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Blackwell Island NYC

Blackwell (Roosevelt) Island
as NYC's Civic Center
The notion of a civic center – a focus of the city’s public energies and an expression of its governmental purposes–was much discussed at the turn of the twentieth century. Daniel Burnham’s White City at the World’s Columbian Exposition, in Chicago, and Charles Mulford Robinson’s City Beautiful designs led a new generation to think about how to build modern-day equivalents of the Acropolis in ancient Greece. In the March 1902 edition of Municipal Affairs, ex-Congressman and lawyer John De Witt Warner declaimed, “New York’s greatest material lack... [of] one or more great civic centres... effectively grouped... public or quasipublic structures that are, as it were, the vital organs upon which its vigor and character must so largely depend.”

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Blackwell Island
3D Reconstruction
 
Location: New York, USA
Year: 2018
The Municipal Art Society deemed City Hall Park the natural center, as did most of the leading planners of the day. The young architect Thomas J. George, however, demurred. He had his own plan, which he sent to the New York City Improvement Commission, and then published in the July 1904 issue of House & Garden. In “A Suggestion for Utilizing Blackwell’s Island, N.Y., as a Site for Municipal Buildings,” George argued that the island, known today as Roosevelt Island, was much closer to the city’s true commercial center. New York would grow to the east, he said, and the new bridges and tunnels crossing the East River, were “already having [their] effect.”

George contemplated the construction of two new bridges to cross Blackwell’s–one of them passing through the dome of his new municipal building. Esplanades at either end of the island would be mirrored by grand promenades stretching along the riverfronts of Manhattan and Long Island City. The municipal building itself would be seven blocks long, with a central tower 600 feet high. The huge capitol structure would be a perpetual landmark, since it would be impossible to hem it in with yet taller buildings–the fate of City Hall in Lower Manhattan. An essential element of George’s enormous scheme was the opening of broad diagonal streets, emanating from such landmarks as Penn Station, the public library at Bryant Park, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Grand Central Terminal, and from the north end of Central Park. Thus, the new city hall would be framed by vistas across Manhattan.
Draft renders of the 3d scene:
Blackwell Island NYC
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Blackwell Island NYC

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