The Cold Tour
Surveillance, Propaganda & Control in Midtown Manhattan
A winter walk through Midtown Manhattan examining how systems of surveillance, information control, and public messaging shaped everyday life in the twentieth century.
In From the Cold
The route includes moments of shelter — including covered entrances and indoor spaces where possible — to make the tour more comfortable in winter conditions.
Why This Tour?
Midtown Manhattan is often understood as New York’s most public space, defined by its visibility and commercial energy.
But throughout the twentieth century, and especially during the Cold War, it was also a place where surveillance and information control operated quietly, shaping public life in ways most people never noticed.
This tour examines how power moved through everyday spaces, including recording studios, porn theaters, libraries, hotels, office buildings, and transit hubs.
What You’ll Discover
John Lennon Under Watch
How a world-famous musician found his work and his life intersecting with federal surveillance in Midtown Manhattan.
Policing and Public Morality
How one Midtown block became a testing ground for regulation, enforcement, and the control of public behavior.
Espionage in Plain Sight
How a familiar civic space became the setting for a long-running intelligence betrayal.
Fear and Public Spectacle
How a transportation landmark reflected national anxiety and official reassurance during a tense political era.
Diplomacy and Influence
How luxury interiors became settings for political tension, control, and behind-the-scenes influence.
Tour Details
Meeting point: The Record Plant (now The Plant – Sony) 321 W 44th St, New York, NY 10036
Endpoint: Rockefeller Center
Tour length: 80 minutes
Distance covered: 1.5 miles

