By Ericka O’Connell, Roosevelt Island Daily
As winter settles in and the days stay short, a burst of color, tradition, and renewal arrives across New York City with the Lunar New Year. While Roosevelt Island may not host a large parade or firecracker ceremony of its own, the celebration still resonates deeply here, woven into the lives of our neighbors, our schools, and our shared city rhythms.
Lunar New Year marks the beginning of the lunar calendar and is celebrated by millions of people across East and Southeast Asia and throughout the diaspora. It is a time centered on family, reflection, gratitude, and hope for the year ahead. For many of our neighbors, it is one of the most meaningful moments of the year.
What Lunar New Year Means
Traditionally, Lunar New Year celebrations include family gatherings, special meals, red envelopes symbolizing good fortune, and rituals meant to sweep away bad luck and welcome prosperity. Each year is associated with an animal from the Chinese zodiac, carrying its own symbolism and energy.
Here in New York City, the holiday becomes a public celebration as well as a personal one. Neighborhoods across Manhattan, Queens, and Brooklyn come alive with lanterns, cultural performances, and community events. For Roosevelt Island residents, these festivities are just a subway stop or tram ride away.
Why It Matters to Roosevelt Island
Roosevelt Island is home to a diverse and international community. Many of our neighbors celebrate Lunar New Year directly, while others experience it through friends, classmates, colleagues, and local businesses. This holiday is a reminder of what makes our island special: we live side by side with people from all over the world, learning from one another simply by sharing space.
Local schools often acknowledge the holiday through lessons, art projects, or classroom conversations, helping younger residents understand its cultural importance. For families on the island, Lunar New Year can be both a link to heritage and an opportunity to share traditions with neighbors.
How Neighbors Can Take Part
You do not need a personal connection to the holiday to participate respectfully and joyfully. Here are a few ways islanders can engage:
- Visit nearby Lunar New Year events throughout the city
- Support Asian-owned small businesses
- Learn about the traditions and history behind the holiday
- Wish neighbors who celebrate a happy and prosperous new year
A Moment for Reflection
Lunar New Year invites all of us to pause. It encourages reflection on where we have been and where we hope to go. On Roosevelt Island, a place shaped by constant change and shared resilience, that message feels especially fitting.
As we move forward together into a new lunar year, may we carry that spirit of renewal, community, and care for one another right here at home.
Rivercross and the Quiet Green Light
Rivercross privatization was enabled in 2010. This matters now because the same governance structures that allowed Rivercross to privatize without formal conflict controls are still in place. The same public authority oversees land leases, settlements, and redevelopment decisions that affect every resident on Roosevelt Island today.





