Brooklyn Bridge Park
A Dying Waterfront Transformed
by Joanne Witty, Henrik Krogius
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Pub Date Sep 01 2016 | Archive Date Aug 05 2016
Fordham University Press | Empire State Editions
Description
Situated below the quiet precincts of Brooklyn Heights, a strip of moribund structures that formerly served bustling port activity became the site of a prolonged battle. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey eyed it as an ideal location for high-rise or commercial development. The idea to build Brooklyn Bridge Park came from local residents and neighborhood leaders looking for less intensive uses of the property. Together, elected officials joined with members of the communities to produce a practical plan, skillfully won a commitment of government funds in a time of fiscal austerity, then persevered through long periods of inaction, abrupt changes of government, two recessions, numerous controversies often accompanied by litigation, and a superstorm.
Brooklyn Bridge Park is the success story of a grassroots movement and community planning that united around a common vision. Drawing on the authors' personal experiences--one as a reporter, the other as a park leader--Brooklyn Bridge Park weaves together contemporaneous reports of events that provide a record of every twist and turn in the story. Interviews with more than sixty people reveal the human dynamics that unfolded in the course of building the park, including attitudes and opinions that arose about class, race, gentrification, commercialization, development, and government.
Despite the park's broad and growing appeal, its creation was lengthy, messy, and often contentious. Brooklyn Bridge Park suggests ways other civic groups can address such hurdles within their own communities.
Advance Praise
“Brooklyn Bridge Park: A Dying Waterfront Transformed is a remarkable telling of an important story. It’s a provocative narrative of tenacity, community activism, politics, perseverance, contentious decision making, and strategic solutions. For anyone interested in urban planning, this book is a must-read. Ultimately, Witty and Krogius remind us that the public triumph of a beautiful park is well worth a good fight!”—Deborah Schwartz, president of the Brooklyn Historical Society
“As a former parks commissioner, it is amazing to me that a spectacular new waterfront park built at great public expense could be as controversial as Brooklyn Bridge Park. This excellent book details how complicated and difficult it was to conceive, design, finance, and build the park and chronicles the dedication and ingenuity of the many who made it happen.”—Betsy Gotbaum, former commissioner of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation and New York City Public Advocate (2002-2009)
“Brooklyn Bridge Park recounts the long-running
saga of high-stakes competition over the fate of a spectacular piece of
waterfront real estate. This fascinating account describes all the challenges
and reveals the fascinating combination of politics and process, ‘pluck and
luck,’ behind the result. The ‘Grand Bargain’ that made the park possible is a
grand story.”—Ellen Schall, Senior Presidential Fellow at New York University
and Martin Cherkasky Professor of Health Policy and Management at NYU Wagner
Available Editions
EDITION | Hardcover |
ISBN | 9780823273577 |
PRICE | $35.00 (USD) |