A program cooked up by the Department of Transportation in 2011 to alert the public that walking into traffic isn’t a smart move. It’s called “Curbside Haiku” and features twelve designs by artist John Morse. The signs are attached to lampposts an utility poles in areas where traffic is especially heavy and pedestrians and bicyclists have run into trouble. Each sign employs a haiku, a centuries-old style of poetry developed in Japan that consists of three lines and exactly seventeen syllables. Most of the signs spell out the haiku, but some have QR codes readable by smartphone apps. (Since I still live in 1985, that’s a world apart from my own.)
I spotted this one at Court Street and Atlantic Avenue, a place where I frequently waited for the B63 bus between 1975 and 1980 when I went to St. Francis College on Remsen Street (in 2023 it is moving to Livingston) and had a job at the Brooklyn Business Library on Cadman Plaza (it was knocked down a few years ago for a luxury building).
Haiku is a Japanese poetry form consisting of three lines with a 5-7-5 syllabic scheme. This program is now a a decade old and there are still some battered, but surviving, haiku signs around. On this FNY page I have some more, but the link on the page indicating all the Curbside Haiku signs around town is now deceased.
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3/2/22