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New Yorkers in awe of storm’s power

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(MCT) — NEW YORK — Fallen trees blocked winding Greenwich Village streets normally jammed with tourists and taxis. Muddy sandbags squished against empty high-rises in the Financial District. The façade of a building had ripped off in Chelsea, leaving apartments bare to camera-toting crowds on the street.

For a change, it wasn’t just out-of-towners wandering slack-jawed at the sights of Manhattan. Facing a massive cleanup from Sandy’s devastation Tuesday, New Yorkers were a state of disbelief as they realized that America’s largest city, for all its museums and Broadway shows, its noisy subways and neon-lit squares, was no match for a super storm.

“The weirdest thing is going from being totally plugged in to being totally incommunicado,” said Carlos Cucurella, as he described the second when his world — and that of more than a quarter-million other residents of Lower Manhattan — went dark when the storm suddenly walloped the city at about 8:30 p.m. EDT Monday.

Cucurella had been in his West Village apartment watching coverage of Sandy on TV, while following Facebook and Twitter updates and swapping text messages with friends.

Then a transformer exploded at a midtown Con Edison electrical substation. His six-story building and hundreds of others lost power. In an instant, much of Manhattan’s brilliant skyline became a gloomy shadow against the night sky.

Over the next 30 minutes, as a moon-driven high tide surged in at record levels, and the storm pushed the Atlantic Ocean sloshing into New York Harbor, rivers of cold gray water suddenly ran 3 feet deep on some city streets.

That’s when Grace Martinez looked out her 3rd-floor window on the Lower East Side and saw something she’d never seen before: cars floating down Avenue C.

Upstairs, her neighbor, Luzdelia Cruz, got a call from her sister. “There’s a guy going by in a Jet-Ski,” she told Cruz.

Just as quickly, the flood began to recede. By 1 a.m. Tuesday, it was over.

Only it wasn’t. The city used as a location for countless Hollywood disaster movies suddenly looked like the real thing, complete with the sound track of wailing sirens.

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