New York City Mayor Eric Adams joined city officials, community leaders and students this week for a symbolic ceremony to bury a time capsule meant to capture the spirit of the city in 2025. The capsule, which will remain sealed until December 2035, is intended to serve as a future window into one of the most consequential moments in New York’s recent history.
The burial took place in Battery Park, overlooking New York Harbor and the Statue of Liberty, a fitting backdrop for a project that organizers say reflects both the city’s resilience and its aspirations. Adams described the occasion as an opportunity to preserve a snapshot of the city’s people, culture and struggles as well as its triumphs. “We want future New Yorkers to look back at where we were, who we were, and what we valued,” Adams said at the event.
Inside the capsule are items selected to represent New York’s identity in the early twenty first century. Included among the objects are a subway MetroCard, a face mask representing the city’s pandemic experience, a copy of the city’s budget plan for twenty twenty five, photos of key neighborhoods, letters from students around the five boroughs and a USB drive containing digital stories submitted by residents. Officials also placed a model of the new Constellation Ball that will drop during the upcoming New Year’s Eve celebration in Times Square.
The initiative grew out of a suggestion by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, which partnered with local schools and community groups to collect contributions. Students were especially integral to the project, submitting essays and artifacts that the city digitized and preserved alongside physical objects. “This is a historic moment,” said a student representative at the ceremony. “We want people in ten years to know what life was like in New York right now.”
Community advocates praised the project for its inclusivity. Rather than focusing solely on political achievements, the time capsule contains reflections from a diverse range of residents. A selection of items came from low income neighborhoods, immigrant communities and frontline workers who helped the city push through difficult years of recovery.
The capsule was placed in a secure concrete vault, marked with a plaque noting the interment date and the future opening date of December 1, 2035. City officials plan to develop an educational program around the capsule so that school groups and the public can connect with the story of New York in 2025 when the lid is finally lifted. For now, it lies buried, a quiet promise to a future that the city’s residents are still building today.






























































