Real Estate

Inside the New York Met’s Bark at the Park at Citi Field

Charles Kadish and Hershey (pictured above)
Commercial-real-estate investor, Old Westbury

Best Citi Field memory?
The Mets were playing in Milwaukee for the playoffs last year, and they hosted a watch party at Citi Field. It didn’t look like the Mets were going to win, and my son was crying. I said to him, “It’s okay if they don’t make it. This is what it means to be a Mets fan.” And then Pete Alonso hit the go-ahead home run and his tears of sadness turned into tears of joy. And I said, “This is also what it means to be a Mets fan.”

Is Hershey a fan too?
The highs and lows of being a Mets fan — these are things that Hershey will never know. Hershey just knows hot dogs. She doesn’t have a rambunctious bone in her body.

AJ Levine, Mac, and Gorda

Preschooler, West Hempstead

Paul Bauer and Tim

Accountant, Cornwall-on-Hudson

Adi Halevi and Palma

Lawyer, Midtown East

Michael and Stacy Reyes and Astro

Student and pediatric nurse, Holbrook

Elizabeth Jebran and Madame Secretary

Creative-operations director, Manhattan Valley

Tell me about Madame Secretary.

Technically, she’s a foster. I foster older dachshunds until their end of life. So I’ve had her for about a year and a half, and I’ve tried to take her on special outings so that she has days that are dedicated to her. This event has been on my list. She’s having a ball. She made best friends with Mrs. Met.

Greg Ewald and Maxx

Personal trainer, Wantagh

Stephanie Ramirez and Zeus

Executive coordinator, Astoria

Shayla, Deanna, and Xander Ward and Izzy

Account director and broker, Fairfield, Connecticut

Do you bring Izzy into the city often?

Deanna: This is one of our first times, actually. She’s three years old. The first year we had her, we just kind of chilled. The second year, we had our baby. So this year, we’re like, “Baby and dog, we’re going out.”

Jen Zhagui and Georgie

Human-resources associate, Jackson Heights

Kita Trinidad and Rosie

Sales manager, Pelham Bay

James Oliver and Pixie

Elevator mechanic, Westchester

What’s something most people don’t know about elevators?

There’s a reference number on every single elevator in the city — the lower the number, the older the elevator. All the new elevators have six or seven digits. The lowest number I’ve seen has three digits, meaning it was around the 100th elevator in the city after they started giving elevators ID numbers in the late 1920s. I’ve heard that there are still single-digit elevators, but I’ve never seen one. It’s like looking for a white whale.

Kayla Rivera and Rocket

Baker, Hackensack, New Jersey

Andrew Sullivan and Goose

Freelance content creator, Massapequa Park

Jordan Cohen, Christine Silikowski, and Hudson

Financial adviser and sales-strategy manager, UES

Hudson is quite a big boy.

Jordan: He’s a celebrity in the neighborhood. He thinks he runs Central Park. People call him the King of 89th Street.

Jane Jun and Chanel

Pharmacist, Wyckoff, New Jersey

Osal Jyana and Kohi

Accountant, Astoria

Marcelo Razzo and Cowboy Woody

Detective, Rego Park

Does Cowboy Woody travel in that carrier a lot?

He does, and he has a passport. It allows me to take him into the European Union. He goes underneath the seat, and he stays there for nine hours — doesn’t bark, just goes straight to sleep. But I get no sleep because I’m always trying to be attentive to make sure that his needs are being taken care of.

Leslie Guzman, Kevin Juárez, Massimo, and Maya

Teacher and ironworker, Sunnyside

Photographs by Frankie Alduino

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