Showing posts with label HDC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HDC. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Concerns about Intro. 775 shared with Council Members


Landmark West!, Historic Districts Council, Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, and Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts wrote to Council Members to express serious concerns about Intro. 775. We share the desire for a swift, predictable and transparent landmark designation process and have given much consideration to how the current process could be improved to accomplish those goals. However, the bill as currently written would achieve the exact opposite. It would discourage the consideration of complicated or controversial sites and encourage obstruction rather than designation. 

Click here to read our full letter.

Write to members of the City Council Land Use Committee today to express your concerns about the significant ways in which this legislation would weaken the Landmarks Law (and please cc. landmarkwest@landmarkwest.org)! Our colleagues at the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation have set up a handy electronic form letter, available here.





Monday, August 6, 2012

Love Your Landmark #5 - Riverside Church


Union Theological Seminary & Riverside Church 
122nd Street and Riverside Drive

Friends and staff members from the Historic Districts Council (HDC) stand in the shadows of Union Theological Seminary (foreground) and the steeple of Riverside Church.  This photo was snapped following Professor Andrew S. Dolkart's incredible walking tour of our neighbor to the north, the Upper-Upper West Side neighborhood of Morningside Heights.

Professor Dolkart's Morningside Heights tour was part of the HDC's 2012 Six to Celebrate.

Friday, August 3, 2012

When East Battles West, Who Will Reign Supreme?


Consult your collection of Robert A.M. Stern's New York books,
revisit your notes from Preservation Law 101,
and brace yourself for some fierce competition ...

it's trivia night!!

Young Professionals Trivia Night
Thursday, August 30th, 7PM* to 9PM
Common Ground, 206 Avenue A (b/w East 12th and 13th Streets)
FREE but space is limited; RSVP required!

LANDMARK WEST! and our colleagues from across the park,
the Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts, will host an
evening to test your knowledge of preservation history and other
esoterica centered on the great metropolis we work tirelessly to
protect: New York City!  Come early* and pick your team members
wisely; serious bragging rights are at stake!

Joining LW! and FRIENDS in our informal "East vs. West" trivia competition will be our friends at the Historic Districts Council
plus members from Preservation Alumni
and Pratt Historic Preservation Alumni.

*Happy Hour runs from 4PM to 8PM! Get to Common Ground early,  
order your drink, and prepare for the trivia to come! 
  
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Monday, July 30, 2012

Sign on to Help Save the Landmarks Law!

Preservation and protection of our architectural, historical, and cultural assets is one of the most important factors in assuring that New York remains a livable city. Preserving the best of our city's past and adapting it for reuse in the 21st century greatly enhances the quality of life for all citizens. Individual Landmarks and historic districts continue to offer substantial opportunities for economic development, the revitalization of neighborhoods, the stabilization of property values, and the enhancement of the tourism industry.

Last month, LANDMARK WEST! alerted our members, friends and neighbors to efforts by the Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY) and others to challenge the City's
1965 Landmarks Law. Since our last email, our colleagues at the Historic Districts Council
(HDC) have formed a coalition to support the Landmarks Law. Read their message below, then sign on to the coalition -- we did!

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Original message dated Thursday, July 26, 2012 

... Following on the heels of the contentious designation hearings regarding the Downtown Brooklyn Skyscraper Historic District, the real estate lobby organized into the deceptively-named Responsible Landmarks Coalition and began proposing "reforms" to the Landmarks Law. These amendments were revealed at a City Council public in the beginning of May, where 11 bills were discussed that would, if adopted, mire the Landmarks Preservation Commission in complete bureaucratic status and encourage the City Council to reject landmarks designations on the basis of over-exaggerated and groundless financial concerns. 

... HDC monitors landmark issues throughout New York and we can unfortunately report that the environment for preservation activity has definitely turned cold. We are losing properties which should be preserved and even protected sites are getting hammered by damaging and potentially destructive proposals. Think about the proposal for a residential tower 15 feet away from St. John the Divine, a 9-story hotel development possibly undermining the Merchant's House or the demolition of the Corn Exchange on 125th Street.

How You Can Help:
  • Sign Up! Join the coalition of those opposing these changes to the Landmarks Law (for individual listing, please fill out the form on the HDC website). This growing list will be used to show City Councilmembers that these "reforms" are not supported by the people in the community. Even if you testified at the hearing on May 2, please affirm that your group wishes to be listed -- we would rather be too solicitous than list an organization incorrectly.
  • Save The Date! This Wednesday, HDC will be hosting a rally to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the Legendary Rally to Save Pennsylvania Station. We will be gathering in the afternoon on Wednesday, August 1, by Madison Square Garden to draw attention to the continued threat to New York City's fantastic and imperiled historic buildings and neighborhoods. Stay tuned for more details (or contact HDC at hdc@hdc.org or 212-614-9107).

We need you. Your community needs you. Stay tuned for updates via email, and visit http://hdc.org/historic-district-15/help-save-the-landmarks-law to share your thoughts, sign up for the coalition and learn more.

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Resources at Risk: Merchant's House Museum endangered

Preservation Advocacy Beyond the Upper West Side
GUEST BLOG by LW! intern Jason Crowley

Next Tuesday, July 24th, the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) will hold a public hearing regarding a proposed 9-story building at 27 East 4th Street, located in the NoHo Historic District. This proposal raises great concern for our preservation colleagues committed to the preservation of the adjacent Merchant's House Museum (built in 1832).

The Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation (GVSHP) and the Historic Districts Council (HDC) have written to the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC), Department of Buildings (DOB), and the Parks Department (which owns the Merchant's House) urging them to work together to ensure that no construction takes place next door unless measures are put in place ensuring that the Merchant's House will not be damaged or undermined.



Learn more here, then be sure to

Even though this is far and away from the typical boundaries for LANDMARK WEST!, the Merchant's House Museum is New York's only 19th-century family home preserved inside and out and is a city-owned property. Significant tax dollars have been put towards the restoration and preservation of the site, so all New Yorkers have a vested interest in its protection.

The Landmarks Preservation Commission will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, July 24th (exact time to be determined; stay tuned to the LPC agenda, or contact the Merchant's House Museum). LW! will be there supporting this city-wide concern (here's our statement).

Track this project via the GVSHP Landmarks Applications database.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Say It Loud: "People Want Preservation"!

Our landmarks -- and our Landmarks Law -- need us!City Council announces public hearing for bills proposing RADICAL CHANGES to the Landmarks Law! Preservation advocates received the following hearing notification late last week:
 ***
 Council Member Brad Lander

I am writing to inform you about a joint hearing that the City Council’s Committee on Housing & Buildings and Committee on Land Use will be holding next week, Wednesday, May 2, 2012 at 10:00 AM at 250 Broadway, 14th Floor.

The hearing will cover a number of bills regarding the Landmarks Preservation Commission and landmarked buildings.  The official agenda with links to the bills being heard is available by clicking here.  The agenda will be updated and bill numbers will be assigned once they are introduced at the Council’s Stated Meeting on Monday, April 30, so please check back on the hearing webpage on Monday afternoon for an updated agenda.

-Councilmember Brad Lander
 456 5th Avenue, 3rd Floor * Brooklyn, NY 11215 * 718-499-1090

***
As Friends of the Upper East Side wrote, calling their friends and supporters to action, "while the Landmarks Preservation Commission certainly needs reform, important policy changes should not be made in haste." Come to the hearing on Wednesday and let the City Council know that a handful of days' notice is not enough!!  More, below, from our colleagues and partners in preservation, the Historic Districts Council, on exactly how you can take action ...
   
Come to the hearing and testify in favor of preservation
    1. Even if the LPC hasn’t responded to your request for evaluation  (or especially if they haven’t), demonstrating to the Council members that ordinary New Yorkers want to preserve their communities and are crying out for help is a powerful statement. We need to show the Council that PEOPLE WANT PRESERVATION!
    2. If you have had work done on a landmarked property – please come in to talk about it. The Council members really don’t have any experience with actually working with LPC and will be taking everything the development industry says as gospel.
    3. If you are a preservation/design professional – showing up and explaining to the Council that Landmarking actually provides real value and jobs is a key thing.  The narrative which they will be hearing is “landmarking costs money”  and we need to shift that to “landmarking creates jobs”.
    4. Even if you do not want to testify, showing up with your posters/buttons/postcards/etc. is a powerful statement to the Council members. 
Contact your elected officials 
    1. Use the deadline of May 2nd to send in your Requests to LPC – and make sure to copy them to your elected official.  If LPC has not responded to your request, send in a reminder and copy your representative.  Show your Council member that people in their district want action from the agency.
To learn more about this emergent issue, contact LW! or our colleagues mentioned above, HDC and Friends of the Upper East Side.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

UPDATE: As historic Tavern on the Green re-emerges, new addition threatens to obscure once more

Earlier this month, we reported on plans moving forward for the iconic Tavern on the Green restaurant in Central Park.  Since then, the action has moved from the field to the hearing room.

The City's multi-agency team and contracted architects have shopped their proposal for what is being termed the "shell and core" restoration of the building before Community Boards (including the West Side's own CB7 Preservation Committee, on February 9th) and, on Tuesday, the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC).

Along with preservation colleagues like the Historic Districts Council (HDC) and Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts (connect with them here and here), LW! took to the podium before the LPC.  As we stated in testimony, "[t]he restoration of the Tavern on the Green to its former glory is an incredible contribution to the long history of this site." We're thrilled! Alas, "that restoration alone is not 'enough' and that an addition is also proposed is predictable" (copy our statement available here).

A glass pavilion has been proposed, to rise in the Tavern's Eastern courtyard, connecting to the historic building where once did the Crystal Room.  Curbed.com provided a glimpse of the final design for said pavilion, posting it to their site at almost the exact time that the LPC review commenced.

Proposed addition for the Tavern on the Green, via Curbed.com.
From LW's statement to the LPC:

LW! is not opposed to new design at the Tavern on the Green site in principle, but a legendary destination and a handsomely designed building such as this deserves something far more sympathetic; a quietly masterful note of our time. The pavilion proposed is a hefty glass-and-metal box that does nothing but hide what is most exciting about the building's primary facade: the East-facing central bay.

We're disappointed to report that the LPC ultimately approved the City's plan, glass box and all.

Read more from preservation advocates on this issue:
       - Statement of the Historic Districts Council (third project down, listed as "Item 9")
       - Statement of Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts

*Central Park, home to Tavern on the Green, was the City's first Scenic Landmark, designated by the LPC in 1974.  Learn more about the park and its history in the designation report. Up until now, and until work on the restoration begins, the Tavern on the Green building has served as a visitor's center (more here).

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Lovers of Open Space, Speak Up!

First, the folks at Historic Districts Council (HDC) handed you the mic to voice your opinion on New York City's open spaces.  Now, they're giving us all -- that includes YOU! -- one more chance to help inform their upcoming annual conference, this year titled "The Great Outside: Preserving Public and Private Open Spaces".

Before Friday, February 10th, head to the HDC blog and fill out their "Request for Information".  Answer questions like ...

Why do you think open spaces matter?  How are open spaces threatened?

After you've shared your comments, be sure to RSVP for the conference, taking place March 2-4th.  Attending HDC's annual conference is a terrific way to learn about preservation efforts taking place city-wide, and an opportunity to share information about your own ongoing preservation campaigns.  

We'll see you in March to celebrate "the Great Outside"!


Wednesday, January 25, 2012

TONIGHT, Open Mic for Open Spaces, with Historic Districts Council

Courtesy of our friends and colleagues at the Historic Districts Council, you're getting your turn at the mic! Be a part of the discussion TONIGHT ...

Open Spaces, Open Voices
Wednesday, January 25th from 6:00 to 8:00pm
Jefferson Market Courthouse, New York Public Library Branch 
located at 425 6th Avenue in Manhattan

Sunnyside Garden Historic District
Grab the mike and tell HDC about the urban open spaces that matter to you! In order to best represent local communities citywide, we want to know what concerns you have about local public and private spaces. What challenges does a particular lot or park pose to your neighbors? How have you triumphed in preserving a garden or landscape? All are invited to share thoughts on public parks, plazas, streets and yards at Open Spaces, Open Voices. Attendees will be asked to voice their ideas in a moderated discussion with fellow neighborhood advocates.

The issues raised at the forum will shape the central topics for HDC’s upcoming conference titled The Great Outside: Preserving Public and Private Open Space in March. The theme for the 18th Annual Preservation Conference is inspired by increased pressure on the city’s green spaces due to overuse, development and neglect. Public and private open spaces and the environment created by the adjacency to buildings are top priorities as we plan for New York City’s future. Participants will explore what makes open space historically significant and how those elements of history can be protected in a changing city landscape. The panels will consider current pressures and threats to public or private open space.

FREE and Open to the Public; Registration required. 
Email sromanoski@hdc.org or call 212-614-9107 to reserve a space. 
Space is limited.
For more information or to rsvp please call 212-614-9107
For information about past conferences click here

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Landmarking by the Numbers

More work and less resources--so continues the saga of the LPC's funding history.  At public hearing of the City Council's Land Use Committee, LPC leadership presented a preliminary budget for FY 2012.  The jist: with less staff and insufficient funds ... we'll figure it out.
Personnel  is DOWN.
          61:  Number of staff persons at the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC)
                  (Does not include the 11-member expert commissioners who review proposals
                  at public hearing on a volunteer basis).

             3: Reduction in number of staff (through attrition) at the LPC going into 
                  Fiscal Year 2012.

Funding is DOWN.
 $4.79 million: Proposed FY 2012 budget of the LPC.

                 8%: Percentage cut for the LPC's FY 2012 budget from the FY 2011 budget.

Workload is UP.
      9,229: Number of permits issued in Fiscal Year (FY, meaning July 1 to June 30) 2010.  
                  That's an average of nearly 770 permits issued every month.

      6,824: Number of applications received (not all necessarily processed) by 
                  February 2011 for FY 2011.  With four months left in the year and 
                  an average of 770 permits issued, it's fair to assume FY 2011 will yield 
                  about 9,904.  A 7% increase in the number of applications demanding 
                  LPC staff energies and resources.

Council members Leroy Comrie (Chair, Land Use
Comm.) and Brad Lander (Chair, Subcommittee
on Landmarks) listen to the LPC's presentation.
LPC Chair Robert Tierney and Executive Director Kate Daly shared with the Land Use Committee, chaired by Council member Leroy Comrie, a laundry list of FY 2010 success stories (more designations in the outer boroughs this year than during any other in the agency's 45 year history) and 2011 goals (anticipated launch of publicly accessible informational database to increase the LPC's transparency and make info more readily available to the public).  All this was achieved on an already-tight budget.

LPC funding has recently been on the minds and lips of the city-wide preservation community, as the LPC proposed--and on March 8th approved--increases in the LPC's application fees.  Neither at past public hearings, when pressed by the public, nor today before the Land Use Committee did the LPC connect fee increases to the LPC's budget.

LPC Chair Robert Tierney and Exec. Dir. Kate Daly present
their Fiscal Year 2012 budget to the Land Use Committee.
Chair Tierney submitted a preliminary FY 2012 budget of $4,799,376.  That's an 8% drop from the FY 2011 budget of just over $5.23 million (as available via the Office of Management and Budget's website).  The LPC's designations only continue to expand the New York City landmarks family--indeed, the proposed West End Avenue historic district extensions to be heard by the Commission this year would add another 800+ buildings to their stewardship roster.

LW! testified before the Land Use Committee, stating our strong support of a well-funded LPC.  We directly recommended a budget increase of $1 million.  The Historic Districts Council appeared before the Land Use Committee as well, underscoring the minimal resources appropriated to the LPC and the immense volume of work set before it.  HDC Executive Director Simeon Bankoff urged the Committee to seriously consider a meaningful budget increase to the LPC, noting that other city agencies such as the Dept. of Information Technology and Telecommunications (also presenting their preliminary FY 2012 budget to the Land Use Committee) have budgets up to 100 times as large as that of the Landmarks Commission.  

Rounding out the public testimony portion of the hearing was Claudette Brady from the Bedford Corners Historic District Joint Block Association (located in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn).  Her community, she reported, has become energized by the landmark possibilities.  The LPC's research department identified approximately 8,500 buildings in the neighborhood that merit landmark consideration, she continued.  While the all-volunteer group has secured the support of nearly all their elected officials, the fear that a reduction in LPC resources would lead to a loss of momentum is very real.

In the past, HDC noted, the City Council has been able to make increases to the tune of $500,000 to the LPC's budget.  That's 10% of their proposed FY 2012 budget.  Can the Land Use Committee and the City Council do it again?  Better yet, can they best themselves?  Stay tuned ...

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

West End Avenue, Part I :: Hearing to consider historic district extensions approaches

West End Avenue, between 79th and 87th Streets, considered in the first of three public hearing
Tell your neighbors!  Tell your friends!  In less than two weeks, we tell the LPC!

On Tuesday, March 22nd, the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) will hold the first of three public hearings to consider historic district extensions on West End Avenue.  Your neighborhood needs you!  Spread the word and let others know about this important hearing.     

What you need to know:

  • Attending the Public Hearing
  • Contacting Your Elected Officials
  • Report of Recent Informational Breakfast Session
  • How to Stay Informed
Attend the Tuesday, March 22nd Public Hearing

      WHEN:   Tuesday, March 22nd; Time TBD* (announced by the LPC no later than Fri., March 18th) *LW! will keep you posted!

    WHERE:   Landmarks Preservation Commission; 1 Centre Street, 9th Floor

The LPC needs to hear from you.  So first ...

Sign the petition! Add your name to the list of those who support the West End Avenue historic district extensions.  The petition will be submitted to the LPC for the upcoming March 22nd public hearing. 

Second, please plan to attend the public hearing and to share your support with the Commission.  Your support can take the form of a personal testimonial or a written statement.  Either way, your presence is incredibly important and speaks volumes, even if you choose not to speak!  Make a statement or stand as a "silent supporter" of the West End Avenue historic district extensions.   

Write to Your Elected Officials

In early 2008, the West End Preservation Society (WEPS) secured a letter supporting expanded historic district protection on West End Avenue signed by elected officials within whose districts such landmarking would occur.  Please write or call their offices, thanking them for their early backing of this important issue, and requesting their continued commitment as the public hearings begin this month.  Not sure which elected officials' districts you're in?  Check here.

State Assembly Members Linda Rosenthal and Daniel O'Donnell
City Council Members Gale Brewer, Inez Dickens and Melissa Mark-Viverito


REPORT from the FIELD: Informational Breakfast Answers Many Neighbors' Questions

To help our fellow West Siders learn more about the landmark designation process, and specifically the March 22nd public hearing of the LPC, LANDMARK WEST! co-sponsored, along with a league of neighborhood groups and preservation advocates, Living with Landmarks, a neighborly Q&A informational breakfast.  For those who couldn't make the morning session, head to our YouTube channel (video coming soon!)!   
LW! Executive Director Kate Wood welcomes the audience to the morning's discussion.
Click here for more pictures
Held this past Wednesday, March 9th, at 8AM, the breakfast kicked-off with welcome remarks from LW! Executive Director Kate Wood and Richard Emery, Esq., of WEPS.  Next, a lively and informative presentation by Prof. Mosette Broderick, Director of the Urban Design and Architecture Studies program at New York University, on the history and development of the Upper West Side.  Following Prof. Broderick, the audience of nearly 100 heard from residents of existing historic districts, to hear from them first-hand what living in a landmark neighborhood has meant.  Finally, breakfast co-sponsors came together for the Q&A portion of the morning.

Breakfast co-sponsors include:

Stay Informed and Spread the Word!

A historic district recognizing the architectural richness of West End Avenue and Riverside Drive has long been a landmark "Wish List" priority for LANDMARK WEST!  The proposed extensions would weave together five smaller, existing historic districts along West End Avenue and take in eight individual buildings that have long been on LW's "Wish List" of landmark priorities (including the First Baptist Church at 79th and Broadway and the Cliff Dwelling apartments at Riverside Drive and 96th Street).

On September 15, 2010, the LPC held a community meeting at which they revealed a draft of their "West End Avenue Study Areas" (watch video of the meeting on our YouTube page).  This was the public's first look at the area the LPC is considering for landmark designation. The new historic district extensions would include nearly 800 buildings (click here for a map of the entire area).

The proposed expansion is being considered at Public Hearing in three parts*:

West End Avenue between 79th and 87th Streets:
Public Hearing at the LPC: Tuesday, March 22

West End Avenue between 70th and 79th Streets:
Public Hearing at the LPC: Tuesday, June 28

West End Avenue between 89th and 109th Streets:
Public Hearing at the LPC: Tuesday, October 25

*All three areas are anchored by West End Avenue and extend to Riverside Drive and Broadway in most, but not all, locations.

For specific questions about owning a home or apartment in a historic district and the regulatory process, call LANDMARK WEST! at 212-496-8110.  Our sincerest thanks go to the West End Preservation Society (WEPS) for their stalwart advocacy!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

GUEST BLOG :: Preservation, the Next Generation

REPORT from the FIELD
A Guest Blog, Reported by Will Vogel

Last weekend (March 4-6) the Historic Districts Council (HDC) continued celebrating “40 years of activism” with their annual preservation conference: Looking Forward, Looking Back: Forty Years of Preserving New York City Neighborhoods. The theme of the three day conference was to explore and celebrate grassroots preservation through a comprehensive overview of how local residents have campaigned to save their neighborhoods from neglect, deterioration and over-development since 1971!

The conference kicked off with a bang Friday night with the Opening Night Reception, hosted by the General Society of Mechanics & Tradesmen.  LW's Debi and Cristiana were there (as you may have heard via our Twitter feed), trading war stories with colleagues throughout the city, educating folks on our current "top priority" advocacy campaigns, and learning what other issues neighborhood groups like us are tackling.  A fun mix of business and educational pleasure!

Picking up early Saturday morning (8:30AM = dedicated to the cause!), the conference was back in full swing with preservationists coming from all over the five boroughs to St. Francis College, (just outside the heard-but-not-designated Borough Hall Skyscraper Historic District in beautiful downtown Brooklyn--more here!)  Leading the charge was architectural historian extraordinaire Francis Morrone, with an informative chronicling of the political and cultural environments that has existed in New York City over the past 45 years (since the Landmarks Preservation Commission was established in 1965). 

Next to the podium was Eric Allison, chair of the Historic Preservation program at Pratt Institute, and previous president of HDC, paralleling Francis' remarks with a lecture detailing how this climate--ripe with change--set the perfect stage for the advancement of the preservation movement. To provide insight on the people behind the movement, Dr. Marjorie Pearson didn’t just monotonously list the movers and shakers name by name.  Rather, Dr. Pearson sang their praises, in true LW! fashion (seriously, we can be quite melodic when it comes to honoring the proverbial little guys who make change happen). 

From the speakers to the audience to the volunteers (many of them students!), there were many different generations of preservationists in attendance.  All agreed that while looking back at a movement that has been going strong in New York City for 45 years may bring some hard memories to the surface, the future of preservation is ultimately bright.  And who better to convey that than LW!'s own Executive Director, Kate Wood!  Read on ...

Post-lunch, two breakout sessions allowed for a more intimate conversation about what can be learned from a successful advocacy campaign in the current preservation climate. One discussion featured Andrew Berman and his efforts in Greenwich Village as Executive Director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation; the other discussion featured LW!’s 25 years of fighting "the good fight" on the Upper West Side, as recounted by our own Kate Wood (obviously yours truly sought to show support for the latter--guilty as charged!). 

The theater was filled with friends old and new as Kate wove together the past and present history of LW!. Our past: A quarter century of feisty advocacy, born from the passion of our founder, Arlene Simon, and fueled by the energies of a small (but nimble!)  staff and dedicated volunteers. Our present: A Kickstarter-funded venture into the world of mobile technology with an iPhone app. Our explanatory project video (informational and playful, wouldn't you agree?) inspired folks from across the globe to support our project and help us reach (and ultimately surpass) our goal! In December 2010, LW! launched the FIRST EVER iPhone app walking tour of Manhattan’s Upper West SideMore than a dozen countries and 500+ downloads later, the rich history of our neighborhood continues to educate and inspire! With Kate's conclusion, an alert crowd jumped into action for a Q&A exchange.

Two additional breakout sessions--addressing the preservation of Staten Island's historic resources, and the campaign to designate Sunnyside Gardens in Queens--concluded the conference's Saturday programming.  The following day, Sunday, March 6, conference attendees found themselves exploring all five boroughs with a suite of walking tours. 
 
The 17th Annual HDC Preservation Conference offered a bit of everything, leaving no one in want.  Except for when it ended--many wanted more! Thankfully, it not need to end there. Check back here to our blog often, or subscribe to LW! email news alerts, as we keep you informed of walking tours, lectures, conferences, and other activities taking place on the Upper West Side ... and beyond!

Friday, October 1, 2010

UPDATE from the FIELD :: Downtown chic at Central Park's Loeb Boathouse? No, thank you.


UPDATE from the FIELD
As reported by Cristiana P.

Boat launch and outdoor bar at the Loeb Boathouse. 
Far left, white columns of the Boathouse; to the immediate
right, existing outdoor bar to be replaced.
Picture it: You're enjoying a beverage on the outdoor patio of the Loeb Boathouse in Central Park.  The calm reflection of the Lake; the soundless paddling of boats; the crisp rustling of leaves ... and a less-than-timid duck hops aboard the decking to join you for a brewskie.  The industry of the city couldn't be further from your mind.  That's Central Park living up to its character: rus in urbe.  That is, a bit of country rusticity in the heart of the urban city.

On Tuesday, a proposal was heard by the Landmarks Preservation Commission 
(LPC) at Public Hearing that would compromise the aesthetic of the Central 
Park landscape, and the selection of buildings located inside (ie: the Loeb Boathouse pavilion, where the proposal is sited).

LW!'s Certificate of Appropriateness (C of A) design review committee weighed in on this project.  The short of it: replace the existing bar with a new structure in glass and metal, relocate the bar closer to the Boathouse proper, swath it in a coat of bright-white paint ... and top it all off with an illuminated display podium for the liquor bottles.  Rustic, no?  And there's more: the proposal calls for raising the level of the patio area, drawing visitors further away from their interaction with nature. 

Our C of A Committtee strongly urged the LPC to deny the applicationClick here to read our testimony, and let us know what you think!  Our colleagues at the Historic Districts Council also presented testimony on this project (their statement available via their website)
.  The public review was also reported on by NY Eater.com.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Preservation in action :: LW! testifies at design review public hearing

UPDATE FROM THE FIELD
As reported by Mei Tuggle, LW! intern and NYU student

Yesterday, the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) reviewed 150 West 77th Street’s application to construct a rear yard addition and to alter its basement entrance.  LANDMARK WEST!’s Certificate of Appropriateness (C of A) Committee not only found the proposal to construct a double-door entrance historically inappropriate, but also found the entire application to alter one of architect Gilbert Schellenger’s Renaissance Revival rowhouses excessively confusing and incomplete. And so did the LPC!

After hearing testimony from LANDMARK WEST!, the Historic Districts Council and neighbors, the LPC directed questions to the applicant.  Significant information was lacking in the presentation, and the LPC needed some answers: regarding the rear yard extension, did the applicant propose reconstructing the existing bay window, or mere replication?  What material was proposed? To what extent would original historic fabric be reused, if at all?

In addition, LW! testimony pointed out that "sacrificing an entire façade of historic building fabric for the sake of three feet of interior space" is wasteful and inappropriate.  Further, our C of A committee called for a renewed review by Community Board 7, noting that "the context of the proposed rear yard addition as presented to the community and as voted on by both the Community Board 7 (CB7) Parks & Preservation Committee and its Full Board was inaccurate. The appropriateness of the proposal was being evaluated in relation to a building façade that does not, in fact, exist."  This seemed to resonate strongly with the Commissioners, as they concurred that such a case rendered CB7’s decision inaccurate.

In the end, the LPC took no action (just as LW! recommended!).The applicant was instructed to supply the LPC with renderings of the proposed rear yard addition.

PHOTOS: Top: Rear facade of 150 West 77th Street as presented to CB7; Bottom: Rear facade as presented to the LPC.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Seeing Is Believing! Preservation rally and West-Park council vote photos are in!


Experience the camaraderie and shared appreciation for our city's rich history as manifest at the preservation rally 2010, which took place on May 12, 2010.



Then, go inside City Hall for images from the decisive votes to confirm the Landmarks Preservation Commission's designation of West-Park Presbyterian Church as an Individual Landmark.



For more info, click here

Preservation Rally Draws Spirited Crowd

Yesterday, May 12th, just before the decisive vote by the City Council to affirm the landmark designation of West-Park Presbyterian Church ...



Rain or shine, New York City wants landmarks!

Dozens of landmark and neighborhood preservation advocates from all of the city's five boroughs gathered on the steps of City Hall to rally for preservation.

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Historic buildings and neighborhoods are among New York's most valuable cultural and economic assets.  Landmarks must be a priority!  Past Preservation Lobby Days have resulted in greater Landmarks Preservation Commission funding and demonstrated the breadth of the preservation community. 

LANDMARK WEST! thanks all of the organizations and individuals who participated in this year's rally.  Your presence helped send the message loud and clear ...

Preservation is for the people and benefits all New Yorkers!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Riverside Park comfort station fated to novice design


UPDATE FROM THE FIELD
As reported by Cristiana P.


Apparently, park "wins" don't come in pairs.

Less than a week after LW! celebrated the community's triumph in successfully pushing back a proposal by the Dept. of Parks and Recreation (DPR) to install bubbles over existing tennis courts in Central Park, our Certificate of Appropriateness (C of A) design review committee testified at the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) on proposed changes to a historic Robert Moses-era building in Riverside Park.  Though our C of A Committee felt strongly that the application did not rise to the standard of design befitting a historic building in a landmarked park and urged the LPC to deny the application, the LPC did ultimately approve it unanimously. 


At Public Hearing of the LPC yesterday, the DPR presented their design for modifications to
the 102nd Street comfort station, located in Riverside Park, a Scenic Landmark.  This joint project with architecture students from Parsons School of Design proposes (1) metal-and-glass infill and (2) the construction of a barrier free access ramp.  Public testimony was presented by the Historic Districts Council and LANDMARK WEST!, both in opposition to the application as presented.  In their testimonies, both groups outlined numerous elements of the design that raised red flags, and provided various suggestions on how the proposal might be improved through further experimentation and exploration.  Manhattan Community Board 7 approved of the design.

In response to public testimony, the DPR stated that the 1930s terra-cotta jalousies (window tiles) were off the proverbial table, as reproducing or reintroducing them in any way, the DPR felt, would unnecessarily historicize the building.  

Which brings us to the six Commissioners in attendance and their comments.  One Commissioner-architect declared the 1937, Clinton Lloyd-designed comfort station to be "Moses at his best," and as such, the LPC must "get this right" in regards to the proposed design.  In their collective opinion, the DPR/Parsons design did just that.  The Commissioners expressed minor concerns for the proposed metal infill framing system (aluminum), the physical arrangement of the access ramp, and the terra-cotta jalousies.  Yet, unfortunately, all six Commissioners present approved of the design, with the footnote that the metal infill framing would be minimally tweaked at staff-level in response to concern for their role in the overall infill design.

*PHOTO:
Top: Proposed metal-and-glass infill design.  Bottom: Proposed design when covered by open-weave metal rolldown security gate.  As presented at LPC Public Review on April 30, 2010.