Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Inwood, 217th Street Between Park Terrace East and Park Terrace West


Mary Sargent © 2010 …………………….. click to enlarge

Here we have the highly esteemed Park Terrace Garden apartments, a complex of 5 buildings surrounding a garden.  Try to overlook the garbage bags.

I have lived in or close to the cities of Washington, D.C., Chicago and St. Louis, and never saw garbage bags on the sidewalk.  That is because those cities were constructed with alleys to handle all the unsightly necessities of life.  The first time I saw garbage bags piled on the sidewalks was in Cincinnati and I thought it was a backward and provincial city.

So you can imagine my horror to discover that New York was just as backward.  I found the explanation in a footnote in Gotham:  "Nor, as was customary, had the commissioners provided service alleys through the center of blocks:  this maximized salable land . . ."  (This refers to the Commissioners Plan of 1811 which laid out the numbered streets and avenues of Manhattan.)  It was to maximize salable land.  Figures.




Mary Sargent © 2010 ………………………….. click to enlarge








Mary Sargent © 2010 ……………………….. click to enlarge


Just thought I'd show you a little art deco detail and bits of shrubbery from their roof terrace.  All lovely . . . except for that band of paint over the brick at the top.  You should enlarge it to get the full effect of its ugliness.  They were covering up something?  Surely there was a better solution.  If only they would come to me first.

But to end on an upbeat note, you must check out Every Person in New York.

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