NEW YORK — The Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree arrived in New York City on Saturday, signaling the start of the holiday season in the Big Apple. The 74-foot Norway spruce was driven into Manhattan’s Center Plaza to be hoisted in place by a crane. It was met in New York City by smiling crowds who held cellphones aloft from behind barriers as crews attached cables to the giant tree, pounded a stake into its base and guided it into place.
The lighting ceremony is scheduled for Dec. 4. It will take 5 miles of light strands with more than 50,000 multicolored LED bulbs to wrap the tree, whose diameter measures 43 feet.
A Swarovski star crown sparkling with 3 million crystals will top it. When it finally comes down in January, the tree will be milled into lumber for Habitat for Humanity. The towering conifer, donated by the Albert family in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts, was cut down Thursday morning and loaded onto a flatbed truck for the 140-mile trip.
It is the first Rockefeller Center Christmas tree to come from Massachusetts since 1959. “The crowds were big today. They were one of the biggest crowds I’ve ever seen that come to a tree raising,” said Erik Pauze, head gardener at Rockefeller Center, who wore a candy cane-striped hard hat.
Once in its new home, the adjustments began to get it ready for the elaborate tree-trimming to come. “We stood it up, and now we’re going to lower some of the branches down by hand, because they’re so heavy and so big that we .