I have hazy memories of seeing some sort of rendering of the ginormous housing developments which now span Houston St - 2nd St. It was around 2000, and in some sort of document I stumbled across in the the Cooper Union library. According to this article, a plan had been in the work for decades, so the information I found could have been much older than what was being proposed at the time (which got built).
Memorable quotes from the NY Times article "At Cooper Square, a New Player Takes the Stage":
"TWENTY years ago -- or 30 or 40 for that matter -- the Cooper Square Committee would have scorned the redevelopment plan for three acres of urban renewal land off East Houston Street that a community task force worked out with the Giuliani administration a year ago. The committee is a nonprofit community development organization that formed four decades ago to resist the redevelopment plans of Robert Moses in the neighborhood."
---------The "suburbanization" of New York maybe can begin to be explained by things like this that started happening under Giuliani--------
"AvalonBay Communities, based in Alexandria, Va., is undertaking the Cooper Square project in partnership with Williams Jackson Ewing, a national retail developer based in Baltimore, and Blackacre Capital, a private investment firm in New York City. Phipps Houses, the New York-based nonprofit housing company, will participate as the developer and owner of a portion of the low-income apartments."
"It is unusual for a national real estate company to undertake residential development in New York City, and even more unusual for it to take the path of bidding for a city-sponsored proposal. For most such companies, the major capital investment required at the beginning of a process of uncertain duration and outcome seems daunting. Companies experienced in the vagaries of New York City development are normally the only participants."
"But the attraction is the chance to own new rental property in a market that is unlikely to become oversupplied with it. ''Our strategy is to focus on the strongest markets,'' said Bryce Blair, president of AvalonBay. ''The markets with the strongest constraints on supply over the long term will be the healthiest.''"
"The design and architectural plan is the work of the New York office of Arquitectonica, an international firm that was founded in Florida in 1977 and became known in its early days for a flamboyant condominium in Miami called the Atlantis, in which a 37-square-foot cube was cut to create a 10-story interior skycourt. Bernardo Fort-Brescia, a founder of the firm, is the chief architect for Cooper Square."
Showing posts with label eastvillage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eastvillage. Show all posts
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Friday, November 19, 2010
"Oh, It's Not What It Used to Be" - Bowery circa 2000
NY Times article circa 2000 about the Bowery, written by someone who spent a lot of time there as a child in the 60's probably.
Notes:
"Today on the Bowery the tallest building -- other than the 1970's Confucius Plaza in Chatham Square -- is the 10-story Salvation Army Chinatown Corps, No. 225, near Rivington Street; most are three or four stories."
"Still seedy around the edges, the Bowery is not yet gentrified -- there's no Starbucks, no Gap -- and it's not clear whether it will soon look more like SoHo, to the west."
"Old-timers gape at a two-story terraced gray penthouse, recently erected atop a dark orange brick building." ---- (While there are other seemingly older penthouse structures visible, I think this one is the first real sign of the beginning of what the Bowery has become.)
Also, another mention of its unique street arrangement:
"The Bowery interrupts the city's straightforward grid. Streets like Prince, Spring and Bleecker on the west side, and Stanton, Rivington and First on the east, end -- or begin -- at the Bowery. In some cases, the names change: Delancey becomes Kenmare; Bond becomes East Second; Great Jones becomes East Third."
Notes:
"Today on the Bowery the tallest building -- other than the 1970's Confucius Plaza in Chatham Square -- is the 10-story Salvation Army Chinatown Corps, No. 225, near Rivington Street; most are three or four stories."
"Still seedy around the edges, the Bowery is not yet gentrified -- there's no Starbucks, no Gap -- and it's not clear whether it will soon look more like SoHo, to the west."
"Old-timers gape at a two-story terraced gray penthouse, recently erected atop a dark orange brick building." ---- (While there are other seemingly older penthouse structures visible, I think this one is the first real sign of the beginning of what the Bowery has become.)
Also, another mention of its unique street arrangement:
"The Bowery interrupts the city's straightforward grid. Streets like Prince, Spring and Bleecker on the west side, and Stanton, Rivington and First on the east, end -- or begin -- at the Bowery. In some cases, the names change: Delancey becomes Kenmare; Bond becomes East Second; Great Jones becomes East Third."
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Wednesday, November 17, 2010
"This is where streets go to die" - Bowery circa 2003
This NY Times article titled "Palimpsest Street" from 2003 gives you a mini rundown of the the Bowery's history, and details some sensibility of its different manifestations. Originally the article probably had pictures (I wish it still did).
During this time period there was no way of knowing that the Bowery was on the precipice of massive change, just that things were generally shifting in a more upscale direction. No one knew if it was sustainable at this point.
I like the author's hypothesis as to why the Bowery had essentially sat unchanged for so many decades:
Or perhaps there's a simpler reason that the Bowery has remained the Bowery. Modern cities developed for the most practical of reasons, as marketplaces of goods, services and ideas. It is only when the markets leave that cities and neighborhoods begin casting around existentially for reasons to exist. On the Bowery, neither the industrial markets nor the artists ever left. The street remained more or less content unto itself. In a way, the Bowery is the only part of the ''real'' city left in Manhattan."
You can check out some aerial photos taken from different time periods by using the NYC.gov interactive map feature (super cool).
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| Bowery and Houston circa 1924 |
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| Bowery and Houston circa 2008 |
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Dive bars in NY circa 1996
I'm working on a big piece for a show I'm doing at La Mama Gallery in January (also showing Wil Ortega's work). La Mama is located right off the Bowery, on 1st street, near the Liz Christy garden. Also, I suppose I should mention its also nowadays sandwiched between one of the largest (luxury) housing developments built in recent times in the neighborhood, built by Avalon Bay, who previous to this complex on the Bowery had mostly build suburban apartment complexes in places like New Jersey. Anyway, if I can pull it off, my portion of the show will incorporate some of the last 20 years of history in terms of the Bowery - pretty much the time person when I would have traversed it as a Cooper Union student, then staff and faculty, and a general NYC downtown resident.
I have a lot of memories, but they tend to be a bit fuzzy. Images are in my heads, but dates are uncertain. I've started doing some research, mostly using the NY Times archive, which so far has been very helpful. I typed in Bowery and Houston and a bunch of stuff popped up. I was tryign to determine when the aforementioned housing development was proposed, because i remember seeing a rendering in a book in the Cooper Library circa 1999? 2000? and thinking "well, thats never going to happen". And it didn't, at least as far as I can tell. Originally it was proposed as city housing. Then it was sold to a private developer. So, big difference there in terms of what it represents. Still looking into finding that rendering.
Anyway, from time to time I'm going to post some of the articles/images I find, and my thoughts here.
Note the date. This one is from 1996:
enjoy.
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