Photo: Katrina Samuelson
The Pepsi-Cola sign was built over the soda company’s LIC bottling plant, and remained after the factory was torn down.
The New York City Council has officially landmarked the neon Pepsi-Cola sign that adorns the Long Island City waterfront.
City Council Majority Leader Jimmy Van Bramer, whose district in Queens encompasses the sign, pushed for the landmark status. After Thursday’s unanimous vote, he called the sign “a staggering piece of pop art.”
The Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to designate the structure a historic landmark in April, calling it an “irreplaceable piece of the urban landscape.”
The sign was built in 1940 and stood on top of the Long Island City Pepsi-Cola bottling plant. The facility was torn down in 2001 but the sign was kept and now stands nearby in Gantry Plaza State Park.
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