When a city park is abandoned and ignored by life’s rushing tide, what does it do? Why, paint its benches in Me Decade shades of neon pinks, oranges and greens, of course. That’s what Thomas Greene Park (or Playground) in Gowanus, Brooklyn has done to draw attention to its underutilized self; a brazen departure from [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Bridge Park, brooklyn-bridge, Business, Gowanus Brooklyn, park, Playground, Recreation, Third Avenue
After more than twenty years of contention, reevaluation and irresolution, Brooklyn Bridge Park has, more or less, finally opened today. While city officials gathered for the ribbon cutting ceremony, on this rain-soaked Monday morning, most of the park has yet to be built…who will foot the bill has yet to be disclosed. The opening introduced [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Brooklyn Bridge Park, East River, mayor-bloomberg, Michael Bloomberg, park, Ribbon cutting ceremony, The New York Times, United States
Now that the cheers have died down, and baseball is stored away in luxurious hibernation, many Bronx residents (along with more rational New Yorkers) are viewing their divinely idolized team a little more critically. When the NY Yankees abandoned the old Yankee Stadium (aka “The House That Ruth Built”) for their new and improved (and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Baseball, Bronx, new york, new york city, New York Yankees, park, Stadium, Yankee Stadium
Top left, a stereoview of the original Oak Bridge, built in the 1860s. Top right, the replacement bridge built in 1935, as seen in 2006. The stone piers and abutments, seen in the photo bottom left, are the only remaining elements from the original bridge. Bottom right, the new bridge, to be dedicated Wednesday. In [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: bridge, Calvert Vaux, Cast iron, central park, Central Park Conservancy, Design, Great Depression, new york, park, Structural Engineering, Technology
Central Park, Hallett Nature Sanctuary, autumn (Joel Meyerowitz) The first photographic study of New York City‘s parks since the 1930s will be on view at the Museum of the City of New York starting October 9th. The massive wall-sized prints will be on view through March 7th, and introduce visitors to parks in all five [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Borough, central park, Joel Meyerowitz, Metro Areas, new york, new york city, park, United States
Updated, 1:02 p.m. | More than 100 trees were toppled and hundreds more were damaged in Central Park during the fierce thunderstorm that moved over New York City on Tuesday night. It was the most severe destruction that the park’s trees had sustained in at least 30 years, according to officials at the city’s Department [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (6) Article tags: central park, City Room, Hurricane Gloria, new york, new york city, nyc, park, United States, Vice president
A tree museum is scheduled to open in the Bronx tomorrow. One hundred trees, stretching 4 ½ miles along Grand Concourse Boulevard, will be marked with signs that will include phone numbers/ codes linked to short recordings of people talking about the Bronx, their lives and work. Tree No. 39, a honey locust at Marcy [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art deco, Arts, Boyd, Bronx, Concourse Boulevard, Course Boulevard, cross bronx expressway, edgar allan poe, George Clooney, Grand, grand concourse, honey, honey locust, Jose, Katie Holten, literature, Lloyd Ultan, locust, Loew, London, london plane tree, manhattan, Marcy Place, museum, north Bronx, park, percussion group, phone, poe park, Rosemary Clooney, Street, tomorrow, tree, work, World Literature
“[The] Public Works of Art Project (PWAP), which in roughly the first four months of 1934 hired 3,749 artists and produced 15,663 paintings, murals, prints, crafts and sculptures for government buildings around the country. The bureaucracy may not have been watching too closely what the artists painted, but it certainly was counting how much and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Mural, National park, New Deal, park, Public Works of Art Project, Smithsonian, Visual Arts
Visitors to the Statue of Liberty will, once again, be allowed to view New York City from its crown this coming July 4. The statue and Liberty Island itself (where Lady Liberty is situated) were closed to the public immediately following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. While the island along with the statue’s base and pedestal [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Lady Liberty, National Park Service, new york city, park, Park ranger, September 11 attacks, Stairway, statue of liberty, United States, War on Terrorism, Warfare and Conflict
America never seems to find the time and money to give proper attention to its lesser-known memorials. While famous locales and attractions such as Gettysburg and the numerous monuments in Washington, D.C. receive the lion’s share of federal funding and diligence (these are, of course, tourist spots), the less popularly frequented/ less attractively situated sites [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: 20th century, brooklyn, Brooklyn Navy Yard, commemoration, historic, HMS Jersey, monument, park, Prison Ship Martyrs Monument, Stanford White, Washington DC, Wikipedia
Brooklyn Bridge Park has been one of this city’s premiere and apparently endless works-in-progress. Years of interminable delays, legal hocus-pocus and false starts have turned an initially appealing project into an utter travesty; yet another pork barrel aspirant on the city’s growing list of purposeless snafus. But good news (insofar as good news goes these [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Brooklyn Bridge Park, brooklyn-bridge, construction, economy, entertainment, Julius Caesar, park, Pier 1 Imports, Pork barrel, Rome, Second Triumvirate
J. J. Byrne is a long-dead, long-forgotten Brooklyn borough president whose most notable achievement is the park that bears his name (or formerly bore his name). Since 1933, a three-acre patch of green at Fourth and Fifth avenues, between Third and Fifth streets, in Park Slope was called J. J. Byrne Park to honor his [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Battle of Long Island, brooklyn, historic, Long Island, manhattan, new york, Old Stone House, park, Park Slope Brooklyn, politics, United States, Washington Park