
The five conceptual proposals for redeveloping Governors Island, "The Park at the Center of the World," have been floating for over a week now. Maybe you saw the technicolor article in last week's New York Magazine. Or maybe you've swooned among the large-scale paradise boards on display at the Center for Architecture.
None of these five proposals will necessarily materialize. We're familiar with this type of conceptual process from design competitions at the WTC site, for example, and the southern tip of Roosevelt Island. This exercise, not without value, is an attempt to deploy big design to inspire big public zeal and the confidence of big developers/sponsors. In other words, these schematic fantasies are intended as catalysts devised by the City, the Governor's Island Alliance (civic organizations), and the Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation (GIPEC) to reincarnate the curious, 172-acre trilobite that New Yorkers have learned to ignore over generations of restricted access. And just in case the process leads to something concrete, as it did for the Highline, why pass up a chance to savor the bait and give it a chomp?
Each of the teams envisions leisure space in alluring ways. But a fascinating spectrum of debate has crystallized between proponents of romantic naturalism vs. urban social ecology. In other words: Two teams posit Olmsteadian meadows, rolling hills and curving paths; two others interpret "contemporary green culture" in the form of enhanced eco-tecture such as new climbable rock walls, caves for spelunking, and solar canopies and windmills; and the final proposal offers a flexible grid of square lots into which fields, gardens, forests, amphitheaters, etc could be plugged as a kind of evolving leisure city. Locating "nature" in any of these proposals is not easy, nor necessarily important. Yet some of the more landscape-intensive concepts rely on what Susannah Drake, a landscape architect who spoke at a public forum on June 11, called "false morphologies... geological formations that would never exist here."
What do you think? The Island is open every weekend this summer for the first time. There's a free weekend ferry from the Battery-Maritime Building, 10am - 5pm. The next public meeting will take place on Wednesday, June 20th, from 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM at the Fashion Institute of Technology’s Reeves Great Hall (28th Street and 7th Avenue). Each of the five design teams to present their visions and receive public feedback.
More:
The Park at the Center of the World: Five Visions for Governors Island
New York Magazine: Paradise Island
Gothamist: Ideas for Governors Island





the entire site should be affordable housing
safe, clean, great views, easy & enjoyable commute
new york owes it to the working class!!
no more yuppie playgrounds!!
Wednesday-Friday: Ferry leaves Manhattan at 10am and 1pm with guided tours available of the Island.
Sat. & Sun.: Ferry leaves Manhattan on the hour between 10am and 3pm. Last ferry back to Manhattan is at 5pm.
I highly suggest spending an entire day on Governor's Island. After walking around and seeing the fort, the prison, and officers' quarters, one can just hang out on the grass near the water and have a picnic or toss around a frisbee. It truly is one of the best parks in NYC. Park Rangers call it the ice cream cone because of the shape.
There is some perfectly good housing there that would be perfect for affordable housing. That is what the city really needs.
And since we are really thinking pie in the sky, extend the Second Avenue Subway out there.
Is it just me, or does Governor's Island look like a giant eggplant?
affordable housing is a great idea, but one of the rules laid out by the federal gov't when they gifted the island to the city was no residencial.....
The Governors Island redevelopment is also up for discussion over at the Public Information Exchange.