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Posts in Built Environment
The Problem of Water in New York’s History

The Problem of Water in New York’s History

By Carolyn Eastman

New York’s water problem has been on my mind because in the evening after I arrived in the city on September 1, 2021 to start a fellowship at the New-York Historical Society, Hurricane Ida barreled through the region. The water was devastating. Dozens died in basement apartments or when they unwittingly drove their cars into flooded streets and got swept away by the rushing water. Media filled with video of torrents of water pouring into the subway and dramatic water rescues in New Jersey.

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Site and Sounds: TWA Terminal, JFK International Airport

Site and Sounds: TWA Terminal, JFK International Airport

By Nicholas D. Bloom

This year marks the fourth season of Sites and Sounds, a podcast series by the Gotham Center for Open House New York’s annual OHNY Weekend. All this week Gotham will bring you new episodes of this award-winning podcast. Check out more about OHNY Weekend, happening October 16-17. In today’s episode of Sites and Sounds, Nicholas D. Bloom talks about the TWA Terminal at JFK International Airport.

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Review: Joshua Jelly-Schapiro’s Names of New York: Discovering the City’s Past, Present, and Future Through Its Place-Names

The Imaginative Geographies of Place Naming in New York City: Joshua Jelly-Schapiro’s Names of New York

Reviewed by Reuben Rose-Redwood and CindyAnn Rose-Redwood

In the opening chapter of Joshua Jelly-Schapiro’s Names of New York: Discovering the City’s Past, Present, and Future Through Its Place-Names, the author observes that New York is a city “in love with stories about itself.” That the Big Apple has an overinflated sense of its own self-importance will come as no surprise to those familiar with the city’s reputation for narcissistic self-indulgence informed by the belief that New York is the center of the universe. Yet, if one thing is certain, it’s that the streets of New York do indeed contain a multitude of stories clamoring to be told.

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“Completion by Contrast”: Architecture and Sculpture in Postwar New York

“Completion by Contrast”: Architecture and Sculpture in Postwar New York

By Donald Albrecht and Thomas Mellins

In the March 30, 1963 issue of the New Yorker, art critic and historian Calvin Tomkins profiled sculptor Richard Lippold, whom he described as “by all odds, the busiest artist now working predominantly in collaboration with architects.”

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New York Recentered: Building the Metropolis from the Shore

Podcast Interview: New York Recentered

Kara Murphy Schlichting Interviewed by Garrett Reed Gutierrez

In New York Recentered: Building the Metropolis from the Shore, Kara Murphy Schlichting offers a fresh perspective on New York City’s history by shifting readers’ gaze away from Manhattan and towards the coastal periphery—where local planning initiatives, waterfront park building, the natural environment, and a growing leisure economy each had a stake in the regional development of New York City. Schlichting’s regional and environmental approach frames New York’s extensive waterways as points of connection that unite, rather than divide, the urban core and periphery to one another.

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Dead rivers and Day’s End: cruising and preserving New York’s queer imaginaries

Dead Rivers and Day’s End: Cruising and Preserving New York’s Queer Imaginaries

By Fiona Anderson

Whenever I’m in New York, I make a point of spending time looking at the wooden pilings that stand in the Hudson, remnants of the warehouses and piers that occupied the waterfront until the mid-1980s. Gathered together in intimate coalition, they jut up and out along the riverside like rugged swimmers leaping in to rescue a drowning comrade. They look both like placeholders for future construction and hardy traces of a long-lost culture, like a forgotten work by Robert Smithson or an American Pompeii. This area is the subject of my recent book Cruising the Dead River: David Wojnarowicz and New York’s Ruined Waterfront (University of Chicago Press, 2019), which looks at how and why this site hosted a vibrant cruising scene and art scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

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Review: Martin V. Melosi's Fresh Kills: A History of Consuming and Discarding in New York City

Review: Martin V. Melosi's Fresh Kills: A History of Consuming and Discarding in New York City

Reviewed by Simone M. Müller

Fresh Kills Landfill was a human-made structure whose scale was gigantic in every conceivable dimension. With some 400 staff on site, holding twenty different job titles, the facility covered an area of about 3,000 acres, 2200 of which were available for fill. At the peak of its operation, in the late 1980s, Fresh Kills received about 29,000 tons of New York City’s municipal solid waste on a daily basis. Until its closure in 2001, Fresh Kills functioned as the world’s largest landfill in the heart of one of the world’s megacities.

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The Invention of Public Space: Designing for Inclusion in Lindsay’s New York

The Invention of Public Space: An Interview with Mariana Mogilevich

Interviewed by Katie Uva

Today on the blog, editor Katie Uva speaks to Mariana Mogilevich about her recent book, The Invention of Public Space: Designing for Inclusion in Lindsay’s New York. Mogilevich discusses the 1960s and 1970s as a uniquely inventive time in the city for defining and conceptualizing the use of public space. At a time when New York was dealing with deindustrialization, economic decline, and suburbanization, the Lindsay Administration made a conscious effort to develop inviting public space and support public interaction in city spaces, an attempt to lift up the city’s density and shared space as an asset rather than a liability.

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