I grew up near the Neversink, which is one that supplies NYC and our local area, and it is by far the best water I've ever drank, showered with, everything. No one in my area growing up needed water softening systems. Only when I moved away did I realize how good I had it, and how bad the water is in other areas.
I did the plumbing and sprinkler system in an apartment that was built in place of the old water tank at the top of a famous building on Central Park West. The sprinkler system I installed was exposed and made of copper, and it encircles the circumference of the structure, as it is round like the water tower. It has a spiral iron staircase which goes up the middle of it. In the top floor is a recording studio. The owner is the recording artist Moby.
Good video, but I was hoping to learn more about the way the wooden rooftop tanks work. How do they get filled up? Are they just gravity drained? What happens in the Really Tall skyscrapers? ANd so forth...
I live about 15-20 minutes away from croton dam and during the summer sometimes large amounts of water splashes out from those tunnel things and the mist flows onto you feeling soooo refreshing
I owned one of those houses relocated to Kingston NY from the Ashokan reservoir, it was 150 years old and we loved it. NY definitely has some of the best water in the world.
I would complain, but the voice over is perfectly centered, and the music is removed from the "center". It works well with stereo headphones. It's produced like the average pop/jazz music.
NY is my bucket list city. There is so much about it that fascinates me. This being but one aspect. Cheddar ,you make learning a blast. A pity your slots are short as they are.Your content is outstanding.
I live in NYC. You must visit. This city is amazing in its extremes. We have some truly amazing things and some truly awful things. It's always an experience, that is for sure.
NY is a bucket. Fill it with your wildest imaginations. Mine is filled with the hopes and dreams of all the rats who traveled through hell to make it big.
Same thing happened here in Canada to create to Saint Lawrence river. We call them “The Lost Villages” because they were submerged and flooded to extend the river more inland
Sacandaga Reservoir is another that supplies water to NYC. It's about 45 minutes north of where I am. Many awesome memories on that lake. Very clean and warm water. It had a town that was flooded as well. There aren't many remnants of the town left but there was all kinds of property that got submerged. They used to do diving tours of the area, although I'm not sure if they still do. You can tell when the water is low during the later months, where there are tons of exposed sandbars and you can walk out in waste deep water quite far. Thanks for sharing this, it's very interesting and educational. 👍👍
As a native NYer, who has travelled across the US and lived in a few states; nothing is like NYC water. Seriously, it just tastes better! I've had transplants ask me why we don't have filtered water stations all over like other cities, especially in the south. Well, because we drink from the tap! Hell, I would even drink from the hose in NY. When I lived in Florida you couldn't pay me to drink from the tap, let alone the hose... Lol.
I tried NYC water and i am so privileged to drink Hungarian water, you can taste chlorine in the NY tapwater especially if you put it into a water bottle and drink from it an hour later. I never experienced this with our water though i might add that our water comes from 500meter ~1500feet below ground so it doesnt really need to be treated.
@@rainingwings449 Just because you dont use chlorine that doesnt mean you will get cholera. They use UV for killing viruses and bacteria and they have to use chlorine because their pipe system is in bad condition
If you live in the Adirondacks you can drink about any water you find. Spring water is ice cold and delicious. When camping, you can use use the springs to keep drinks cold.
is it really the best water if you have to add Chlorine? here in Germany it is normal to have unfiltered water. tap water is cleaner than bought mineral Water here
New York City has very good quality water. I'm constantly impressed with the engineering that brings drinking water to so many of our large cities, especially those in the Southwest.
I live right over tunnel number 2. There was work being done recently to improve water flow. I had no clue up until now that I live directly above these pipes.
I want to see Cheddar talk about water systems in the US and the world. Portland, Oregon does not add fluoride to their tap water which drastically changes how the water tastes and I think making a video about that would be really awesome.
@bluessi2378 I'm sure the reason why Portland doesn't add fluoride to its water is because their source water has adequate amounts in it. I'm sure the same can be said for Germany but I wouldn't know.
While a long video would be great, given this platform, six ten minute videos would be more fiscally successful than an hour long one so I doubt Cheddar will deviate from what they are doing now
at 10:24 "You turn that dap - The water has been there every single day since 1842. We take a lot of pride in that. AS YOU SHOULD. OUTSTANDiNG JOB ! 👌👏🌹I❤NY
When I was a kid I used to drink the water straight from the Scoharie Creek. The source of the water for NYC. Back then most of the creeks and rivers were the water supply for town, no treatment at all. It was really awesome. I miss those days. And Saratoga had natural springs and the water was so good. It had a sulphur taste to it and lithium in it. You felt really great after drinking it, especially if you were a kid. The amount of lithium was high for a kid to ingest.
The wooden tanks last 50-100 years. It’s also cheaper to get individual pieces up to the roof than to hire a crane and get Street permits. The wooden design is pretty simple and the two companies that monopolized the roof tank business in NYC can usually build them in a single day, which means less downtime to the occupants.
when I saw photos from the 1900s and saw the water towers. I thought that's how water used to be stored, but I now know some buildings still store water that way via a pump as gravity powered water didn't have the energy to go to taller buildings.
Bro New York water is elite. Straight from the tap it tasted like bottled water. When we moved to jersey, we needed to get the big water jugs for our home, the water in our shower makes hair fall out… it’s a disaster. Definitely miss the water in NY.
Thank you for including acrhive materials, thos old construction sites are amazing! Really makes you remember that people and engineering weren't as undeveloped back then up to Roman empire and Egypt as we usually think.
Yeah that Flouride water be hittin different for real. I also love the other chemicals in the water like Chloramine, Chloroform, bromodichloromethane, Haloacetic acid, Tthm & Nitrate. Keep up the good work guys 🙏❤️
These gentlemen need to come to Norway! The best Water you can find on the planet even though water is everywhere the quality can't be matched. I salute your profession and entusiasme but Norway is just different breed to you all. No disrespect to New Yorks or USA for the matter but We the best and cleanest in the world. I might give you 5 slot behind Belgium.
Welcome To The Brooklyn World! Good Morning Brooklyn, The Clean Water Is Only One Thing About The City And There Are Actually Many Other Things That Count Towards The Greatest City In The World Status. New York City Has Great Parks, A Great Subway System, A Great Bus System, A Great Public School System, A Great Ferry System, A Great Clean Air System, The Best Firefighters, The Best Building Codes, The Best Police Officers, Great Colleges, Great Museums, Great Bridges, Great Street Grids, Great Airports That Are Improving Every Year, Great Casinos, Great Safety All Around, The Safest Streets, The Greatest Citi-Bike System, And Much More. Of Course, Let’s Not Forget That New York Is The Headquarters Of Wall Street, The Headquarters Of Two Ivy League Colleges And Many More Top Notch Universities, The Headquarters Of The U.N. Which Should Get And Extension Soon Hopefully, And So Much More.
Honestly I swear that many New Yorkers take this place for granted. I'm from Wichita, and I thought our little city was a little jewel on the prairie, but let's just say that the "5th avenue" in "5th avenue diamond" is a very real place you can go to in NYC, and it is just ONE of the many wonders that makes this city a most unique metropolis. I've passed through many cities in my travels in the USA, and this one is probably the most spectacular of them all. Suffice it to say, I will be calling NYC my home from here on.
Pumps. Water towers can be thought of almost as a battery that stores pressure. Without a water tank, all water pressure in tall buildings would be supplied by pump and the building would loose pressure if the pump stopped at all or too many people had their taps on at once. Water tanks allow some time where pumps can be off without losing pressure and can be drawn down to provide excess flow when the pumps alone are insufficient. They basically allow you to utilize a smaller more efficient pump by storing excess water during low usage times and allowing it to flow back downhill during high usage times to pick up the slack.
So True. We do take advantage of the water system daily. I am greatful to all those who are responsible for the clean water NYC flows with every single day. Thank you !! I love my NYC Tap water.
Aren't those tanks notoriously contaminated with pollution, pigeons and everything organic that grows in still water in out-of-sight and neglected tanks?
@@dragonhunter4469 Not every watertank is new though. A lot of apartment buildings cheap out on these kinda stuff, or the company who maintains it dont do a good enough job.
Great video...going to check the wood water tank one next. I thought at one time there was a museum about NYC water - Im brining a group of water nerds (we are watershape designers/builder of pools/fountains etc) to NYC next year and would love to be able to show them something really cool w/r to water resources.
The Big Apple's water tastes delicious thanks to the light that kills the bacteria. It still does not tastes as good as the water from an Oceanian island.
Pump the water up to the water tank, use the pressure to provide water to the people below. Usually easier than on demand pumping to each unit from the ground/street level.
@@Menjoro skyscrapers need water tank. even in europe there are actually water tanks in buildings and skyscrapers, it's just hidden unlike nyc. especially europe doesnt have much tall buildings.
Europe have a lot of countries with 100% clean water. Capted from the mountains and underground channels. Nothing it's used, from the nature to our homes.
Same here, never heard of New York’s supposed special water and I come from an area where the water is naturally filtered through rocks into an aquifer.
Its a bit odd since in the usa isnt exactly know for its drinkable tap water lol. It makes me really doubt the claim its the worlds best water. Perhaps the US's best water
I'm a union plumber and I take a lot of pride in building our infrastructure. This guy does as well. We need more soldiers in this trade to keep America safe.
Tbh its so weird they have those wooden tanks. In my city the tanks are like big boxes made out of tile and concrete, kinda like swimming pools but covered at every side and on the roofs lol There are tanks that kinda look like the nyc ones too, but they are made out of metal, not wood. Barely anything is made out of wood tbh, furniture at most.
@@kirkrotger9208 yes, wood is a great building material. I wish the rest of the world used it as much as you guys do, its definitely more ecological than most other materials too
@@agme8045 I much rather have a non-wooden water tank. These things can rot and a lot of stuff can fall into these tanks like birds if it isnt maintained properly and unfortunately a lot of them arent maintained properly
I feel like this account is run by someone who moved to New York for college or for career and is now completely obsessed with learning everything there is to know about New York and telling everyone on RUclips.
Problems: The map at 6:03 circling towns---several of the circles are not in the correct locations of towns that were flooded. At 6:35 I think you're saying 1915, which is correct, but it's easily heard as 1950, though I guess that's English's fault. And you mostly overlooked the Delaware system, only mentioning that its tunnel is leaking; it's still the world's longest tunnel 77 years after construction. Getting the approvals for the Delaware System got the Supreme Court involved. I usually like Cheddar but this feels incomplete or rushed.
They basically telling you all the good points in leaving all the bad points out like what happened to all those small towns that they moved or flooded
@@morpheus_9 yeah we get that but what happened to them people those people got stories of the events that happened afterwards they didn't go into detail about that ... They should have made more of a documentary about it the whole water system of NYC
After visiting NYC, i'm sorry to say the water's not really as good as they portray. Maybe it's the best in the US, but comparing it to Germany? Nah. But interesting video!
As a kid I grew up just north of NYC in an area which is part of the NYC water system, and I assumed the whole country had the same high-quality water until I retired to the pristine waters of Florida to find out that pristine waters don't compare to NYC water. But like the music we grew up with as kids one prefers what they grew up with as kids, so people here in Florida who did not relocate here from the NYC area and relocated here from other parts of the country have no understanding of how good NYC water is.
It explains why a lot of people around the country live on bottled water. Growing up in New York I could never understand why you wouldn't just drink your tap water. Didn't know what I had till I traveled away.
@@lookoutforchris I agree, but bottled water is bland compared to NYC water and if you store a lot of bottled water over time it takes on the taste of plastic. Also as an adult I commuted into the city for work and the water had the same quality at both locations even though both locations were 14 miles apart and had to be piped under one of the most densely populated metro areas in the nation.
NYC is one of the few places that uses gravity to provide water. It's one of the most environmentally friendly water delivery systems in the U.S. if not the world. It's completely emissions free.
All municipalities use gravity. Just some more than others. NYC does use pumping stations when the hydraulic grade form it's raw reservoirs drop too low.
I grew up near the Neversink, which is one that supplies NYC and our local area, and it is by far the best water I've ever drank, showered with, everything. No one in my area growing up needed water softening systems. Only when I moved away did I realize how good I had it, and how bad the water is in other areas.
if the water pipes are not copper u gonna have lead in it. XD Drink up!
I did the plumbing and sprinkler system in an apartment that was built in place of the old water tank at the top of a famous building on Central Park West. The sprinkler system I installed was exposed and made of copper, and it encircles the circumference of the structure, as it is round like the water tower. It has a spiral iron staircase which goes up the middle of it. In the top floor is a recording studio. The owner is the recording artist Moby.
Whaaaaat you were Mobys plumber? Niceeee
Minute 2:50 , dude gets wood smacked behind the head 👷🏽♂️🤣
Reminds me of programs I'd see on the History Channel or TLC before moronic reality TV style shows took over every network.
There is no mention of Aliens.
@@alex626ification Exactly.
They hired the old voiceover guy from those shows
Except I still don't know why they have a million little water towers and no other city does.
Ever seen Aerial America ?
Good video, but I was hoping to learn more about the way the wooden rooftop tanks work. How do they get filled up? Are they just gravity drained? What happens in the Really Tall skyscrapers? ANd so forth...
Water gets pumped up to the tanks, and then it gravity feeds the building… it’s a smoother operation than just using pumps.
They usually use pelican birds that drop water to New Yorkers everyday. It's pretty neat
You're in luck! We have a video on that topic specifically. Search: Why New York City Still Uses Wooden Water Towers
Only people living in tall buildings have tanks. Vast majority of people in nyc get their water straight from the system
Why are tanks even needed? Does the system not have enough pressure to provide water to tall buildings the normal way?
I live about 15-20 minutes away from croton dam and during the summer sometimes large amounts of water splashes out from those tunnel things and the mist flows onto you feeling soooo refreshing
I owned one of those houses relocated to Kingston NY from the Ashokan reservoir, it was 150 years old and we loved it. NY definitely has some of the best water in the world.
Y’all can say what you want about New York City but their water is top tier. Cleanest I’ve ever drank
😂😂😂😂😂 tap water always comes out looking foggy and grey lol idk about it being the cleanest
@@moG4545if it’s foggy in grey it could be a good sign, that.color comes from oxidation
New York Tapp water is the greatest in the world
Background music being as loud as the voices lol takes me back to 2000s
Its a highly distracting production mistake.
Yeah, they fucked up
I would complain, but the voice over is perfectly centered, and the music is removed from the "center". It works well with stereo headphones. It's produced like the average pop/jazz music.
I just got back from New York and I tell you I have never had water that tastes so good and clean seriously the best water system.
Maybe the best in the US which doesn't say a lot. It has multiple chemicals in it. We use untreated water here. What a joke.
NY is my bucket list city. There is so much about it that fascinates me. This being but one aspect. Cheddar ,you make learning a blast. A pity your slots are short as they are.Your content is outstanding.
I live in NYC. You must visit. This city is amazing in its extremes. We have some truly amazing things and some truly awful things. It's always an experience, that is for sure.
So many rats running around too
dont go to brownsville or some parts of the bronx
@@callmeishmael_S what’s up with the Bronx ?,
NY is a bucket. Fill it with your wildest imaginations. Mine is filled with the hopes and dreams of all the rats who traveled through hell to make it big.
I swear I love my city. And thank whomever!
Cheddar is turning into a water management showcase channel, and I am so here for it! :D
Same thing happened here in Canada to create to Saint Lawrence river. We call them “The Lost Villages” because they were submerged and flooded to extend the river more inland
Sacandaga Reservoir is another that supplies water to NYC. It's about 45 minutes north of where I am. Many awesome memories on that lake. Very clean and warm water. It had a town that was flooded as well. There aren't many remnants of the town left but there was all kinds of property that got submerged. They used to do diving tours of the area, although I'm not sure if they still do. You can tell when the water is low during the later months, where there are tons of exposed sandbars and you can walk out in waste deep water quite far. Thanks for sharing this, it's very interesting and educational. 👍👍
You're wecome. -From Upstate NY.
The water tower building guy seems sooo nice 😄😄😄
As a native NYer, who has travelled across the US and lived in a few states; nothing is like NYC water. Seriously, it just tastes better!
I've had transplants ask me why we don't have filtered water stations all over like other cities, especially in the south. Well, because we drink from the tap! Hell, I would even drink from the hose in NY.
When I lived in Florida you couldn't pay me to drink from the tap, let alone the hose... Lol.
But did you try the water in Flint MI
I tried NYC water and i am so privileged to drink Hungarian water, you can taste chlorine in the NY tapwater especially if you put it into a water bottle and drink from it an hour later. I never experienced this with our water though i might add that our water comes from 500meter ~1500feet below ground so it doesnt really need to be treated.
@@collan580 yeah in Europe, drinking water from a tap is completely normal, even in rural areas.
@@collan580 Tasting chlorine is pretty common in most places in the US. I’d rather taste a bit of chlorine than get cholera lel
@@rainingwings449 Just because you dont use chlorine that doesnt mean you will get cholera. They use UV for killing viruses and bacteria and they have to use chlorine because their pipe system is in bad condition
If you live in the Adirondacks you can drink about any water you find. Spring water is ice cold and delicious. When camping, you can use use the springs to keep drinks cold.
I love CJ’s attitude and outlook on his life!
I own a water desalination plant so these videos about water are very interesting for me!
is it really the best water if you have to add Chlorine? here in Germany it is normal to have unfiltered water. tap water is cleaner than bought mineral Water here
New York City has very good quality water. I'm constantly impressed with the engineering that brings drinking water to so many of our large cities, especially those in the Southwest.
Michael 🧐
You have to chlorinate water here legally
I live right over tunnel number 2. There was work being done recently to improve water flow. I had no clue up until now that I live directly above these pipes.
Incredible. Thank you water system workers.
I want to see Cheddar talk about water systems in the US and the world. Portland, Oregon does not add fluoride to their tap water which drastically changes how the water tastes and I think making a video about that would be really awesome.
You guys have nothing on the east coast
@@NJRB23 and you guys have nothing on finland
Finally someone is thinking....fluoride is rate poison and it block the pineaglan for making us dummer
In Germany we don't add fluoride in water either. It is unimaginable!
@bluessi2378 I'm sure the reason why Portland doesn't add fluoride to its water is because their source water has adequate amounts in it. I'm sure the same can be said for Germany but I wouldn't know.
To be honest, I really like Cheddar news. I love these topics. But come on Cheddar. These videos need to be at least an hour long!
While a long video would be great, given this platform, six ten minute videos would be more fiscally successful than an hour long one so I doubt Cheddar will deviate from what they are doing now
They'd loose tons of subscribers if they did an hour long video. Maybe check out there pateron
Yeah, a lot to squeeze in! Luckily, we made a 24 minute version of this episode and all from this series. You can find them on CuriosityStream.
at 10:24 "You turn that dap - The water has been there every single day since 1842.
We take a lot of pride in that. AS YOU SHOULD. OUTSTANDiNG JOB ! 👌👏🌹I❤NY
I'd like to learn more about the people / towns displaced by imminent domain to create the reservoirs. I had no idea that even happened.
Your mom happened.
Richard 😚
When I was a kid I used to drink the water straight from the Scoharie Creek. The source of the water for NYC. Back then most of the creeks and rivers were the water supply for town, no treatment at all. It was really awesome. I miss those days. And Saratoga had natural springs and the water was so good. It had a sulphur taste to it and lithium in it. You felt really great after drinking it, especially if you were a kid. The amount of lithium was high for a kid to ingest.
That sounds really awesome, nature is beautiful .
Thank you Cheddar! Two questions - why wooden tanks? And, how is the water untreated if it has fluoride and chlorine in it? Thanks :D
It's unfiltered !
We have a whole video on New York's water tanks! Search: Why New York City Still Uses Wooden Water Towers
@@cheddar Thanks! It's true, the wooden tanks do look better than metal ones.
@@shigekax Thanks Yuri - you're right - I misheard when he said unfiltered.🤐
The wooden tanks last 50-100 years. It’s also cheaper to get individual pieces up to the roof than to hire a crane and get Street permits. The wooden design is pretty simple and the two companies that monopolized the roof tank business in NYC can usually build them in a single day, which means less downtime to the occupants.
Many thanks to these great men and women
*many tanks
when I saw photos from the 1900s and saw the water towers. I thought that's how water used to be stored, but I now know some buildings still store water that way via a pump as gravity powered water didn't have the energy to go to taller buildings.
The Croton Dam is amazing. i love that spill-over.
Hey o
Just finding this but pretty awesome knowing work for a company that provides material for these projects
"we're proud to have unfiltered water" then goes on to list the chemicals they put in the water lmao
In the mid 1990's, while in a nightclub in lower Manhattan, i drank water from the faucet. And it tasted really really good.
one thing i love about nyc water is that as an aquarium hobbyist, i dont have to treat the water before using it.
I love how they show two guys sitting on the water tank building it and one guy hits the other in the head with a piece of wood. right at 2:50.
Bro New York water is elite. Straight from the tap it tasted like bottled water. When we moved to jersey, we needed to get the big water jugs for our home, the water in our shower makes hair fall out… it’s a disaster. Definitely miss the water in NY.
Not all of New Jersey, and not every town gets its water from the same source.
The love and kindness in these comments is inspiring. Thank you!
Thank you for including acrhive materials, thos old construction sites are amazing! Really makes you remember that people and engineering weren't as undeveloped back then up to Roman empire and Egypt as we usually think.
I was hoping for a full map of the system. Which parts are open to the the air or in tunnels. Over bridge or dams. Etc.
Big up To All My Guyanese, We always gotta Represent‼️🇬🇾🙏🏽
Hello, this system is really an ecologically clean system, and I appreciate the people of America for that.
Yeah that Flouride water be hittin different for real. I also love the other chemicals in the water like Chloramine, Chloroform, bromodichloromethane, Haloacetic acid, Tthm & Nitrate. Keep up the good work guys 🙏❤️
Gary 😑
You know it! 😂
Thank you to everyone who makes sure it got water 🚿
Fascinating! I liked the UV treatment plant, had no idea
These gentlemen need to come to Norway! The best Water you can find on the planet even though water is everywhere the quality can't be matched. I salute your profession and entusiasme but Norway is just different breed to you all. No disrespect to New Yorks or USA for the matter but We the best and cleanest in the world. I might give you 5 slot behind Belgium.
its such a cool city, maybe i see it in person one day..
Welcome To The Brooklyn World!
Good Morning Brooklyn,
The Clean Water Is Only One Thing About The City And There Are Actually Many Other Things That Count Towards The Greatest City In The World Status. New York City Has Great Parks, A Great Subway System, A Great Bus System, A Great Public School System, A Great Ferry System, A Great Clean Air System, The Best Firefighters, The Best Building Codes, The Best Police Officers, Great Colleges, Great Museums, Great Bridges, Great Street Grids, Great Airports That Are Improving Every Year, Great Casinos, Great Safety All Around, The Safest Streets, The Greatest Citi-Bike System, And Much More.
Of Course, Let’s Not Forget That New York Is The Headquarters Of Wall Street, The Headquarters Of Two Ivy League Colleges And Many More Top Notch Universities, The Headquarters Of The U.N. Which Should Get And Extension Soon Hopefully, And So Much More.
The pressure tunnels are engineering marvels!
good job NYC
that dam is very peaceful at night. I hear the spillway from my house.
These infrastructure workers are so essential and they need to be paid more than some insignificant ball player artist or a social media influencer
Doesnt matter how clean it would be at the begin of the pipe. The question is: how clean it is at the end of the pipe.
Honestly I swear that many New Yorkers take this place for granted. I'm from Wichita, and I thought our little city was a little jewel on the prairie, but let's just say that the "5th avenue" in "5th avenue diamond" is a very real place you can go to in NYC, and it is just ONE of the many wonders that makes this city a most unique metropolis. I've passed through many cities in my travels in the USA, and this one is probably the most spectacular of them all.
Suffice it to say, I will be calling NYC my home from here on.
Nice video, cover bridges and bridge workers next
So much potential, but it seems they cut way too much content. What about those tanks? How does water get there?
Pumps. Water towers can be thought of almost as a battery that stores pressure. Without a water tank, all water pressure in tall buildings would be supplied by pump and the building would loose pressure if the pump stopped at all or too many people had their taps on at once. Water tanks allow some time where pumps can be off without losing pressure and can be drawn down to provide excess flow when the pumps alone are insufficient. They basically allow you to utilize a smaller more efficient pump by storing excess water during low usage times and allowing it to flow back downhill during high usage times to pick up the slack.
We have a whole video on the water tanks specifically. Search: Why New York City Still Uses Wooden Water Towers
Guyanese happy to hear that
This could’ve and probably should’ve been longer. I would’ve watched it all.
The water tank owner guy is much much less awkward than he was when he showed up in Vox.
Was having Deja Vu the whole ep. Good catch.
Not his first rodeo anymore I think
We thank you for the water! - from the Bronx/Harlem
So True. We do take advantage of the water system daily. I am greatful to all those who are responsible for the clean water NYC flows with every single day. Thank you !!
I love my NYC Tap water.
Aren't those tanks notoriously contaminated with pollution, pigeons and everything organic that grows in still water in out-of-sight and neglected tanks?
No? Where did you get that idea? They're sealed. Nothing gets in.
@@kirkrotger9208 Not really, there are tons of unmaintained watertanks with damaged top lids
@@collan580 bruh they literally said they built new ones now
@@dragonhunter4469 Not every watertank is new though. A lot of apartment buildings cheap out on these kinda stuff, or the company who maintains it dont do a good enough job.
Lived there for 3 years and I would say NYC water is by far the best.
Great video...going to check the wood water tank one next. I thought at one time there was a museum about NYC water - Im brining a group of water nerds (we are watershape designers/builder of pools/fountains etc) to NYC next year and would love to be able to show them something really cool w/r to water resources.
Nah Singapore has the world’s cleanest water, it’s called NEWater
I wonder what was in the construction materials of those submerged towns. Lead paint? Asbestos?
Carl
The Big Apple's water tastes delicious thanks to the light that kills the bacteria. It still does not tastes as good as the water from an Oceanian island.
I used to drink store-bought water until some contractors fix the water system at my house.
Hmm 🤔
Kinda happy my fellow Guyanese does such an ironic job in the USA.
Not to burst the guy's bubble but I really doubt that "wooden water towers" would make a top 10 list of anyone's "iconic New York City landmarks."
It definitely does!
Coming from a land of nothing but rainforest to the big concrete jungle of NYC. The view he gets is not like anyone else's who visits here.
I live in Scotland we got some of the best water in the world
So what are the tanks for?
Did i miss it? If you have underground pipes, why do they even need those tanks?
Pressure. If you have pipes coming from underground, it's hard to maintain pressure above 5 stories.
@@kirkrotger9208 Thanks :)
Pump the water up to the water tank, use the pressure to provide water to the people below. Usually easier than on demand pumping to each unit from the ground/street level.
@@andresmcavoy5765 Was just wondering, since a lot of cities (in europe for example) dont use this. Event on skyscrapers :)
@@Menjoro skyscrapers need water tank. even in europe there are actually water tanks in buildings and skyscrapers, it's just hidden unlike nyc. especially europe doesnt have much tall buildings.
Is this Cheddar or the New York City channel? I'm not complaining by the way great vids!
Great video - I'm not surprised that you are so proud of such a beautiful, efficient and technological advanced water system.
Dope VID CHEDDAR 👍🏼
I proudly grew up right next to the Amawalk resevior.
Why are you proud? It’s just a place.
Europe have a lot of countries with 100% clean water. Capted from the mountains and underground channels. Nothing it's used, from the nature to our homes.
"...aound the world for being some of the best water" I have never heard that in my life and I live where you get Voss water from the tap
Same here, never heard of New York’s supposed special water and I come from an area where the water is naturally filtered through rocks into an aquifer.
Great video! These folks do amazing work. And yes, as a "New Yawka", I took this for granted. No more though.
Its a bit odd since in the usa isnt exactly know for its drinkable tap water lol. It makes me really doubt the claim its the worlds best water. Perhaps the US's best water
I'm a union plumber and I take a lot of pride in building our infrastructure. This guy does as well. We need more soldiers in this trade to keep America safe.
The world cleanest water is Zemzem water source in Saudi Arabia. Go check it out you'll be amazed
Yo u from Guyana 🇬🇾 shout out bro big up
And in the south Bronx they turn on the hydrants and waste 20 million Gallons they are trying to recover…….
Tbh its so weird they have those wooden tanks. In my city the tanks are like big boxes made out of tile and concrete, kinda like swimming pools but covered at every side and on the roofs lol
There are tanks that kinda look like the nyc ones too, but they are made out of metal, not wood. Barely anything is made out of wood tbh, furniture at most.
Wood is used because it's a good natural insulator and prevents freezing without the need for additives that could taint the water.
@@kirkrotger9208 yes, wood is a great building material. I wish the rest of the world used it as much as you guys do, its definitely more ecological than most other materials too
there's a whole video talkin about the thing you're wondering on this very same channel.
@@agme8045 I much rather have a non-wooden water tank. These things can rot and a lot of stuff can fall into these tanks like birds if it isnt maintained properly and unfortunately a lot of them arent maintained properly
@@dyarous im pretty sure I’ve seen it, I don’t remember much though
Let’s gooo, my fellow Guyana’s showing up. 🇬🇾
I feel like this account is run by someone who moved to New York for college or for career and is now completely obsessed with learning everything there is to know about New York and telling everyone on RUclips.
Except NYC puts fluoride in their water.... Even so, the water from the Catskills and Delaware River is extremely clean (naturally).
Great example. Now do it in flint Michigan
Do enjoy the commentator, such nostalgia!!
Problems: The map at 6:03 circling towns---several of the circles are not in the correct locations of towns that were flooded. At 6:35 I think you're saying 1915, which is correct, but it's easily heard as 1950, though I guess that's English's fault. And you mostly overlooked the Delaware system, only mentioning that its tunnel is leaking; it's still the world's longest tunnel 77 years after construction. Getting the approvals for the Delaware System got the Supreme Court involved. I usually like Cheddar but this feels incomplete or rushed.
They basically telling you all the good points in leaving all the bad points out like what happened to all those small towns that they moved or flooded
@@jermainec2462 they said that they were not fairly compensated and were pushed out of their homes.
@@morpheus_9 yeah we get that but what happened to them people those people got stories of the events that happened afterwards they didn't go into detail about that ... They should have made more of a documentary about it the whole water system of NYC
The image indicating the location of the three tunnels is not in the correct position either. Regardless, this is still a great video.
After visiting NYC, i'm sorry to say the water's not really as good as they portray.
Maybe it's the best in the US, but comparing it to Germany? Nah.
But interesting video!
Come to most of Canada tap water here is good in most places water snobs don't event notice the difference between tap and bottled
As a kid I grew up just north of NYC in an area which is part of the NYC water system, and I assumed the whole country had the same high-quality water until I retired to the pristine waters of Florida to find out that pristine waters don't compare to NYC water. But like the music we grew up with as kids one prefers what they grew up with as kids, so people here in Florida who did not relocate here from the NYC area and relocated here from other parts of the country have no understanding of how good NYC water is.
It explains why a lot of people around the country live on bottled water. Growing up in New York I could never understand why you wouldn't just drink your tap water. Didn't know what I had till I traveled away.
@@lookoutforchris I agree, but bottled water is bland compared to NYC water and if you store a lot of bottled water over time it takes on the taste of plastic. Also as an adult I commuted into the city for work and the water had the same quality at both locations even though both locations were 14 miles apart and had to be piped under one of the most densely populated metro areas in the nation.
@@myreadingmapped lol
Anyone notice the guy getting hit in the back of the head with a 2x6 at 2:52
So does the whole tunnel full up with water are is just a part of it like the big yellow tubes hanging from the top of the tunnel?? Would love to know
Some are steam pipes or are waste pipes the big tunnels are for when rain, floods , storms to prevent flooding in the streets or damages
@@LegendOfTheFLame393 that’s amazing thank you
Cheddar = the New York channel 😂
2:53 That one tall building is leaning like crazy. Is that normal?
You should check out the Paris water treatment plant.
NYC is one of the few places that uses gravity to provide water. It's one of the most environmentally friendly water delivery systems in the U.S. if not the world. It's completely emissions free.
All municipalities use gravity. Just some more than others. NYC does use pumping stations when the hydraulic grade form it's raw reservoirs drop too low.
What are you talking about? Cities using gravity to move water is ubiquitous all over the world. small villages to metropolitan areas....
The Catskill Mountains are much higher in elevation than sea level NYC Area and thus the water runs down hill.