FTPT NL Winter' 10 Proof.Indd

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

FTPT NL Winter' 10 Proof.Indd Friends Committee G Winter 2010 azette www.FortTryonParkTrust.org FORT TRYON PARK’S 75TH YEAR Painting with Plants in the Heather Garden Jennifer M. Hoppa, Administrator of Northern Manhattan Parks eing a trained artist sive, as well as give a blueprint has been very im- to those who will be tending “B portant to my work,” the garden daily to help guide says Lynden B. Miller, an the ongoing maintenance.” acclaimed public garden de- Both Miller and Brands signer and champion of public appreciate the uniqueness parks. This year, Miller is help- of Fort Tryon Park with its ing develop a Framework Plan Photo by Marechal Brown views of the Hudson River, for enhancing and sustaining the Rockefeller family con- Fort Tryon Park’s 75-year-old, nection, and its expansive gar- Heather Garden. dens. “Ronda’s ¼ scale draw- “Gardening is an art form ing of the perennial bed hung using many of the same ele- over my ten foot long draft- ments as painting,” says Miller, ing table,” Miller exclaimed. adding, “I paint with plants The Heather Garden’s pe- using line, form, color and rennial bed is 600 feet long. texture.” Miller also used to Both designers see the need make large abstract landscape for large swaths of plants and collages. “When I began to repetition as keys to making design gardens,” she says, “I the long perennial bed suc- realized that a garden is also a cessful. “We want to create collage — a group of disparate a consistent and congenial elements brought together to Experts assess soil issues, from left, Ronda Brands, relationship between the pe- form a composition made of Lynden Miller and Fort Tryon Park Gardener Marcia Garibaldi. rennial bed and the heather living plants.” bed, while ensuring they read Miller’s associate designer, Ronda message in her new book, Parks, as individual pieces of a larger whole,” Brands, comments that in the Plants and People: Beautifying the says Miller. historic Heather Garden, many col- Urban Landscape: “Good parks make In conjunction with the Fort Tryon lage elements are already in place: the good cities.” Miller and Brands are Park gardeners, Miller and Brands rocky topography, the extensive heaths currently working on projects at the have mapped the garden’s existing con- and heathers and the unique collec- Museum of Modern Art, Columbia ditions, helped tackle soil remediation tions of perennials. Brands says, “One University, Princeton University, in problem areas, and identifi ed ways to of the challenges of improving the Stony Brook University, Hudson ensure year round interest throughout the garden is that it is already established. River Park, Hanover Square, and the garden. With the support of the Fort We want to reinvigorate it through US Supreme Court. Tryon Park Trust and the collabora- the Framework Plan, but make it true Despite their collective wealth of ex- tion between Miller, Brands and the to the history of the park’s design and perience, Miller and Brands recognize Fort Tryon Park gardeners, the larg- ensure strong structure and form.” the expertise of the Fort Tryon garden- est heath and heather collection in the In addition to numerous horti- ers and are working closely with them Northeast will be enjoyed for genera- cultural awards, Miller may be best on all plant selections and developing tions to come. known for reclaiming the histor- maintenance and operations plans for Come see the garden collage unfold ic Conservatory Garden in Central the garden’s long-term needs. “So much this spring. Park in the early 1980s and for help- knowledge and material already existed,” If you would like to help support the ing revitalize Bryant Park. The Wall says Brands, “Now we can document it, Heather Garden Framework Plan, please Street Journal summarized Miller’s strengthen it, and make it more cohe- contact [email protected]. ■ Nancy’s Letter: Refl ections Dr. Ruth on the This year we will celebrate the 75th anniversary of Fort Park’s 75 Years Tryon Park, and it seems to be a good moment to look back “There’s been a lot of ‘progress’ in the last 75 and refl ect upon what the park has meant to me for the past years, but as someone who can barely fi gure ten years. out how to make a call on her iPhone, when Without a doubt, the park is one of the main reasons I I come to the Heather Garden and see the improvements that have been bestowed by moved to Washington Heights in the fi rst place. I remember our Parks Department and the Fort Tryon the exact point in time when I realized I had to move back to Park Trust on this little piece of heaven, that’s New York City from California: I was soaking up the sunset progress I can relate to,” says Dr. Ruth, adding, on Linden Terrace, looking west, the trees below silhouetted by “Everyone whose soul could use a little pick me up should come and visit and join in some of the blazing red-orange of the sky. I had never seen anything the 75th Anniversary celebration events.” so beautiful. Right then and there, I made up my mind I was coming back. The Hudson River view over the treetops was calling to me more strongly than the equally breathtaking view across San Francisco Bay. Since then, the park has become my refuge in times of trouble and despair. It’s been my backyard where I express my inner gardener and sink my fi ngers into the earth. Through my volunteer work with the Friends of Fort Tryon Park and now with the Fort Tryon Park Trust, it has become a kind of social club, introducing me to hundreds of my neighbors and members of the Trust’s board. And fi ve years ago, it became my big green gym, a lovely place to become healthier and to help others become healthier Photo by Malcolm Pinckney, NYC Parks & Recreation Photo by Malcolm Pinckney, through our organized fi tness programs, as well as impromptu walks and rounds of ping pong in the subway terrace. As this unique and glorious park has become more and more a part of my life, it has changed it for the better. I simply can’t imagine living without it. Can you? See you in the park, Nancy Bruning Dr. Ruth Westheimer, accompanied by Parks Chair, Friends Committee Commissioner Adrian Benepe, is a Trust Board Fort Tryon Park Trust Member and the Honorary Chair of the 75th Anniversary Committee. Fort Tryon Park Trust’s mission is to promote the restoration, preservation, and enhancement of this historic and scenic landmark for the benefi t and use of the surrounding community Mission and all New Yorkers. • Fort Tryon Park Trust Website: www.FortTryonParkTrust.org • Friends Committee Email: [email protected] • To volunteer in the Heather Garden: [email protected] • Northern Manhattan Parks Administrator, Jennifer Hoppa: 212-795-1388, Ext. 300 or [email protected] • Council Member Robert Jackson: 212-928-1322 • To report dangerous conditions or graffi ti and other vandalism: 311 • Forestry (tree pruning, dead tree and limb removal): 311 • For event permits, parties of 20 or more and professional photography, please visit www.nycgovparks.org, and click on special events. Contacts 2 Friends Committee Gazette Volunteers Plant 1,000 Bulbs Mike Klein Fort Tryon Park 1935 to 1945 he fi nal beautifi cation events of 2009 yield- ed a great number of newcomers to Fort Tryon T Park. On September 13 an energetic group of about 40 volunteers turned out despite the intermit- tent rain. Many of these volunteers were recruited by Street Project (www.streetproject.org), which has ral- lied volunteers for these events throughout the year. (Thank you, Street Project!) Volunteers concentrat- ed on cleaning out the abandoned horseshoe pitch area, located just north of the volleyball courts, restor- ing the sightlines and making the area safer. Clean up efforts yielded over 50 bags of leaves and trash. For the bulb planting event on October 30, a record 175 volunteers amassed. Volunteers included employ- Photo courtesy of the Olmsted Archives ees of United Light, members of the fraternities Beta Alpha Psi and Sigma Lambda Beta, as well as students from St. John’s, Fordham, Baruch, Pace and New York Universities, and our regulars from Street Project. The groups prepped and planted bulbs in the Margaret Corbin Circle and the upper Subway Terrace, raked London plane trees shade Anne Loftus Playground in 1935 and today. leaves on the upper and lower Subway Terrace, weed- ed and removed invasive plants from the slope off of n honor of the park’s 75th year, the Friends Committee of the Fort Tryon Fort Washington Avenue, collected trash from behind Park Trust would like to acknowledge and bring to life memories of the the stone walls, and cleared English Ivy off of the Ipark from current and former community members. Susan Daglian, a res- trees. In total, the volunteers planted just over 1,000 ident of 187th Street, shares her story: bulbs consisting of a variety of tulips, Narcissus, Allium “My father, Kourken A. Daglian, worked in Fort Tryon Park as a Playground Globemasters (ornamental onions), and Vanguard Director in the summer of 1942. The playground was the one at Dyckman Crocus Vernus. Rosa Naparstek provided a wonderful and Broadway (Anne Loftus Playground). In 1940 he took the civil service spread of refreshments, bagels, fruit, and granola bars test and placed sixth. First, he worked at a park on East 108th Street, and then for all the volunteers.
Recommended publications
  • Wanderings Newsletter of the OUTDOORS CLUB INC
    Wanderings newsletter of the OUTDOORS CLUB INC. http://www.outdoorsclubny.org ISSUE NUMBER 108 PUBLISHED TRI-ANNUALLY Jul-Oct 2014 The Outdoors Club is a non-profit 501(c) (3) volunteer-run organization open to all adults 18 and over which engages in hiking, biking, wilderness trekking, canoeing, mountaineering, snowshoeing and skiing, nature and educational city walking tours of varying difficulty. Individual participants are expected to engage in activities suitable to their ability, experience and physical condition. Leaders may refuse to take anyone who lacks ability or is not properly dressed or equipped. These precautions are for your safety, and the wellbeing of the group. Your participation is voluntary and at your own risk. Remember to bring lunch and water on all full day activities. Telephone the leader or Lenny if unsure what to wear or bring with you on an activity. Nonmembers pay one-day membership dues of $3. It is with sorrow that we say goodbye to Robert Kaye, the brother of Alan Kaye, who died in January. We have been able to keep the dues the same, and publish the Newsletter because of Robert’s benevolence to the Club. Robert wanted to make sure that the Club would continue after Alan’s death. Please join Bob Susser and Helen Yee on Saturday, October 18th, at the New York Botanical Gardens for a memorial walk in honor of Robert Kaye. CHECK THE MAILING LABEL ON YOUR SCHEDULE FOR EXPIRATION DATE! RENEWAL NOTICES WILL NO LONGER BE SENT. It takes 4-6 weeks to process your renewal. Some leaders will be asking members for proof of membership, so please carry your membership card or schedule on activities (the expiration date is on the top line of your mailing label).
    [Show full text]
  • NYC Park Crime Stats
    1st QTRPARK CRIME REPORT SEVEN MAJOR COMPLAINTS Report covering the period Between Jan 1, 2018 and Mar 31, 2018 GRAND LARCENY OF PARK BOROUGH SIZE (ACRES) CATEGORY Murder RAPE ROBBERY FELONY ASSAULT BURGLARY GRAND LARCENY TOTAL MOTOR VEHICLE PELHAM BAY PARK BRONX 2771.75 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 VAN CORTLANDT PARK BRONX 1146.43 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 01000 01 ROCKAWAY BEACH AND BOARDWALK QUEENS 1072.56 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00001 01 FRESHKILLS PARK STATEN ISLAND 913.32 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 FLUSHING MEADOWS CORONA PARK QUEENS 897.69 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 01002 03 LATOURETTE PARK & GOLF COURSE STATEN ISLAND 843.97 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 MARINE PARK BROOKLYN 798.00 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 BELT PARKWAY/SHORE PARKWAY BROOKLYN/QUEENS 760.43 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 BRONX PARK BRONX 718.37 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 01000 01 FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT BOARDWALK AND BEACH STATEN ISLAND 644.35 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00001 01 ALLEY POND PARK QUEENS 635.51 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 PROSPECT PARK BROOKLYN 526.25 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 04000 04 FOREST PARK QUEENS 506.86 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 GRAND CENTRAL PARKWAY QUEENS 460.16 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 FERRY POINT PARK BRONX 413.80 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 CONEY ISLAND BEACH & BOARDWALK BROOKLYN 399.20 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00001 01 CUNNINGHAM PARK QUEENS 358.00 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00001 01 RICHMOND PARKWAY STATEN ISLAND 350.98 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 CROSS ISLAND PARKWAY QUEENS 326.90 ONE ACRE OR LARGER 0 00000 00 GREAT KILLS PARK STATEN ISLAND 315.09 ONE ACRE
    [Show full text]
  • In New York City
    Outdoors Outdoors THE FREE NEWSPAPER OF OUTDOOR ADVENTURE JULY / AUGUST / SEPTEMBER 2009 iinn NNewew YYorkork CCityity Includes CALENDAR OF URBAN PARK RANGER FREE PROGRAMS © 2009 Chinyera Johnson | Illustration 2 CITY OF NEW YORK PARKS & RECREATION www.nyc.gov/parks/rangers URBAN PARK RANGERS Message from: Don Riepe, Jamaica Bay Guardian To counteract this problem, the American Littoral Society in partnership with NYC Department of Parks & Recreation, National Park Service, NYC Department of Environmental Protection, NY State Department of Environmental Conservation, Jamaica Bay EcoWatchers, NYC Audubon Society, NYC Sierra Club and many other groups are working on various projects designed to remove debris and help restore the bay. This spring, we’ve organized a restoration cleanup and marsh planting at Plum Beach, a section of Gateway National Recreation Area and a major spawning beach for the ancient horseshoe crab. In May and June during the high tides, the crabs come ashore to lay their eggs as they’ve done for millions of years. This provides a critical food source for the many species of shorebirds that are migrating through New York City. Small fi sh such as mummichogs and killifi sh join in the feast as well. JAMAICA BAY RESTORATION PROJECTS: Since 1986, the Littoral Society has been organizing annual PROTECTING OUR MARINE LIFE shoreline cleanups to document debris and create a greater public awareness of the issue. This September, we’ll conduct Home to many species of fi sh & wildlife, Jamaica Bay has been many cleanups around the bay as part of the annual International degraded over the past 100 years through dredging and fi lling, Coastal Cleanup.
    [Show full text]
  • Aroundmanhattan
    Trump SoHo Hotel South Cove Statue of Liberty 3rd Avenue Peter J. Sharp Boat House Riverbank State Park Chelsea Piers One Madison Park Four Freedoms Park Eastwood Time Warner Center Butler Rogers Baskett Handel Architects and Mary Miss, Stanton Eckstut, F A Bartholdi, Richard M Hunt, 8 Spruce Street Rotation Bridge Robert A.M. Stern & Dattner Architects and 1 14 27 40 53 66 Cetra Ruddy 79 Louis Kahn 92 Sert, Jackson, & Assocs. 105 118 131 144 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill Marner Architecture Rockwell Group Susan Child Gustave Eiffel Frank Gehry Thomas C. Clark Armand LeGardeur Abel Bainnson Butz 23 East 22nd Street Roosevelt Island 510 Main St. Columbus Circle Warren & Wetmore 246 Spring Street Battery Park City Liberty Island 135th St Bronx to E 129th 555 W 218th Street Hudson River -137th to 145 Sts 100 Eleventh Avenue Zucotti Park/ Battery Park & East River Waterfront Queens West / NY Presbyterian Hospital Gould Memorial Library & IRT Powerhouse (Con Ed) Travelers Group Waterside 2009 Addition: Pei Cobb Freed Park Avenue Bridge West Harlem Piers Park Jean Nouvel with Occupy Wall St Castle Clinton SHoP Architects, Ken Smith Hunters Point South Hall of Fame McKim Mead & White 2 15 Kohn Pedersen Fox 28 41 54 67 Davis, Brody & Assocs. 80 93 and Ballinger 106 Albert Pancoast Boiler 119 132 Barbara Wilks, Archipelago 145 Beyer Blinder Belle Cooper, Robertson & Partners Battery Park Battery Maritime Building to Pelli, Arquitectonica, SHoP, McKim, Mead, & White W 58th - 59th St 388 Greenwich Street FDR Drive between East 25th & 525 E. 68th Street connects Bronx to Park Ave W127th St & the Hudson River 100 11th Avenue Rutgers Slip 30th Streets Gantry Plaza Park Bronx Community College on Eleventh Avenue IAC Headquarters Holland Tunnel World Trade Center Site Whitehall Building Hospital for Riverbend Houses Brooklyn Bridge Park Citicorp Building Queens River House Kingsbridge Veterans Grant’s Tomb Hearst Tower Frank Gehry, Adamson Ventilation Towers Daniel Libeskind, Norman Foster, Henry Hardenbergh and Special Surgery Davis, Brody & Assocs.
    [Show full text]
  • Youth Guide to Summer Fun!
    NYC th Gui You – – de TO AUGUST 2016 The Department of Youth and Community Development will be updating this guide regularly. Please check back with us to see the latest additions. Have a safe and fun Summer! For additional information please call Youth Connect at 1.800.246.4646 EMPOWERING INDIVIDUALS • STRENGTHENING FAMILIES • INVESTING IN COMMUNITIES UPDATED 08.01.16 T H E C I T Y O F N E W Y O R K O F F I C E O F T H E M A Y O R N E W Y O R K , N Y 1000 7 July 2016 Dear Friends: Welcome to the 2016 edition of the New York City Youth Guide to Summer Fun! With sprawling green parks, refreshing beaches and pools, festive street fairs, world-class music and sports venues, and so much more, the five boroughs has something to offer everyone to enjoy summer in our city. The months of July and August also give young people a chance to continue learning and discovering outside of the classroom. This summer’s youth offerings include everything from astronomy and global fashion to learning Italian and kayaking. My administration remains committed to ensuring that residents and visitors alike have access to the cultural, recreational and educational opportunities that make New York City an international summer hotspot. The NYC Department of Youth and Community Development in collaboration with other City agencies has put together this handy guide with information about free and low-cost events in all five boroughs, and I wish you many fun-filled days as you explore our great city this summer.
    [Show full text]
  • Botanic Garden News
    Spring 2010 Page 1 Botanic Garden News The Botanic Garden Volume 13, No. 1 of Smith College Spring 2010 Floral Radiography Madelaine Zadik E veryone loves flowers, but imagine how they would appear if you had x -ray vision. Our latest exhibition, The Inner Beauty of Flowers, presents just that. Once radiologist Merrill C. Raikes retired, he turned his x-rays away from diagnostic medicine and instead focused them on flowers. The resulting floral radiographs bring to light the inner structure of flowers that normally remains invisible to us. It wasn’t easy for Dr. Raikes to figure out the exact techniques that would produce the desired results, but he finally discovered how to get the detail he was after. He uses equipment that is no longer manufactured, since current day medical x-ray equipment doesn’t produce x-rays suitable for this kind of work. Combined with his artful eye, the results are extraordinary and reveal an amazing world of delicacy and beauty. I was very impressed by Dr. Raikes’ artwork when he first showed it to me, and I wanted to create an educational exhibit that Sunflower with seeds would display his magnificent floral radiography. Through a collaboration with University of Massachusetts physics professor Robert B. Hallock, we were able to produce an exhibit that not only showcases Dr. Raikes’ art but also explains the science behind the images. Visitors have the opportunity to learn about the way light works, how the eye sees, what x-rays are, and how x-ray technology can be used to create beyond the surface of objects and enable botanical art.
    [Show full text]
  • American Society of Landscape Architects Medal of Excellence Nominations C/O Carolyn Mitchell 636 Eye Street, NW Washington, DC 20001-3736
    AMERICAN SOCIETY OF American Society of Landscape Architects LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS Medal of Excellence Nominations NEW YORK 205 E 42nd St, 14th floor c/o Carolyn Mitchell New York, NY 10017 636 Eye Street, NW 212.269.2984 Washington, DC 20001-3736 www.aslany.org Re: Nomination of Central Park Conservancy for Landscape Architects Medal of Excellence Dear Colleagues: I am thrilled to write this nomination of the Central Park Conservancy for the Landscape Architects Medal of Excellence. The Central Park Conservancy (CPC) is a leader in park management dedicated to the preserving the legacy of urban parks and laying the foundations for future generations to benefit from these public landscapes. Central Park is a masterpiece of landscape architecture created to provide a scenic retreat from urban life for the enjoyment of all. Located in the heart of Manhattan, Central Park is the nation’s first major urban public space, attracting millions of visitors, both local and tourists alike. Covering 843 acres of land, this magnificent park was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1963 and as a New York City Scenic Landmark in 1974. As the organization entrusted with the responsibility of caring for New York’s most important public space, the Central Park Conservancy is founded on the belief that citizen leadership and private philanthropy are key to ensuring that the Park and its essential purpose endure. Conceived during the mid-19th century as a recreational space for residents who were overworked and living in cramped quarters, Central Park is just as revered today as a peaceful retreat from the day-to-day stresses of urban life — a place where millions of New Yorkers and visitors from around the world come to experience the scenic beauty of one of America’s greatest works of art.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2017
    Central Park Conservancy ANNUAL REPORT 2017 Table of Contents 2 Partnership 4 Letter from the Conservancy President 5 Letter from the Chairman of the Board of Trustees 6 Letter from the Mayor and the Parks Commissioner 7 Serving New York City’s Parks 8 Forever Green 12 Honoring Douglas Blonsky 16 Craftsmanship 18 Native Meadow Opens in the Dene Landscape 20 Electric Carts Provide Cleaner, Quieter Transportation 21 Modernizing the Toll Family Playground 22 Restoring the Ramble’s Watercourse 24 Enhancing and Diversifying the Ravine 26 Conservation of the Seventh Regiment Memorial 27 Updating the Southwest Corner 28 Stewardship 30 Operations by the Numbers 32 Central Park Conservancy Institute for Urban Parks 36 Community Programs 38 Volunteer Department 40 Friendship 46 Women’s Committee 48 The Greensward Circle 50 Financials 74 Supporters 114 Staff & Volunteers 124 Central Park Conservancy Mission, Guiding Principle, Core Values, and Credits Cover: Hallett Nature Sanctuary, Left: Angel Corbett 3 CENTRAL PARK CONSERVANCY Table of Contents 1 Partnership Central Park Conservancy From The Conservancy Chairman After 32 years of working in Central Park, Earlier this year Doug Blonsky announced that after 32 years, he would be stepping down as the it hasn’t been an easy decision to step Conservancy’s President and CEO. While his accomplishments in that time have been too numerous to count, down as President and CEO. But this it’s important to acknowledge the most significant of many highlights. important space has never been more First, under Doug’s leadership, Central Park is enjoying the single longest period of sustained health in its beautiful, better managed, or financially 160-year history.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2018
    ANNUAL REPORT 2018 44415 AR2018__draft_color_rev.indd 1 4/30/19 5:27 PM Contents From the President 2 Speaking Out for Preservation 3 Providing Technical Expertise 8 Preserving Sacred Sites 14 Funding Historic Properties 20 Honoring Excellence 23 Celebrating Living Landmarks 25 Tours and Other Events 29 Our Supporters 31 Financial Statements 37 Board of Directors, Advisory Council, and Staff 38 Our Mission The New York Landmarks Conservancy is dedicated to preserving, revitalizing, and reusing New York’s architecturally significant buildings. Through pragmatic leadership, financial and technical assistance, advocacy, and public education, the Conservancy ensures that New York’s historically and culturally significant buildings, streetscapes, and neighborhoods continue to contribute to New York’s economy, tourism, and quality of life. On the Cover Lucy G. Moses Preservation Award winner - 462 Broadway, Manhattan - Owner Meringoff Properties has returned a French Renaissance-style building to its original glory in the SoHo-Cast Iron Historic District. Platt Byard Dovell White Architects oversaw the restoration. Photo by Francis Dzikowski. 1 44415 AR2018__draft_color_rev.indd 2 4/30/19 5:27 PM From the President Dear Friend of the Conservancy: We celebrated our 45th anniversary in 2018. It’s an in-between number so we weren’t going to go all out with celebrations. Then we realized that there was no guarantee 45 years ago that we’d still be here—let alone have developed our range of programs and skills. So we decided that a little horn tooting was in order. Our founders had a vision: an organization that would focus on preservation and have technical skills that could actually help people fix their buildings.
    [Show full text]
  • Botanical Gardens in the West Indies John Parker: the Botanic Garden of the University of Cambridge Holly H
    A Publication of the Foundation for Landscape Studies A Journal of Place Volume ıı | Number ı | Fall 2006 Essay: The Botanical Garden 2 Elizabeth Barlow Rogers: Introduction Fabio Gabari: The Botanical Garden of the University of Pisa Gerda van Uffelen: Hortus Botanicus Leiden Rosie Atkins: Chelsea Physic Garden Nina Antonetti: British Colonial Botanical Gardens in the West Indies John Parker: The Botanic Garden of the University of Cambridge Holly H. Shimizu: United States Botanic Garden Gregory Long: The New York Botanical Garden Mike Maunder: Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden Profile 13 Kim Tripp Exhibition Review 14 Justin Spring: Dutch Watercolors: The Great Age of the Leiden Botanical Garden New York Botanical Garden Book Reviews 18 Elizabeth Barlow Rogers: The Naming of Names: The Search for Order in the World of Plants By Anna Pavord Melanie L. Simo: Henry Shaw’s Victorian Landscapes: The Missouri Botanical Garden and Tower Grove Park By Carol Grove Judith B. Tankard: Maybeck’s Landscapes By Dianne Harris Calendar 22 Contributors 23 Letter from the Editor The Botanical Garden he term ‘globaliza- botanical gardens were plant species was the prima- Because of the botanical Introduction tion’ today has established to facilitate the ry focus of botanical gardens garden’s importance to soci- The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries widespread cur- propagation and cultivation in former times, the loss of ety, the principal essay in he botanical garden is generally considered a rency. We use of new kinds of food crops species and habitats through this issue of Site/Lines treats Renaissance institution because of the establishment it to describe the and to act as holding opera- ecological destruction is a it as a historical institution in 1534 of gardens in Pisa and Padua specifically Tgrowth of multi-national tions for plants and seeds pressing concern in our as well as a landscape type dedicated to the study of plants.
    [Show full text]
  • A Resource Guide to New York City's Many Cultures
    D iv e r C it y : A Resource Guide to New York City’s Many Cultures New York City 2012 DiverCity: A Resource Guide to New York City’s Many Cultures Table of Contents I. Museums and Cultural Institutions A. Art Museums Page 1 B. Historical and Cultural Museums Page 7 C. Landmarks and Memorials Page 12 D. Additional Cultural Institutions Page 15 II. Cultural/Community Organizations and Associations Page 18 III. Performing Arts Centers and Organizations Page 22 IV. College/University Cultural Departments and Potential Speakers Page 25 Mu s eu m s a nd Cu l t u r a l In s ti t u ti o n s “We have become not a melting pot but a beautiful mosaic. Different people, different beliefs, different yearnings, different hopes, different dreams." - Jimmy Carter, 39th President of the United States 1 A) ART MUSEUMS Name Address Phone/ Website Admission Information Description American 2 Lincoln (212) 595-9533 FREE at all times The American Folk Art Museum is the Folk Art Square at leading center for the study and Museum 66th St. Folkartmuseum.org Hours: Tues-Sat enjoyment of American folk art, as well 12:00PM-7:30PM; Sun as the work of international self- taught 12:00PM- 6:00PM artists. Diversity in programming has become a growing emphasis for the museum since the 1990s. Major presentations of African- American and Latino artworks have become a regular feature of the museum's exhibition schedule and permanent collection. Asia Society 725 Park Avenue at (212) 288-6400 FREE Fridays 6-9PM The Asia Society is America's leading 70th Street institution dedicated to fostering Asiasociety.org Price: $10 Adults; $7 understanding of Asia and Seniors; $5 Student ID communication between Americans FREE children under 16 and the peoples of Asia and the Pacific.
    [Show full text]
  • Restoration of the Conservatory Garden
    RESTORATION OF THE CONSERVATORY GARDEN Celebrating 35 Years of the Women’s Committee THE CONSERVATORY GARDEN | A Women’s Garden In honor of their 35th Anniversary and in collaboration with Central Park Conservancy’s Campaign, Forever Green: Ensuring the Future of Central Park, the Women’s Committee of Central Park Conservancy has committed to raise at least $5 million towards a transformative $10 million initiative to restore the Conservatory Garden, Central Park’s six-acre masterwork of formal garden design, located off Fifth Avenue from 104th to 106th Streets. History Completed in 1937 under Parks Commissioner Robert Moses’ chief landscape architect Gilmore D. Clarke, the Conservatory Garden became Central Park’s only formal garden. The original plans were designed by aptly-named landscape architect M. Betty Sprout, who later became Clarke’s wife. In the latter part of the 19th century, the area originally hosted a small nursery for growing plants for the Park. The name “Conservatory Garden” was adopted in 1898 when a large conservatory (greenhouse) was constructed on the site, featuring then-exotic tropical plants and ornate flower beds. After falling into disrepair, the greenhouse was demolished in 1934 and the exceptional six-acre formal outdoor garden that we now know was conceived and built. Thanks to its original designers and the Conservancy’s substantial 1983 restoration of the Garden’s horticultural elements, the Garden stands as one of the world’s great masterworks of formal garden design. Since its earliest days, horticultural direction has been in the hands of women, including Lynden Miller, who led the 1983 restoration, and long-time Garden curator Diane Schaub.
    [Show full text]