Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Riverside Park and Issues of Historic Preservation

View through CrossRef
Riverside Park and Riverside Drive in New York City were designated a Scenic Landmark in 1980 by the New York Landmarks Preservation Commission, but this designation raises some problems for historians. The Landmark designation is based primarily on the park's status as a Frederick Law Olmsted design. My research shows, however, that only a small part of the park as it stands today was actually designed by Olmsted, and that Riverside Park was rather the result of ad hoc decisions and compromises over several decades. The history of Riverside Park presented in this article is offered as an alternative to the Landmarks Commission's history in its "Designation Report." This alternative history of a "non-Olmsted park" shows that Olmsted's design, based on an aesthetic of nature, is preserved only in the layout of Riverside Drive on the high ground above the Hudson and in the parkland immediately adjacent to the Drive. The many sculptural monuments added to Riverside Park and Drive, beginning with a temporary Grant's Tomb in the 1880s and continuing through the 1920s, are the legacy of a City Beautiful conception of the park as an instrument for cultural uplift and education. In the 1930s yet another conception of parks as active recreation space led to doubling the park's size by landfill and expanding its facilities by building many sports grounds, children's playgrounds, and a tree-bordered promenade. In my conclusion, I consider what it means, to readers of history and to makers of parks policy, to choose one or the other of these histories. If Riverside is "an Olmsted park," preservation policies will take a different form than they will if it is a "non-Olmsted park." From this discussion, I also raise some general questions about the meaning and implications of constructing particular kinds of historical stories.
Title: Riverside Park and Issues of Historic Preservation
Description:
Riverside Park and Riverside Drive in New York City were designated a Scenic Landmark in 1980 by the New York Landmarks Preservation Commission, but this designation raises some problems for historians.
The Landmark designation is based primarily on the park's status as a Frederick Law Olmsted design.
My research shows, however, that only a small part of the park as it stands today was actually designed by Olmsted, and that Riverside Park was rather the result of ad hoc decisions and compromises over several decades.
The history of Riverside Park presented in this article is offered as an alternative to the Landmarks Commission's history in its "Designation Report.
" This alternative history of a "non-Olmsted park" shows that Olmsted's design, based on an aesthetic of nature, is preserved only in the layout of Riverside Drive on the high ground above the Hudson and in the parkland immediately adjacent to the Drive.
The many sculptural monuments added to Riverside Park and Drive, beginning with a temporary Grant's Tomb in the 1880s and continuing through the 1920s, are the legacy of a City Beautiful conception of the park as an instrument for cultural uplift and education.
In the 1930s yet another conception of parks as active recreation space led to doubling the park's size by landfill and expanding its facilities by building many sports grounds, children's playgrounds, and a tree-bordered promenade.
In my conclusion, I consider what it means, to readers of history and to makers of parks policy, to choose one or the other of these histories.
If Riverside is "an Olmsted park," preservation policies will take a different form than they will if it is a "non-Olmsted park.
" From this discussion, I also raise some general questions about the meaning and implications of constructing particular kinds of historical stories.

Related Results

Information Resources Preservation: Bottlenecks and their Effect on Library Information Services
Information Resources Preservation: Bottlenecks and their Effect on Library Information Services
Abstract This study investigated the factors hindering information resources preservation and the extent to which information services are affected in academic libra...
Contemporary Archival Appraisal Methods and Preservation Decision-Making
Contemporary Archival Appraisal Methods and Preservation Decision-Making
Archival administrators are beginning the search for administrative tools that rationalize difficult preservation priority decision-making processes. Some are suggesting that the n...
Links between heritage building, historic urban landscape and sustainable development: systematic approach
Links between heritage building, historic urban landscape and sustainable development: systematic approach
Heritage and historic buildings deserve attention not only as a significant part of the building stock or from energy efficiency or carbon emissions points of view. They constitute...
World War II: Defending Park Values and Resources
World War II: Defending Park Values and Resources
Abstract This article focuses on the way in which the National Park Service (NPS) resisted demands for the consumptive use of park resources during World War II prim...
Why Preserve? An Analysis of Preservation Discourses
Why Preserve? An Analysis of Preservation Discourses
AbstractThe greatest risk in preservation is lack of motivation. Why we should be in need of preservation at all, why we should need the enduring access to information, is far from...
Educational Options for Preservation Administrators: An Afterword on the Preservation Management Institute
Educational Options for Preservation Administrators: An Afterword on the Preservation Management Institute
The education and development of preservation administrators is an important issue for archivists. The Preservation Management Institute (PMI), a pilot project cosponsored by the S...
Preservation Practices for Information Resources in Public University Libraries in Tanzania
Preservation Practices for Information Resources in Public University Libraries in Tanzania
AbstractThe present study examined the preservation practices for information resources in seven public university libraries in Tanzania. Convenient and purposive sampling techniqu...
Cultural heritage preservation by using blockchain technologies
Cultural heritage preservation by using blockchain technologies
AbstractUbiquitous digitization enables promising options for cultural heritage preservation. Therefore, a new approach is presented that considers deployment scenarios by linking ...

Recent Results

Non-Phylarchean Tradition of The Programme of Agis IV
Non-Phylarchean Tradition of The Programme of Agis IV
It is generally held that Plutarch's authority in his Vita Agidis was Phylarchos and that, consequently, our knowledge of Agis' programme derives solely from the Phylarchean, pro-S...
[Underwater Course]
[Underwater Course]
First underwater course at the Costa Brava Underwater Activity Centre Portrait of a Participant. Sant Feliu de GuĂ­xols....

Back to Top