Power up your air-conditioners, historic heat is on the horizon in New York City.
A brutal stretch of scorching temperatures begins Tuesday with no immediate relief in sight, with a forecast full of 90-degree days threatening the safety of New Yorkers.
Every day this week is projected to exceed 90 degrees, and that streak could continue into the following week, Fox Weather Meteorologist Amy Freeze told the Daily News.
“I can’t emphasize enough that, yes, it’s supposed to be hot during the summer, but it’s the consecutive 90-degree days that make it really hard for our body to handle,” Freeze said. “If you don’t have air conditioning, you don’t have a lot of time to cool off in the evening hours, because our temperatures don’t drop as dramatically in the summer.”
Eight consecutive days of 90-degree weather or higher would account for one of the 10 hottest stretches in the history of New York City.
The city’s record of 12 consecutive 90-degree days was set during the summer of 1953. The two most recent streaks of at least eight days at 90 degrees in New York both occurred in 2002.
Thursday will likely be the hottest day of the upcoming heat wave with a high of 97, but Friday could feel even hotter without any cloud covering in the forecast, Freeze said.
The high temperatures mixed with the Manhattan humidity figures to cause some sweaty and uncomfortable days in the city.
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“Once we get a heat wave like this, the hardest part for New Yorkers, I think, is always the subways,” Freeze said.
“Some of these platforms are just so incredibly hot in the summer. They have limited ventilation. Even when subway cars have (air conditioning), just waiting for your train can be oppressive, and we’ve seen dangerous situations in the past where people pass out from the heat, heat exhaustion, those kinds of things.”
The sizzling heat is expected to torch the entire tristate area as July temperatures spike everywhere in the United States besides the Pacific Northwest and New Mexico.
Freeze, a six-time Emmy winner who previously worked for New York’s WABC-TV news station, stressed the importance of staying hydrated during the heat wave, and warned that temperatures will still hover around 80 degrees at night during the hot stretch in the five boroughs.
The temperature typically peaks between 1 and 4 p.m., and there isn’t much likelihood for cooling rain in the coming days, Freeze said.
“You really, over the next week, have got to find a way to get access to air conditioning at some point during the day,” Freeze said.
“Whether it’s going to the cooling centers, going to the mall, getting to the movie theater, even adjusting your work schedule so you’re going in and leaving earlier in the afternoon so you don’t have to spend all day outdoors or all day exposed to the temperatures, is really critical.”