Yesterday I was torn between taking a familiar or a new ride. So I did a bit of both: I pedaled through areas of Westchester County I hadn’t seen in a while, on roads I’d never ridden.
While riding, I couldn’t help but to think about how two affluent towns, so close, could feel so different. Scarsdale, New York, like Greenwich, Connecticut, is one of the most affluent towns in the United States. Both have quaint downtowns full of shops that offer goods and services you don’t find in big-box stores. But while some Greenwich establishments have the intimacy of places where generations of people have congregated, others are like the ones in Scarsdale and other wealthy parts of Westchester County: more self-conscious—you can see it in the names, some of which show merely that whoever came up with the name took French or Italian—and more trendy while trying not to seem trendy.
Also, the mansions of Greenwich are set further from the roadway than those in Scarsdale. I suspect that has to do with the differences between the towns’ zoning codes—which has to do with the philosophies of the people who made them. Also, part of Greenwich includes farms where horses are bred and herbs are grown.
In other words, they reflect the difference between New England and suburban New York wealth (though Greenwich is certainly part of the New York Metro area).
While both towns have public art and sculpture, I don’t think I’ve seen anything like this in Greenwich:
Simone Kestelman, the creator of “Pearls of Wisdom,” says she was inspired by what pearls mean: something to wear for special occasions, purity, spiritual transformation, dignity, charity honesty, integrity—and, of course, wisdom acquired over time.
One might expect to see something like this in Greenwich:
Indeed, the town has public horlogues like that one, But I encountered it in the Bronx, across the street from Montefiore Hospital!
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