Liberty Park, New Downtown Green Space, Coming Next Year

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Liberty Park will have seating, trees, plantings and an overlook on the northern side with a direct view of the National Sept. 11 Memorial. Rendering: Port Authority of NY&NJ Photographed by The Tribeca Trib
Liberty Park will have seating, trees, plantings and an overlook on the northern side with a direct view of the National Sept. 11 Memorial. Rendering: Port Authority of NY&NJ Photographed by The Tribeca Trib
The southwest corner, where stairs lead to the park alongside the Vehicle Security Center (VSC). Portions of the sides of park will be adorned with ivy to "soften" the appearance of the VSC. Rendering: Port Authority of NY&NJ Photographed by The Tribeca Trib
The southwest corner, where stairs lead to the park alongside the Vehicle Security Center (VSC). Portions of the sides of park will be adorned with ivy to "soften" the appearance of the VSC. Rendering: Port Authority of NY&NJ Photographed by The Tribeca Trib
Diagram by the Port Authority of NY&NJ and The Tribeca Trib
Diagram by the Port Authority of NY&NJ and The Tribeca Trib
Carla Bonacci, assistant director of the Port Authority's World Trade Center Con­struction division, presents the plans for Liberty Park to Community Board 1's Planning Committee in January. Photo: Carl Glassman/Tribeca Trib
Carla Bonacci, assistant director of the Port Authority's World Trade Center Con­struction division, presents the plans for Liberty Park to Community Board 1's Planning Committee in January. Photo: Carl Glassman/Tribeca Trib
Posted
Jan. 31, 2014

Liberty Park, a one-acre elevated green space with a dramatic view of the National September 11 Memorial will open early next year. Located just south of the memorial, it will also be the site of the Santiago Calatrava-designed St. Nich­olas Greek Ortho­dox Church, which re­places the modest building de­stroyed on Sept. 11.

Bordered by Liberty, Cedar, West and Greenwich Streets, the park will be constructed on the roof of the World Trade Center’s Vehicle Security Center and be accessible at all four corners, with en­trance ramps on the east side and stairs rising 20 feet on the west. An overlook on the northern side will provide pan­oramic views of the September 11 Memorial.

The park, designed by landscape architect Joseph E. Brown, will provide a crossing between the Financial District and Battery Park City, but also bring some color to the grey-and-black, bunker-­like security center below. Dog­woods and other ornamental trees, 18- to 35-feet tall, will change color with the seasons, and ivy will hang along the vehicle center’s concrete north facade.
A “mini-garden” of trees and seating  highlights the park’s eastern end and is approached at the ramp entrances.

“It’s very comforting and a great view,” said Carla Bonacci of the Port Authority’s World Trade Center Con­struction division, who presented the park plans last month to Com­munity Board 1. “You’re sitting with some green­ery all around you.”

There will also be a “living wall” along the northern, 300-foot long Liberty Street side, according to a description in the New York Times that was not presented at the meeting. Periwinkle, winter creeper, Baltic ivy and other plants will  cover the wall.

Bonacci said the park has seating for up to 750 people, much of it located along the perimeter of planting beds.

On the western side of the park is a  large seating area that the Port Authority is calling an amphitheater.

The South Bridge, which now spans West Street from Brookfield Place (the former World Financial Center), will be extended into the park.

According to the Port Authority’s Glen Guzi, also on hand to make the presentation, weddings and other church functions will take place in the plaza in front of the church, but there otherwise will be no concerts or other performance events in the park.