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Riverside Park (Manhattan)

Coordinates:40°48′15″N73°58′12″W / 40.80417°N 73.97000°W /40.80417; -73.97000
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public park in New York City

Riverside Park
Riverside Park has many walking and bicycle paths.
Map
Interactive map of Riverside Park
TypeUrban park
LocationManhattan, New York
Coordinates40°48′15″N73°58′12″W / 40.80417°N 73.97000°W /40.80417; -73.97000
Area253.17 acres (102.45 ha)
Operated byNYC Parks
StatusOpen all year
Public transit accessSubway and bus; see below
Riverside Park and Drive
LocationFrom 72nd St. to 129th St.,New York City[a]
Coordinates40°47′53″N73°58′31″W / 40.79806°N 73.97528°W /40.79806; -73.97528
Built1874
ArchitectMultiple[b]
NRHP reference No.83001743
Significant dates
Added to NRHPSeptember 2, 1983[2]
Designated NYCLFebruary 9, 1980[1]

Riverside Park is a scenic waterfrontpublic park along theHudson River on theWest Side of theborough ofManhattan inNew York City. The park measures 4 miles (6.4 km) long and 100 to 500 feet (30 to 152 m) wide, running between theHudson River andHenry Hudson Parkway to the west and the serpentineRiverside Drive to the east, from 72nd to 158th Street.

Riverside Park was established byland condemnation in 1872 and was developed concurrently with Riverside Drive. Originally running between 72nd and 125th Streets,[a] it was extended northward in the first decade of the 20th century. When the park was first laid out, the right-of-way of theNew York Central Railroad'sWest Side Line blocked access to the river. In the 1930s, under parks commissionerRobert Moses's West Side improvement project, the railroad track was covered with anesplanade and several recreational facilities. Few modifications were made to the park until the 1980s, when it was renovated and extended southward as part of theRiverside South development.

Riverside Park is part of theManhattan Waterfront Greenway, a pedestrian and bicycle route around Manhattan's waterfront. TheNew York City Department of Parks and Recreation operates and maintains the park, although its operating activities are supported by the Riverside Park Conservancy. It is listed on theNational Register of Historic Places and designated aNew York City scenic landmark.

History

[edit]

Planning

[edit]

The 191 acres (77 ha) of land in the original park between72nd and125th Streets[a] were once inhabited by theLenape people, but by the 18th century, European settlers used it for farming.[3] Over the years, several villas were also constructed along the river. The area's two largest settlements were the villages ofBloomingdale andManhattanville.[4] In 1846, theHudson River Railroad (later theWest Side Line andHudson Line) was built along the waterfront, connecting New York City to Albany.[5][6]

By the 1850s, New York City was growing quickly.[4] The construction ofCentral Park nearby in the 1860s spurred construction on theUpper East Side of Manhattan. Similar development on theUpper West Side was slower: by 1865, only West 76th and86th Streets had been completed and opened.[7] By an act of theNew York State Legislature passed that year, the Central Park commissioners had the responsibility of executing theCommissioners' Plan of 1811, the Manhattan street grid, within Upper Manhattan.[5]

In 1865, Central Park commissioner William R. Martin put forth the first proposal for a riverside park along theHudson River.[6][8] An act providing for such was presented to the Legislature by commissionerAndrew Haswell Green in 1866[9] and approved the next year.[10] In his argument for a riverside park, Green wrote that the only location on the Hudson River waterfront reserved for park space wasthe Battery at the southern tip of Manhattan island.[9] The first segment of Riverside Park was acquired in 1872 by condemning lots for a cost of $7.25 million, or over $80,000 per acre ($200,000/ha) for each of the 119 acres (48 ha) in the original park.[11] The park also included the construction ofRiverside Avenue, a boulevard lined with trees and overlooking the future park and the waterfront. The avenue was initially laid out in 1868 and was 100 feet (30 m) wide for its entire length.[4][9][12] The plans for Riverside Park and Avenue came to the attention ofWilliam M. Tweed, who bought several lots adjacent to the park in anticipation of its construction.[9]

Construction

[edit]

Late 19th century

[edit]
The future park site depicted in the King's Handbook of New York City, circa 1890

Initially, Riverside Avenue had been planned to run in a straight line, which would have required a retaining wall and extensive fill.[4][13] However, the area's difficult topography had come to the attention of the Manhattan park commissioners.[14][15] In 1873, the commissioners selectedFrederick Law Olmsted, a park commissioner who had also designed Central Park, to redesign the park and avenue.[6][16][17] Olmsted devised a plan that would create a main road extending from 72nd to 123rd Streets, with overpasses at 79th and 96th Streets, as well as "carriage roads" to serve the nearby neighborhood.[12][14][15][18] The park and drive together would vary between 70 and 150 feet (21 and 46 m) wide.[14] Olmsted's plan, which also included designs forFort Washington Park andMorningside Park, called for these parklands to be designed around the existing landscape.[16][17] Olmsted wrote in 1873 that Riverside Park "presented great advantages as a park because the river bank had been for a century occupied as the lawns and ornamental gardens in front of the country seats along its banks. Its foliage was fine, and its views magnificent."[19]

Construction on Riverside Park and Avenue started in 1874[17] or 1876,[14][18] and Olmsted was ousted as parks superintendent in 1877.[20] Designers such asCalvert Vaux,Samuel Parsons, and Julius Munckwitz laid out the stretch of park and road between 72nd and 125th Streets in a way that made the park look like theHudson Valley.[11][21] Riverside Avenue opened in 1880 and quickly became popular, though parts of the road, such as the 96th Street overpass, remained incomplete through the 1900s.[17][22] There was no single plan that encompassed the entirety of Riverside Park, which meant it would incorporate a number of separate designs. Olmsted wrote in 1886 that "in many important particulars the design has been mangled," saying that the park's terrain was too steep for recreation, and that Riverside Avenue's trees might block views of the river; despite this, Olmsted's offer to work with Vaux to create a unified park design was denied.[21] Furthermore, the railroad cut the park off from the waterfront.[23]

With the park's construction came land purchases on the Upper West Side. However, development in the neighborhood was slow to come since most of the lots were too expensive for the middle class to purchase, and the wealthy preferred to settle on the East Side of Manhattan.[22] Development of low-density residences and small apartment buildings did not come until the 1880s.[14] These residents formed an organization called the West End Avenue Association,[24] which in 1888 published a booklet titledWest End Avenue: Riverside Park in the City of New York extolling the park's benefits.[22][25] At the time, few wealthy families had settled in the area. It would take until the 1900s and 1910s before Riverside Avenue and Park gained its present-day concentration of upscale houses.[26]

The park was not extensively developed, either.[27] A temporary tomb for the late U.S. presidentUlysses S. Grant was built at Claremont Hill in 1885, since Grant had said he wanted to be buried in New York City.[28][29] Additionally, paths between 72nd and 79th Streets were laid out in 1891.[30] However, in an 1893 article,The New York Times mentioned that "but a small portion of the land thus acquired has been improved so as to be capable of public use."[27] At the time, Riverside Park did not include the shorefront.[27] In November 1893, a compromise was reached that would allow for the shore to be used for parkland while still allowing access to docks,[31] and two months later, the park commissioners adopted plans to build docks at 79th and 96th Streets.[32] Under an act of the state legislature, the city condemned an underwater area along the shore, which would allow forland reclamation to expand the park.[17][28] By 1895, paths had been laid out between 96th and 120th Streets.[30] The permanentGrant's Tomb opened at 122nd Street two years later.[33][34] Notwithstanding the lack of park development, Riverside Park still contained nuisances such as outdoorsewerage,squatters' shacks, and coal emissions from the trains,[35] as well as garbage dumps at 77th and 96th Streets. These conditions persisted through the 1920s.[36]

Early 20th century

[edit]
Riverside Drive Viaduct under construction

Several structures were built in the late 1890s and early 1900s. Two monuments were built in Riverside Park at the turn of the 20th century:[28][37] a permanentGrant's Tomb at 120th Street in 1897,[38] and theSoldiers' and Sailors' Monument at 89th Street in 1902.[39][40] This would be followed by eight other monuments from the 1900s through 1920s.[28] The construction of these monuments signified a major change in the use of Riverside Park, since the park was no longer being idealized solely as a nature space,[41] though writerElizabeth Cromley says that the monuments did fit in with the park aesthetic.[28] Another structure built in the park wasColumbia University's Gould Boathouse, constructed at 115th Street in 1896.[42] The Gould Boathouse was abandoned by the 1920s and burned down in 1927.[42] Other waterfront projects undertaken in the first decade of the 20th century included a stadium for Columbia University, built along land fill.[43] Another proposal, for a new boathouse for the Motor Boat Club, was vetoed by mayorGeorge B. McClellan Jr. in 1906.[44]

The existence ofManhattan Valley at approximately 125th Street blocked the further development of Riverside Park northward. However, in 1898, construction commenced onan ornate viaduct carrying Riverside Drive across the valley to 135th Street.[45] The viaduct, designed by F. Stuart Williamson, was completed in 1901 and consisted of 26 steel-latticed arches rising 80 feet (24 m) above ground level.[46][47] By 1902, plans were made to extend the park's border north to 155th Street.[48] Williamson also designed the park extension, which contained stone retaining walls as well as grand entrances designed.[11] The first extension of Riverside Park, from 125th/129th[a] to 137th Streets, was completed in 1902. The city acquired land northward to 158th Street in 1903, and with the completion of this park extension in 1908, Riverside Avenue was renamed Riverside Drive.[24]

In 1906, there was an effort to expand Riverside Park by adding the piece of land bounded by Riverside Drive,Claremont Avenue, and116th and 122nd Streets. This was seen as historically important because it was the site ofBattle of Harlem Heights.[49] The city also envisioned 116th Street as a grand gateway to Grant's Tomb. Neither the park extension nor the 116th Street gateway were built, and today, the only remnants of this plan are the wide curves at the intersection of 116th Street and Riverside Drive, where theColosseum andPaterno apartment buildings sit.[50] The underwater area owned by the city was filled between 1911 and 1912 using rock from the excavation of theCatskill Aqueduct. The landfilling was criticized as it was done without public knowledge.[51][52] One prominent group to form during this time was the Women's League for the Protection of Riverside Park, formed in 1916 to advocate recreational uses within the park. Many of the club's members were from prominent or wealthy families, and a sizable number of its early members lived close to Riverside Park.[53]

West Side Improvement

[edit]

Initial plans

[edit]
A section of Riverside Park above the Freedom Tunnel, a train tunnel
Trains travel through theFreedom Tunnel below this section of the park.

Even as there was discussion to expand Riverside Park, the New York Central Railroad continued to expand its facilities. This clashed with the ideals of the City Beautiful movement, which led an increasing segment of the population to view the railroad as a nuisance rather than a part of the park.[28] Even so, the railroad was a crucial part to New York City's commerce, and as such could not be removed.[54] As early as 1909, there were plans to expand the West Side Line to six tracks within Riverside Park, though this was heavily opposed.[55] The crux of the disagreement was a stipulation that would give New York Central the rights to develop the shorefront with commercial enterprises. The area between 59th and 72nd Streets was being planned for development into train yards, which citizens' groups strongly opposed,[56] and the city had no money to condemn that land.[57]

Disputes over the railroad's role within the park continued for several years.[58] At the time, there were other issues that beset the rail line; in particular, the street-level southern section of the line was known asDeath Avenue due to the high level of collisions there.[59] In 1913 New York Central presented a proposal for the railroad to be grade-separated, including constructing a new tunnel within Riverside Park.[56][60][61] This plan was received favorably by the citizens' groups.[54] By 1917, there was a tentative agreement to enact that proposal.[58] Another initiative that aided the redevelopment of Riverside Park was the closure of one of the garbage dumps in 1923.[36] Despite a citywide growth in realty values in the 1910s and 1920s, such benefits did not translate to the area nearest Riverside Park, and in the section between 69th and 89th Streets, real estate values declined slightly. As such, the local community wanted to improve Riverside Park.[62]

Evening at Riverside Park byAlice Neel (1927)

The railroad grade-separation proposal remained stalled until the passage of theKaufman Act in 1924, which forced the electrification of all railroads in the city.[60][63] The same year, comptrollerCharles L. Craig put forth a plan to create a waterfrontparkway in Riverside Drive to alleviate vehicular traffic.[61][64] The "Craig Plan", the first of four unsuccessful blueprints for the park's reconstruction that were proposed in the 1920s, also called for the inclusion of athletic facilities, a feature that would eventually be included in the park's reconstruction.[62] The proposal included plans for expanding Riverside Park, such as a freshwater swimming pool between 72nd and 75th Streets; a play field from 75th to 77th Streets; and a recreation building with a new boathouse between 77th and 81st Streets.[52] The plans included land reclamation using excavation from theNew York City Subway'sEighth Avenue subway line, which created up to 70 acres (28 ha) of new parkland.[65] Planners thought that the railroad tunnel's utility could be increased as well. While some suggested building the parkway atop the tunnel, others proposed converting the top of the tunnel into parkland and building a waterfront parkway instead.[54]

Disputes about the tunnel roof and parkway delayed the approval of a Riverside Park plan for several years, by which point increasing pollution made the park nearly unusable.[54][61] The Women's League endorsed a proposal for converting Riverside Drive's bridle trail to a playground,[66] though they opposed the scenic parkway in Riverside Park.[67] Other organizations also opposed building the parkway in Riverside Park; for instance, the City Club endorsed building the parkway on the waterfront instead, in order to give more space to recreational uses.[68] The waterfront parkway proposal was supported only by a minority of architects and organizations, and was voted down by the Board of Estimate.[69] In June 1929, the city voted to approve a plan that would build the parkway above the tracks, but not on the waterfront.[70]

Execution

[edit]
The railroad tunnel seen from 116th Street (2012)

The architecture firmMcKim, Mead & White was hired to create plans for the parkway and the grade-separated railroad tunnel (later known as theFreedom Tunnel). In order to meet the requirements of the project, the firm proposed erecting a City Beautiful-style retaining wall with arches, similar to that of aRoman aqueduct, that seemed to support the highway above it.[17][71][72][73] The retaining wall would includeparapets andNeoclassical detailing, as well as 50-foot (15 m) arches to ventilate the railroad tracks behind the wall.[17][71][73][74] The road would have contained classical flagpoles and lampposts, viewing areas, and resting areas for pedestrians.[73] The plans also called for the reconstruction of the 86th Street marina and the construction of parking lots, playgrounds, and tennis courts.[74]

Work between 72nd and 79th Streets was underway when parks commissionerRobert Moses was appointed in 1934. Moses halted McKim, Mead & White's plan,[75] deriding it as a "visionary scheme,"[74] since he thought the highway's construction would make the new parkland inaccessible and contain too many pedestrian tunnels.[54][71][74] Furthermore, Moses believed that his alternate plan would be completed more quickly and cheaply.[69] Moses's biographerRobert Caro described Moses surveying the area prior to his project, and seeing:

a wasteland six miles (10 km) long, stretching from where he stood all the way north to 181st street ... The 'park' was nothing but a vast low-lying mass of dirt and mud.... Unpainted, rusting, jagged wire fences along the tracks barred the city from its waterfront ... The engines that pulled trains along the tracks burned coal or oil; from their smokestacks a dense black smog rose toward the apartment houses, coating windowsills with grit ... [a stench] seemed to hang over Riverside Drive endlessly after each passage of a train carrying south to the slaughterhouses in downtown Manhattan carload after carload of cattle and pigs.... [Once,Frances Perkins ] heard Moses exclaim, "Isn't this a temptation to you? Couldn't this waterfront be the most beautiful thing in the world?"[76]

Moses's updated "West Side Improvement" plan, designed byGilmore D. Clarke, Michael Rapuano, and Clinton Loyd, retained the railroad tunnel under the park, but moved the parkway to the shorefront instead; this would become theHenry Hudson Parkway.[11][75][77] As part of the project, the parkway was to connect with theWest Side Elevated Highway at the south end of Riverside Park,[78] while the railroad would connect to theHigh Line viaduct even further south.[79] The parkway was to be built on newly filled land along the shore, requiring the extension of the shoreline by 50 feet (15 m) and the dumping of 1 million cubic yards (760,000 m3) of fill.[77][80] This resulted in a more contiguous park area, since the roof of the tunnel would then be occupied by parkland.[11][81] Moses's plan was also more actively focused toward recreation:[75][81] his plan called for playgrounds, tennis courts, wading and swimming pools, an amphitheater, and docks at 79th and 96th Streets. The roof of the railroad tunnel would host several of these recreation fields, while other parts of the tunnel's roof would be used by a promenade. The cost as submitted to theNew York City Board of Estimate was $11 million (equivalent to $249 million in 2024), of which $6 million would go toward the railroad tunnel alone (equivalent to $136 million in 2024).[82]

By mid-1934, Moses was ready to employ about 4,000 workers through theWorks Progress Administration.[83] Filling operations were underway by early 1935, requiring the dumping of 4,000 cubic yards (3,100 m3) of dirt per day.[80] The parkway in Riverside Park was approved in June 1935,[84] and was completed in 1937.[85] In addition, plans for a new boat basin at 149th Street were announced in 1939.[86] The West Side Improvement project was completed by 1941.[87] The project was twice as big as theHoover Dam's construction.[11] In total, the project plan added 132 acres (53 ha) to the park.[75][81] Ultimately eight full playgrounds were built, as well as baseball fields and tennis, handball, and basketball courts.[74] Having achieved its goal of rebuilding Riverside Park, the Women's League disbanded in 1937.[88]

Decline

[edit]
Walkway near 108th Street

For several decades after the completion of the Moses-era improvements, few changes were made to the park:[89] a memorial grove was added in 1946;[90] a playground at 76th Street was added in 1952;[91] and the 103rd Street playground was restored in 1960.[92] Amonument to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, first proposed in 1947, was never realized due a lack of funding and opposition from city officials.[93] Riverside Park had its ownNew York City Police Department precinct (the 26th Precinct), but this was abolished in 1954.[94]

By 1962, a new playground was proposed between 102nd and 106th Streets, to be dedicated to the philanthropist Adele Rosenwald Levy. The architectLouis Kahn and the artist and landscape architectIsamu Noguchi prepared plans for a $1 million facility to include among other things, a community center, an amphitheater, and play structures.[95] The plan proved to be controversial: advocates claimed the playground would create additional recreational space, while opponents argued that the playground would be excessively expensive and serve essentially as a memorial to a private figure.[96] Despite having redesigned the playground five times, and having the support of MayorRobert F. Wagner Jr., the designers met with much resistance.[97] In 1963, opponents filed suit to prevent construction of the project,[98] and in 1966, the project was cancelled by the new administration of MayorJohn Lindsay.[97]

Ultimately during the 1960s, a playground and a comfort station were added at 76th Street, another comfort station was added at 91st Street, and tennis courts were built between 97th and 119th Streets. Otherwise, the park was neglected, and vandalism and dumping were common.[89] In 1970 a writer forThe New York Times observed that the northern part of the park, in western Harlem, was in worse condition than the original park near the Upper West Side and Morningside Heights.[99] Around this time, several shafts were installed in Riverside Park as part of a project to reduce sewage outflows into the Hudson River, which forced the temporary closure of part of the park.[100]

In 1971, officials proposed converting the West Side Elevated Highway and Henry Hudson Parkway intoWestway, a six-laneinterstate highway connecting theGeorge Washington Bridge and theBrooklyn–Battery Tunnel, which would have resulted in the condemnation of portions of Riverside Park.[101] The construction of Westway within Riverside Park was ultimately deemed infeasible due to a state law that prohibited the Henry Hudson Parkway's conversion into an interstate highway.[102] The Westway plan was abandoned altogether by 1984.[103]

Late 20th century

[edit]

Restoration

[edit]

By 1979, NYC Parks was restoring retaining walls and making plans to rehabilitate several playgrounds. The failed Westway proposal had inspired a movement to make Riverside Park a designated city landmark, so as to preclude future construction that might take away parkland. Advocates petitioned theNew York City Landmarks Preservation Commission to make the park an official city landmark.[104] Riverside Park was designated as aNew York City scenic landmark in 1980[105] and listed on theNational Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1983.[11][2]

The Friends of Riverside Park organization was formed in March 1979, initially working to plant new trees and stop deterioration of existing trees.[106] Their projects included the conservation of 500 endangeredDutch elm trees in Riverside Park.[107] The organization soon turned toward preservation-oriented initiatives, successfully working to stopJuly 4 fireworks shows in the park and plans for a restaurant at the 79th Street Boat Basin.[108][109] The city indicated in 1983 that it planned to refurbish parts of the park, especially the section between 97th and 110th Streets, at a cost of $910,000.[110] The park's partial renovation was completed in 1984.[89] However, Riverside Park was still in a dilapidated state because of funding shortfalls: it lacked any full-time security, park rangers, or recreation workers, and had a staff of 40 workers for the entire park.[111] Throughout the late 20th century, homeless people and drug users would congregate in the park.[112] By the 1990s, there were estimated to be between 75 and 325 homeless people living within Riverside Park, including the Freedom Tunnel.[113]

In 1987, fourteen areacooperatives combined to create the Riverside Park Fund to raise money for maintenance.[111] The Fund also sponsored a proposal for a continuous $3 million path that would run the length of the park to the George Washington Bridge,[114] though this path would be delayed through the mid-1990s.[115] Starting in 1992, NYC Parks restored the retaining wall within Riverside Park between 98th and 120th Streets.[116] By 1994, the Riverside Park Fund was conducting various projects including landscaping, the installation of new playgrounds, and the restoration of existing facilities.[117] A dog run was proposed for the Morningside Heights section of the park in 1998, but was canceled after opposition.[118]

TheNorth River Wastewater Treatment Plant was constructed between 137th and 144th Streets, alongside Riverside Park's northern section, during the late 1980s.[119] The 28-acre (11 ha)Riverbank State Park was built atop the plant, opening in 1993.[120] Ten Mile River Playground was renovated in 1995 for $450,000.[121]

Riverside Park South

[edit]
Main article:Riverside South, Manhattan
TheRiverside South development funded this extension of Riverside Park. NewWaterline Square buildings visible to the left.

In the 1980sDonald Trump, then the owner of the 57 acres (230,000 m2) of land just south of Riverside Park that had been thePenn Central freight rail yard, proposed building a massive development including a huge shopping mall and the world's tallest skyscraper.[122] Facing great opposition and hobbled by his weak financial position, Trump agreed in 1990 to adopt a new plan for the site put forward by six civic groups. The new plan, calledRiverside South, included much smaller buildings centered around a new Riverside Park South, stretching between 72nd and 59th Streets with a similar design to the original Riverside Park. In order to expand Riverside Park by 25 acres (100,000 m2), Trump's proposed shopping mall would be eliminated and the elevated West Side Highway would be relocated eastward to grade and buried.[123] A newRiverside Boulevard would curve above the relocated highway, with the park sloping down toward the river. Portions of the former rail yard, such as theNew York Central Railroad 69th Street Transfer Bridge, would be incorporated into the new park.[11] As part of the project, Trump and the city agreed to build a new bicycle path connecting Riverside Park withHudson River Park immediately to the south.[124]

External images
image iconTrump City
image iconThe Civic Alternative
image iconRiverside South, as proposed
image iconRiverside Park South with and without relocated highway.
image iconRiverside Park South Interim Plan.
image iconRiverside Park South Final Plan.

In November 1998, the first phase of the new Riverside Park South started, having been designed by Thomas Balsley & Associates.[11] Phase 1, a 7-acre (3 ha) section from 72nd to 68th Streets, was opened just over two years later in January 2001.[125] Pier I at 70th Street, part of the railyard, was rebuilt; it maintains its original length of 795 feet (242 m), but is narrower than originally, at 55 feet (17 m).[126] Phase 2, opened in 2003, comprises a waterfront section from 70th Street to 65th Street, including two plazas at 66th and 68th Streets and a jagged waterfront.[127] Phase 3, opened in August 2006, stretches from 65th Street to 62nd Street on the waterfront.[11] Phase 4 opened in 2007 along the waterfront from 62nd to57th Streets.[128]

The design of Phases 5 and 6, located between the current and future highway alignments, is partially tied to the fate of the highway relocation, the timing of which is still uncertain.[129] However, NYC Parks has approved interim and final designs for those two sections; construction of the interim park started in August 2016.[130] Relocating the highway will require some reconstruction of the park.[131]

21st century

[edit]

By the Fund's 20th anniversary, much of the park south of 125th Street had been restored, and Upper West Side and Morningside Heights residents had become invested in the park's well-being.[112] The northern section, above 125th Street, still remained deteriorated, with poorly maintained ballfields and a lack of access from nearby neighborhoods. This was attributed to the economic conditions in the neighborhoods adjoining each section: while the Upper West Side was generally wealthy, Harlem was mostly lower-class.[132]

In 2015, after a quarter-century of planning, construction started on a new pedestrian bridge connecting Hamilton Heights to Riverside Park at 151st Street, replacing a tunnel and a long staircase.[133] After some delays,[134] the bridge opened in 2017.[135] Also in 2017, NYC Parks released a master plan for Riverside Park. The plan called for the restoration of the rotunda, Soldiers & Sailors Monument, Cherry Walk, and pedestrian walkways; expansion of the marina; construction of new bicycle paths and a new 111th Street entrance; and construction of new play areas in Morningside Heights and at the north waterfront.[136] A bicycle bypass was proposed in 2016 to reduce frequent congestion and collisions between pedestrians and bicyclists in the park.[137] The first section opened in 2019.[138]

Riverside Park continued to suffer from various problems such as faulty drainage systems and deterioration.[139] In 2019,The New York Times observed that following every rainstorm, water tended to pool on the roof of the Freedom Tunnel and other locations due to the three-tiered topography of the park, and that the tunnel's retaining wall was leaking.[140] In addition, there was visible decay in some of the structures within Riverside Park, such as the 79th Street Rotunda, retaining walls, and various pathways. Other issues included the poor design of Riverside Drive'scurbs and the dilapidated condition of the park's trees.[139] The city government announced in December 2019 that it would spend $11.5 million to fix the park's drainage systems.[141][142] Nonetheless, parts of the park remained in poor condition in the early 2020s, with inadequate lighting and bad pavement.[143] A $7.4 million renovation of Ten Mile River Playground was announced in late 2023; during the project's planning, a set of dark monkey statues in the playground were removed.[144] Cherry Walk was closed in September 2024 for further repairs lasting six months.[145][146]

Geography and design

[edit]
Staircase from the promenade above the Freedom Tunnel to the parkland beside the tunnel

Riverside Park is classified by the Parks Department as a community park covering 253.17 acres (102.45 ha).[147] The primary section of Riverside Park is the tiered slopes between the Henry Hudson Parkway and Riverside Drive from 72nd Street to 125th Street, designated as both an official New York City landmark and a NRHP site. This section ranges from 100 to 500 feet (30 to 152 m) wide.[148] The eastern border of the park is generally Riverside Drive, a curving avenue with a maximum grade of 1 in 27. Various apartment buildings and religious/educational institutions on Riverside Drive overlook the park.[148][149] The Henry Hudson Parkway, on the park's western border, contains numerous interchanges that are included as part of the official landmark designation.[150]

The 1930s rebuild was designed by architect Michael Rapuano, aRome Prize Fellow, who placed London plane trees and Robinia trees atop the Freedom Tunnel. At 74th and 97th Streets, curving stone staircases led from the top of the tunnel to the playgrounds below. During the renovation, much of the original topography was modified in order to conceal the tunnel, and large clusters of trees were installed elsewhere in the park.[151] Most of the initial plantings were removed by the 1980s.[150]

There is also a northern section of the park from 135th Street to 155th Street and adjacent to Riverbank State Park. This area is designed more simply than the rest of the park, as the Henry Hudson Parkway is elevated in the area, and much of the space is occupied by parking lots.[151] It is neither protected by the Landmarks Preservation Commission nor listed on the NRHP.[148][152]

Geographical features

[edit]

Sources vary on how many tiers are included in Riverside Park.[148][152][153] James T. Dowell of the Riverside Park Fund states that there are three tiers: Riverside Drive on top, the promenade above the Freedom Tunnel below, and the parkland beside the Henry Hudson Parkway and waterfront esplanade at the bottom.[148][153] The city's Landmarks Preservation Commission, as well as theNational Park Service's NRHP report for the park, say that there are four "registers": three are similar to those cited by Dowell, while the fourth "register" is the sloping area that connects Riverside Drive and the roof of the Freedom Tunnel.[152] Each of the "registers" serves a specific purpose. The uppermost, which includes Riverside Drive, serves as the border to the park. The central sections, comprising both the sloping region and the plateau above the Freedom Tunnel, contain most of the greenery as well as playgrounds and other recreational facilities. The lowermost register, next to Henry Hudson Parkway, provides a waterfront promenade with views of the Hudson River, as well asthe Palisades on the opposite bank.[148]

Before the park existed, poetEdgar Allan Poe was said to have enjoyed sitting on rocky "Mount Tom" at 83rd Street.[154] The rock outcropping still exists and is the only such formation at Riverside Park with a name.[153]

Paths

[edit]
Ramp in Riverside Park looking up to West 68th Street

The park's central "registers" contain various curving pathways amid the greenery. These paths are connected to Riverside Drive and the waterfront level via staircases and ramps.[148][151]

Riverside Walk, a waterfront walkway, runs the entire length of the park between 72nd and 158th Streets.[155] This walkway includes Cherry Walk, a path between 100th and 125th Streets, which is named for the cherry trees beside it. The grouping of 700 cherry trees was donated in 1909 by the Committee of Japanese Residents.[155][156][157]

Riverside Park contains a bicycle lane that runs for most of the park's length, except for a small gap in West Harlem.[158] However, there are multiple locations where the bicycle lane intersects with the pedestrian paths, causing congestion. As such, a bicycle bypass is being built within several sections of Riverside Park.[137]

Extensions and connections

[edit]

Riverside Park South extends from 72nd to59th Street on the former Penn Central yard, with an old locomotive on display. Riverside Park South leads to Hudson River Park which leads to Battery Park at the southern tip of Manhattan. With the addition of Riverside Park South and Hudson River Park, a continuous waterfront right-of-way for pedestrians and bicyclists now stretches nearly the length of Manhattan from north to south.[11]

Paths along the river connect the park to Fort Washington Park to the north. The portion of Fort Washington Park from 181st Street to Dyckman Street includesInspiration Point, a shelter at 190th Street.[159]

Wildlife

[edit]
Red-tailed hawk in Riverside Park

A bird sanctuary exists in Riverside Park between 116th to 124th Streets.[160][161][162]New York City Audubon estimates that birdwatchers have seen more than 177 bird species at the sanctuary since the 1980s. About 10 acres (4.0 ha) has been reforested and over 3,000 individual plants have been placed in the sanctuary since 1997.[163] More than 80 bird species have been seen at the Bird Drip, a man-made water feature near 120th Street.[164]

Riverside Park contains numerous other species of wildlife. TheNew York State Department of Environmental Conservation states that park visitors can seewaterfowl such asCanada geese,mallards, andAmerican black ducks;raptors, such asred-tailed hawks,American kestrels andperegrine falcons;songbirds;raccoons; andreptiles.[160] In addition, a wild turkey namedGiuliani was first spotted at Riverside Park in 2003, and several other wild turkeys have since been observed at the park.[165][166]

Landmarks and structures

[edit]

Monuments and statues

[edit]

Riverside Park includes numerous monuments and statues.[167]

Amiable Child Monument

[edit]
Main article:Amiable Child Monument

TheAmiable Child Monument, at Riverside Drive north of 122nd Street, on the slope north of Grant's Tomb,[168][169] commemorates the long-ago death of a beloved child, a small boy who died in what was then an area of country homes near New York City. One side of the monument reads: "Erected to the Memory of an Amiable Child, St. Claire Pollock, Died 15 July 1797 in the Fifth Year of His Age."[170] The monument is composed of a granite urn on a granite pedestal inside a wrought iron fence. Originally erected by George Pollock, who was either the boy's father or his uncle, the monument has been replaced twice due to deterioration. It is thought to be the only private, single-person grave on city-owned land in New York City.[169]

Eleanor Roosevelt Monument

[edit]
Main article:Eleanor Roosevelt Monument
Eleanor Roosevelt Monument
Firemen's Memorial

TheEleanor Roosevelt Monument is located at 72nd Street and was dedicated in 1996. The landscape architectsBruce Kelly and David Varnell designed the planted, circular monument. The artistPenelope Jencks sculpted the larger-than-life statue ofEleanor Roosevelt, the boulder on which it leans, and the foot-stone on which it rests. The architectMichael Dwyer designed inscriptions in the surrounding granite pavement, including a quotation from Roosevelt's 1958 speech at the United Nations advocating universal human rights, and a bronze tablet, located in the planting bed, summarizing her achievements.[171][172]

Firemen's Memorial

[edit]
Main article:Firemen's Memorial (Manhattan)

TheFiremen's Memorial, located on the west side of Riverside Drive opposite West 100th Street, was dedicated in 1913.[168][173] The architectHarold Van Buren Magonigle designed the monument as a sarcophagus inTennessee marble, with a dedicatory inscription on the east side. The artistAttilio Piccirilli embellished it with allegorical figures on the north and south sides, and a bas-relief bronze plaque on the west side. Approached from the west by a grand staircase, the monument sits on a terrace surrounded by a classicalbalustrade.[173] A tablet, dedicated to the horses who assisted the firemen with their duties, was embedded in the monument's terrace paving in 1927.[174]

General Franz Sigel statue

[edit]
General Franz Sigel memorial

The GeneralFranz Sigel memorial, at 106th Street, was designed by the architectWilliam W. Bosworth and dedicated in October 1907.Karl Bitter sculpted the centerpiece, an equestrian statue of Sigel, who attained the rank of general in theUnion Army during the Civil War.[168][175] The larger-than-life bronze figure is located atop a stone pedestal at the top of a staircase. The figure formerly had a sword, but it was removed in 1941. NYC Parks restored the statue in the late 1980s.[175]

Grant's Tomb

[edit]
Main article:Grant's Tomb
Grant's Tomb, dedicated 1897

The design of Grant's Tomb, located in the median of Riverside Drive at 122nd Street, is loosely based on the design of the ancientMausoleum of Halicarnassus.[37][150] The memorial was dedicated in 1897.[38] The architectJohn Hemenway Duncan designed the building as a cube with blind colonnades on the east, west, and north sides, and a portico of Doric columns leading to the entrance door on the south side. Atop the cube, he placed a cylindrical dome embellished withIonic columns, topped with a conical cap. Inside, the principal room is a crypt with sarcophagi containing the remains of President Ulysses S. Grant and his wifeJulia Dent Grant.[150][176]: 1  The National Park Service has maintained the tomb since 1958 as the General Grant National Memorial.[177] Grant's Tomb is both a New York City landmark and anational monument.[176][178]

Joan of Arc memorial

[edit]

TheJoan of Arc memorial, located at 93rd Street, was designed by the architectJohn V. Van Pelt and dedicated in 1915. The artistAnna Hyatt Huntington sculpted the statue,[37][168] which depicts Joan of Arc on horseback in bronze. The statue was restored in 1939 and 1987.[179]

Louis Kossuth monument

[edit]

The monument in honor of Hungarian leaderLajos (Louis) Kossuth is located at West 113th Street. It was dedicated in 1928.[168][180] The artistJános Horvay sculpted a bronze statue of Kossuth standing atop a stone pedestal, and two more bronze figures at its base. The pedestal is embellished with an inscription and a denticulated cornice.[180]

Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument

[edit]
Main article:Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument (Manhattan)
Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument, dedicated 1902

TheSoldiers' and Sailors' Monument, dedicated in 1902, commemorates Civil War veterans of both the Union Army and Navy.[37][150] Originally planned forGrand Army Plaza in Brooklyn,[164] the monument was erected in Riverside Park opposite West 89th Street.[40] The architectsStoughton & Stoughton in collaboration with the architect Paul E. M. DuBoys designed the monument as a circular temple embellished with twelve fluted Corinthian columns atop a rusticated basement, a reinterpretation of theChoragic Monument of Lysicrates inAthens. The architects sited the monument on a series of stepped terraces surrounded by a low classical balustrade.[150][181] The Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument is a designated New York City landmark.[182]

Warsaw Ghetto Plaza

[edit]
Main article:American Memorial to Six Million Jews of Europe

Riverside Park almost received a monument to theWarsaw Ghetto Uprising, which would have been located between 83rd and 84th Streets.[183] A granite plaque, set in the paving at the end of the Promenade, near 84th Street, on October 19, 1947, is inscribed:"This is the site for the American memorial to the heroes of the Warsaw Ghetto Battle April–May 1943 and to the six million Jews of Europe martyred in the cause of human liberty."[184] Subsequent proposals for larger monuments were made byJo Davidson,Percival Goodman,Ivan Meštrović, and a partnership betweenErich Mendelsohn andNathan Rapoport;[93] however, none were approved due to a lack of funding and officials' fears that a large monument might distract drivers on the Henry Hudson Parkway.[185] A monument measuring 102 by 60 feet (31 by 18 m) with a height of 80 feet (24 m), to be sculpted by Meštrović, was approved in 1952 but was never built.[186] NYC Parks restored the site in 2001. It is now called the Warsaw Ghetto Memorial Plaza.[93]

Other monuments

[edit]

There are several other monuments in Riverside Park. These include:[167]

Plaques

[edit]

There are several plaques in Riverside Park that commemorate various events or structures. These include:[167]

  • Armed Forces Plaque, at 121st Street, dedicated 1953[194]
  • Battle of Harlem Heights Marker, at 121st Street, dedicated 1961[195]
  • Chaplains Memorial. at 121st Street, dedicated 1950[196]
  • Chinese Tablet, at about 124th Street (north of Grant's Tomb), dedicated 1897[197]
  • Claremont Inn Tablet, at 123rd Street, dedicated 1952[198]
  • Cyrus Clark relief, at 83rd Street, dedicated 1911[199]
  • Henry Neufeld Playground Plaque, at 76th Street, dedicated 1991[200]
  • Marine Heroes Tablet, at 93rd Street, dedicated 1950[201]

Other structures

[edit]

Riverside Park contains several other physical structures, including a three-story rotunda with a boat basin,[150] a field house,[202]: 24  and a building used by Riverside Park Conservancy volunteer operations.[203]

79th Street Boat Basin, Rotunda, and cafe

[edit]
The Boat Basin Cafe inside the rotunda, 2008

The79th Street Boat Basin is one of the boating facilities in Riverside Park. The basin contained 116 slips and was used as a launch site for kayaks, canoes and sailboats.[204] It took in hundreds of thousands of dollars in dock-fee revenues each year. NYC Parks provided fresh water lines and a boat pump-out system for sewage disposal at no additional cost, but all other services, including electricity, telephone, television, and internet access, were charged to boat owners.[205] The marina closed for rebuilding in 2021.[206]

Adjacent to the boat basin, the 79th Street Rotunda, a three-storytraffic circle, allows access to the Henry Hudson Parkway and to the park from 79th Street.[150][207] The rotunda is constructed with reinforcedconcrete clad with cut stone. An underground parking garage sits below it.[150][208]

An arcade with vaultedGuastavino tiled ceilings surrounds the rotunda and overlooks the marina. Currently, it is the site of the open-air O'Neals' West 79th Street Boat Basin Cafe.[11] The internal courtyard and seasonal cafe were added after a design competition.[209]

The designs of the 79th Street Rotunda and Boat Basin have changed little since their construction.[210] The structures were designed to make Riverside Park into a grand "river gate" for marine travelers.[151]

102nd Street Field House

[edit]

The 102nd Street Field House, adjacent to the Freedom Tunnel structure, was completed in 1937. NYC Parks renovated it in 1964 but it was damaged by fire in the 1970s.[202]: 24  NYC Parks renovated the Field House again starting in 2015.[211]

Peter Jay Sharp Volunteer House

[edit]

The Peter Jay Sharp Volunteer House is located at 107th Street. Built in the late 19th century, the structure was formerly a one-story limestone tool shed that had become dilapidated over the years. In 2003, the architectsMurphy Burnham & Buttrick converted the building into an architecturalfolly, adding a mezzanine and second floor, expanding the floor area from 500 to 1,550 square feet (46 to 144 m2).[203] The Riverside Park Conservancy operates out of the building, with facilities to aid their operation, including: storage space, plant-growing areas, a restroom, akitchenette, and a meeting room on the second floor.[212]

Activities

[edit]

Riverside Park's numerous recreation facilities includetennis,volleyball andbasketball courts;soccer fields; and askatepark.[213][214]

Play areas

[edit]

Riverside Park contains several playgrounds. All of the following playgrounds are located near the intersection with Riverside Drive unless otherwise stated.[213]

  • Little Engine Playground, at Riverside Boulevard between 67th and 68th Streets
  • Classic Playground, at 74th Street
  • Neufeld Playground, at 76th Street
  • River Run Playground, at 83rd Street
  • Hippo Playground, at 91st Street
  • Dinosaur Playground, at 97th Street
  • 101st St. Soccer Field, at 101st Street
  • Riverside Park, at 119th Street
  • Claremont, at 124th Street
  • Riverbank Playground, at 142nd Street[215]
  • Ten Mile River, at 148th Street[121]
  • Palisades Playground, at 148th Street[216]

Playgrounds that are designated as "Tot Lots" include:[213]

  • Tot Lot One Hundred Five, at 105th Street
  • Tot Lot One Hundred And Ten, at 110th–111th Streets
  • Tot Lot One Hundred And Twelve, at 112th–113th Streets
  • Tot Lot One Hundred And Sixteen, at 116th–117th Streets

Riverside Park contains three dog runs at 72nd, 87th, and 105th Streets.[217][218]

In addition, Riverside Park containsRiverside Skatepark at 109th Street.[219] It was the first full-sized public skatepark in Manhattan, designed and built in 1995 by skateboarder and skatepark builderAndy Kessler.[220][221]

Recreation

[edit]
Springtime in Riverside Park, 2007

Riverside Park contains a number of facilities. There are ninebaseball fields in the park, including five standalone fields (four from 104th to 107th Streets and one at 72nd Street),[222] as well as two pairs of baseball fields that each overlap with another sporting field, at 77th and 146th/147th Streets.[214][223] There are also five sets ofbasketball courts at 71st, 76th, 102nd, 111th, and 148th Streets.[214][224] Seven handball courts are located in Riverside Park, five at 111th Street and two at 71st Street,[214][225] as well as 20 tennis courts, ten each at 96th and 119th Streets.[226][227] There are also sixsoccer fields, at 71st, 74th, 77th, 101st, 103rd, and 107th Streets.[214][228] Volleyball courts are located at 102nd, 105th, and 148th Streets.[214][229] Most of the facilities were built in the 1930s reconstruction of Riverside Park, except a recreational building near West 91st Street, as well as the Columbia University tennis courts near 119th–121st Streets.[168]

A free season of events, named Summer on the Hudson, takes place throughout Riverside Park between May and October and hosts events for all including movies, concerts, and children's shows.[230] In addition to the 79th Street Boat Basin, there is a kayak launch at 148th Street. During the spring and the summer, a free kayak rental also operates at 72nd Street.[231]

96th Street Clay Tennis Courts, 2022

The Riverside Clay Tennis Association (RCTA) operates ten red-clay tennis courts near 96th Street,[232] which are open to the general public.[233]

Management

[edit]

A nonprofit organization called the Riverside Park Conservancy maintains the park. while NYC Parks owns and operates the land and facilities. The Conservancy's responsibilities include maintaining and restoring park areas, as well as providing educational and cultural programs.[234] In the fiscal year ending December 31, 2019, the Conservancy hadnet assets (own equity) of about $4.82 million andliabilities of $1.34 million, which amounted to totalassets of $6.16 million. Net assets increased $630,000 from the fiscal year ending December 31, 2018.[235]

In the late 1970s, New York City's park system was in bad shape: underfunded and plagued with crime. As a result, the Riverside Park Fund was founded in 1987 as a grassroots community organization formed to reclaim the park by establishing community gardens and improving park maintenance.[111] The Fund was renamed the Riverside Park Conservancy in 2012.[236] Merritt Birnbaum, who was previously executive director of theFriends of Governor's Island, was named President & CEO in 2022.[237] It has 30 staff who focus on park programs and projects, including gardens, playgrounds, sports fields, monuments and landscaping.[238] Cumulatively the Conservancy had received $6.6 million in private donations and had spent 80,000 worker-hours on restoring the park.[202]: 13 

Robert M. Morgenthau Citizenship Award

[edit]

The Robert M. Morgenthau Citizenship Award was created by the Riverside Park Conservancy in 2016, in honor ofRobert Morgenthau, the formerManhattan District Attorney. It is granted each year for service to the park and the community.[239]

Transportation

[edit]

There are severalNew York City Subway stations within two blocks of the park, particularly those on theIRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line (1, ​2, and ​3 trains) from72nd Street to145th Street.[240] Direct bus service is provided by theM5 andM11 buses along Riverside Drive, as well as theM79 SBS,Bx11 andBx15 crosstown routes.[241]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abcd12th Avenue, which runs directly below theRiverside Drive Viaduct and alongside Riverside Park withinManhattanville, intersects with 129th and 125th Streets in the same location due to the street grid of the area. As a result, either 125th or 129th Streets can be considered to be the northern border of the original Riverside Park.
  2. ^IncludingCalvert Vaux,Samuel Parsons, andJulius Munckwitz in the 1870s, andGilmore D. Clarke,Michael Rapuano, andClinton Loyd in the 1930s

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^Landmarks Preservation Commission 1980.
  2. ^ab"Federal Register: 49 Fed. Reg. 4459 (Feb. 7, 1984)"(PDF).Library of Congress. February 7, 1984. p. 4653.Archived(PDF) from the original on January 26, 2021. RetrievedMarch 8, 2020.
  3. ^New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 68.
  4. ^abcdCromley 1984, p. 240.
  5. ^abGrimm & Schroeder 2007, p. 3.
  6. ^abc"Riverside Park Highlights".New York City Department of Parks & Recreation. New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.Archived from the original on September 18, 2019. RetrievedAugust 20, 2019.
  7. ^Landmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 7.
  8. ^Cromley 1984, p. 240;Grimm & Schroeder 2007, p. 3;"Board of Commissioners of the Central Park – Documents: May 11, 1865 – January 11, 1866"(PDF).nyc.gov.New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. 1866. pp. 3–5.Archived(PDF) from the original on February 3, 2018. RetrievedJuly 30, 2019.
  9. ^abcdLandmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 9.
  10. ^Peck, Richard (April 14, 1974)."Riverside Drive, Brussels' Flourishes".The New York Times. RetrievedOctober 5, 2024.
  11. ^abcdefghijklPark historyArchived March 3, 2016, at theWayback Machine, riversideparknyc.org. Retrieved August 26, 2014.
  12. ^ab"Board of Commissioners of the NYC Dept of Public Parks – Documents: January 20, 1874 – April 30, 1875"(PDF).nyc.gov.New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. 1875. pp. 2–8.Archived(PDF) from the original on February 3, 2018. RetrievedJuly 30, 2019.
  13. ^New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 69.
  14. ^abcdeCromley 1984, p. 241.
  15. ^abNew York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 71.
  16. ^abGrimm & Schroeder 2007, p. 4.
  17. ^abcdefgNational Park Service 1983, p. 9.
  18. ^abLandmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 10.
  19. ^Landmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 8.
  20. ^Rosenzweig, Roy &Blackmar, Elizabeth (1992).The Park and the People: A History of Central Park. Cornell University Press. pp. 291–293.ISBN 0-8014-9751-5.
  21. ^abNew York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 73.
  22. ^abcLandmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 11.
  23. ^New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 75.
  24. ^abCromley 1984, p. 244.
  25. ^West End Avenue Association, New York (1888).West End Avenue, Riverside Park in the City of New York. American bank note Company.
  26. ^Cromley 1984, p. 242.
  27. ^abc"Want the Lines Fixed; Riverside Park, Residents Urge, Should Extend to the Bulkhead Line".The New York Times. November 16, 1893.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. RetrievedAugust 21, 2019.
  28. ^abcdefCromley 1984, p. 243.
  29. ^"A Nation at a Tomb; The Reunited Republic Buries Gen. Grant".The New York Times. August 9, 1885.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  30. ^abNew York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 76.
  31. ^"Compromise Party Agreed On; Dispute as to Protecting Riverside Park's Water Front Practically Settled".The New York Times. November 18, 1893.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. RetrievedAugust 21, 2019.
  32. ^"Riverside Park Improvements; Plans for Docks at the Foot of Seventy Ninth and Ninety-Sixth Streets".The New York Times. January 13, 1894.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. RetrievedAugust 21, 2019.
  33. ^"At Gen. Grant's Tomb; Exercises Impressive in Their Simplicity Mark the Transfer of the Handsome Monument".The New York Times. April 28, 1897.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedAugust 11, 2023.
  34. ^"Great Day in Gotham: The Tomb of Ulysses B. Grant Dedicated With Pomp and Splendor".Austin Daily Statesman. April 28, 1897. p. 1.ProQuest 1623512153.
  35. ^Grimm & Schroeder 2007, p. 7.
  36. ^abButtenwieser 1999, p. 135.
  37. ^abcdLandmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 12.
  38. ^ab"Grant Tomb Accepted; The City of New York Formally Receives the Memorial of the Great General".The New York Times. April 28, 1897.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. RetrievedAugust 21, 2019.
  39. ^"Memorial Day Observances".New-York Tribune. May 31, 1902. pp. 1,2 – via newspapers.comOpen access icon.
  40. ^ab"Tribute to Heroes on Memorial Day; Veterans Once Again Remember Their Sleeping Comrades".The New York Times. May 31, 1902.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. RetrievedAugust 21, 2019.
  41. ^New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 86.
  42. ^ab"Historic Boathouse Burned As Throngs Watch On Riverside".The New York Times. August 31, 1927.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  43. ^"Educational Structures".New-York Tribune. January 2, 1907. p. 14. RetrievedAugust 16, 2019 – via newspapers.comOpen access icon.
  44. ^"Mayor Protects Public".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. May 16, 1906. p. 2. RetrievedAugust 21, 2019 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.comOpen access icon.
  45. ^Daley, Suzanne (May 22, 1985)."Rebuilding the Riverside Drive Viaduct".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  46. ^New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 83.
  47. ^Grimm & Schroeder 2007, p. 8.
  48. ^New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, pp. 84–85.
  49. ^"To Enlarge Riverside Park; Neighboring Plot Be Added If Petitioners Prevail".The New York Times. January 21, 1906.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. RetrievedAugust 21, 2019.
  50. ^Gray, Christopher (August 15, 1999)."Streetscapes/The Colosseum and the Paterno, 116th Street and Riverside Drive; At Curves in the Road, 2 Unusually Shaped Buildings".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  51. ^"Riverside Grab Secret 18 Months".Brooklyn Times-Union. September 24, 1917. p. 2. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019 – via newspapers.comOpen access icon.
  52. ^ab"Riverside Park Extension Assured; Controller Craig Reveals Estimate Board's Endorsement of His Project".The New York Times. March 8, 1925.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  53. ^Buttenwieser 1999, pp. 129–130.
  54. ^abcdeCromley 1984, p. 245.
  55. ^"Say Tracks Hurt Riverside Park; Residents of the Drive to Fight Open Cut for Central's Lines".The New York Times. March 31, 1907.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  56. ^ab"To Fight Against Invasion of Riverside Park; Manhattan Island's Only Big Waterfront Playground Is Jeopardized, Citizens' Organizations Assert, By the Plans of the New York Central Railroad for the Extension of Its Tracks and Freight Yards".The New York Times. March 23, 1913.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  57. ^"City Has No Money to Buy Waterfront; Controller Prendergast Tells Why N.Y. Central Property Cannot Be Condemned".The New York Times. February 18, 1917.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  58. ^ab"Lease Of 25 Years In West Side Plan; Public Hearing on New York Central Improvement to Be Held Oct. 18".The New York Times. October 7, 1917.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  59. ^Dunlap, David W. (February 18, 2015)."New York City Rail Crossings Carry a Deadly Past".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on February 13, 2018. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  60. ^abLandmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 13.
  61. ^abcNew York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 87.
  62. ^abButtenwieser 1999, p. 139.
  63. ^Buttenwieser 1999, p. 138.
  64. ^"Craig Offers Plan for Improvement of Riverside Park".Brooklyn Times-Union. February 3, 1924. p. 6. RetrievedAugust 23, 2019 – via newspapers.comOpen access icon.
  65. ^"Plan Adds 70 Acres to Riverside Park".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. July 18, 1927. p. 7. RetrievedAugust 23, 2019 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.comOpen access icon.
  66. ^"Wants Playground On Riverside Drive; Women's League Endorses Move to Utilize Bridle Path for the Children".The New York Times. May 26, 1925.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  67. ^"Women Fight Plan For Park Speedway; Riverside, North of 111th Street, Is Needed for Recreation, League Tells Miller".The New York Times. February 28, 1926.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  68. ^"Speedway Opposed In Centre Of Park; City Club Again Urges Plan for Elevated Road at the Water's Edge in Riverside".The New York Times. May 29, 1929.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  69. ^abButtenwieser 1999, pp. 145–146.
  70. ^"PPass Riverside Plan; Highway Over Track; Estimate Board Ends Six Week Controversy by Adopting the Majority Report".The New York Times. June 14, 1929.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  71. ^abcNew York City Department of Parks and Recreation 2017, p. 88.
  72. ^"Park-Highway Plan for Drive Is Drawn; Riverside Park Plaza Planned as Line to Express Highway".The New York Times. April 10, 1931.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  73. ^abcCromley 1984, p. 246.
  74. ^abcdeLandmarks Preservation Commission 1980, p. 14.
  75. ^abcdNational Park Service 1983, p. 10.
  76. ^Caro, Robert (1974).The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York. New York: Knopf. pp. 65–67.ISBN 978-0-394-48076-3.OCLC 834874.
  77. ^abButtenwieser 1999, p. 147.
  78. ^Robbins, L. h (June 3, 1934)."Transforming The West Side: A Huge Project Marches On; New Legislation Speeds the Work of Removing 'Death Avenue' From the Map and of Creating a Greater Riverside Park".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 23, 2019. RetrievedAugust 23, 2019.
  79. ^"Mayor Dedicates West Side Project; ' Death to Death Av.' Is Toast to Terminal and Vast System of Tracks on West Side".The New York Times. June 29, 1934.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 22, 2019. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
  80. ^ab"Widening Begins Of Riverside Park; 500 Truckloads of Fill a Day Being Dumped Between 72d and 129th Streets".The New York Times. February 28, 1935.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on August 23, 2019. RetrievedAugust 23, 2019.
  81. ^abcCromley 1984, p. 247.
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Sources

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Religion
Churches, chapels
Synagogues
Transportation
Subway stations
Streets
Other
Related topics
Main topics
Subsections
Designated
landmarks
Other points
of interest
See also: Manhattan Community Boards:9,10,11
National Historic Sites
National monuments
and memorials
National recreation areas
State
State Parks
State recreation lands
Manhattan
The Bronx
East Bronx
West Bronx
South Bronx
Brooklyn
Queens
Staten Island
North Shore
(Community District 1)
Mid-Island
(Community District 2)
Mid-Island & South Shore
(Community Districts2 & 3)
South Shore
(Community District 3)
Other
Nature centers
Zoos
Botanical gardens
Roosevelt Island
Other lists
Cemeteries
Clubhouses
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Stores,
other commercial
Educational buildings
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other residential
Theatres
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Others
Former
Authority control databases: GeographicEdit this at Wikidata
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