He Built This City: Joe Macken’s Model

Start
End
December 31, 2026
Location
Museum of the City of New York, 1220 5th Ave, New York, NY 10029
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Joe Macken, New York City Model (detail), 2004–2025. Photo by David Lurvey for MCNY

He Built This City: Joe Macken’s Model celebrates the extraordinary vision and dedication behind one of the most ambitious handmade representations of New York City ever created. For the first time in New York—Macken’s muse—the artist’s monumental model will be presented to the public at the Museum of the City of New York.

Queens-born artist Joe Macken began the project in 2004. Over the next 21 years, working first in Middle Village, Queens and later in Clifton Park, New York, he devoted himself to crafting a vast architectural portrait of the city he calls home. Built entirely by hand using everyday materials—including balsa wood, cardboard, and glue—the model spans 50 by 27 feet and comprises over 340 individual sections. It renders the city’s skyline, neighborhoods, and landmarks with remarkable precision, character, and imagination. Macken started with the Comcast Building at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, infusing its familiar form with details that signal his personal artistic vision.

The model is on view in the Museum’s Dinan Miller Gallery, presented in an installation that balances close looking with an appreciation of the full scale of the model. In the gallery, we encourage you to use the provided binoculars to see the model in greater detail and to watch the video highlighting Macken's hand-carved buildings. Weather permitting, access to view the north side of the model will be available through the North Terrace.

Displayed on the Museum's first floor, He Built This City is steps away from the permanent exhibitions New York at Its Core and Timescapes. Together, these presentations create a dynamic conversation about the city’s evolution. While New York at Its Core explores four centuries of transformation through themes of density, diversity, money, and creativity, and Timescapes animates the city’s physical expansion, Macken’s sweeping handmade model offers a tactile, artistic interpretation of New York’s built environment—bringing the city’s past and present into a shared, immersive space.

On View

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Center for Architecture

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May 24, 2026
Viollet-le-Duc Drawing Worlds
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May

Museum of the City of New York