Quantcast

A Glimpse of the High Line

Highline_Westview-lg2.jpg

Of all the forbidden sites that were opened for public viewing last weekend in the 5th annual Open House New York program, the High Line was one of the crown trophies. It offered rare views of the city, sexy industrial details, and the mysterious allure of a wild grassy flying carpet that won't open until at least a year hence. Built during the same era (early 1930s) as the Empire State Building, the George Washington Bridge and other Gotham landmarks, could this elevated former freight railway become a comparably iconic amenity?

2007_10_highline.jpgThe quickness with which the limited tour slots were snatched up recalled the frenzied competition among real estate developers such as André Balazs, Alf Naman, and Leviev Boymelgreen to whip up luxury dwellings along the future park. Tour guests had to present ID and sign a waiver before being allowed to pass through a chain-link fence on the westernmost stretch of 34th Street. While the tour covered only the upper spur of the High Line -- a U-shaped section that wraps around the Hudson Rail Yards from 30th to 34th Street -- it's the downtown portion (Gansevoort St to 20th St.) that will open to pedestrians next fall. That's the plan, anyway, according to Friends of the High Line, the non-profit group that has propelled this adaptive re-use project since 1999.

Said Katie Lorah, a spokeswoman for the group, "The portion of the High Line on which we were walking is in danger of being demolished, depending on how the planning process plays out at the West Side Rail Yards." On the other hand, Curbed speculates that the 30th Street Spur will be preserved for parkland based on a West Side condo developer's plan to invest $2M in an access bridge. But the tour guide also said that all access to the future park will be public.

Highline_2_rails2b.jpgThe design by Field Operations and Diller Scofidio + Renfro seeks to preserve the High Line's rusty-nature aesthetic. Each section of rail, and perhaps even some warrior shrubs, have been meticulously catalogued and tagged for re-installation after the substructure is inspected and renovated. Picking our way along the overgrown rails and lonesome urban detritus, and absorbing a beating from the August-like heat and haze, we suddenly found the proper bookend for the Richard Serra summer.

Photos by Double Bunny on Flickr

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • guest

    http://omarnyc.homestead.com/files/swlckla.jpg



    BEEN THERE DONE THAT!



    Michael Alig threw an underground outlaw party there once!



    grow some balls people!

  • guest

    You guys know you can just sneak on there at night right? Or the day. It's not particularly hard.

  • guest

    you idiots need to stop looking for 'permission' to do things, not every cool place is written up in timeout ny mag.





    grow some balls and explore the city!





    the king of graffiti has spoken!

  • Reflect

    It runs right through my street on 22nd and 10th.

  • guest

    I'm glad I went when it was still wild. None of this guided tour stuff and definitely none of this renovation. Just the entire High Line all to myself. Okay, so it was a little illegal trespassing. So sue me.

  • guest

    that would be hilarious. is your name michael vick? :)

  • matty

    it would be funny if they turned it into a park and a bunch of dogs fell off from overthrown frisbees.



    or maybe not. still, i don't see how i could make a very good park.



    how about a jogging trail?

  • guest

    been there done that...



    real adventurers and explorers do not go on guided tours!!



    el swatcho boracho

  • guest

    There should be a big banner over the chainlink fence that reads "Welcome Yuppies"

  • guest

    High Line is two words.

  • mjbnyc

    I had a blast on the highline tour.



    On a side note, did anyone else see 6 Serra pieces on flatbed trucks parade across 14th st last thursday around 10pm, it was awesome!

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com