Register on Arqa.com

Arqa Newsletter

El nuevo parque ‘flotante’ High Line en New York es una parque lineal de 2,5 kms de largo construido sobre las vias elevadas en desuso de un tren de carga. El parque comienza en el Meat Packing District, atraviesa Chelsea y termina en Penn Station. El proyecto fue una colaboración entre los estudios neoyorquinos Field Operations y Diller Scofidio + Renfro, en el que trabajó por 4 años Gaspar Libedinsky como diseñador principal desde la etapa del concurso internacional hasta el inicio de las obras.

High Line, New York

Northern Spur Preserve, between West 16th Street and West 17th Street, looking South towards the Statue of Liberty

High Line, New York

Typical Cross Street, West 20th Street, looking East

High Line, New York

Gansevoort Slow Stair, corner of Gansevoort Street and Washington Street, looking North

High Line, New York

Gansevoort Plaza and Stair, Gansevoort Street and Washington Street, looking North

High Line, New York

Washington Grasslands, between Little West 12th Street and West 13th Street, looking South

High Line, New York

Sundeck Water Feature and Preserve, between West 14th Street and West 15th Street, looking South

High Line, New York

Gansevoort Woodland, Gansevoort Street to Little West 12th Street, looking South

High Line, New York

baan-aerial -Sundeck Water Feature and Preserve, between West 14th Street and West 15th Street, looking South

High Line, New York

Chelsea Grasslands, between West 19th Street and West 20th Street, looking North

High Line, New York

Gansevoort Woodland at Night, Aerial View from Gansevoort Street to West 13th Street, looking South

clic en Imágenes slide-show | clic en centro ampliar imagen | clic en laterales secuencia

Published: June 9, 2009, The New York Times
By NICOLAI OUROUSSOFF

I keep picturing Carrie Bradshaw on the High Line, and it terrifies me. Ever since it was unveiled in 2005, the design for this park, conceived for a strip of elevated rail tracks abandoned nearly 30 years ago, has been the favorite cause of New York’s rich and powerful. Celebrities attended fund-raisers on its deck. City officials endorsed it. Developers salivated over it, knowing it would raise land values.

I worried that it would one day be overrun with tourists and film crews. I imagined turning on the television to see Carrie stumbling down its promenade with a broken heel, weeping over Mr. Big. How, I wondered, could it possibly retain the tranquillity that made walking along its rusting, decrepit deck such a haunting experience? So I was overjoyed this weekend when I climbed the stairs at Gansevoort Street, entered the new city park and felt an immediate sense of calm. Designed by James Corner Field Operations with Diller Scofidio & Renfro, the first phase of the High Line, which opened on Tuesday, is a series of low scruffy gardens, punctuated by a fountain and a few quiet lounge areas, that unfold in a lyrical narrative and seem to float above the noise and congestion below. It is one of the most thoughtful, sensitively designed public spaces built in New York in years.
But what’s really unexpected about the park is the degree to which it alters your perspective on the city. Guiding you through a secret landscape of derelict buildings, narrow urban canyons and river views, it allows you to make entirely new visual connections between different parts of Manhattan while maintaining a remarkably intimate relationship with the surrounding streets.
The park, which currently extends as far north as West 20th Street, is conceived as a series of interwoven events, like chapters of a book. Approached from the south along Washington Street in the meatpacking district, its 30-foot-high steel deck, supported on big steel columns and sliced off brutally at one end, makes for a striking contrast with the green, leafy landscape atop it. A street-level entry plaza, paved in concrete, is tucked underneath, and a broad metal staircase, with sleek brushed stainless-steel handrails, leads up to the structure’s underbelly. Rusted Corten steel plates line the opening in the deck’s floor, emphasizing the violence of the cut.
A subtle play between contemporary and historical design, industrial decay and natural beauty sets the tone. The surface of the deck, for example, is made of concrete planks meant to echo the linearity of the old tracks. The path slips left and right as it advances, so that at some points you are right up against the edge of the railing and at others you are enveloped in the gardens.
And those gardens have a wild, ragged look that echoes the character of the old abandoned track bed when it was covered with weeds, just a few years ago. Wildflowers and prairie grasses mix with Amelanchier bushes, their branches speckled with red berries. Mr. Corner designed planters to hold the taller trees, and the Gansevoort entry is marked by a cluster of birches. On Saturday the gardens were swarming with bees, butterflies and birds. I half expected to see Bambi.
Occasionally, you catch a glimpse of a fragment of track lying in the grass, a carefully placed reminder of the High Line’s former life.
What saves all this from becoming a saccharine exercise in nostalgia is the sophistication with which these elements are fused together. The benches, for example, have a sleek contemporary feel; they are made of simple wood slats that lock into the deck’s concrete planks. The lighting, too, is uncommonly subtle. Most of it is embedded in the bottom of the handrails to keep the focus on the plantings and keep glare to a minimum.
As you continue north, the narrative keeps shifting. The park tunnels through an old brick commercial building just above 13th Street; dimly lit, the cavernous space offers an escape from the heat of a sunny day or from a downpour. Farther up, a spur breaks off and dead-ends into another building, creating a more private pocket overgrown with grasses and shrubs. The most original feature is a small amphitheater that angles down from the center of the deck near 17th Street. Sitting on rows of wood benches, visitors can look through an enormous window up the length of 10th Avenue, the cars and taxis roaring out from directly beneath their feet.
But as mesmerizing as the design is, it is the height of the High Line that makes it so magical, and that has such a profound effect on how you view the city. Lifted just three stories above the ground, you are suddenly able to perceive, with remarkable clarity, aspects of the city’s character you would never glean from an office window. At some points, billboards and parking structures dominate the foreground. At others, you are directly below the cornice line, so that you seem to be floating among the rooftops.
Longer views open up down narrow side streets to the Hudson, or east across the city.
At the same time, you are still close enough to make eye contact with people on the sidewalks, so that you never lose your connection to the street life. The High Line is the only place in New York where you can have this experience - one that is as singular in its way as standing on the observation deck of the Empire State Building.
None of this would matter if the architects had not struggled so hard to regulate access. It often seemed that almost every developer working in the meatpacking district, at one point or another, was begging to have an apartment building or hotel connect directly to the gardens. Yet remarkably, there are only four access points between Gansevoort and 20th Streets. This adds considerably to the park’s low-key mood, and reinforces the notion that it is a place for a quiet stroll, an escape from the trendy neighborhoods below.
We still need to see what will happen when the High Line gets on the major tourist itineraries. The second phase, extending it up to 30th Street, is set to start construction in a few weeks, which will raise new design questions. And developers are still fighting to build bridges to the gardens from their buildings.
But the care and patience with which this project was developed, both on the part of the architects and the High Line’s founders, Joshua David and Robert Hammond, is a rarity anywhere. They have given New Yorkers an invaluable and transformative gift.

High Line, New York

Where the High Line begins to narrow in Chelsea,plantings grow denser, with shrubs and trees adding a variety of textures.

High Line, New York

The textured concrete walking surface meanders through tall plantings in the Chelsea Thicket.

High Line, New York

The High Line’s dramatic curve westward along 30th Street is augmented with an access point, with the stair intersecting the structure and rising up through it.

High Line, New York

A metal walkway lifts off from High Line level, allowing the landscape to fill in below. Visitors are lifted into the shady canopy of a sumac forest. Planting here takes advantage of a cooler, shadier condition between tall buildings, where trees originally grew up once the trains stopped running.

High Line, New York

Below the walkway, an undulating terrain of moss and groundcovers thrive in the shade.

High Line, New York

A spur of the flyover’s metal walkway brings visitors to a view over 26th Street. A viewing frame recalls the billboards that were once attached to the High Line.

High Line, New York

A straight walkway, running alongside the railroad tracks, is surrounded by a landscape of native species that once grew spontaneously on the High Line, interspersed with new species that ensure bloom throughout the growing season.

High Line, New York

A straight walkway, running alongside the railroad tracks, is surrounded by a landscape of native species that once grew spontaneously on the High Line, interspersed with new species that ensure bloom throughout the growing season.

High Line, New York

The High Line’s dramatic curve westward along 30th Street is augmented with an access point, with the stair intersecting the structure and rising up through it.

High Line, New York

By removing the High Line’s concrete deck, the gridwork of the beams and girders is revealed. Visitors float above the structural framework on a viewing platform.

High Line, New York

The exposure of the steel framework creates a dramatic transition to the rail yards section to the north.

clic en Imágenes slide-show | clic en centro ampliar imagen | clic en laterales secuencia

Compartir:

http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/digg_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/stumbleupon_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/delicious_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/google_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/myspace_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/facebook_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/twitter_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/meneame_24.png http://www.arqa.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/mail_24.png
Enlace corto a esta nota:
Los textos publicados son responsabilidad de sus respectivos autores.

Add a commentRSS feeds: Arqa | Architecture

Technical Information
James Corner Field Operations (Design Lead)

Principal-in-Charge: James Corner

Lead Project Designers: Lisa Tziona Switkin, Nahyun Hwang

Project Team: Sierra Bainbridge, Tom Jost, Danilo Martic, Tatiana von Preussen, Maura Rockcastle, Tom Ryan, Lara Shihab-Eldin, Heeyeun Yoon, Hong Zhou


Diller Scofidio + Renfro

Partners: Elizabeth Diller, Ricardo Scofidio, Charles Renfro

Project Designer: Matthew Johnson

Project Team: Robert Condon, Tobias Hegemann, Gaspar Libedinsky, Jeremy Linzee, Miles Nelligan, Dan Sakai

Related articles

El ojo del Bicentenario, experiencia panorámica Obelisco 20 Jun 09 BsAs

‘El Ojo del Bicentenario' es el proyecto de experiencia panorámica en torno al Obelisco a ser instalado en forma temporal en el marco de las celebraciones del Bicentenario Argentino 2010.

Ver todas

Lastest Articles

Nomiya: restaurante temporal en el techo del museo Le Palais de Tokyo, París 18 Mar 10

Se trata de un restaurante temporal transportable ubicado en el techo del museo Le Palais de Tokyo, en París. El restaurante lleva como nombre ‘Nomiya', un restaurante muy pequeño de Japón.

Bar Temporal, en Oporto, Portugal 18 Mar 10

Año tras año, los estudiantes de la Escuela de Arquitectura de Oporto son invitados a reflexionar sobre un bar temporal para representar dignamente a su institución a través de un objeto[...]

Se presenta la Casa Solar Urcomante en Valladolid 17 Mar 10

El Concurso SOLAR DECATHLON es una competición, organizada por el Departamento de Energía de EE.UU., en la que se convoca a universidades de todo el mundo para diseñar y construir un prototipo de[...]

Seguros de Responsabilidad Profesional, en el CPAU 16 Mar 10

El Consejo invita a participar de la conferencia sobre seguros de responsabilidad profesional para arquitectos a cargo del Cdor. Juan Carlos Maleplate, a realizarse el martes 23 de marzo de 2010 a[...]

Archigram. Arquitectura experimental 1961-1974 19 Mar 10

Cuándo: Del 19 de marzo al 2 de mayo de 2010, de 12:00 a 21:00 Dónde: Sala de exposiciones la Pasión / Calle de la Pasión, 2-10, 47001 Valladolid, España Valladolid acogerá por primera vez en[...]

Calendar events starting this week

Roberto Burle Marx, Inédito y Original BsAs

A través de imágenes y textos, el Lic. Edgardo M. Ruiz nos presenta la trayectoria y la proyección de los trabajos[...]

Aprendiendo de las Ciudades - Medellín

Ciudad Inclusiva V, 18 - 19 -20 de abril de 2010 en Rosario, Argentina

VII Bienal Iberoamericana de Arquitectura y Urbanismo, Medellín 2010

La Bienal Iberoamericana de Arquitectura y Urbanismo (BIAU) es una iniciativa del Ministerio de Vivienda del Gobierno[...]

Congreso Mundial y Exposición Ingeniería 2010, en Argentina BsAs

Por primera vez en la Argentina se llevará a cabo "Ingeniería 2010 - Argentina" Congreso Mundial y Exposición, desde[...]

XVII Bienal Panamericana de Arquitectura de Quito 2010

La XVII edición de la Bienal Panamericana de Arquitectura de Quito "LA BIENAL ABIERTA, La Arquitectura Rompe sus[...]

There are no comments yet

comments are open, but there are no comments.

Leave a comment :: Trackback