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Top NYC selfie spot battered by thousands of daily tourists braces for World Cup: ‘Sheer chaos’

top-nyc-selfie-spot-battered-by-thousands-of-daily-tourists-braces-for-world-cup:-‘sheer-chaos’
Top NYC selfie spot battered by thousands of daily tourists braces for World Cup: ‘Sheer chaos’

An already overrun selfie spot in Brooklyn that’s battered by thousands of tourists a day is about to become even more of a chaotic mess with the World Cup this summer, frantic locals told The Post.

The world-class view of the Manhattan Bridge in trendy DUMBO has drawn busload after busload of visitors to Washington Street daily since the spot went viral as a picture-perfect backdrop a few years ago.

But along with the massive crowds have come hordes of price-gouging aggressive street vendors, smelly trash and rats — and the mayhem is only expected to worsen thanks to the expected 1.2 million FIFA fans set to flood the city, residents said.

People gathered on a cobblestone street with brick buildings on both sides, the Manhattan Bridge visible in the background.

A spot in Downtown Brooklyn provides the perfect selfie backdop for photos with the iconic Manhattan Bridge — and headaches for locals. Michael Nagle

“It will take a catastrophe before anything changes,” lamented local Tara Quinn.

DUMBO’s denizens said they are raising the alarm yet again about the area because of the impending locally held global soccer games — with free watch parties being staged in Brooklyn Bridge Park in June — and America’s 250th birthday celebrations the next month.

“The quality of life has massively deteriorated” already, resident Sheryl Buchholtz said.

“It’s a great community, it’s certainly open to the world,” she said. “But it’s sheer chaos.”

The community — where the median asking monthly rent for a one-bedroom tops $5,200 —has repeatedly called for more security patrols, trash clean-ups and illegal vending crackdowns.

But disgruntled locals said their complaints have fallen on deaf ears — which will only spell out more trouble for the picturesque neighborhood come this summer.

Pedestrians and cars crossing the Brooklyn Bridge with Manhattan buildings in the background.

Thousands of tourists flock to the spot every day. AFP via Getty Images

“It’s not that you shouldn’t come here, it’s that there’s no support for the volume of folks that come here,” resident Jimmy Ng told The Post.

Local city Councilman Lincoln Restler said the Mamdani administration has yet to create any “coordinated planning” to manage the influx of crowds in the “deeply congested neighborhood.

“As a result, it’s been hard on neighborhood residents,’’ he said.

Ng said, “The most comparable thing to us here is Times Square — millions of people from all over the world want to come.’’

But without proper help and enforcement from the city, “it’s only going to get worse.”

Trash complaints in Brooklyn’s Community Board 2, which includes DUMBO, have spiked 136% since 2019.

People taking photos on a street corner with a Sabrett hot dog stand in the foreground.

Tourists take their coveted photos on Washington Street. Michael Nagle

Calls about illegal vending meanwhile jumped a whopping 537%, according to a Post analysis of city data.

Flagrant illegal peddlers will “accost” tourists for souvenir photos and hot dogs, residents said ahead of a neighborhood meeting Monday.

The illicit food vendors also pump generator fumes into narrow streets for hours, leave trash around and pour food waste down street drains, attracting rats and other pests — and become aggressive when confronted by locals, residents said.

“Wrappers, cartons, food: none of that gets picked up,” Ng said. “It’s flies everywhere.”

When there is enforcement — such as monthly NYPD crackdowns on illegal street vendors — they do little good, locals said.

Many of the scofflaws return just a few hours or days later and are easily able to pay fines by charging sky-high prices to tourists, residents said.

A street vending task force that residents petitioned City Hall to create in 2024 never came to fruition, Restler’s office confirmed.

“We have several landmarks here, and we’re an easy target,’’ Quinn said. “There’s no police or security, and emergency vehicles can’t get through.”

FIFA World Cup 2026

The World Cup is expected to flood the city — and the top Brooklyn selfie site — with tourists. Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

Restler said additional police officers are typically brought in from other precincts during the summer months to manage the growing crowd — but there is “often a desire from the community for more police presence.”

Both the nonprofit helping to oversee Brooklyn Bridge Park, and Adidas, will be investing in more security during World Cup events, he said.

“We expect the NYPD, the mayor’s office and Sanitation to scale up their services accordingly,” said Alexandria Sica, president of the DUMBO Business Improvement District, to The Post.

“The BID’s clean team will also be ready to keep the streets looking their best, as we welcome New York’s soccer fans to the neighborhood,” Sica said.

But some locals questioned the BID’s ability to clean up after the expected additional swarms.

“You can’t have four or five people picking up trash for tens of thousands of people,” Ng said.

Restler has drafted legislation mandating the city create a DUMBO tourism plan and prohibit vending on bustling sections of Washington Street where tourists congregate.

“The Adams administration refused to do this,” Restler said. “I’m hopeful that we’ll be successful in bringing together the relevant city agencies to jointly enforce against illegal activity in the neighborhood.”

But the legislation will take months to pass — while in six weeks, the FIFA World Cup kicks off in New Jersey, residents said.

“Things need to improve and improve quickly,” Restler acknowledged to a crowd of constituents last week.

“I know people are frustrated. We have to do better.”

The NYPD and City Hall declined Post requests for comment.

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