LANDMARK WEST’s First Roosevelt Island Visit: FDR Four Freedoms Memorial Park
Kyle Johnson leading LW! and friends beneath the
Queensboro Bridge, en route to the Memorial
|
You read correctly…on Nov. 14th, 2012 LANDMARK WEST!
left the Upper West Side for a sunny afternoon with friends to explore the new FDR
Memorial on Roosevelt Island . Kyle Johnson, Co-Chair
of the AIA NY Chapter's Architecture Tour Committee & Vice President of DOCOMOMO US -New
York/Tri-State led LW! and friends via the Tram from Manhattan to Louis Kahn's only work in NYC.
In 1973 Mayor John Lindsay
announced that a memorial park at the southern tip of Roosevelt
Island for Franklin D. Roosevelt. Louis Kahn was selected as the
architect and plans were completed. However, Kahn's sudden death in 1974
followed by NYC's fiscal crises of the 1970s diminished the priority of Four Freedoms
Park . On October 24,
2012, the FDR Four Freedoms
Park opened to the
public; a project which began forty years ago.
LW! upon arrival to the FDR Memorial
|
"Surely, in the light of
history, it is more intelligent to hope rather than to fear, to try rather than
not to try. For one thing we know beyond all doubt. Nothing has ever been
achieved by the person who says, 'It can't be done.'" - Eleanor Roosevelt,
1960
The Upper West Side Roosevelt
connection is the Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial.
The First Lady's statue rests adjacent to the Hudson River
and 72nd Street .
Eleanor was a founder of the United Nations, served as head of the United
Nations Human Rights Commission and helped to draft the UN's Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. FDR’s Four Freedoms speech, etched in Mount Airy
Granite, faces the United Nations across the East River .
Franklin D. Roosevelt's Four Freedoms Speech, January 6, 1941
|