My cousin Ester passed away at 97 years old last week, So I returned to Boro Park the Brooklyn neighborhood I grew up in for a condolence call. . Getting off the train I saw 2 of the neighborhood schoolyards had been transformed into playgrounds. Under the NYC Schoolyards to Playgrounds Program.
PS 131 Brooklyn
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PS 164 was the public school I graduated from. When I was a child , I recall its schoolyard as being a bleak place totally devoid of anything to do |
PS 138X Before and After
NYC's Schoolyards to Playgrounds program has the goal of converting over 200 NYC public school yards into public playgrounds that are open to all after school hours and on weekends.
Of
260 sites only 19 are to be in in Manhattan and
only THREE of those are south of 110th Street
Of the 3 slated for Manhattan south of 110th two have been put on hold. Leaving Manhattan south of 110 with only ONE schoolyard into playground.
Manhattan neighborhoods are Starved for Open Space
Chelsea- Our Chelsea neighborhood has too few parks link
Greenwich Village: Ours is a park-starved district.link
Yorkville— The Upper East Side is starved of open space link
East Side: :the neighborhood has much less park space than most of the city, NY Observer
A lot is written about Manhattan neighborhoods being starved for open space . Why aren't more then 3 schoolyards below 110th street being turned into playgrounds?
The Schoolyard to Playground Site at 116 West 11th St making it an easy walk to southeast Chelsea residents. However the site has been put on hold
This press release says 200 playgrounds were built for about 87.6 million dollars.That's $438,000 per playground. Cost of building some recent parks dept Playgrounds has run from $2.5-5 million dollars each.
MAYOR BLOOMBERG OPENS 200th "SCHOOLYARD TO PLAYGROUND" AS PART OF PLANYC INITIATIVE TO ENSURE ALL NEW YORKERS LIVE WITHIN A TEN MINUTE WALK OF A PARK OR PLAYGROUND
More than 700 acres of New Parkland and 134 Acres of Schoolyards
Converted to Playgrounds Have Been Opened by Bloomberg Administration
71 Percent of New Yorkers Now Live Within a 10 Minute Walk of a Park or Playground
Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg, Director of the Mayor’s Office of Long-Term
Planning and Sustainability David Bragdon, Parks & Recreation
Commissioner Adrian Benepe and Schools Chancellor Dennis M. Walcott
today opened the 200th “Schoolyard to Playground” at P.S. 69 in Jackson
Heights as a part of the
PlaNYC initiative to ensure all New
Yorkers live within a 10 minute walk of a park or playground. The newly
opened playground at P.S. 69 is the latest schoolyard to be renovated
and opened to the public during non-school hours through the program,
which is turning schoolyards into playgrounds in neighborhoods across
the city. The Mayor also was joined at the announcement at P.S. 69 by
Queens Borough President Helen M. Marshall, State Senator Jose R.
Peralta, Assembly Member Francisco P. Moya, City Council Member Daniel
Dromm, P.S. 69 Principal Martha Vazquez and Mary Alice Lee of the Trust for Public Land, the City’s primary partner for the program.
“Since
2002, our Administration has been committed to creating new public
parks and new open spaces of every kind,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “
PlaNYC,
our long-term sustainability agenda, identified public schoolyards that
could be opened up year-round in neighborhoods most in need of open
space. Despite the economic downturn, we’ve maintained our commitment to
this innovative program and we are delivering on our promise. In a time
of tight budgets, our schoolyards represent a great opportunity for
transforming existing, underused resources into something we can all
enjoy.”
“
PlaNYC sets a goal of every New Yorker living with
a 10 minute walk of a park,” said Director of Long-term Planning and
Sustainability Bragdon. “It’s a simply-stated but profoundly ambitious
goal, and one we are on the way to delivering. The Schoolyard to
Playground program is a creative use of previously underused open space
to bring recreation opportunities to underserved neighborhoods and do it
cost-effectively for taxpayers.”
“Active play and recreation are
not only for having fun, but play a crucial role in child development
and fitness,” said Parks Commissioner Benepe. “Thanks to our program, we
have been able to create more spaces for children to play by improving
schoolyards and keeping them open outside of school hours. This 200th
site is an important milestone in making our city a more sustainable,
healthier place to live and play.”
“The strong partnership between
PlaNYC,
the Parks Department and the Department of Education has been so
instrumental to the City’s efforts to ensure children have access to
safe and clean playgrounds in their neighborhoods,” Schools Chancellor
Walcott. “I am so happy to be here today at P.S. 69 in Queens to mark
this important milestone and see children enjoying this new space.”
PlaNYC’s
Schoolyards to Playgrounds initiative is investing $87.6 million to
convert schoolyards into playgrounds and community parks complete with
fields, basketball courts, play equipment, gardens, and trees. The City
works with the Trust for Public Land to design, develop, and open the
sites, which are open and accessible to the community on weekdays from
after school till dusk and on weekends or days when school is not in
session from 8:00 AM till dusk.
PlaNYC calls for a total of
230 schoolyards to be converted into playgrounds by 2013. A schedule
for an additional 28 locations is currently being determined.
The
Trust for Public Land, which works across the country to conserve land
for people to enjoy local parks, playgrounds, and natural areas, has helped design and build 30 of the Schoolyards to Playgrounds in
PlaNYC and the Trust is working to help design another 125 of the locations in the program. The Trust also has built an additional 24 playgrounds in New York City.
The
Schoolyards to Playgrounds initiative uses a participatory design
process – designing the playgrounds with ideas generated by the local
school community, including children and teachers. This design process
facilitates in-depth interagency and community coordination and opens up
dialogue
to ensure continued success of the parks after they are open to the public.
MEDIA CONTACT:
Stu Loeser / Marc La Vorgna
(212) 788-2958
Vickie Karp (Parks)
(212) 360-1311
Natalie Ravitz / Margie Feinberg (Schools)
(212) 374-5141
The Bloomberg Administration reckoned that 69 schoolyards required
nothing more than a school custodian to turn a key in order to help meet
the goal. And by the summer of 2007, 69 were in fact opened—at a cost
of $50,000 per school to pay custodians as reported by the New York Post—in neighborhoods ranging from Brownsville in Brooklyn to Belmont in the Bronx. link
Libraries to Parks
If you can turn schoolyards into Fixed equiopment parks, I think Libraries with Lawns can be turned into Loose Parks.
The closest park to this
NYPL Tottenville branch on Staten Island,is a 10 minute walk. This branch has benches on its lawn(upper left) so
it currently acts as a passive recreation park. . By adding portable
recreation equipment lending to this branch, you would now have an active
recreation park with a staffed parkhouse.
This
is Staten Islands St Georges Branch Library. Note the lawn that is I
suspect currently mostly used by birds and local squirrels.
By
offering Recreation equipment loan of items like hula, hoops, jump ropes, lawn chairs, board games, etc, this space can
be transformed into a outdoor playspace for the neighborhood.
If
NYC's Department of Transportation can transform its roadways(below)
into parks, no reason our libraries can do what the Johnston Library did
and turn their laws into staffed micro parks that loan recreation
equipment.