Archive

You are currently browsing the archives for the Landmark Structures category.

Sep

16

Monday, September 16, 2024 – Just up the river is a red arched bridge

By admin

10 Secrets

of

Hell Gate Bridge

in

NYC-Part 1

New York City’s Hell Gate Bridge sits on the north end of the East River, between Astoria, Queens, and Randall’s Island. The bridge is named for the once-dangerous channel it crosses, derived from the Dutch word hellegat, which means “hell channel.” Infrastructure aficionados marked the span’s centennial year with cake and events in 2017.

Hell Gate also happens to be a favorite of Dave Frieder, “the Bridge Man” and author of The Magnificent Bridges of New York City. Frieder has been documenting sights from atop the city’s bridges for over two decades. With his help and that of our Chief Experience Officer, Justin Rivers, we bring you ten fun facts and secrets about the Hell Gate Bridge. Want more? Join us for our upcoming Powering NYC: East River Ferry Tour, where you’ll learn more about Hell Gate’s “explosive” past and sail past multiple bridges, abandoned islands, waterfront power plants, and more!

The Hell Gate Bridge is actually a complex of three bridges: the well-known Steel Arch, an inverted bowstring arch that spans a former water-filled channel (Little Hell Gate) between Wards and Randall’s Islands, and a small truss bridge, which would have been a double bascule-type bridge that goes over a small “Kill” between the Bronx and Randall’s Island.

In 2015, a pedestrian and bike route was opened beneath arches of the truss bridge, providing a pleasant and easy way to connect between the Port Morris in the Bronx and Randall’s Island. The bridge was the result of years of activism by groups like South Bronx Unite and others who have been advocating for healthier urban design for a community adversely affected by continued industrial waterfront conversion.

The Bayonne Bridge was inspired by the design of Hell Gate

The Queens-side tower of the Hell Gate Bridge sits on solid bedrock, reaching only 15 to 38 feet below ground level. The Wards Island side was a completely different story because it lay near upturned rock strata that made the Hell Gate so treacherous to navigate by water. Also, a gas line that had run under the river prior to the bridge’s construction revealed a fissure in the bedrock which made creating a uniform bridge foundation nearly impossible.

Bridge engineer Gustav Lindenthal’s solution for the Wards Island tower was to utilize fifteen 18-foot diameter caissons to provide solid footing. It took sandhogs (excavation workers) several weeks to dig deep enough to find the reported fissure. It was much deeper than they had originally thought based on initial borings. The solution was one Lindenthal had already used closer to the surface. He used concrete to secure one of the caissons where the fissure passed through its center and, where the fissure lay at a connection point of two other caissons, he bridged the gap with a concrete cantilever. It was the first time this practice was employed in bridge building. In comparison to the Queens tower, the Wards Island tower caissons reach down anywhere from 94 to 123 feet.

Photo by Dave Frieder

The Hell Gate’s “live load” capacity is 24,000-pounds per foot (that is 12 tons per foot), one of the most extreme load capacities for a bridge. In fact, Lindenthal designed the bridge so that sixty 200-ton locomotives could be placed end to end and the structure would easily take the weight.

Yet throughout the bridge’s history, it has never come close to testing that capacity. According to Sharon Reier’s book The Bridges of New York City, on the very day the Hell Gate Bridge opened in April 1917 the future of private rail in the United States was being called into question. A mere two days later the United States declared war on Germany and a year later all rail was nationalized for the war effort. The Pennsylvania Railroad would have a hard time bouncing back from this over the next fifty years. At its height, the PRR ran about 65 trains daily over the bridge. That number plummeted to four after the failure of Penn Central in 1970. Currently, Amtrak runs approximately 40 trains over the bridge.

Photo by Dave Frieder

The “grip” of a bridge rivet (or mechanical fastener) is the thickness of the steel it holds together. The rivets of the Hell Gate Bridge happen to have the longest grip of any bridge in New York City: over nine inches. Due to the high carbon steel it is constructed out of, the span could last well over a thousand years.

Unfortunately that 1000 year guarantee does not include the paint job. By the early 1990’s the steel’s coating was in rough shape. With the urging of Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the US Congress allocated $55 million to re-paint the bridge for the first time since it was built. The color chosen was a deep red called “Hell Gate Red.” But there was a problem, the clear urethane top coating wasn’t formulated to withstand UV bombardment from the sun. This, in turn, faded the red undercoating which was already fading before the paint job was finished. Amtrak chose to use the same paint in the late 1990’s to patch up the damage but it too began to fade. The bridge has undergone multiple paint jobs since.

Part 2 Tomorrow

CREDITS

JUDITH BERDY
ESTHER COHEN
THE SHOP

Untapped New York

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

13

Friday, September 13, 2024 – SIGHTS ON THE ISLAND TODAY

By admin

SOMETHING OLD

SOMETHING NEW


SOMETHING BRONZE


SOMETHING BLUE

ISSUE # 1306

C J HENDRY FLOWER MARKET

THE LAWN AT FOUR FREEDOMS FDR STATE PARK
FREE TO THE PUBLIC FRIDAY- SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
EVERY GUEST GETS ONE FREE FLOWER
ADDITIONAL FLOWERS AND MERCHANDISE ON SALE

A  NEW MAILBOX IS FINALLY BACK OUTSIDE OUR POST OFFICE.  

CREDITS

JUDITH BERDY
NYS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
JUDITH BERDY

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

12

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2024 – LIGHTHOUSE PRESERVTION AWARD

By admin

ROOSEVELT ISLAND AT 50

ISSUE # 1305

The Roosevelt Island Lighthouse restoration was completed in 2022 after a years-long project initiated by the Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation. The project included restoring brick, stone, windows, and doors. Site improvements at the Lighthouse include installation of a new metal spiral staircase, new electrical and LED accent lighting, resetting and installation of new and salvaged stone pavers and curb stones, and the installation of new recessed ground lighting and controls. The project was completed by the construction team of The LIRO Group and ICC Commonwealth. The League is thrilled to recognize this work with a 2024 Excellence in Historic Preservation Award.

Designed by James Renwick Jr., the Roosevelt Island lighthouse was constructed in 1872 on the northern tip of the island to aid ships navigating the then-treacherous waters of the East River. It was decommissioned in 1940. In 1976, it was designated a New York City landmark and incorporated into the 3-acre Lighthouse Park. Over the years, it had fallen into disrepair and was subject to inappropriate repairs and alterations.

In 2019, Thomas A. Fenniman Architect was hired to create construction documents to help increase the useful life of the structure, eliminate potentially unsafe conditions, and reduce operating and maintenance expenses.

The original Renwick-designed lantern top was removed sometime during the 1920s and replaced with a “standard issue” cast iron lantern. During this project’s planning stages, the team explored the options of either restoring the extant lantern or creating a new lantern, inspired by the original Renwick design. In the end, it was decided to create a new lantern that would bring the Lighthouse design back to its original intent. This new structural glass and blackened stainless steel lantern provides a more sustainable structure to withstand the elements with less maintenance and operating costs.

The restoration and new lantern design were approved by the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission under a public review.

The team behind the restoration of the Roosevelt Island Lighthouse thoughtfully considered the history, significance, and current use of the site, breathing new life into a beloved local landmark.

Project team
Owner: Roosevelt Island Operating Corporation (RIOC); Architect: Thomas A Fenniman, Principal and Samuel Harris, Project Architect, Thomas A. Fenniman Architect; Owners Representative: The LiRo Group; Structural & Electrical Engineer: Norfast Engineering, PLLC; Laser Scanning & Drone Images: Berkshire Dimensions; General Contractor: ICC Commonwealth; Electrical Contractor: AMJ Electric Corp.; Stone Fabricator: Traditional Cut Stone; Metal Fabricator: Tymetal Corp.; Structural Glass Lantern Fabricator: SADEV USA; Light Fixture Manufacturer: Lumenpulse.

This Award from the Preservation League follows a 2023 Lucy Moses Award from the New York Landmarks Conservancy and a 2023 Rehabilitation Award from Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts.

Work in progress: The new lantern being installed.

LATE 1970’S  WESTVIEW  IN THE BACKGROUND WITH THE ORGINAL COMMUNITY GARDENS IN THE FOREGROUND. GARDENS WERE PLACED ON THE SITE OF THE FORMER FDNY TRAINING CENTER.

“Many of us have lived here for decades and have accumulated vast amounts of information (and some mis-information…)

Join Judith Berdy, long time resident. She takes us on a history trip. She explains how the community developed. She discusses how it became the Roosevelt Island we live in today.

“This is a great introduction for our new residents who have many questions about our community,” Judy says.  “Join us for a fun evening of facts, fiction and fantasy.”

When: September 17th, @ 6:30 p.m.

Where: New York Public Library Branch, 504 Main Street
*This is a free public program of the Roosevelt Island Historical Society (RIHS).

CREDITS

PRESERVATION LEAGUE OF NEW YROK
NYS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
JUDITH BERDY

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

11

Wednesday, September 11, 2024 – DO YOU REMEMBER THESE?

By admin

ROOSEVELT ISLAND AT 50

ISSUE # 1304

LATE 1970’S  WESTVIEW  IN THE BACKGROUND WITH THE ORGINAL COMMUNITY GARDENS IN THE FOREGROUND. GARDENS WERE PLACED ON THE SITE OF THE FORMER FDNY TRAINING CENTER.

1977 WHEN RIVERCROSS WAS REALLY AFFORDABLE.

“Many of us have lived here for decades and have accumulated vast amounts of information (and some mis-information…)

Join Judith Berdy, long time resident. She takes us on a history trip. She explains how the community developed. She discusses how it became the Roosevelt Island we live in today.

“This is a great introduction for our new residents who have many questions about our community,” Judy says.  “Join us for a fun evening of facts, fiction and fantasy.”

When: September 17th, @ 6:30 p.m.

Where: New York Public Library Branch, 504 Main Street
*This is a free public program of the Roosevelt Island Historical Society (RIHS).

CREDITS

NYS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
JUDITH BERDY

CREDITS 

NYS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
JUDITH BERDY

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

10

Tuesday, September 10, 2024 – HOW COULD OUR COMMUNITY BE 50 YEARS OLD NEXT YEAR

By admin

ROOSEVELT ISLAND AT 50

AUGUST, 1972 NYS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

CHAPEL OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD BEING PRESERVED AS THE HOLY SPIRIT LUTHERAN CHURCH NEXT DOOR IS BEING DEMOLISHED.

EASTWOOD IS JUST BEGINNING TO BE CONSTRUCTED.

“Many of us have lived here for decades and have accumulated vast amounts of information (and some mis-information…)

Join Judith Berdy, long time resident. She takes us on a history trip. She explains how the community developed. She discusses how it became the Roosevelt Island we live in today.

“This is a great introduction for our new residents who have many questions about our community,” Judy says.  “Join us for a fun evening of facts, fiction and fantasy.”

When: September 17th, @ 6:30 p.m.

Where: New York Public Library Branch, 504 Main Street
*This is a free public program of the Roosevelt Island Historical Society (RIHS).

CREDITS

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

CREDITS 
NYS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
JUDITH BERDY

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

9

Monday, September 9. 2024 – JOIN THE WONDERFUL HERD MIGRATION

By admin

100 Magnificent Indian Elephants

are

Migrating Across the USA

to

Share their Story with the World

The Great Elephant Migration is a global fundraising adventure to amplify indigenous knowledge and inspire the human race, to share space.

A collaboration between indigenous artisans, contemporary artists and cultural institutions, it will raise millions of dollars to power human-wildlife coexistence projects and protect migratory animals making spectacular journeys across land, rivers, skies and oceans.

ELEPHANTS ARE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE

The creators of the herd live in the Nilgiri Hills, Southern India, where humans and elephants coexist in the densest overlap on the planet. The indigenous communities here see everything in nature as being alive and having a soul. The wind has a spirit, whispering secrets to the trees as she moves through. The stars, rocks, rivers, trees, plants and animals are all part of a big family. 

This way of looking at the world is rooted in mutual respect and reciprocity. There’s a reverence for nature and all its inhabitants and a belief that the earth will look after us if we are respectful towards the earth and all of its inhabitants. Humans are a part of a larger web of life, where everything is interconnected. When we harm the earth or other beings we harm ourselves. If we behave respectfully towards the elephants, they are expected to behave well in return. This way of looking at the world is key to everyone’s survival and successful coexistence between all living beings.

Kris Tompkins

“I’m very proud to be a Matriarch of The Great Elephant Migration. Audacious and exceptional voices who incite fierce protection of wildness not only around single species but for all life are lacking around the world. 

Every category we humans use to communicate with one another is essential and art and scale are both powerful and impossible to ignore. These giant, beautiful beings touring the world speak louder and more profoundly than any or

Freeing The Forests

Each elephant is made from Lantana camara, the second most widespread invasive species in the world. This fast growing, toxic shrub has taken over 40% of forests in India, obliterating native plants and diminishing food sources for animals, pushing them out of forests and into urban areas.  

The migration supports a large scale lantana removal project, converting it into biochar which improves soil fertility and water retention. Biochar is the only feasible direct capture solution for sequestering carbon into the ground to mitigate climate change – the biggest problem humanity faces today. The project will restore vast areas of forests over the next five years. By the close of 2025, this effort will have sequestered 2,625 tons of carbon.

Along 9th Avenue to the south of 15th Street and west on 14th Street and at Ganesvort Square the elephants are on display until October 20th.

From our perch at a outdoor dining spot, we were in the
audience for the great human migration.

CREDITS

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

THE GREAT ELEPHANT MIGRATION
JUDITH BERDY

Dan Freedland and I love exploring neighborhoods of New York.. Look for his photos in an upcoming edition.

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

8

Sunday, September 8, 2024 – HOW DID THIS MASTERPIECE END UP IN KANSAS CITY?

By admin

Ever since I visited Kansa City in 2017, when I saw this fountain, I have been curious about it traveled
from Pennsylvania Station to Kansas City.  Here is the answer.

Before this sculpture became part of an Eagle Scout memorial in Missouri, it hung above the Seventh Avenue entrance to the original Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan. The colossal train station designed by the illustrious architecture firm of McKim, Mead, and White opened in 1910, welcoming the first LIRR train on September 2nd. When the station was infamously demolished in the 1960s, some ornamental pieces of the structure were salvaged. Stone eagles that sat atop the station’s cornice were spread throughout the northeast, St. John the Divine acquired lampposts that still sit in the cathedral’s basement, and this sculpture traveled halfway across the country.

German-American sculptor Adolph Alexander Weinman created the pink Milford granite sculpture at the center of the Kansas City Eagle Scout fountain. It features two female figures leaning on opposite sides of a central wreath that once encircled a 7-foot wide clock. The allegorical women are meant to represent Day and Night. While the figure on the left (Day) is adorned with sunflowers, the figure on the right (Night) is shrouded under a cloak. Both figures have an eagle at their feet.

Weinman created four pairs of Day and Night sculptures for Penn Station. When the station was demolished, the sculptures and clocks met various fates. The clocks were disposed of in the Meadowlands of New Jersey along with other debris from the demolition. Some fragments of the female figures and a couple of eagles turned up at a New Jersey Transit facility in Newark a few years ago and one Night figure is stored safely in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum.

So how did this sculpture end up in Kansas City? When news of Penn Station’s impending demolition was announced, John W. Starr, chairman of the Eagle Scout tribute committee, thought the entablature would make for the perfect Eagle Scout memorial in his hometown. According to a Kansas City Times article from 1968, the Kansas City area council awarded more Eagle Scout badges than anywhere else in the United States. Becoming an Eagle Scout is a rare feat that only a small percentage of Boy Scouts obtain. In 1966, the Pennsylvania Railroad gifted the statue to the Boy Scout organization.

The next hurdle was transporting the 62,000-pound piece over a thousand miles west. The Pennsylvania Railroad carried the sculpture to Saint Louis, its western terminus. It was then picked up by a flatcar on the Missouri Pacific Railroad for the rest of the journey to Kansas City. Finally, it was driven to a warehouse.

A few modifications were made to the original sculpture before it was unveiled in Missouri. In place of a central clock, an aluminum replica of an Eagle Scout badge was added to the middle of the wreath frame. The entire sculptural work was set atop a fountain designed by Maurice McMullen on land donated by The Kansas City Park and Recreation Department and the City of Kansas City. Starr raised the funds to pay for the design, construction, and landscaping. The fountain was dedicated on October 6, 1968.

You can now see the sculpture at the intersection of 39th Street and Gillham Road in Kansas City, but you don’t have to go all the way to Missouri to see remnants of Day and Night. An art installation by Andrew Leicester, titled Ghost Series, brought remnants of the original station into the modern transportation hub as bas-relief terra cotta murals. There are five murals in total scattered throughout the station. The Day and Night one can be found on the east end of the main LIRR concourse, near the 1,2,3 subway entrance. See this mural and more pieces of the original station on our upcoming Secrets of Penn Station and Moynihan Train Hall Tour!

CREDITS

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

100,000 plush flowers crafted by artist CJ Hendry will take over Four Freedoms Park from September 13-15! This immersive floral exhibition, Flower Market, is housed within a greenhouse built on the park’s lawn. Colorful florals inside were inspired by the Roosevelt family: the yellow Eleanor Roosevelt Rose, Tulips for the Roosevelt family’s Dutch heritage, red roses symbolizing the Roosevelt name, and Peonies, a signature flower of the family’s farm. Twelve original drawings by Hendry accompany the blossoming meadow. Visitors are encouraged to pluck their own flowers from the garden to take home. This exhibition is free and open to the public from 10am to 4pm on September 13 to 15.

Check out her website and imagine what we will see here:
https://cjhendrystudio.com

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

7

Saturday, September 7, 2024 – MEET A HERD OF ELEPHANTS IN MANHATTAN

By admin

THE GREAT ELEPHANT

MIGRATION

IS COMING 

TO MANHATTAN 

&

Photo by Corey Favino, Courtesy Elephant Family USA and Newport Restoration Foundation

A herd of 100 Indian elephant sculptures will descend upon the Meatpacking District on September 6th! The arrival of The Great Elephant Migration marks the largest installation to come to New York City since Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s The Gates in 2005. The herd started its journey in Newport, Rhode Island and after New York, it will travel to Miami, Blackfeet Nation, Buffalo Pastures in Browning, Montana, and Los Angeles. As the installation moves across the country in electric trucks adorned with Indian lorry art, it will bring awareness to the relationship between humans and animals and raise funds for organizations supporting that coexistence such as local groups like New York City’s Wild Bird FundINDIGENOUS LED, and Lion Guardians.

All of the elephants were crafted by Coexistence Collective, a community of 200 Indigenous artisans living within India’s Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve. The sculptural herd is based on the elephants that India’s Soligas, Bettakurumbas, Kattunayakan, and Paniyas tribes live amongst. Every elephant is unique.

Glenn Ligon, Untitled (America/Me), 2022/2024 (rendering). A High Line Billboard. On view September–November 2024. Rendering courtesy of the artist and the High Line

A new billboard will appear on the High Line at 18th Street on September 3rd. The giant sign created by artist Glenn Ligon is an altered image of a neon piece he created back in 2008. In revisiting a piece originally created during an election year (the year Obama won), Ligon examines the shift in America’s political climate and culture as we face another presidential election. In this new iteration, Ligon has taken a photo of the neon work and added thick black X’s over some of the letters in “America.” The only unaltered letters that show through spell “Me.” By manipulating the image this way, Ligon calls attention to the self-focused tendencies of today’s society and inspires viewers to contemplate the complex relationship between our nation and ourselves.

Iván Tovar, La chaise adulte, 1969

A new monumental installation by the late Dominican artist Iván Tovar is coming to Times Square on September 15th. Standing 13 feet tall,TOVAR The Chair is a large-scale version of Tovar’s earlier work, La Chaise Adulte (The Adult Chair). The installation of this surrealist, stainless steel sculpture coincides with the start of National Hispanic Heritage Month and calls attention to the 800,000 Dominicans living in the New York region. A 50-foot screen-printed timeline chronicling Tovar’s inspiring career will accompany the sculpture. TOVAR The Chair will sit in Broadway Plaza between 45th and 46th Streets and 7th Avenue until November 15, 2024.

Edra Soto, Graft, 2024 Photo: Nicholas Knight, courtesy of Public Art Fund, NY

Edra Soto debuts her first large-scale public art commission in New York City on September 5th at Doris C. Freedman Plaza. Titled Graft, the sculptural installation is part of an ongoing series based on rejas, wrought iron screens frequently seen outside lower and middle-class homes in Puerto Rico. Soto was born in Puerto Rico and currently lives in Chicago. For her New York installation, Soto has created an inviting domestic scene out of red terrazzo concrete and corten steel. Three tables with seats beckon passersby to take a rest.

Patterns on the rejas cast playful shadows of Caribbean palm leaves and other imagery sourced from Yoruba
symbols of West Africa, a prominent influence on Puerto Rican design. By combining these symbols of her birthplace with the bustling scenes of New York, Soto “reflects on themes of migration, displacement, and the search for belonging.”

Photo by Jen Phanomrat and Leonardo Samanamud, Courtesy of Morningside Lights

You can help create a dazzling light display this month as the annual Morningside Lights parade returns to celebrate “100 Years of New York Art.” Ahead of the grand illuminated parade on Saturday, September 21st at 8 PM, New Yorkers can help create the glowing handmade lanterns in a lantern-building workshop. The workshops will run from September 14th through 20th at the Miller Theatre at Columbia University (116th St. and Broadway). Interested participants can register here!

This year’s theme, In Retrospect, “celebrates how a century of New York art has shaped our image of where and how we live.” On September 21st, the luminescent parade will travel from the heart of Morningside Park, up Morningside Drive, to the Columbia campus. Participants and spectators are welcome to join anywhere along the roughly one-mile route.

Hedgework by Marek Walczak

Buildings 77 and 92 in the Brooklyn Navy Yard are currently home to two unique installations. At Building 77, visitors will find Hedgework by Marek Walczak (Civic Space LLC), Mark Shepard (Center for Architecture and Situated Technologies), and Antonina Simeti (Timbre Consultants). This outdoor piece is a sentient hedgerow made up of native plants, environmental sensors, and materials such as sand, stone, and solar panels sourced straight from companies in the Yard. Visitors can interact with the piece by sitting among the plants and by scanning a QR code which will provide information about the habitat and the Brooklyn Navy Yard with AI technology. On September 19th, co-creator Mark Shepard will host an Eco Data Workshop where you’ll learn about the data collected by the hedge, how to document and interpret the data, and how to use data for various purposes from policymaking to art. Book your ticket here!

Steven and William Ladd’s Transforming America through Art: A Vision for Brooklyn’s Community at Building 92 was created with input from Brooklynites. Locals responded to the prompt, “What one word describes your hopes for the future?” The installation displays answers to this question along with photographic reproductions of collaborative textile artwork created by the Ladds over the past ten years. On September 17th, you can join the Ladd brothers for a free artmaking workshop and tour at the Navy Yard. Your contribution will become part of a community art project on view in the exhibition! These sessions are designed for industry professionals working at and around the Brooklyn Navy Yard and are open to anyone who is 18 years or older. This Brooklyn installation is part of a larger project called Scrollathon which will be on view at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. as part of a 250th anniversary celebration of the United States’ founding.

Art Professor Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons in her studio office and outside Ingram Fine Arts Center. (John Russell/Vanderbilt University)

Show your solidarity with fellow New Yorkers by participating in a walk from Harlem Art Park down to Madison Square Park on the mornings of September 7th and 20th. Conceived by artist María Magdalena Campos-Pons, Procession of Angels for Radical Love and Unity will highlight seven stops throughout Manhattan that were historically filled with agency, optimism, or trauma. Some of those stops include the Dos Alas (Two Wings) mural dedicated to revolutionaries Ernesto Che Guevara and Pedro Albizu Campos, the former site of the Colored Orphan Asylum, and a monument to independence leader José Julián Martí. Stops will include poetry readings and the procession on September 7th will end with an artmaking workshop, while the procession on September 20 will end with musical performances. Anyone who wants to participate is encouraged to register here. “

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

CREDITS

100,000 plush flowers crafted by artist CJ Hendry will take over Four Freedoms Park from September 13-15! This immersive floral exhibition, Flower Market, is housed within a greenhouse built on the park’s lawn. Colorful florals inside were inspired by the Roosevelt family: the yellow Eleanor Roosevelt Rose, Tulips for the Roosevelt family’s Dutch heritage, red roses symbolizing the Roosevelt name, and Peonies, a signature flower of the family’s farm. Twelve original drawings by Hendry accompany the blossoming meadow. Visitors are encouraged to pluck their own flowers from the garden to take home. This exhibition is free and open to the public from 10am to 4pm on September 13 to 15.

Check out her website and imagine what we will see here:
https://cjhendrystudio.com

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

6

Friday, September 6, 2024 – HOW DID THIS MASTERPIECE END UP IN KANSAS CITY?

By admin

This Fountain in Kansas City

Contains a Remnant

of

NYC’s Penn Station

Ever since I visited Kansa City in 2017, when I saw this fountain I have been curious about it traveled
from Pennsylvania Station to Kansas City.  Here is the answer.

Before this sculpture became part of an Eagle Scout memorial in Missouri, it hung above the Seventh Avenue entrance to the original Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan. The colossal train station designed by the illustrious architecture firm of McKim, Mead, and White opened in 1910, welcoming the first LIRR train on September 2nd. When the station was infamously demolished in the 1960s, some ornamental pieces of the structure were salvaged. Stone eagles that sat atop the station’s cornice were spread throughout the northeast, St. John the Divine acquired lampposts that still sit in the cathedral’s basement, and this sculpture traveled halfway across the country.

German-American sculptor Adolph Alexander Weinman created the pink Milford granite sculpture at the center of the Kansas City Eagle Scout fountain. It features two female figures leaning on opposite sides of a central wreath that once encircled a 7-foot wide clock. The allegorical women are meant to represent Day and Night. While the figure on the left (Day) is adorned with sunflowers, the figure on the right (Night) is shrouded under a cloak. Both figures have an eagle at their feet.

Weinman created four pairs of Day and Night sculptures for Penn Station. When the station was demolished, the sculptures and clocks met various fates. The clocks were disposed of in the Meadowlands of New Jersey along with other debris from the demolition. Some fragments of the female figures and a couple of eagles turned up at a New Jersey Transit facility in Newark a few years ago and one Night figure is stored safely in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum.

So how did this sculpture end up in Kansas City? When news of Penn Station’s impending demolition was announced, John W. Starr, chairman of the Eagle Scout tribute committee, thought the entablature would make for the perfect Eagle Scout memorial in his hometown. According to a Kansas City Times article from 1968, the Kansas City area council awarded more Eagle Scout badges than anywhere else in the United States. Becoming an Eagle Scout is a rare feat that only a small percentage of Boy Scouts obtain. In 1966, the Pennsylvania Railroad gifted the statue to the Boy Scout organization.

The next hurdle was transporting the 62,000-pound piece over a thousand miles west. The Pennsylvania Railroad carried the sculpture to Saint Louis, its western terminus. It was then picked up by a flatcar on the Missouri Pacific Railroad for the rest of the journey to Kansas City. Finally, it was driven to a warehouse.

A few modifications were made to the original sculpture before it was unveiled in Missouri. In place of a central clock, an aluminum replica of an Eagle Scout badge was added to the middle of the wreath frame. The entire sculptural work was set atop a fountain designed by Maurice McMullen on land donated by The Kansas City Park and Recreation Department and the City of Kansas City. Starr raised the funds to pay for the design, construction, and landscaping. The fountain was dedicated on October 6, 1968.

You can now see the sculpture at the intersection of 39th Street and Gillham Road in Kansas City, but you don’t have to go all the way to Missouri to see remnants of Day and Night. An art installation by Andrew Leicester, titled Ghost Series, brought remnants of the original station into the modern transportation hub as bas-relief terra cotta murals. There are five murals in total scattered throughout the station. The Day and Night one can be found on the east end of the main LIRR concourse, near the 1,2,3 subway entrance. See this mural and more pieces of the original station on our upcoming Secrets of Penn Station and Moynihan Train Hall Tour!

CREDITS

UNTAPPED NEW YORK

100,000 plush flowers crafted by artist CJ Hendry will take over Four Freedoms Park from September 13-15! This immersive floral exhibition, Flower Market, is housed within a greenhouse built on the park’s lawn. Colorful florals inside were inspired by the Roosevelt family: the yellow Eleanor Roosevelt Rose, Tulips for the Roosevelt family’s Dutch heritage, red roses symbolizing the Roosevelt name, and Peonies, a signature flower of the family’s farm. Twelve original drawings by Hendry accompany the blossoming meadow. Visitors are encouraged to pluck their own flowers from the garden to take home. This exhibition is free and open to the public from 10am to 4pm on September 13 to 15.

Check out her website and imagine what we will see here:
https://cjhendrystudio.com

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

Sep

4

Wednesday/Thursday, September 4-5, 2024 – HERE ARE AUTHENTIC 17TH CENTURY HOMES

By admin


Rue de Braque:


Discovering a Hidden Gem


of


Old Paris

One spring morning in 2016, I discovered a hidden gem on the quiet Rue de Braque in the 3rd arrondissement.

Until then, I thought there were only three major half-timbered houses in Paris.

This beautifully preserved house stands tucked away from the busy streets, offering a glimpse into the city’s pre-Haussmannian past.

It felt like stepping back in time to when timbered façades were common across Paris.

Discovering this rare piece of history was a reminder that Paris still holds surprises, revealing traces of its medieval charm when you least expect it.

Half-Timbered Houses in Central Paris

To my knowledge, there are three principal half-timbered dwellings in Paris, all of them situated in the 3rd and 4th arrondissements:

Rue François Miron (numbers 11&13):

Rue des Barres (number 12):

And Rue Volta (number 3):

A house dating back to the 17th century

This hidden gem dates back to the 17th century.

Originally, timbered houses were prohibited, so builders often concealed them behind courtyards, out of public sight.

Number 5 is one such example, originally covered with plaster to avoid detection.

However, a recent restoration has revealed the magnificent timber structure of the corps de logis, showcasing the craftsmanship of a bygone era.

Restricted access!

Despite its beauty, this property remains privately owned, with access strictly limited.

Visitors can only catch a glimpse if the courtyard gate happens to be open.

It’s this exclusivity that makes the house all the more intriguing.

For those seeking to explore Paris beyond the well-trodden paths, this discovery offers a rare glimpse into the city’s hidden architectural treasures—remnants of a time long before Haussmann reshaped the skyline.

Half-timbered house in Rue de Braque Paris © French Moments

CREDITS

PARIS MOMENTS (C)
UNTAPPED NEW YORK
JUDITH BERDY

100,000 plush flowers crafted by artist CJ Hendry will take over Four Freedoms Park from September 13-15! This immersive floral exhibition, Flower Market, is housed within a greenhouse built on the park’s lawn. Colorful florals inside were inspired by the Roosevelt family: the yellow Eleanor Roosevelt Rose, Tulips for the Roosevelt family’s Dutch heritage, red roses symbolizing the Roosevelt name, and Peonies, a signature flower of the family’s farm. Twelve original drawings by Hendry accompany the blossoming meadow. Visitors are encouraged to pluck their own flowers from the garden to take home. This exhibition is free and open to the public from 10am to 4pm on September 13 to 15.

Check out her website and imagine what we will see here:
https://cjhendrystudio.com

All image are copyrighted (c) Roosevelt Island Historical Society unless otherwise indicated
THIS PUBLICATION FUNDED BY DISCRETIONARY FUNDS FROM CITY COUNCIL MEMBER JULIE MENIN & ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE FUNDS.

Copyright © 2024 Roosevelt Island Historical Society, All rights reserved.Our mailing address is:
rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com