Houston Chronicle

2 million to pack into Times Square for New Year’s? Experts say no way

- By Michael R. Sisak

NEW YORK — Ryan Seacrest and Anderson Cooper will be there. Snoop Dogg, too.

But 1 or 2 million people in New York’s Times Square for New Year’s Eve? As Snoop would say, you must be sippin’ on gin and juice.

Crowd-size experts scoff at those mammoth figures — floated annually by city officials and event organizers — saying it’s impossible to squeeze that many of even the skinniest revelers into such a relatively small space.

The real Times Square ball drop crowd likely has fewer than 100,000 people, crowd science professor G. Keith Still said.

“Generally, people are overestima­ting crowd sizes by 10- to 100-fold,” said Still, who teaches crowd science at Manchester Metropolit­an University in England and trains police department­s on techniques to calculate crowd sizes.

The crowd estimates come from the New York City Police Department, according to the Times Square Alliance, which runs the ball drop.

Mayor Bill de Blasio used a big number again Friday, saying the city expected “up to 2 million people in Times Square itself,” a bow tie-shaped zone running five blocks between Broadway and 7th Avenue.

New York University professor Charles Seife, a mathematic­ian and journalist who explored statistica­l manipulati­on in his book “Proofiness,” said the city has an interest in promoting a bigger number because it “helps cement the image of New York City as the center of the universe at a certain date and time.”

He suggested fuzzy math and fuzzier geography were at play.

“How do you count a participan­t in the Times Square ball drop?” Seife asked. “Is it everyone who can see the ball, or anyone squeezed into a bar in Manhattan?”

To actually fit 1 million revelers, the city would have to jam more than the equivalent of a sold-out Yankee Stadium on every block of 7th Avenue between Times Square and Central Park — which starts about 15 blocks to the north.

Times Square would hold about 51,000 people at a density of 3 people per square meter, Still said, or about 86,000 at 5 people per square meter. It might reach 120,000 if the crowd packed in at 7 people per square meter, but he said that density, with people squished together front to back and shoulder to shoulder, is unlikely.

Those numbers don’t count people watching from hotel and office building windows or from penned-off areas farther away. They also don’t account for space taken up by stages, security apparatus and egress routes, where people would otherwise be able to stand.

At big events, an accurate crowd estimate is critical to public safety. The wrong number can leave cities devoting too many or too few resources to an event, Still said. But New York — despite inflating the size of its crowd — manages the throngs well, funneling revelers into penned off areas, so there’s no opportunit­y for overcrowdi­ng, and screening each person for weapons.

 ?? Associated Press file ?? Revelers celebrate the new year as confetti flies over New York’s Times Square last January. Year after year, city officials say millions pack the bow tie-shaped area on New Year’s Eve, but crowd-size experts estimate the number is likely fewer than 100,000.
Associated Press file Revelers celebrate the new year as confetti flies over New York’s Times Square last January. Year after year, city officials say millions pack the bow tie-shaped area on New Year’s Eve, but crowd-size experts estimate the number is likely fewer than 100,000.

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