Posts Tagged PARKS

A Brighter Future for University Woods?

A Brighter Future for University Woods? : Mount Hope Monitor

A Brighter Future for University Woods?

November 5, 2008

It was once the worst park in the city. Today, it’s become a symbol of what local residents can achieve with hard work and a little imagination.

University Woods is set on a hillside off West 180th Street, near Bronx Community College. It’s a beautiful spot, with commanding views of the Harlem River. But from 2003 to 2005, New Yorkers for Parks, an advocacy group, named it the city’s worst park in their annual survey. In 2005, the Woods received just 6 points out of 100, the group’s lowest rating ever.

According to an article in the New York Times that year, hypodermic needles, human feces, and condoms littered the ground. And there were signs – broken animal bones – that the park was used for Santeria sacrifices.

“That park is not a park… it’s a cliff side,” Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe told the Times. “It will never be a park… just because something is in our inventory doesn’t mean it’s worth taking care of.”

With rampant drug use and prostitution, some community leaders began to question University Woods’ future.

Xavier Rodriguez, Community Board 5’s district manager, even looked at the possibility of a “land swap” with Andrew Lasala, a local developer who owns land near the Harlem River by East Fordham Road. That way, affordable housing could be built in Woods; and a new park on the waterfront land.

But one local resident wasn’t ready to let it go.

Brandy Cochrane, 27, first stumbled upon University Woods in the summer of 2006. “I was shocked,” she said. “I had been living there for four years and didn’t know it was a park.”

Uni Woods Brandy

That year, Cochrane collaborated with the Parks Department for the park’s first ever “It’s My Park! Day.” And she founded “Friends of the Woods,” a group dedicated to restoring and maintaining the 3.4-acre park.

In 2007, the group held monthly cleanups, and today, refuge no longer lines the pathways. The park is now home to Cochrane’s “Wood Walks,” tours of the Woods, which allows residents to experience the park. “Now our focus is on awareness,” she said.

To help publicize their work, Friends of the Woods has a Web site (www.uniwoods.com) which carries details of upcoming events inside the park. Visitors to the site can also sign up for the group’s quarterly newsletter, and even buy “University Woods” clothing, bags, and mugs.

Earlier this year, they received a grant from Partnership for Parks, a joint program of the City Parks Foundation and the Parks Department. The funds helped pay for an Aug. 31 block party on nearby Cedar Avenue, which was cosponsored by University Heights Presbyterian Church and others. It was billed as the first block party in the neighborhood. About 100 people showed up.

“It gave us a chance to meet neighbors, and talk about our group,” said Cochrane.

After neglecting the park for years, the Parks Department has also been busy. They recently completed a capital project to repair some of the damaged walls. New trees and shrubs have also been planted, and earlier this year the park was allocated $500,000. Among other things, the funds will go towards fixing the staircase that leads from Sedgwick Avenue to Cedar Avenue.

“If Friends of the Woods didn’t exist, I don’t think the Woods would have got any of this attention,” says Cochrane, whose group has about nine active members.

She hopes the park’s recovery will motivate others to fight for change, and help improve the Bronx. “The Woods is a beautiful place after we all got together and worked hard for it,” said Cochrane. “I think the same thing [can be done] with the Bronx. We can have a beautiful place by working for it together.”

Next year, when the weather warms up, she’s planning to hold free classes inside the park, so residents can learn how to instigate change in their communities.

Rodriguez says Friends of the Woods is doing admirable work. “The Board is happy Brandy Cochrane has stepped up to the plate,” he said. “She’s the spark of energy needed to bring some sort of conclusion to these woods. She’s brought in community involvement, and that’s what’s important.”

But Rodriguez, whose “land swap” idea didn’t go anyway, still has concerns. “There’s no question it’s beautiful,” he said. “But when you start talking about $500,000, the park has to have a purpose. It’s still pretty dangerous, there’s no lighting, and some are still practicing some religious cult [Santeria]. I’d rather spend the money on playgrounds.”

Uni woods

Still, Rodriguez is “definitely coming around” says Cochrane, who, busy as ever, has continued to mobilize residents. On Oct. 31, she put on a Halloween event inside the park, called Ghost Stories in the Woods. And she’s also already planning next year’s block party.

Meanwhile, the Parks Department is looking at how the park can be improved. A scoping meeting was held on Oct. 29, so residents could voice their thoughts on what renovations should be made a priority in the future.

Cochrane, for her part, wants the park’s crumbling walls secured, the railings re-done, the trails smoothed out and defined, and benches installed, among other things. She’s hopeful the Parks Department will eventually invest a significant sum of money – perhaps $3 million.

When this happens, Cochrane says, University Woods will be a “true gem.”

By ROB SGOBBO. Additional reporting by JAMES FERGUSSON

COURTESY OF: MOUNTHOPEMONITOR.ORG

Wednesday,November 12, 2008

Seeking Law and Order on a Crowded Playground

Bronx Park – Teenage Skaters in Bronx Park – More Rules Now, Please – NYTimes.com

Bronx Park

Seeking Law and Order on a Crowded Playground

By KATHERINE BINDLEY

THE teenagers who hang out at the skate park that opened at the end of June in Bronx Park are grateful for its arrival.

From early morning until dinnertime, on a 6,000-square-foot site northeast of the New York Botanical Garden, their skateboards can be heard rumbling back and forth between the quarter-pipe ramps, each ride punctuated by a smack as they reach the top.

These teenagers have just one request. They’d like some rules, please.

“There’s no age limit right now,” said Tyriq Holloway, a 17-year-old from Eastchester who was wearing a striped knit hat on a recent hot August afternoon. He and other skate park regulars are frustrated by the number of children between the ages of 5 and 7 who, they say, make the area dangerous by riding their bikes around the skate park without supervision. “People get hurt cause they don’t know what they’re doing,” he said.

Tyriq raised this issue one day recently with a parks department employee who was driving by.

“I said, ‘Can we do anything about the little kids?’ ” Tyriq recalled. In response, he said, the woman asked if anything could be done about the teenagers.

“She was joking around,” Tyriq said. “But I told her a lot of little kids are in the way, and people get hurt.”

Michael Maldonado, a 14-year-old who lives just east of the park in the Bronxdale neighborhood, had a bad fall in the park and had to take six weeks off from skateboarding.

“I was skateboarding on the hubba,” he said, pointing to a metal box in the center of the area where he does tricks. “A little kid got in my way on a bike and I jumped off and I landed straight on my ankle and broke it.”

Michael said that the child, a boy, was 4 or 5 and seemed to know how to ride his bike. “But there was nobody here to watch him,” Michael said.

The parks commissioner, Adrian Benepe, said that setting a minimum age would be arbitrary because some experienced skaters might be as young as 6 or 8. In addition, he said, while many other city skate parks have attendants and require users to sign a waiver releasing the parks department from responsibility in case of an accident, the one at Bronx Park is designed so as not to require either. “Everything there is three feet high or less,” Mr. Benepe said.

Many skaters say that even parents in the vicinity rarely keep an eye on their youngsters. One exception the other day was Michael Saunders, who works at a telephone company and grew up in Bronxdale when the only place to skate was the sidewalk or the street.

“Anybody under 13 definitely should have parental supervision coming to the park,” Mr. Saunders said as he kept an eye on his 7-year-old son, Jalen, who was wearing a helmet and had a large hole in the right knee of his jeans. “Anything can happen here.”

[NYT]

Monday,September 1, 2008

PARK PLAN’S ‘CONCRETE’

PARK PLAN’S ‘CONCRETE’ – New York Post

PARK PLAN’S ‘CONCRETE’
By DAVID SEIFMAN

June 10, 2008 — A former concrete plant in The Bronx will be transformed into an urban oasis following a $10 million cleanup, officials announced yesterday.

The name of the 2.7-acre project along the western shore of the Bronx River in Crotona Park East? What else but Concrete Plant Park?

Remnants of the old Edgewater Concrete Plant, which closed in 1987, have been left intact to provide a gritty backdrop to the sliver of green near the Bruckner Expressway.

The park is scheduled to open in the fall and will eventually be part of a chain along the Bronx River, said Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe.

The city has 7,600 acres of contaminated brownfields, leading the mayor to call for a quicker cleanup program from Albany.

One feature of the program Bloomberg desperately wants to change would allow developers to do their own cleanups to qualify for a release of liability from the state.

As things now stand, the state won’t provide that release unless it also provides funds for the cleanup.

Tuesday,June 10, 2008


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