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New Yorkers in awe of storm’s power

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Amanda Teitler was among the many city dwellers who did not leave her home.

Living on the seventh floor of an apartment building, Teitler figured she would be fine. She was, but her building’s garage and lobby, on Horatio Street near the banks of the Hudson River, weren’t.

“The river came in 3 feet high,” said Teitler, who was in her apartment when the power went out. She went downstairs to see the Hudson pouring in and rising fast. “It was crazy,” she said.

Her main worry was her mother in the Rockaways, a badly hit beach area. The contents of the family’s basement had washed down the street.

Bloomberg said more than 7,000 trees were reported downed or damaged, and Central Park and all the city’s other parks remained closed because of the danger of falling trees and limbs.

On Eighth Avenue, crowds stood and gawked at the apartment building that lost its facade during the storm. The structure, squeezed between a giant bank and a 24-hour check-cashing business, looked like a giant dollhouse. The blue walls and dark wood furniture in the four apartments were exposed to the wind, the rain, and the eyes of New York.

As the afternoon wore on, the streets began filling with people and with cars. Some edged into intersections devoid of working traffic signals, as police tried to keep order. Lines more than 20 feet deep formed at the few delis open and serving hot coffee. Locals who might otherwise be in their offices strolled and chatted, taking pictures of the mess.

Some things inched back to normal. Street sweepers hit the debris-clogged roads, their whirring brushes clearing the way for vehicles to pass. Most bridges connecting the city’s five boroughs reopened. The New York Stock Exchange was expected to reopen Wednesday. So was one airport, John F. Kennedy International. Even trash pickup was supposed to restart.

Perhaps most important for a city that depends on public transport, buses began running again Tuesday evening, and the rides were free.

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(Times staff writer Meredith Blake, in New York, contributed to this story.)

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