Connect with us

New York

How Hudson River Park Helped Revitalize Manhattan’s West Side

Published

on

How Hudson River Park Helped Revitalize Manhattan’s West Side

Twelve hundred tons of sand arrived last month in Hudson River Park, the sliver of green space on the western edge of Manhattan, and it took only a quarter-century to get there.

In 1998, when Gov. George E. Pataki signed the law authorizing the creation of the park, he vowed it would have a beach. Now, on the 25th anniversary of the Hudson River Park Act — which turned a strip of dilapidated warehouses and rotting piers along the city’s mightiest river into a sprawling park network — West Siders will finally get to wriggle their toes in the sand.

The beach is part of a larger effort to complete the park and knit together its disparate sections, which have been developed in bits and pieces over the years. The newest projects expected to open soon are Gansevoort Peninsula, a recreational area off Gansevoort Street that includes the beach as part of a $73 million overhaul, and Pier 97, a $47 million project off 57th Street that will have a big playground.

The largest park built in Manhattan since Central Park, Hudson River Park draws 17 million visits a year and has helped spur real estate development on the West Side. Developers have poured billions of dollars into transforming neighborhoods along the park, a former industrial area, attracting companies like IAC, a digital media firm, and Google, and legions of residents to the shiny new towers that face the river.

“It’s like they said: ‘Build the park and development will follow,’” said Robert Freudenberg, a vice president at the Regional Plan Association, a nonprofit.

Advertisement

Hudson River Park came about to solve a problem: what to do with a moribund waterfront after industry and commerce had left.

The western shore of Manhattan below 59th Street was the teeming center of New York’s maritime economy at the turn of the 20th century. Ships brought goods from all over the world and carried away products from the city’s factories. Immigrants and visitors streamed through a passenger terminal on Pier 97.

But much of that activity was gone by the 1970s, after the decline of manufacturing and changes in transportation methods. The abandoned piers and warehouses drew sunbathers, artists and members of the L.G.B.T.Q. community. But the collapse of a section of the elevated West Side Highway, which ran parallel to the river, drew attention to the seediness of the waterfront area, which was highlighted in the opening scenes of the 1976 movie “Taxi Driver.”

A plan emerged in the 1980s and 1990s to refurbish many of the piers as park spaces, allow commercial enterprise on others, and build an esplanade and bike path stringing them all together. The city and state would fund capital improvements, and the commercial piers would provide revenue for operations and maintenance of the 550-acre park, which stretches from Chambers Street in TriBeCa to West 59th Street in Hell’s Kitchen.

The first green space, Pier 45 off Christopher Street in the West Village, opened in 2003. Other piers took longer to transform. City agencies had set up operations on some and were slow to budge, and there were structural problems with others — the deteriorating wooden piles under them had to be replaced with concrete.

Advertisement

Funding issues also slowed progress: When the economy took a turn for the worse, as it did with the financial crisis of 2008, cash dried up.

But with derelict buildings on the waterfront cleared and the West Side Highway rebuilt at ground level — and the river finally in view — inland properties became more desirable.

A pair of condominium towers facing the water at Perry Street in the West Village — designed by Richard Meier and gleaming amid the brick walk-ups and cinder-block warehouses — was one of the first signs that change was afoot.

“That really stood out,” said Connie Fishman, the executive director of a fund-raising partner to the Hudson River Park Trust, the public corporation that develops and runs the park.

In 2008, the Regional Plan Association documented how the West Village portion of the park was spurring property sales, corroborating other studies on how parks add value to neighborhoods. Beyond their intrinsic recreational and environmental benefits, parks also play an economic role by increasing the worth of adjacent real estate.

Advertisement

By 2016, the neighborhoods along the park led Manhattan in development — their growth in built square footage from 2000 to 2014 represented more than a quarter of all new development in the borough.

Zoning changes on the West Side allowing for residences and taller buildings also stimulated development, as did the High Line, the landscaped former rail line, which attracts droves of strolling tourists and spawned luxury buildings alongside it.

A parade of striking buildings by top architects sprang up facing Hudson River Park. The entertainment mogul Barry Diller hired Frank Gehry to design the headquarters for IAC with a facade of white glass bowed to evoke a ship’s sails. “I wanted to be near the water,” Mr. Diller said.

A condominium by Jean Nouvel with irregularly sized windows slanted every which way rose directly north of IAC. And the Durst Organization hired Bjarke Ingels to fashion an apartment building shaped like a pyramid to maximize river views.

The Whitney Museum of American Art, a staple of the Upper East Side, moved to a battleship-colored building designed by Renzo Piano on a site opposite Gansevoort Peninsula. The museum worked with the park’s trust to place alongside the peninsula a monumental sculpture by David Hammons that traces the outline of the pier shed that once stood on the spot.

Advertisement

“When we started looking at the site around 2007, it still felt like an industrial neighborhood,” said Adam D. Weinberg, the Whitney’s director. “There were the nightclubs, a handful of meatpackers left.”

Now, two blocks away is Little Island, a mini park that rests on tulip-shaped concrete pots planted on the site of another old pier. It was paid for by a foundation started by Mr. Diller and his wife, the fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg.

“There’s Hudson River Park, then us, then the High Line,” Mr. Weinberg said. “It feels like a crossroads now.”

As new structures went up, old ones were renovated. Pier 57, an engineering marvel from the 1950s at West 15th Street that is on the National Register of Historic Places, has a new food hall and Google offices. Since the food hall opened in April, pedestrian crossings into the park have more than doubled, according to MRI Springboard data gathered for the Meatpacking District Management Association, the neighborhood’s business improvement district.

The park and inland real estate were further entwined when the sale of unused development rights from the commercial piers was allowed. Air rights from Pier 40 off West Houston Street enabled floors to be added atop a 1934 freight terminal building that has been turned into more Google offices.

Advertisement

When Pier 97 and Gansevoort Peninsula open, the public portions of the park will be 95 percent complete, said Noreen Doyle, president and chief executive of the park’s trust. The latest projects “really catapult us forward,” she added.

For Pier 97, !melk, a design firm, used a lightweight construction material called geofoam to vary the topography of the nearly two-acre pier, creating a lawn that rises to an angular shade structure on its north side. The landscape architects also laid out winding paths, filled planters with catmint and other saltwater-tolerant species, and designed a polished-granite slide wide enough for a whole family.

“The community wanted something cool,” said Jerry van Eyck, the firm’s founder and principal.

Field Operations, the landscape architecture firm that reimagined the 5 ½-acre Gansevoort Peninsula, also added a sizable soccer field in addition to a dog run, picnic tables and roomy chaises.

“We were trying to pack in a variety of experiences,” said Lisa Switkin, a partner at Field Operations.

Advertisement

Beyond a pine grove with a boardwalk running through it, the beach occupies much of the southern side of the peninsula. Filled with 35 truckloads of buff-colored sand from a quarry near Cape May, N.J., it is dotted with blue umbrellas, Adirondack-style chairs and river birches. Logs are scattered about as if a mighty wave had washed massive pieces of driftwood ashore.

Ms. Switkin kicked off her shoes on a recent tour. “It feels great,” she said, swiveling in the sand.

Points of interest in the park

1) Pier 97: The pier will have a large playground, an all-ages slide and a sloping lawn.

2) Chelsea Piers: The first revenue-producing commercial area in the park. It opened in 1995.

Advertisement

3) Pier 57: A historic landmark that was recently renovated. It now houses Google offices and a food hall.

4) Little Island: A mini park supported by tulip-shaped concrete pots that opened in 2021 with funding from a foundation started by Barry Diller and Diane von Furstenberg.

5) Gansevoort Peninsula: A new area that will have a public sand beach.

6) Pier 45: Opened in 2003, it was the first pier in the park to be renovated as green space.

Buildings along the West Side Highway

Advertisement

7) St. John’s Terminal, 550 Washington Street: Purchased by Google in 2021, it is part of the tech giant’s campus.

8) 173 and 176 Perry Street: Twin condo towers designed by Richard Meier that opened in 2002.

9) Whitney Museum of American Art, 99 Gansevoort Street: The new home of the museum, designed by Renzo Piano.

10) IAC Building, 555 West 18th Street: The headquarters of IAC, a digital media company, designed by Frank Gehry.

11) Jacob K. Javits Convention Center: The structure was constructed from 1980 to 1986 and named to honor the U. S. senator from New York.

Advertisement

12) VIA 57 West Apartments, 625 West 57 Street: Shaped like a pyramid, this residential building was designed by Bjarke Ingels Group, a Danish firm.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

New York

Rudy Giuliani, Slow to Transfer Assets to Election Workers, Could Be Held in Contempt

Published

on

Rudy Giuliani, Slow to Transfer Assets to Election Workers, Could Be Held in Contempt

Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former mayor of New York, was grilled for hours in federal court on Friday after missing several deadlines to hand over $11 million of his prized possessions to two poll workers he defamed after the 2020 election.

Mr. Giuliani avoided, for now, being held in contempt of court — a charge he has been threatened with at various times during the case and that could include jail time.

But for most of his time on the stand, Mr. Giuliani frustrated the judge and the plaintiffs’ lawyers with a spotty memory and vague answers that slowed to a crawl proceedings that were already bogged down in minutiae.

For much of the seven-hour hearing, lawyers on both sides were preoccupied with the question: Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?

One of the central items of Mr. Giuliani’s collection of sports memorabilia is a jersey signed by Mr. DiMaggio, the Yankees legend, that hung over the former mayor’s fireplace. On Friday, Mr. Giuliani said he had no idea where it was.

Advertisement

That was not the only missing Yankees great.

“There is no Reggie Jackson picture,” Mr. Giuliani said, referring to the right-fielder known as Mr. October. He had previously said in court documents that the picture would be handed over to the plaintiffs. But now, the photo didn’t exist, according to Mr. Giuliani. “The picture was Derek Jeter,” he said. “I was kind of confused about it.”

The judge, Lewis J. Liman, appeared skeptical of Mr. Giuliani’s puzzlement, noting that such a rare collectible, especially for an avowed Yankees fan, would be top of mind.

“I’m sorry,” Mr. Giuliani said in response to questions about the collectibles, and a number of other items that were expected to be found in his New York apartment. “When I looked, this is what I found.”

At the heart of the contempt charges he continues to face is whether Mr. Giuliani, 80, has been uncooperative with the handover of his personal assets, which will serve as a small down payment on the $148 million defamation judgment that he owes the plaintiffs, Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Shaye Moss. Mr. Giuliani said, repeatedly and without evidence, that the women helped steal the presidential election from Donald J. Trump more than four years ago.

Advertisement

The assets include a 10-room apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan; a 1980 Mercedes-Benz convertible; a collection of 26 designer watches; and rare Yankees collectibles, the most valuable of which might be the signed and framed DiMaggio jersey.

More than two months after a federal court judge ordered Mr. Giuliani to hand over the items, the former mayor and his lawyers contend that he has tried to comply fully, but that the process has been onerous.

“Mr. Giuliani is an 80-year-old man who has been hit by a whirlwind of discovery,” said Joseph M. Cammarata, Mr. Giuliani’s lawyer, who specialized in divorce cases before joining the defense team. Mr. Giuliani is also facing civil and criminal charges in other cases, stemming from his time as Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer.

In roughly three hours on the stand on Friday, Mr. Giuliani repeatedly responded that he could not remember details about his personal items or their whereabouts.

While pressing Mr. Giuliani, Meryl Governski, one of the lawyers for the plaintiffs, turned her attention to a checking account subject to the seizure.

Advertisement

“Where does it say that you turned over the cash?” she asked Mr. Giuliani, pointing out an omission in a recent letter he wrote to the court.

Mr. Giuliani, flipping through a bulky binder of materials, appeared flustered. “Are we talking about the Mercedes now?” he said.

As the hearing dragged on, lawyers on both sides seemed to test Judge Liman’s patience. After a long series of objections by Mr. Cammarata, nearly all of them overruled, Judge Liman chastised the defense.

“If you have one more speaking objection, sir, you’re going to have to sit down,” he said. “You know the rules.”

On Thursday, Mr. Giuliani’s lawyer asked if his client could appear virtually, because of medical issues related to his left knee, as well as breathing problems attributed to Mr. Giuliani’s time spent at the World Trade Center after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Advertisement

But Judge Liman, who had a testy exchange with Mr. Giuliani about the case in November, said he would not accept Mr. Giuliani’s testimony unless he attended in person. So the former mayor, in a dark blue suit and glasses, walked into the 15th floor courtroom on Friday with a visible limp and a dry cough.

The transfer was originally scheduled to take place in late October. But one deadline after another has passed, and lawyers for the women said they have received only a fraction of the property.

The women have yet to receive legal possession of Mr. Giuliani’s apartment, once listed for over $6 million, in part because paperwork has not been updated since his divorce from his ex-wife Judith Giuliani, according to court filings. The title to Mr. Giuliani’s convertible, which he said was once owned by Lauren Bacall, has yet to be transferred.

But Mr. Giuliani raised eyebrows on Election Day, when he appeared in the passenger seat of the same convertible, more than a week after the initial turnover deadline. On Friday, he said he has requested a copy of the title to the car three times, but has yet to receive it.

In November, Mr. Giuliani’s original lawyers withdrew from the case, citing an undisclosed professional ethics reason.

Advertisement

In a recently unsealed letter explaining their departure, one of the lawyers, Kenneth Caruso, a longtime friend of Mr. Giuliani, said his client was not cooperating in the discovery process related to a condominium he owns in Palm Beach, Fla., and was withholding access to his electronic devices.

The judge will determine on Monday whether Mr. Giuliani was uncooperative during the discovery process. A separate hearing will be held to discuss his turnover efforts.

Later this month, Mr. Giuliani also faces the possibility of contempt charges in a Washington, D.C., court, where he has been accused of continuing to publicly make false claims about the two Georgia poll workers.

On Jan. 16, Mr. Giuliani is expected back in court to argue that his Palm Beach condo, as well as three personalized Yankees World Series rings, should be excluded from the handover.

Outside the courthouse, at a prepared mic stand, Mr. Giuliani, who typically appeared energized and combative, demurred.

Advertisement

“It would be inappropriate and unwise to say a darn thing about this case right now,” he said.

Continue Reading

New York

9 Plays to Warm Up Winter in New York

Published

on

9 Plays to Warm Up Winter in New York

In New York, Broadway hits its winter lull in January, as Off Broadway and beyond burst into activity. If most of the tourists have gone home after the holidays, many of the visiting theater artists have arrived from all over, for the annual festivals that draw a tantalizing breadth of new work.

The venerable Under the Radar festival (Saturday through Jan. 19), now in its post-Public Theater era, is blossoming lushly again, with some of the city’s major companies participating. The Prototype Festival (Thursday through Jan. 19) has a full menu of interdisciplinary opera, while the Exponential Festival (through Feb. 2) centers local emerging experimental theater makers. There’s also the International Fringe Encore Series (through March 16), whose lineup includes “Gwyneth Goes Skiing,” one of two Gwyneth Paltrow-focused shows at last year’s Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

It’s a bountiful month, on festival stages and elsewhere. Here are nine shows worth keeping in mind.

In this hourlong play by the Iranian writer-director Amir Reza Koohestani, a political prisoner in Tehran asks her husband to help a young woman, who was blinded in a protest, to run a marathon in Paris. The more dangerous race is the one they undertake from there: trying to cross the English Channel through the tunnel without being hit by a train. A two-hander performed in Persian with English supertitles, and presented with Arian Moayed’s company, Waterwell, it’s about surveillance, oppression and the insistent pursuit of freedom. The critic Michael Billington called it “mesmerizing.” Part of Under the Radar. (Saturday through Jan. 24, St. Ann’s Warehouse)

The Canadian puppet artist Ronnie Burkett is a marvel to watch, manipulating populous casts of marionettes all on his own. Too seldom seen in New York, he arrives this month for a brief run of his new play, which landed on The Globe and Mail’s top-10 list of 2024 shows. The story is about an old man, Joe, and his aged dog, Mister, who lose their home to gentrification and hit the streets, approaching misfortune as adventure. This is not puppetry for little ones, though; audience members must be 16 or older. Part of Under the Radar. (Tuesday through Jan. 12, Lincoln Center)

Advertisement

The company Wakka Wakka (“The Immortal Jellyfish Girl”) descends into the underworld with this sparkling puppet piece about a pair of skeletons: a dodo and a boy. Their ancient bones are in the process of disintegrating. Then, out of nowhere, the bird grows a new bone, sprouts fresh feathers — and is apparently not dead as a dodo after all. Directed by Gwendolyn Warnock and Kirjan Waage, who wrote it with the ensemble, this show is recommended for ages 7 and up. But be warned: Wakka Wakka does not shy from darkness. Part of Under the Radar. (Wednesday through Feb. 9, Baruch Performing Arts Center)

American history and politics are Robert Schenkkan’s dramatic bailiwick. He won a Pulitzer Prize for “The Kentucky Cycle” and a Tony Award for “All the Way.” And Brian Cox starred as Lyndon B. Johnson in Schenkkan’s most recent Broadway production, “The Great Society.” For this satire, though, the playwright teams up with the Portuguese company Mala Voadora and the director Jorge Andrade to tell a distinctly Portuguese story, pitting the rooster that is a symbol of that country against António de Oliveira Salazar, the dictator who ruled it for decades. Part of Under the Radar. (Wednesday through Jan. 19, 59E59 Theaters)

Eliya Smith, a master of fine arts candidate at the University of Texas at Austin whose previous forays into New York theater include the intriguingly strange, fragmented elegy “Deadclass, Ohio,” makes her Off Broadway playwriting debut with this world premiere. Directed by the Obie Award winner Les Waters (“Dana H.”), it’s about a group of teenagers in a summer cabin in Hurt, Va., confronting loss. And, yes, even this camp has a resident guitarist. (Thursday through Feb. 16, Atlantic Theater Company)

The experimental company Target Margin Theater does not pussyfoot when it comes to re-examining canonical classics. Adapted and directed by David Herskovits, this interpretation of “Show Boat” aims to reframe the Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II musical from 1927, about the entertainers and others aboard a riverboat on the Mississippi in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Groundbreaking in its time for its themes, including racism and interracial marriage, “Show Boat” has long been accused of being racist itself. The content advisory warns: “The production includes racially offensive language and incidents.” Part of Under the Radar. (Thursday through Jan. 26, N.Y.U. Skirball)

The Golan Heights-based writer-performer Khawla Ibraheem plays a Gazan woman rehearsing what she will do if she hears a low-level warning bomb — a “knock on the roof” by the Israeli military — which would mean she had only minutes to evacuate her home before an airstrike escalated. Directed by the Obie winner Oliver Butler (“What the Constitution Means to Me”), who developed the play with Ibraheem, it won awards at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this summer. Part of Under the Radar, this production moves to the Royal Court Theater in London in February. (Jan. 10 through Feb. 16, New York Theater Workshop)

Advertisement

Jordan Harrison’s new play imagines a history of the Late Human Age as told by the “nonorganic beings” who will succeed us. Starting on the night in 1816 when Mary Shelley told her ghost story, it hops through time to 2240. Building on themes Harrison contemplated in “Marjorie Prime,” it’s about what it is to be human, and whether we’ve sown the seeds of our destruction. Produced with the Vineyard Theater in New York and the Goodman Theater in Chicago, where it is slated to run this spring. David Cromer and Caitlin Sullivan direct. (Jan. 11 through Feb. 23, Playwrights Horizons)

The writer-director Matthew Gasda, who first gained traction a few years back with his scenester play “Dimes Square,” now stages an adaptation of Chekhov’s “Uncle Vanya,” created with its actors over the past year. Bob Laine, a star of “Dimes Square” (which makes a fleeting return this month), plays the title role in “Vanya,” opposite fellow “Dimes Square” cast member Asli Mumtas as Vanya’s longed-for love interest, Yelena. (Jan. 14 through Feb. 4, Brooklyn Center for Theater Research)

Continue Reading

New York

Video: Adams’s Former Chief Adviser and Her Son Charged With Corruption

Published

on

Video: Adams’s Former Chief Adviser and Her Son Charged With Corruption

new video loaded: Adams’s Former Chief Adviser and Her Son Charged With Corruption

transcript

transcript

Adams’s Former Chief Adviser and Her Son Charged With Corruption

Ingrid Lewis-Martin, who resigned as Mayor Eric Adams’s chief adviser, and her son, Glenn D. Martin II, were charged with taking $100,000 in bribes from two businessmen in a quid-pro-quo scheme.

We allege that Ingrid Lewis-Martin engaged in a long-running bribery, money laundering and conspiracy scheme by using her position and authority as the chief adviser of — chief adviser to the New York City mayor, the second-highest position in city government — to illegally influence city decisions in exchange for in excess of $100,000 in cash and other benefits for herself and her son, Glenn Martin II. We allege that real estate developers and business owners Raizada “Pinky” Vaid and Mayank Dwivedi paid for access and influence to the tune more than $100,000. Lewis-Martin acted as an on-call consultant for Vaid and Dwivedi, serving at their pleasure to resolve whatever issues they had with D.O.B. on their construction projects, and she did so without regard for security considerations and with utter and complete disregard for D.O.B.’s expertise and the public servants who work there.

Advertisement

Recent episodes in New York

Continue Reading

Trending