Add The New York Post on Google They’re buckling up to return.
Evacuees ordered to stay away from a Midtown high-rise with buckling beams kept trickling back to their hotels and jobs Thursday, although lingering frustrations — and closures — remained.
A trio of Scottish tourists — Lucy McCarron, Collette Miller and Nicole Murrey — were only allowed to return to the Westin Hotel late Wednesday, a day after they learned the building near Grand Central was being evacuated.
The misadventure left them scrambling and $2,000 out of pocket for a new hotel, which they said Westin didn’t pick up.
“We checked in on the seventh of July, and then we stayed for one night and then we had to collect our stuff the next day,” a frustrated Murrey said.
“We had two rooms, and together the two rooms were about $1,100 dollars. One night that we had to pay on Tuesday was probably the price of the whole accommodation for the whole week.”
City officials lifted most street closures near the afflicted former Pfizer building at 235 E. 42nd St. on Wednesday as crews stabilized the shaky structure.
But four surrounding buildings, plus a downstairs restaurant in a nearby edifice, remained under vacate orders.
Even with most restrictions lifted, businesses such as Sandwicherie of New York still grappled with a shutdown hangover.
The East 42nd Street sandwich shop was forced to close Tuesday and had limited hours Wednesday, as only a few people who were on the street hopped inside for a nosh.
During Thursday, the typical morning rush was just a trickle, one worker said.
“We’d have a line outside at 6 in the morning, so this is like nothing,” she said, looking around at a next-to-empty store. “Right now, there should be a line.”
A remaining street closure on East 43rd Street caused problems for a shared Budget and Avis car rental location a block away.
The businesses’ vehicles were parked on the closed street, causing a shortage of rentals.
The Scottish travelers — who planned to go to Nashville starting Saturday — said New Yorkers largely stepped up to help during their ordeal
“Everyone was friendly yesterday. Bus drivers were helpful, friendly,” Miller said, before taking a shot at the hotel, “Except them.”