Posts tagged "Queens"
The New York Times: 
How the Coastline Became a Place to Put the Poor
By Jonathan Mahler Dec 3, 2012
In retrospect, after the storm, it looked like a perverse stroke of urban planning. Many of New York City’s most vulnerable people had been housed in its most vulnerable places: public housing projects along the water, in areas like the Rockaways, Coney Island, Red Hook and Alphabet City.
How is it possible that the same winding, 538-mile coastline that has recently been colonized by condominium developers chasing wealthy New Yorkers, themselves chasing waterfront views, had been, for decades, a catch basin for many of the city’s poorest residents? The answer is a combination of accident, grand vision and political expedience.”
Photo: Meyer Liebowitz/The New York Times

The New York Times: 

How the Coastline Became a Place to Put the Poor

By Jonathan Mahler Dec 3, 2012

In retrospect, after the storm, it looked like a perverse stroke of urban planning. Many of New York City’s most vulnerable people had been housed in its most vulnerable places: public housing projects along the water, in areas like the Rockaways, Coney Island, Red Hook and Alphabet City.

How is it possible that the same winding, 538-mile coastline that has recently been colonized by condominium developers chasing wealthy New Yorkers, themselves chasing waterfront views, had been, for decades, a catch basin for many of the city’s poorest residents? The answer is a combination of accident, grand vision and political expedience.”

Photo: Meyer Liebowitz/The New York Times

“In Queens, An Artistic Alteration
“That’s the screech,” Margie Ruddick explained. She was referring to the No. 7 train. It emitted an ear-splitting sound as we rounded a curve and came to a stop at the Queensboro Plaza subway station.
It wouldn’t be quite accurate to say that Ms. Ruddick, a landscape architect who led the recently completed $45 million makeover of Queens Plaza, spoke of the screech with affection. It was more like she was talking about a crazed relative whose existence one is forced to acknowledge when neighbors hear him barking in the attic.
The screech was but one challenge Ms. Ruddick and her team—including Marpillero Pollak Architects, Judith Heintz of the landscape architecture firm WRT, artist Michael Singer and lighting artist Leni Schwendinger—faced in attempting to transform Queens Plaza from a wasteland of potholed roads, a parking lot and elevated subway tracks into a greenway that would attract businesses and greet pedestrians and motorists arriving in Queens.
Let me put it another way: Imagine an urban-design competition where some higher power with a peculiar sense of humor—that would be the New York City Planning Commission—said, “We’re going to give you a 16-lane roadway so dangerous pedestrians get hit by cars and an elevated subway track that creates so much noise you can’t hear yourself think; now go turn it into a life-affirming oasis.”

Remarkably, they succeeded, doing so by creating a lush strip of green plantings, benches and a two-way bicycle path. The project culminates in a new, 1.5-acre park on the site of the former parking lot. Ms. Ruddick describes the whole thing as a “linear park.” That might be stretching it, no pun intended. Nonetheless, it’s shining proof of the power of enlightened urban planning, talent, taste, trees and other plants and, perhaps most of all, positive thinking to minimize, if not wholly eradicate, the effects of an otherwise hostile environment.”
Via: The Wall Street Journal
Photo: Queens Plaza; Jason Andrew for The Wall Street Journal

In Queens, An Artistic Alteration

“That’s the screech,” Margie Ruddick explained. She was referring to the No. 7 train. It emitted an ear-splitting sound as we rounded a curve and came to a stop at the Queensboro Plaza subway station.

It wouldn’t be quite accurate to say that Ms. Ruddick, a landscape architect who led the recently completed $45 million makeover of Queens Plaza, spoke of the screech with affection. It was more like she was talking about a crazed relative whose existence one is forced to acknowledge when neighbors hear him barking in the attic.

The screech was but one challenge Ms. Ruddick and her team—including Marpillero Pollak Architects, Judith Heintz of the landscape architecture firm WRT, artist Michael Singer and lighting artist Leni Schwendinger—faced in attempting to transform Queens Plaza from a wasteland of potholed roads, a parking lot and elevated subway tracks into a greenway that would attract businesses and greet pedestrians and motorists arriving in Queens.

Let me put it another way: Imagine an urban-design competition where some higher power with a peculiar sense of humor—that would be the New York City Planning Commission—said, “We’re going to give you a 16-lane roadway so dangerous pedestrians get hit by cars and an elevated subway track that creates so much noise you can’t hear yourself think; now go turn it into a life-affirming oasis.”

Remarkably, they succeeded, doing so by creating a lush strip of green plantings, benches and a two-way bicycle path. The project culminates in a new, 1.5-acre park on the site of the former parking lot. Ms. Ruddick describes the whole thing as a “linear park.” That might be stretching it, no pun intended. Nonetheless, it’s shining proof of the power of enlightened urban planning, talent, taste, trees and other plants and, perhaps most of all, positive thinking to minimize, if not wholly eradicate, the effects of an otherwise hostile environment.”

Via: The Wall Street Journal

Photo: Queens Plaza; Jason Andrew for The Wall Street Journal

“Eyes on the Street: Runoff Retention? Sidewalk Extension!
Clarence files these photos of a dual-purpose street reclamation in Queens.
In Woodside at the intersection of 39th Ave and Woodside Avenue they have put in a massive traffic calming/bioswale-ish extension of the sidewalk! It looks like a standard Portland-style bioswale for water runoff.
We have queries in with the city for more information, but as Clarence says, it looks like this is another in a series of joint ventures between multiple agencies — DOT, DEP and Parks — designed to absorb runoff while taming traffic. The initiative is a product of PlaNYC.
Though this one looks mostly complete, says Clarence, “It looks like they haven’t removed the sharrow just yet, which will put you right into a curb.”
Via: Streetsblog
Photo: Clarence Eckerson Jr. 

“Eyes on the Street: Runoff Retention? Sidewalk Extension!

Clarence files these photos of a dual-purpose street reclamation in Queens.

In Woodside at the intersection of 39th Ave and Woodside Avenue they have put in a massive traffic calming/bioswale-ish extension of the sidewalk! It looks like a standard Portland-style bioswale for water runoff.

We have queries in with the city for more information, but as Clarence says, it looks like this is another in a series of joint ventures between multiple agencies — DOT, DEP and Parks — designed to absorb runoff while taming traffic. The initiative is a product of PlaNYC.

Though this one looks mostly complete, says Clarence, “It looks like they haven’t removed the sharrow just yet, which will put you right into a curb.”

Via: Streetsblog

Photo: Clarence Eckerson Jr. 

Architectural + Urban Research

Mass Urban is a multidisciplinary design-research initiative concerned with contemporary cities and urbanism. Mass Urban was co-founded in April 2011 by David Lee and Cliff Lau.

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