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Hurricane Sandy: Photos document catastrophe 10 years later

Ten years after Hurricane Sandy unleashed its devastation on New York City and the surrounding region, the images of it💝s wrath remain indelible.

When the monster 900-mile-wide storm just south of Mantoloking, NJ on Oct. 29, 2012, it dealt a catastrophic blow to coastal communities all along the💟 Jersey Shore and Long Island oc🌸eanfront and sent floodwaters coursing far inland.

The superstorm’s rage smashed New Jersey’s iconic Seaside Heights pier into matchsticks and stranded the skeletal remains of the Jet Star roller coaster amid the waves.

A storm-sparked blaze in Breezy Point, Queens burned at least 50 homes to the ground as floods kept firefighters at bay. Staten Island neighborhoods like𝔍 Fox Beach were all but obliterated.

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Water rushes into the Carey Tunnel during Hurricane Sandy in Oct. 29, 2012.
Water rushes into the Carey Tunnel during Hurricane Sandy in Oct. 29, 2012.Getty Images
The Carey Tunnel ten years after the flooding.Helayne Seidman
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People walk near the remains of burned homes after Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 31, 2012 on Breezy Point.
People walk near the remains of burned homes after Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 31, 2012 on Breezy Point.Getty Images
Breezy Point one year after the Hurricane Sandy.
Breezy Point one year after the Hurricane Sandy.Edmund J Coppa
A member of the Army Corps of Engineers walks along Kissam Avenue in the Oakwood Beach area of Staten Island on Nov. 28, 2012.
A member of the Army Corps of Engineers walks along Kissam Avenue in the Oakwood Beach area of Staten Island on Nov. 28, 2012.Chad Rachman/New York Post
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Cattails grow wild on either side of Kissam Ave in 2022.
Cattails grow wild on either side of Kissam Ave in 2022.N.Y.Post/Chad Rachman
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The Brooklyn Battery Tunnel is flooded after a tidal surge on Oct. 30, 2012.Getty Images
The Carey Tunnel (formerly the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel) ten years later.
The Carey Tunnel (formerly the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel) ten years later.Helayne Seidman
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Coney Island ten years later, in Oct. 2022.
Coney Island ten years later, in Oct. 2022.Paul Martinka
Devastation on Coney Island in the days after the hurricane.
Devastation on Coney Island in the days after the hurricane.Paul Martinka
Waves break in front of a destroyed amusement park wrecked by Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 31, 2012.
Waves break in front of a destroyed amusement park wrecked by Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 31, 2012.Getty Images
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Seaside Heights on Oct. 20, 2022.
Seaside Heights on Oct. 20, 2022.AP
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People take photos of water filling the entrance of The Plaza Shops in Battery Park the morning after Hurricane Sandy.
People take photos of water filling the entrance of The Plaza Shops in Battery Park the morning after Hurricane Sandy.AFP via Getty Images
The entrance to One New York Plaza shops near Battery Park a decade later.
The entrance to One New York Plaza shops near Battery Park a decade later.Helayne Seidman
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A man walks into the flood waters on Midland Avenue to look for his brother.
A man walks into the flood waters on Midland Avenue to look for his brother.Chad Rachman/New York Post
Midland Avenue on Staten Island ten years after the devastating storm.
Midland Avenue on Staten Island ten years after the devastating storm.N.Y.Post/Chad Rachman
The Jet Star Roller Coaster, which sat in the ocean after part of the Funtown Pier was destroyed during Superstorm Sandy.
The Jet Star Roller Coaster, which sat in the ocean after part of the Funtown Pier was destroyed during Superstorm Sandy.AP
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The Jet Star roller coaster ten years later, after extensive restoration.
The Jet Star roller coaster ten years later, after extensive restoration.AP
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A 14-foot storm surge in lower Manhattan filled much of the city’s subway system with corrosive ocean water, causing an estimated $5 billion in damage to the MTA’s infrastructure alone.

Fleets of yellow cabs parked in Hoboke🍌n, NJ were flooded up to their windows. Region-wide power outages plunged eight million households i🍬nto darkness for days and even weeks.

The Centers for Disease Control to the storm, 87 of them in and around NYC. Twenty New 🃏Yorkers tragically drowned in their own𝓀 homes.