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William Helmreich, Sociologist Known For Walking Every Block Of New York City, Dies

AILSA CHANG, HOST:

Hundreds of New Yorkers have died from the coronavirus, including a man who relished walking his hometown streets and talking to its inhabitants.

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WILLIAM HELMREICH: You know what I did? I walked every block in New York City.

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

That is William Helmreich, a sociology professor at the City College of New York. Over the course of four years, Helmreich logged 6,163 miles. He told his local PBS station just last month how.

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HELMREICH: You walk it like you walk a mountain, one step at a time. You do 30 miles a week, 120 miles a month, 1,500 miles a year. Four times 15 is 6,000, and you're there.

CHANG: He wrote about the experience in his 2013 book "The New York Nobody Knows." But he kept walking.

KELLY: In 2015, Joshua Rothman of The New Yorker joined Helmreich for walks around the Bronx. Rothman wrote three things were immediately clear. He loved New York. He loved people, and the people of New York loved him.

CHANG: In a video for The New Yorker, Helmreich describes the city as the greatest outdoor museum.

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HELMREICH: People here come from more than 150 lands. And the great thing is that New Yorkers feel like they're part of a small town, but they're also part of an incredibly big city.

CHANG: He also kept writing, most recently creating walking guides for each borough.

KELLY: Yeah, he wanted New Yorkers to get out and discover their neighborhoods just like he did when he was a kid with his own dad.

William Helmreich - he died Saturday. He was 74.

(SOUNDBITE OF LOWERCASE NOISES' "THE HUNGRY YEARS") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.