Abstract
This article examines the shifting role of arcades in Times Square from the early 20th century through their gradual disappearance in the 21st. Drawing on archival print sources, it situates arcades within the broader cultural and political dynamics of urban change, arguing that these venues functioned as vital “third places” that mediated working-class access to the city. As sites of low-cost, communal entertainment, arcades offered a form of urban belonging often excluded from dominant narratives of modernization. However, arcades were also figured as zones of social disorder and became the focus of regulatory interventions, including intensified policing and restrictive zoning. Tracing these tensions, the article frames the arcade as a contested site of the “right to the city,” illuminating how urban redevelopment campaigns in Times Square redefined the terms of public leisure and ultimately displaced these spaces. Through this lens, arcades offer a critical entry point for rethinking the spatial politics of Times Square’s transformation.
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