13. 10月 2023
All photographs by John Hill/World-Architects
World-Architects packed a lunch and headed to Gansevoort Peninsula, the former sanitation facility that is now home to Manhattan's first public beach. Designed by a team led by Field Operations, the latest addition to Hudson River Park opened to the public on October 2.
Although most of the manmade elements jutting into the Hudson River up and down the four miles (6.4 km) of Hudson River Park are piers that are propped above the water on stilts, Gansevoort Peninsula is notably landfill. Created in the 1880s as part of the Gansevoort Market, aka New York City's Meatpacking District, the buildings on the peninsula were torn down in the 1950s, when the Department of Sanitation built an incinerator plant and other facilities on it. Although pollution concerns led to the closure of the Gansevoort Destructor, the official name of the incinerator, in 1980, Sanitation used the peninsula as a garage until the completion of a replacement garage, designed by Dattner Architects and WXY, opened in 2015.
While the peninsula's landfill enabled NYC to use it as an industrial site, it also gave Field Operations, the landscape architecture studio headed by James Corner — the same studio, it should be noted, that designed the nearby High Line, which has its southern entrance at Gansevoort Street — “the incredible opportunity,” in their words, “to incorporate both ecological restoration as well as access to the water that wouldn’t be possible at a typical Hudson River Park pier.” With that in mind, World-Architects visited the park on a mild weekday afternoon to look at the park's design features.