NEW YORK — Tourists once again climbed the steps of Manhattan's beehive-shaped Vessel sculpture after it reopened Monday for the first time in three years, now with netting aimed at decreasing the risk of suicides like the ones that forced its closure.
Around 75 visitors had bought tickets and lined up to enter the metallic honeycomb design as it opened Monday morning. Within minutes, they passed through a security checkpoint and buzzed about the stairways and vista platforms, the highest of which is around 150 feet (45 meters).
Flexible netting allowed visitors to stick out their phones, but not their bodies, to capture views of the sculpture's interior and the surrounding cityscape.
''The pictures you can take from downstairs and upstairs, they are so beautiful," said Alexandre Paes, a software engineer from Rio de Janeiro.
This isn't the first time the site has closed and reopened with new safety features. The climbable sculpture's zigzagging stairs drew crowds of tourists when it opened in 2019. It closed after three people died after jumping from the structure, and reopened with security guards and an unusual rule: nobody could visit it alone. Despite those safety measures, another person died in 2021, and it was closed again.
The Vessel reopened Monday with floor-to-ceiling mesh barriers on all the walkable sections, partially obstructing some views, and closing off much of the higher levels from visitors.
The sculpture was designed by Thomas Heatherwick and fabricated in Venice. But its backers were taken off guard by the safety issues.
''We wanted people to come here and have fun,'' said Andy Rosen, COO of Related Companies, which owns Hudson Yards.