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Gothamist (Free subscription) | 11/10/2009
Think of it as functional street art. Pratt Grad student Ali Pulver has created portable, temporary eating surfaces for those lunching at street carts. The tiny tables are by far the best options, but she's got plenty more ideas she's put into practice on her Pop Up Lunch blog . Where's the most unconventional space you've dined in the city?
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Boing Boing (Free subscription) | 11/10/2009
Here's a great look at Pop Up Lunch: NYC, a work-in-progress from Ali Pulver, a grad student at Pulver. The idea is to create a bunch of portable, temporary eating surfaces that hungry New Yorkers can chow down from after buying street food from a wagon or cart. Those of us who love eating street food, but hate taking lunch back to our desks, have a common problem. Where should we eat?...
5Vote!
Click World News (Free subscription) | 11/10/2009
Here's a great look at Pop Up Lunch: NYC, a work-in-progress from Ali Pulver, a grad student at Pulver. The idea is to create a bunch of portable, temporary eating surfaces that hungry New Yorkers can chow down from after buying street food from a wagon or cart. Those of us who love eating street food, but hate taking lunch back to our desks, have a common problem. Where should we eat?...
7Vote!
Ed Levine Eats (Free subscription) | 11/06/2009
[Photos: Midtown Lunch] One Pratt student, Ali Pulver, has tackled a problem so many urbanites face—where, on a busy city block, can you eat a street food lunch?—and devoted her graduate thesis to it. Midtown Lunch reports that she's...