Public Imagines a Future Coney Island

Tonight the Municipal Art Society will present the public ideas for Coney Island, as well as outline their ideas for revitalization (a preview from tonight's meeting after the jump). MAS President Vin Cipolla said that “The extraordinary array of ImagineConey submissions from the public is a reminder of Coney Island's unique potential as New York's great waterfront destination. Building on the City’s work so far, we must take the steps necessary to realize that potential and create a truly original destination and economic engine for New Yorkers and tourists alike.”

Some of the renderings are available on Flickr, and while the "Don't Feed the Yuppies" cage renderings are amazing in their own right, there is nothing (nothing) that comes close to the genius of bringing a cloned animal exhibit to Coney Island. The synergy with Hollywood alone would be worth it, just picture these words on the marquee: Coney Island Clone Animals Attack! And while the tourists will continue to be amazed, you know after a few weeks locals will all be disaffected by the rooster dogs.

Building on the City’s recent actions to revitalize the area, MAS will also set forth the steps it believes are necessary to successfully return Coney Island to its former place as a dynamic and robust entertainment and amusement destination:
  • New York City Should Buy the Land for an Amusement Area. At current land values, it is unrealistic to expect private developers to construct amusements in Coney Island. Building on it’s successful effort to purchase a parcel last November, New York City should purchase enough land for a Coney Island Amusement Area of sufficient scale that could then be managed by a private, third-party entity overseeing a mix of large, small and mid-scale operators.
  • Refine Vision for a Viable Coney Island. Building on the strategic plan developed by the city, key stakeholders should develop a specific master plan for Coney Island that incorporates 25 acres of amusements, excluding retail and hotel uses, to support a minimum of 3.4 million visitors annually. The refined vision should include a signature, iconic ride that re-establishes Coney Island as world-class destination and enough rides to support up to 15,000 visitors at any one time.
  • Shape the Zoning to Complement Refined Vision. New York City should ensure that its zoning for Coney Island North and West requires entertainment-related uses - including hotels and entertainment-related retail - that complement the activity in the amusement district.
  • Launch Interim Programming to Support Area in Short-Term. Coney Island cannot be allowed to lie fallow in the upcoming years. Key stakeholders should engage a producer to develop short- and longer-term programming in Coney Island using existing and temporary spaces to ensure activity and attract visitors to Coney Island while long-term development efforts take shape.

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Comments (6) [rss]

What is that, a dog, crossed with a rooster, crossed with a ...

The renderings look like an Alexis Rockman-esque dystopia.

http://tinyurl.com/8lx48v

www.forgotten-ny.com

I would be perfectly happy with Coney Island circa. 1998.

That rooster in the first picture is outrageous. I could only hope we'd have that in Coney Island one day.

Last night when they showed these images at the meeting, the MAS presenter said the renderings were meant to be inspirational and not to take them literally. But I would like to see the cloned animal sideshow come to Coney Island. He compared it to Dreamland's exhibit of Infant Incubators with Living Infants (see picture at link) started by a doctor before hospitals would allow such a shocker. http://www.shorpy.com/Coney-Island-Luna-Park

As cool as that is it's not cloning, unless that creature already exists. Stitching together parts of animals like that is vivisection. As in the Island of Dr. Moreau.

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