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Old Posted Aug 15, 2012, 1:02 AM
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Smile NEW YORK | McCarren Park Pool Renovation

There's been a flood of bad news coming from the pool since its reopening due to rowdy behavior, but I think the renovation itself has been worth noting...


http://archpaper.com/news/articles.asp?id=6210

McCarren Park Pool Renovation
Rogers Marvel's $50 million renovation restores dignity to a Moses-era pool.






Thomas de Monchaux


Quote:
No diving. That’s the rule in most all of the 50 public outdoor swimming pools of New York City, including the McCarren Park Pool between Greenpoint and Williamsburg in Brooklyn. The pool was recently reopened with a $50 million renovation by Rogers Marvel Architects after a near-30-year dry spell.

And yet there’s something about the new outdoor changing pavilions, the most visible part of the renovation that has all the poised tensile exuberance of a leap into space. Their white, plastery canopies narrow in profile, diving-board-like, toward their perimeters—the soffits tilting up more gradually poolside, more steeply behind—and their supporting columns are similarly skinnier closer to the water and stouter closer to the existing building—reinforcing an impression of embodied and potential energy. Incisions and gill-like fins guide daylight into the interiors, and a generous gap between the underside of the canopies and the top of the partitions and lockers below bring sparkle and spaciousness to what would otherwise be dour transitional spaces.

They also echo the crisp clerestory canopy over the existing entry to the complex, a monumentally moderne triumphal arch in Roman brick by Aymar Embury II, the notably skillful in-house architect for then-Parks Commissioner Robert Moses. Funded by the Depression-era Works Progress Administration, McCarren was one of ten city pools that opened in the summer of 1936, the hottest on record at the time. It closed in 1984, the victim of recession and a flashpoint for tension and crime in neighborhoods going through demographic change and economic decline. This summer’s reopening, following the well-known hipster-driven development of the area, is the first of eight large-scale park refurbishments planned between now and 2030 under the city’s PlaNYC program. Opening day on June 28 saw that gorgeous mosaic of New Yorkers of all shapes and colors filling the million-gallon cobalt-blue pool to its 1,500-person capacity.

And while the subsequent heatwave saw assaults and arrests ascending out of the usual watery mayhem, the pool has become an instant mainstay, both athletic and democratic, establishing what designer Jonathan Marvel has described as “spaces that inspire community involvement and face time.”

Some of those spaces are elegantly prosaic, like computer labs, meeting rooms, and small-scale gymnasiums tucked into the existing no-nonsense bar buildings that flank Embury’s fantastical arch. The pool itself, once a massive rectangle with enough water for four Olympic-size facilities, has been reconceived with a central peninsula (an ice rink in winter) that configures the now C-shaped complex into a sloping inlet for kids, a 25-meter-long area for laps and lanes, and a big expanse for everything else. Fountains and mist machines turn that central peninsula into an uncanny beach. A subtle arrangement of gates and fences allows parallel indoor-outdoor circulation for swimmers and patrons of the community facilities. Some of the spaces are more poetic, like the restored atrium inside the entrance pavilion topped by a skylight worthy of James Turrell, or the adjacent moody lobbies, lined in horizontal hardwood boards salvaged from Coney Island’s demolished boardwalk.

_
A corridor inside McCarren Park Pool (left); Original locker baskets hang from the lobby ceiling (right)






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Old Posted Aug 15, 2012, 1:29 AM
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Some shots of the pool before renovation...



jason bergman













Brooklyn Hilary





tixgirl









Luke Redmond





Reopening...

nycmayorsoffice













Long lines...

chicapoquita





miss mousey brown

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Old Posted Aug 16, 2012, 12:30 PM
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Tyler Xyroadia Tyler Xyroadia is offline
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HA-ZAH!

Bloody good to see a run down, deterioating Art-Deco damsel in distress be rescued and given back to the public! In recent years there has been a great deal of dreary news concerning at risk wonders from the 30's. So hearing of this succes story warms the curmudgeon's heart!
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Old Posted Aug 18, 2012, 2:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tyler Xyroadia View Post
HA-ZAH!

Bloody good to see a run down, deterioating Art-Deco damsel in distress be rescued and given back to the public! In recent years there has been a great deal of dreary news concerning at risk wonders from the 30's. So hearing of this succes story warms the curmudgeon's heart!
It is nice to see the City breath life back into some of the places that have seen better days. There are proposals to turn some of the huge armories into public uses around town.



Here's a link for the park and pool...
http://www.mccarrenpark.com/









Reconstruction pics...
http://anntortorelli.viewbook.com/pe...fffe9c4cd3e8#9



More interesting pics...
http://www.freewilliamsburg.com/tag/mccarren-park/

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Last edited by NYguy; Aug 18, 2012 at 3:01 PM.
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  #5  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2012, 12:33 PM
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Tyler Xyroadia Tyler Xyroadia is offline
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One can only hope!
There are so many un-used buildings in NYC. How much better it is to make the old new and useful again/ then to level it for some modern Eye-sore?
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"God damn modern architect's and their Brtualism, and 'realism' and damn concrete boxes. Why I remember back when buildings had STYLE back when you would have real ARTISTS working away both inside and out!
"Um, aren't you like barely 30?"
"Thats not the point you damn whipper snapper!"
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  #6  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2012, 4:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tyler Xyroadia View Post
There are so many un-used buildings in NYC. How much better it is to make the old new and useful again/ then to level it for some modern Eye-sore?
It really depends on location, where the issue is more that of use than of land. In other words, creating or returning use to a space as it is as opposed to removing something because it no longer serves the location.

But here are a couple of things I think you would like, first from the NY Times...
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/17/ny...ia-campus.html


And another thread in General Developments...
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=200835



miss mousey brown





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