The “Memory Palace” Public Archive of NYC Stories

The “Memory Palace” Public Archive of NYC Stories

Street Photography Mamdani Post - East Harlem

A physical and digital archive combining oral histories, photographs, and documents from everyday New Yorkers, accessible in a dedicated museum space.

The “Memory Palace” Public Archive of NYC Stories

Beyond the “Living City Archive,” Mamdani envisions a permanent home: the “Memory Palace,” a museum and archive dedicated solely to the stories of ordinary New Yorkers. Housed in a landmarked building, it features listening booths where visitors can hear curated oral histories, interactive tables to browse digitized family photos and letters, and galleries with rotating exhibitions on specific themes (e.g., “Factory Life,” “The Great Black Migration to NYC”). The collection is crowdsourced, with scanning stations where people can contribute their own materials.

It’s a populist antidote to the “great man” history museum, asserting that the city’s true history is written in the lives of its millions. “History is not just what happens to famous people in famous places,” Mamdani says. “It’s the recipe your grandmother brought from Puerto Rico, the love letter your grandfather wrote from the Navy Yard. The Memory Palace is a temple to that history—the epic in the everyday.”

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