NYC & Company Secures Whimsical European Tourist Market
When you lie down with hordes of European tourists, you wake up with locks on your bridges:
A pop cultural phenomenon that has turned an Italian bridge into a locksmith’s paradise has jumped across the Atlantic and is threatening to cover the Brooklyn Bridge in lovers’ padlocks.
The tradition of securing a symbol of amore to a bridge — and tossing the keys into the river below — dates back to a 1992 book by sugary Italian novelist Federico Moccia, but the tradition didn’t take off until the movie version of “Tre Metri Sopra il Cielo” came out in 2004.
That’s when Roman authorities suddenly had to deal with thousands of lovers clipping all manner of Master, Kryptonite and Medco locks to the Ponte Milvio — and throwing the keys into the muddy Tiber. Well, guess what, Brooklynites: the tradition is here.
Location Scout: Brooklyn Bridge.
Posted: April 30th, 2010 | Filed under: Architecture & Infrastructure, Brooklyn, New York, New York, It's A Wonderful Town!