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“Normally we’d be doing the jungle gym, but it’s a little bit too hot for that,” said Tamara Ewoldt, as she helped 22 month-old Ousmane cool off at a spray fountain at Samuel N. Bennerson 2nd Playground on West 64th Street and Amsterdam Ave.
DNAinfo/Leslie Albrecht
A woman sunbathes along the Hudson River in Riverside Park, Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Crystal Dunnar, 10, plays in a fountain in St. Nicholas Park in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Rosie O'Donnell and the film crew for "Curb Your Enthusiasm" struggle through 102 degree heat in Central Park, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Della Hasselle
A boy uses a hose to keep cool in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
A baseball game was in full swing, despite the heat in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Jennifer Chu, 18, uses a fan to cool off in Central Park while sitting with sisters Xiaoxian, Caifa and Christine. The foursome hails from the Netherlands.
DNAinfo/Della Hasselle
Water fountains all over the city offered a little relief from the heat.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
A man catches some sun while keeping cool by the Hudson River in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Augustina Comas, 27, catches some sun in Central Park during her visit from Uruguay.
DNAinfo/Della Hasselle
Children cool off in Colonel Charles Young Playground in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Leyla Marks, 2, cools off with an ice pop in Colonel Charles Young Playground in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Mariah Low, 27, and Seth, 6, try to stay cool in the shade in Central Park.
DNAinfo/Della Hasselle
Keeping cool in St. Nicholas Park in Harlem, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Artist Paulo Gomes, 34, visits a steamy Central Park from his home in New Jersey during a summer heat wave.
DNAinfo/Della Hasselle
Tourists braved the heat in Riverside Park, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
"It's hot, hot, hot, but you've got to suck it up," said Wilson Munoz, 55, of Chelsea, who walked with his water cooler to West 4th Street to get some exercise during his lunch break. "You can't let it hold you back."
DNAinfo/Nicole Breskin
Angel Sanchez, 49, stopped at a West 14th Street electronics store to peruse air conditioners. "I have a small one, but I'm considering another," Sanchez said. "A fan just ain't gonna do it."
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Kids cool off in a fountain in Central Park, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Della Hasselle
Fire hydrants sprayed water in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
A West Village crossing guard used a rigged up water hose to cool off Tuesday afternoon.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
A flavored ice vendor does a brisk trade on 145th Street in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Kids lined up to dive into the public pool on Seventh Avenue South and Clarkson Street in the West Village, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Natalie Steiner, 15, and her sister Sarah,12, cool off with fountains and popsicles in Central Park.
DNAinfo/Della Hasselle
Sprinklers offer some relief for kids playing in the Colonel Charles Young Playground in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
A woman creates some shade with her umbrella on 145th Street in Harlem.
DNAinfo/Yepoka Yeebo
Day campers played on a makeshift slip n' slide in Hudson Park during Tuesday's heat wave.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Nancy Velasquez, foreground, and Muneca Sanchez, take in the sun on the beach in Coney Island Sunday.
AP Photo/Tina Fineberg
"My feet are on fire, it's burning hot and I feel like this city is a human sized oven," said Cathy Luc, 13, a tourist from Calgary Canada as she crossed the Brooklyn Bridge with her family.
DNAinfo/Josh Williams
Despite temperatures in the mid-90s, Manhattanites took advantage of Central Park's sprawling lawns on the holiday weekend.
DNAinfo/Jennifer Glickel
The fountain at Washington Square Park was dry even as temperatures soared, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Nicole Breskin
The heat made for a scorching walk across the Brooklyn Bridge, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Josh Williams
Children run and play under the water at J. Hood Wright Park in Washington Heights, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Carla Zanoni
The line outside Tony Dapolito Recreation Center stretched down Seventh Avenue Tuesday, as New Yorkers waited to take a dip in the public swimming pool.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Lydia Mohammed, 48, a greens-keeper for the Union Square Partnership, said the plants were parched Tuesday following the holiday weekend.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Saravuth Inn, 50, drenched himself in the Union Square sprinklers, Tuesday.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Pedicab drivers used towels to shield their heads near Central Park during Tuesday's heat wave.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Day-campers played baseball in Hudson Park Tuesday, despite the sweltering heat.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
Christina Sovanna, 3, cooled off in the sprinklers and then the shade at Union Square during Tuesday's record-breaking heat.
DNAinfo/Olivia Scheck
"I took my sneakers off because it's just too hot to have them on," Demetrice Gumbs, 20, of Brooklyn said while working on Monday selling maps of Central Park in the scorching heat.
DNAinfo/Jennifer Glickel
David and Jennifer Baker, tourists from Pennsylvania, stopped in the Seaport after rollerblading from 110th Street down to Battery Park. Their next stop: Heartland Brewery for a well-deserved beer.
DNAinfo/Julie Shapiro
Jimmy Acevedo, 32, general manager at Blazing Saddles bike rentals in the South Street Seaport, said he would be drinking lots of Gatorade while standing out in the sun all day. So far, he said the heat wasn't keeping customers away.
DNAinfo/Julie Shapiro
Christine Chen, 32, a maintenance worker at the South Street Seaport, predicted that tourists seeking air conditioning would fill the Pier 17 mall.
DNAinfo/Julie Shapiro
Restaurants in the Seaport touted their air conditioning and cold drinks in an effort to lure customers in from Tuesday's scorching heat.
DNAinfo/Julie Shapiro
People sunbathe in Central Park. Temperatures in the city are expected to top 100 degrees Tuesday.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
Kids cooled off in the spray fountain area at Heckscher Playground in Central Park.
DNAinfo/Jennifer Glickel
Angela Tuttle, 40, enjoyed a book on a Central Park bench in the summer heat on Monday. Visiting New York from Texas, Tuttle said that the 96-degree weather in Manhattan was "nothing" in comparison to what she's used to.
DNAinfo/Jennifer Glickel
A child cools off in the East River during a visit to the Brooklyn Bridge Park on Monday as temperatures climbed into the high 90s.
AP Photo/Mary Altaffer
People went shirtless in Central Park on Monday to cope with temperatures in the mid-90s at the end of the holiday weekend.
DNAinfo/Jennifer Glickel
Sanjana Ali, 11, cools off in a water fountain on the Lower East Side on Monday.
AP Photo/Mary Altaffer
“Normally we’d be doing the jungle gym, but it’s a little bit too hot for that,” said Tamara Ewoldt, as she helped 22 month-old Ousmane cool off at a spray fountain at Samuel N. Bennerson 2nd Playground on West 64th Street and Amsterdam Ave.
Photo Credit: DNAinfo/Leslie Albrecht
MANHATTAN — Manhattan residents hit the pools and camped out in front of air conditioners to stay cool on Tuesday as temperatures hit a record-breaking 103 degrees in the city.
By 3 p.m. the temperature had climbed to 103 degrees in Central Park, breaking the daily record set in 1999, but humidity and a lack of breeze made it feel more like 110 degrees, according to AccuWeather.
The National Weather Service issued a heat advisory that will stay in effect until 7 p.m. Wednesday.
"This is horrible. I feel like I'm going to pass out," said Upper West Sider Kim Goldberg, 29, who was stuck on a downtown subway car without air conditioning. "I wish it would
just rain and cool off already."
Officials warned New Yorkers to stay inside and drink plenty of water as the heat wave continued to scorch Manhattan.
Bronx resident Angel Sanchez, 49, was in Union Square looking at air conditioners at an electronics store on 14th Street.
"It's too hot," said Sanchez. "A fan ain't gonna do it."
The city opened cooling centers where people could seek relief from the sweltering temperatures in air-conditioned buildings.
Bibo Hou, 25, said she tried to buy air conditioners at three separate stores without luck.
"All the stores are sold out," the NYU graduate student said. "I'm going to stay in the library to stay cool. My apartment is way too hot."
Con Edison expects power usage to reach an all-time high Tuesday and asked customers to conserve power by keeping air conditioners at 78 degrees, unplugging appliances, keeping lights switched off and waiting until nighttime to run washers, dryers and dishwashers.
The electric company deployed extra crews to respond to problems in the power grid.
"We're going to use more energy in the next couple of days than we've ever used before in New York City," Bob McGee, a spokesman for the utility, told the New York Daily News.
The city's previous power usage record was set on Aug. 2, 2006, when New Yorkers gobbled 13,141 megawatts. The high back then was 97 degrees, according to news reports.
Alexa Colon, 9, cools off in the sprinklers at J. Hood Wright Park in Washington Heights, Tuesday
“That’s not a record we’re hoping to break,” ConEd spokesman John Miksad said Tuesday.
There were 1,500 homes without power in the city as of 12 p.m., but only 37 were located in Manhattan, according to ConEd.
“We do expect isolated outages throughout the week,” Miksad said.
The scorching weather did not dissuade David and Jennifer Baker, tourists from Pennsylvania, from getting their exercise Tuesday morning. The pair rollerbladed down the west side from 110th Street to Battery Park, then they headed up to the Heartland Brewery in South Street Seaport for a beer.
"I'm actually from the South, so this isn't so bad," said David Baker, 48.
Charles Lee, 42, who biked from his home in Long Island to Greenwich Village's West 4th Street courts to play handball, didn't let the heat slow him down.
"I'm from St. Croix originally," he said. "This is nothing. This is cool."
Christine Chen, 32, a maintenance worker at the Seaport, said she expected more tourists than usual to crowd the Pier 17 mall as they sought air conditioning. Wiping sweat from her forehead, she said she would be drinking plenty of water to stay cool.
The oppressive heat is expected to keep the city in its sweaty grip until Thursday, when the high temperature is expected to drop down to 90 degrees.