In Jan/Feb 2014 while taking a course in NYC I stayed
in a dorm (Sara´s homestay) on 85th street, very close to Central Park.
* 85th street in Manhattan
* 85th street in Manhattan - a photo in front of Sara´s homestay
It was just
about a five-minute walk to get there. I was with a group of Brazilian teachers
and at that time the weather was terrible so we had to face snowstorms very
often. In spite of that very cold – freezing, I would say - weather we went to
the park a few times and the sensation was that the weather was even colder. Here
you can see some photos and also a little history of Central Park:
New York's Central Park is the first urban landscaped
park in the United States. Originally conceived in the salons of wealthy New
Yorkers in the early 1850's, the park project spanned more than a decade and
cost the city ten million dollars.
After years of debate over the location, the park's
construction finally began in 1857, based on the winner of a park design
contest, the "Greensward Plan," of Frederick Law Olmsted, the park
superintendent, and Calvert Vaux, an architect. Using the power of eminent
domain the city acquired 840 acres located in the center of Manhattan, spanning
two and a half miles from 59th Street to 106th Street and half a mile from Fifth Avenue to Eighth
Avenue. In the process, a population of about 1,600 people who had been living
in the rocky, swampy terrain - some as legitimate renters and others as
squatters - were evicted; included in this sweep were a convent and school,
bone-boiling plants, and the residents of Seneca Village, an African-American
settlement of about 270 people which boasted a school and three churches.
As the city and the park moved into the twentieth
century, the lower reservoir was drained and turned into the Great Lawn. The first
playground, complete with jungle gyms and slides, was installed in the park in
1926, despite opposition by conservationists, who argued that the park was
intended as a countryside escape for urban dwellers. The playground, used
mostly by the children of middle and working class parents, was a great
success; by the 1940s, under the direction of parks commissioner Robert Moses,
Central Park was home to more than twenty playgrounds.
In the sixties and seventies the park's maintenance
entered a decline; despite its growing use for concerts and rallies, clean-up,
planting, and general maintenance fell by the wayside. A 1976 evaluation by
Columbia University found many parts of the park in sad disrepair, from the low
stone wall which surrounded it to the drainage system that kept the transverses
from flooding. During the early 1980s there was a massive attempt to involve
New Yorkers in the upkeep of their beloved park, including the "You Gotta
Have a Park" campaign and the formation of a private fundraising body (the
Central Park Conservancy) to fund repairs projects. Today, as the major site of most New
Yorkers' recreation, the park hosts millions of visitors yearly engaging in
such activities as roller blading, fine dining at the Tavern on the Green,
watching free performances of Shakespeare in the Park, and relaxing and
sunbathing in Sheep's Meadow.
Aadapted from
www.ny.com
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