A lifelong mission to run every street of New York City. Not a race. Not a record. Just a journey to understand a place.
New York City has 6,300 miles of streets. Everyone knows the ones near home, the ones near work, the ones that feel safe or fast or familiar. The rest of the grid sits there, unrun, waiting.
The goal was simple: turn left where you'd normally turn right. Then come back tomorrow and do it again.
"New York has 6,300 miles of streets. I've run maybe 20 of them. Not for much longer."
What the map reveals isn't just streets — it's the city's texture. The blocks that feel different at 5am. The neighbourhoods that open up only to people on foot. The New York that doesn't exist unless you run it into existence.
The mission is ongoing. The heat map keeps growing. Every new street is a block of the city that belongs to her now in a way it didn't before.