Jennifer Stewart

NY Park in the Sky - Two Guys Make A Dream Come True, make the world a better place for New Yorkers


Posted: Saturday, February 04, 2012

by Jennifer Stewart
Stepping out of History

I love the American capacity to think and dream big and turn those dreams into magnificent realities. New York's Park in the Sky is such a perfect example of it.

In 1847 the City of New York authorized railroad tracks down Manhattan’s West Side. It was a great idea, but it caused a lot of accidents between traffic and freight trains. So many that 10th Avenue became known as Death Avenue, and men on horses, the West Side Cowboys, had to ride ahead of trains waving red flags.

It got so bad that in 1929 the New York Central Railroad and the City and State of New York created the West Side Improvement Project, part of which was a 13 mile long High Railway Line 30 feet above street level. It was designed to go through the center of blocks rather than over avenues. It connected directly to factories and warehouses, so trains carrying milk, meat, produce and goods could roll right inside buildings without interrupting traffic.

It put the Westside Cowboys out of a job, I guess, but for everybody else it was great until interstate trucking made rail transport redundant. The last train ran in 1980, pulling three carloads of frozen turkeys.

In the late 1990’s two ordinary guys, Joshua David and Robert Hammond, who lived in the area, founded Friends of the High Line to protect it from being demolished.
If you let them, dreams will have their way
They had no experience in urban planning or dealing with the City, but they saw how gorgeous the line would be as a public open space. They managed to get City support, and funding to lay out a planning framework over the next three years. And the project had wings.

In 2003 a design competition was held. 720 teams from 36 countries entered. By now it had become an international project and Mayor Bloomberg had agreed to City funding for it, and the State of New York came on board. The team chosen included a landscape architecture firm, an architecture firm, experts in horticulture, engineering, security, maintenance, public art.

The first phase of construction started in April 2006, and by June last year it was complete. 2.3 km of self-seeded wild sections, others with lush lawns, benches and boardwalks, and others with more formal landscaping. And a river runs through it. 30 feet above the chaotic traffic in downtown Manhattan. it's nothing short of magic. And all because of two guys with a dream and the gutzpah to do something about it, to start even though they didn’t have any knowledge about how to finish.

If you let them, dreams will have their way.
Jennifer Stewart is the author of ebook And What About Me? Am I Into Him?

After a life of being adaptive, Jennifer is starting to do it her way. She values independence of mind and spirit and treasures the gift of being able to walk her own path and make dreams come true.

Right now she is now working on a crime novel, a memoire and three film scripts. She also plays piano and sings jazz standards and has a blog at And What About Me?

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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)
» left by The Old Gray Mare
80 days 15 hours ago.
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My curiosity has once again been roused. Now I'm bound and determined to learn more about this project. It's amazing when you consider how it came about. Goes to show how much can be accomplished with dreams, ideas, plans, support, passion and drive. Just goes to show what can be accomplished!
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