Remember the Grand Piano mysteriously found on Biscayne Bay sandbar? Ever wonder how it got there in the first place? 16-year-old Nicholas Harrington confessed that it's a Part of a College Application.
The Grand Piano, damaged by fire, belonged to his grandparents, who wanted to get rid of it… so Harrington and his brother hauled it out to the sandbar on a boat. Nicholas Harrington is a junior at Mast Academy in Key Biscayne.
“We did it for the great photo shoot we had,” 16-year-old Nicholas Harrington told ABC News. “I wanted to do something really special, part art, and part” college application. His dream is to get to the New York City art school Cooper Union.
But when nobody noticed, "I kind of forgot about it," he said.
The Grand Piano, damaged by fire, belonged to his grandparents, who wanted to get rid of it… so Harrington and his brother hauled it out to the sandbar on a boat. Nicholas Harrington is a junior at Mast Academy in Key Biscayne.
“We did it for the great photo shoot we had,” 16-year-old Nicholas Harrington told ABC News. “I wanted to do something really special, part art, and part” college application. His dream is to get to the New York City art school Cooper Union.
But when nobody noticed, "I kind of forgot about it," he said.
For 26 days, they kept it a secret but suddenly on Tuesday it took off.
Newspapers splashed the first grainy pictures of it, as if it were the Loch Ness monster.
Source: abcnews.com