The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

With lights back on, Times Square hopes to regain its luster

- By Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK » David Cohen has been yearning for a return to the days when business boomed at his family’s souvenir shop in Times Square.

While tourists have begun returning, foot traffic into Grand Slam souvenirs is still not what it was before the coronaviru­s pandemic, when hordes of global visitors crowded under the canopy of electric billboards just outside his door.

But the return of foreign tourists to a place popularly called the crossroads of the world may help hasten recovery for businesses like his — many of them mom-and-pop shops — that collective­ly employ thousands of people and serve as one of New York City’s most important economic engines.

“We welcome them back with open arms,” Cohen said after the U.S. began allowing vaccinated internatio­nal travelers into the country this month. “We’ve got a long way to go.”

Times Square had long stood as an emblem of New York’s hustle and bustle, but when Broadway theaters shut their doors at the height of the pandemic, 9 in 10 businesses in the area closed, according to a district civic group, The Times Square Alliance.

Three-fourths have since reopened, bit by bit, as Broadway shows began reopening to vaccinated-only audiences.

Among those hopefully restarting are businesses that don’t cater directly to tourists, but are part of the city’s entertainm­ent ecosystem.

Sam Vasili’s Shoe Repair reopened last month across 51st street from the Gershwin Theater, where it had operated for three decades before a long pandemic closure.

Owner Sam Smolyar was all grins on a recent afternoon as he shared the news that a Broadway production set to reopen nearby had requisitio­ned his help. For years, he had been helping outfit the Rockettes with custom-fitted boots. “We rely on the theater, and on the businesses around here,” he said.

He hopes more people buying tickets on Broadway will mean busier times.

“It starts to get better,” said Vasili, who employs three people at the shop.

Just before the COVID-19 outbreak, New York City had been posting record numbers of tourists — 66.6 million in 2019, including 13.5 million from outside the United States. Then the pandemic hit, prompting severe restrictio­ns on foreign travel.

A marketing blitz has been underway for months to remind Americans that New York City is again open for business and ready for the visiting masses. Now the city is expanding its outreach to those outside the United States, who are especially coveted because they spend more time and more money during their visits.

While domestic travel accounted for 80% of New York visitors, foreign tourists account for about half of the city’s tourism spending and typically represent half of all hotel bookings.

 ?? SETH WENIG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pedestrian­s pose for pictures in Times Square, Monday, Nov. 15, 2021, in New York. Even as visitors again crowd below the jumbo screens in New York’s Times Square, the souvenir shops, restaurant­s, hotels and entreprene­urs within the iconic U.S. landmark are still reeling from a staggering pandemic.
SETH WENIG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pedestrian­s pose for pictures in Times Square, Monday, Nov. 15, 2021, in New York. Even as visitors again crowd below the jumbo screens in New York’s Times Square, the souvenir shops, restaurant­s, hotels and entreprene­urs within the iconic U.S. landmark are still reeling from a staggering pandemic.

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