I took this picture last week, with my back to the
Hudson River, standing at the northern end of the High Line. The building rising on the left, along with the High
Line itself, is part of the massive Hudson Yards project, an example of the major rearrangement of New York’s landscape through the initiatives of former Mayor Mike Bloomberg.
For 30 years, a relative of mine, away from New York
City since 1979, could truly say that he could still find every significant point in
the Big Apple all these years later. In a couple of years, though, that will no
longer be the case.
In a prior post, I talked about Brookfield Place. And that’s just a small part of the new
city-within-a-city rising from the ashes of the bombing of the old World Trade
Center. But development has hardly stopped there.
The High Line itself is reclaimed space, the remnant
of a freight line elevated above the streets of a portion of Manhattan’s West
Side. After nearly two decades of disuse, it opened in 2009, preserved as an
unusual, elevated public park.
When I visited the High Line first a year and a half
ago, it was open from Gansevoort Street to West 30th Street. This past September, the last portion of it,
up to 34th Street, opened. It offers two views that are each, in
their way, something to behold: New Jersey, to the west, and Hudson Yards, to
the east. I took this photo in the new section.
Hudson Yards, involving a rezoning of the Far West Side, will be the largest private real estate
development in the history of the United States. When completed, this newly created neighborhood will
comprise more than 17 million square feet of commercial and residential space,
more than 100 shops, a collection of restaurants, approximately 5,000
residences, a unique cultural space, 14 acres of public open space, a 750-seat
public school and a 175-room luxury hotel.
Five years hence, we will see how much all of this
development worked out to the advantage of New Yorkers hoping for a sustainable
future. In many ways, however, much of the landscape will look different from
what we see now.
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