logo
A Project to Be Proud of at Central Park's Northern Tip

A Project to Be Proud of at Central Park's Northern Tip

New York Times05-05-2025

Good morning. It's Monday. Today we'll look at the transformation of the northernmost part of Central Park.
And tomorrow, keep an eye on your inbox. The Times will begin a limited-run newsletter focused on the race for mayor in New York City. Our politics team will bring you a weekly digest of news, trends and observations about the Democratic primary next month. Early voting begins in just 40 days.
Last month the $160 million Davis Center at the Harlem Meer opened — a new swimming pool, skating rink and community hub on six remade acres at the north end of Central Park. Michael Kimmelman, The Times's architecture critic, says it's a significant change for the park, which is a barometer of New York's shifting fortunes. I asked him to explain.
You called this huge project an 'act of civic reparation.' How so?
It's in Harlem, at the north end of the park, which had become very decrepit and crime-ridden during the later decades of the last century. So Davis represents the final step in a long-term effort to restore dignity, beauty and order to that area.
And it's also an attempt to restore something of Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux's original vision, from the mid-19th century, which imagined the northern park as a bucolic retreat. Davis doesn't quite do that. Times change. The park now has to serve many purposes.
But it finds a way to return some of the pastoral ambition of the original plan and also meet the needs of a population that depends on having a pool and skating rink. It's a great example of how landscape architecture needs to adapt and reflect a changing city and society, which is why it is also tied up with race and the history of Harlem. These are all inseparable issues when you're talking about critical public spaces like Central Park in a city like New York.
You look to 1989 as a crucial year. Why?
In mid-April of that year, on the same night that a Black woman was raped and thrown off a roof in Brooklyn, a woman jogging near the Meer was raped and brutally beaten. Five Black and Latino teenagers were arrested, convicted and imprisoned for the crime, which they did not commit.
The north part of the park became synonymous with the racial unrest in the city. That year was a nadir. Afterward, attempts began to turn that part of the park around, to clean the Meer, to redo playgrounds and integrate them with the original landscape.
The last step, now just completed, was to replace Lasker Pool, a hulking pool that could convert to a skating rink in winter, with Davis, which involves not just a new pool and a pavilion but a relandscaping of several acres. The pavilion is tucked into a hill, so it feels much less like an urban intrusion than Lasker was, more like a part of nature.
You talked to Yusef Salaam, one of the teenagers who was convicted in the 1989 attack. He is now a member of the City Council, representing the district that includes the north end of the park. What did he say about how Davis differs from what used to be there?
Salaam pointed out that often change is seen as gentrifying — 'exclusionary' was the word he used. But he suggested that when something new and good like Davis comes along, people should 'receive the goodness because when you give yourself the opportunity to participate in something good, you give yourself permission to lead a full life — to find a way forward.'
I think that is what a project like Davis means in a larger sense. It is an opportunity for people who use it and for all New Yorkers to see a way forward.
That's certainly not what Lasker was. Lasker wasn't maintained.
There were many things that brought on the park's decline, and they all worked together in the way that happens when cities are in free fall.
With the financial crisis of the '70s, that northern part of the park was virtually abandoned by the city. As a consequence, it also became a center of crime.
It's easy to ruin things quickly. It takes ages to fix them. This effort has taken more than a generation.
How different is it from what Olmsted and Vaux originally had in mind for that part of the park?
Their idea was that this area would be a complex landscape of meandering paths, hills, forests and waterways — a diverse and seemingly natural creation, although everything in Central Park is constructed and designed.
Many people don't realize that now. They think the park, or bucolic parts of it, like the north end, with its lake and woods, are the remains of untouched Mannahatta, from precolonial days. But every one of those streams and forests and meadows and lakes was created. It was part of a democratic vision of Olmsted and Vaux to make it seem naturalistic. Central Park was a retreat from the hardships of the urban grid. It was a place for everyone.
And they planned the north end of the park to be rustic.
Right. They conceived it around the Harlem Meer, which linked to a loch and a ravine, which they constructed through the north woods, which they planted. All of this was a sequence of nature that approximated the Adirondacks or some rural stretch of the Hudson Valley.
But as the city grew, pressures on the park increased to serve more people and purposes. And when Robert Moses became head of the parks department in the 1930s, the push was toward adding recreational spaces, so the pastoral idea was replaced by a variety of playgrounds, ball fields and hardscaping. The lake was surrounded by a concrete border. That end of the park became increasingly urbanized.
The culmination in the 1960s was the building of the Lasker Pool, a behemoth tucked into the ravine, which plugged up the waterway. It was very popular in the neighborhood because kids could go there and cool off or, in the winter, learn to skate. But Lasker was not well built. It leaked.
The upshot was it was always a place in need of repair, rundown and poorly maintained. It was important to the community in Harlem, but not really worthy and forbidding, done on the cheap, which sent a message about how the city feels about the people who depend on it. Davis is an attempt to send an opposite message.
Can the city maintain Davis?
Works of architecture are always subject to the vagaries of fate and politics. We'll see what the economic situation for the city is in the coming years. Lasker wasn't built in the '60s to anticipate the near-bankruptcy of the '70s.
That said, it makes a difference when something is well done and people who use it feel respected and dignified by association with it. These places tend to be more cared for. It's not a guarantee. But investing the kind of money and care that has gone into Davis often translates into civic pride and ownership.
That's an important message today, when the city needs signs of progress and hope. And there's no place more central to the soul of New York than Central Park.
Expect a rainy Monday with the possibility of a thunderstorm and a high temperature around 64. The rain will continue tonight, when the low will be around 58.
In effect until May 26 (Memorial Day).
The latest Metro news
Unacceptable
Dear Diary:
I went to a new bagel store in Brooklyn Heights with my son.
When it was my turn to order, I asked for a cinnamon raisin bagel with whitefish salad and a slice of red onion.
The man behind the counter looked up at me.
'I'm sorry,' he said. 'I can't do that.'
— Richie Powers
Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here.
Glad we could get together here. See you tomorrow. — J.B.
P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here.
Stefano Montali and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at nytoday@nytimes.com.
Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

In their own words: Trump, Newsom trade insults and barbs over National Guard in Los Angeles

time32 minutes ago

In their own words: Trump, Newsom trade insults and barbs over National Guard in Los Angeles

The swiftly evolving situation in the Los Angeles area over protests surrounding immigration enforcement actions has also cued up a public spat between President Donald Trump and Gov. Gavin Newsom, the California governor who has been one of the Republican president's most vocal Democratic critics. After Trump on Sunday called up 2,000 National Guard troops to respond, Newsom said he would sue the administration, a promise on which the state followed through a day later. Trump cited a legal provision that allows him to mobilize federal service members when there is 'a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States." The president also agreed with one of his top advisers that maybe the governor should be arrested. Here's a look at back-and-forth between Trump and Newsom in their own words: 'You have violent people, and we're not gonna let them get away with it.' — Trump, Sunday, in remarks to reporters in Morristown, New Jersey. ___ Newsom's ire has been elevated over Trump's decision to, without his support, call up the California National Guard for deployment into his state. In a letter Sunday, Newsom called on Trump to rescind the Guard deployment, calling it a 'serious breach of state sovereignty.' The governor, who was in Los Angeles meeting with local law enforcement and other officials, also told protesters they were playing into Trump's plans and would face arrest for violence or property destruction. 'Trump wants chaos and he's instigated violence,' he said. 'Stay peaceful. Stay focused. Don't give him the excuse he's looking for.' In an interview with MSNBC, Newsom said Sunday he had spoken with Trump 'late Friday night,' after the protests had begun, but said deploying the National Guard 'never came up.' "We talked for almost 20 minutes, and he — barely, this issue never came up. I mean, I kept trying to talk about LA, he wanted to talk about all these other issues," Newsom said. 'We had a very decent conversation.' 'He never once brought up the National Guard,' Newsom said of Trump, calling him 'a stone-cold liar.' Saying, 'I did call him the other night,' Trump told reporters Sunday that he told Newsom in that call: ''Look you've got to take care of this. Otherwise I'm sending in the troops.' ... That's what we did.' On Monday, Trump posted on social media that Los Angeles would have been 'completely obliterated' without his intervention and referred to Newsom as 'Newscum,' a pejorative moniker he has used to refer to the governor. 'We are suing Donald Trump. This is a manufactured crisis. He is creating fear and terror to take over a state militia and violate the U.S. constitution.' — Newsom, Monday, X post. ___ As Newsom promised, California officials sued the Trump administration on Monday, with the state's attorney general, Rob Bonta, arguing that the deployment of troops 'trampled' on the state's sovereignty and pushing for a restraining order. The initial deployment of 300 National Guard troops was expected to quickly expand to the full 2,000 that were authorized by Trump. Late Monday, Trump authorized an additional 2,000 National Guard troops. Ahead of that move, Newsom accused the president of inflaming tensions, breaching state sovereignty and wasting resources, while warning protesters not to 'take Trump's bait.' Teasing the suit, Newsom told MSNBC that he saw the deployment as 'an illegal act, an immoral act, an unconstitutional act.' Asked Monday about the lawsuit, Trump said it was 'interesting' and argued 'that place would be burning down' without the federal government's intervention. 'I'm very happy I got involved," Trump added. "I think Gavin in his own way is very happy I got involved.' 'I think it's great. Gavin likes the publicity, but I think it would be a great thing." — Trump, Monday, in remarks to reporters. ___ Tom Homan, the Trump administration's border czar, previously warned that anyone, including public officials, would be arrested if they obstructed federal immigration enforcement. Newsom's initial response to Homan, during the MSNBC interview and in subsequent posts on his own social media: 'Come and get me, tough guy.' On Monday Trump seemed to agree with his border chief, telling reporters, 'I would do it if I were Tom.' 'I think it's great. Gavin likes the publicity, but I think it would be a great thing,' Trump added. "He's done a terrible job. Look — I like Gavin, he's a nice guy, but he's grossly incompetent, everybody knows." Homan later said there was 'no discussion' about actually arresting Newsom, but reiterated that 'no one's above the law.' wrote Monday on X that they represented 'a day I hoped I would never see in America' and said Trump's call for his arrest marked 'an unmistakable step toward authoritarianism.'

Gavin Newsom Dares Donald Trump to Arrest Him: 'Get It Over With'
Gavin Newsom Dares Donald Trump to Arrest Him: 'Get It Over With'

Newsweek

time43 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Gavin Newsom Dares Donald Trump to Arrest Him: 'Get It Over With'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. California Gov. Gavin Newsom told U.S. President Donald Trump to "just get it over with, arrest me" as the pair clashed over immigration raids in the city and how to handle the disorder that erupted from the protests against them. Trump had said he would arrest Newsom if he were the White House border czar Tom Homan, calling it a "great thing". Homan had earlier said those harboring illegal immigrants would face the law, and the Democratic governor of California is not excluded from that risk. Newsom called it a "sober and serious moment" in remarks to MeidasTouch, a liberal activist media group, on Monday evening. "This is why I told the president, just get it over with, arrest me, move on. If you need some head to scalp, do it with me, but stop messing with these kids," Newsom said. "Stop messing with four-year-olds. Kids in elementary school. We've got kids. We have hundreds of graduations down here. "Kids are not going to their own graduations, families, grandparents, here legally. Mixed status families in some cases, scared to death to go to a graduation. People are scared to walk down the streets." Newsom said he was aware of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) running "checkpoints, checking people's IDs" in Los Angeles. "We've never seen this kind of deployment in so many accents," Newsom said. "It's mass panic out here in the nation's largest county, in the nation's largest state. Good, hardworking people, decent people. These are not the criminals. These are not the thugs." This is a developing article. Updates to follow.

Proposal to increase SPD salaries by 13.5%
Proposal to increase SPD salaries by 13.5%

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Proposal to increase SPD salaries by 13.5%

SPRINGFIELD, Mo.- At Monday's city council meeting, council discussed a potential 13.5% increase in Springfield Police Department salaries. This increase would be specifically for sworn officers. Ozarks First asked members of the community how they felt about the potential increase. One person said they would support the increase if there was more information released. Sheila Sharpe tells Ozarks First she understands what it's like to serve the public. 'I've worked in the public sector for all my life, and I feel like most of us are underpaid for what we do,' Sharpe said. 'We do it for the love of what we're doing and helping others.' This ordinance would technically be an amendment to an agreement between the city and the police union. The increase, if approved, would go into effect this July. 'I'm all in favor for that,' Sharpe said. 'I think people that do such dangerous work and put their lives on the line and help us in so many ways. I'm all for any increase in benefits or their salary.' This ordinance is expected to be voted on in two weeks at the next city council meeting. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store