- In 2013, the Queens Museum of Art will be a transformed institution. Building on 35 years of success, it will grow to be one of the most interesting and enjoyable cultural institutions in the greater New York area. The key to this transformation is the Museum’s expansion: a doubling of the size, to 100,000 square feet, which will create one of the most refined museum spaces in the country. Grimshaw Architects has developed plans for a stunning facility that will engage diverse communities and make the Queens Museum into a model for the urban, American museum of the future.
- On April 12, 2011, the Queens Museum of Art (QMA) hosted a groundbreaking ceremony, marking the commencement of the expansion project that will double the size of the institution, adding 50,000 square feet of new galleries, classrooms, public events spaces, a café and museum shop.
- Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Queens Borough President Helen Marshall, City Council Member and Chairman of Cultural Affairs Committee Jimmy van Bramer, and fellow members of the New York City Council, joined QMA Executive Director Tom Finkelpearl, board members, funders, artists and community partners in taking this important institutional step.
- The $65 million project, expected to be completed by the end of 2013, includes a new 220 foot long illuminated glass façade and entry plaza on the Grand Central Parkways side of the building, a new entrance and expanded outdoor space on the Flushing Meadows Corona Park side of the building, and a generous skylit atrium in between. The expansion, which gives the museum the entirety of the NYC Building – originally built as the city’s official pavilion for the 1939 World’s Fair ‐ is designed by Grimshaw Architects. The museum had, until 2009, shared the building with the World’s Fair Ice Rink, and the ceremony was held on the site of the rink, now the museum’s construction area.
There's one more, and it's already been approved. The Queens Museum Expansion:
On June 20, 2012, NYC Parks, as lead agency for the CEQR environmental review for the USTA NTC Strategic Vision Project, issued a Positive Declaration for the project and directed that a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) be prepared. At the same time, a Draft Scope of Work for an EIS was issued for public comment. A public scoping meeting was held on July 23, 2012 at the NTC Indoor Training Center at David Dinkins Circle, Flushing Meadows Corona Park, to accept oral and written comments. Written comments on the proposed project’s Scope of Work were accepted through August 8, 2012. The Final Scope of Work for this project’s EIS, including a summary of comments received and responses to those comments, was issued on December 27, 2012.
The DEIS is available for public inspection at the following locations:
Contact person: Joshua Laird, Assistant Commissioner for Planning and Parklands, New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, The Arsenal, Central Park, 830 Fifth Avenue, Room 401, New York, New York 10065, Telephone: 212-360-3402, Fax: 212-360-3453, and email Joshua.Laird@parks.nyc.gov. National Tennis Center Strategic Vision Project Environmental Impact Statement This was from a 1994 article in the Queens Tribune.
Great open letter to the City Council over on the blog, Queens Crap. Here's an excerpt regarding FMCP:
We, the people, need leaders who are willing to stand up for the citizens they represent and lie down in front of an earth-moving machine when the government, local, state, or federal, seeks to take a portion of Flushing-Meadow Park or Willets Point under some misguided notion of “eminent domain.” We do not need leaders who pander to developers to have their picture taken when the ground is broken. That is not leadership; it is sellout. Individual rights must be restored and both the private and public property of the citizens of New York must never be allowed to be taken for any private purpose, period. As I said in my first letter, I will do all to awaken the Patrick Henry in each of my fellow citizens so that they will remember how you violated the will of the people four years ago and send you packing in November. And if you happen to win, you shall remain imposters. Sincerely, William J. Cariello III • The USTA says it needs extra money to prevent big name players from defecting to places like Dubai.
According to the USTA, the rationale behind the proposed expansion (land grab) is that it is necessary because it would allow the USTA to pay top players more money in order to prevent them from going to up-and-coming foreign venues/tournaments like Dubai, the United Arab Emirates state located in the Persian Gulf. The USTA has repeatedly said the extra money generated would help ensure the U.S. Open would not lose the marquee players to other markets that could be more lucrative. While this may be important to this private business - which is being allowed to run on public parkland - it is NOT of importance to those who use the park. • When the USTA was allowed to double its parkland holdings in the 1990's, they said they would NOT seek any more incursions into the park. The current USTA plan would: • Bring an additional 10,000 daily spectators • Remove more than 400 trees • Demolish existing stadiums and build a replacement them with 15,000 and 8,000-seat stadiums • Construct two new garages including a 423-space, 2-level garage, and a 270-space, 3-level garage • The outdoor tennis courts which the pay-to-play USTA charges up to $32 an hour to use as compared to the City which charges $200 for an entire seven month season and outdoor courts are free for the remaining 5 months of the year including the courts nearby in the Flushing Meadows Park. Free. Good Neighbors? The USTA made $ 275 million last year according from the public park land according to USTA Chief Operating Officer Daniel Zausner while giving just $ 2.5 million back to the city according to their license agreement. • The USTA prohibits Soccer from being played in the park when the US Open is underway. • There are already so many cars coming to the park during the US Open that patrons of CitiField and the Open are forced to park on the grass. There are two other commercial projects currently proposed for Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, including a 1.4 million sq. ft mall and a new stadium for Major League Soccer. Together, these projects will alienate 56 acres of parkland. In 1951, the area the USTA currently occupies was parkland in the truest sense of the word. In the 1990s, the City handed over a whole bunch of parkland to the USTA to expand their tennis complex. It just kept getting larger and larger. This shot is from 2006. And this one is from 2008. Here's what the site looks like today. Note the gorgeous ring of mature trees on the bottom left. If the USTA's plans are approved, this is how much real estate they will control. 400+ trees will die. Insane, isn't it? The wide area of the Flushing River in 1951 is where the Pool of Industry was constructed for the 1964-65 World's Fair. The Pool was drained in 2006, revealing that the Flushing River still runs beneath it. This is where Major League Soccer wants to build their stadium. On marshland. Does this sound like a good idea? The following are a list of comments submitted to our website:
- I cannot believe that my state assemblyman (Moya) and state senator (Peralta) are both in support of this land-grab. I will vote for neither if this deal goes through, and will contribute time and money to ANYONE who runs against them in a primary or general election. I urge ALL my neighbors to do the same. Shame on you, Moya and Peralta! - The USTA has been siphoning off land for almost 30 years. I remember the park when... Now this? Sure, I will sign. This is the only place where people can play ball and just enjoy themselves. Who's getting paid off? - If private businesses can take my parkland away so they can make millions of dollars, then I'm just going to have to start recreating inside the office buildings of New York. The CitiBank building in LIC has a nice big lobby, I'm sure they won't mind if we organize a pick-up soccer game there... - I agree with the comments and have wondered why the city hasn't done more to restore the buildings still standing. It would serve the city to provide more places for the communities to have places for children and families to come and enjoy. Fresh air and cultural activities. - Save our parks! - The current policy of this NYC administration that allows the private use and take-over of public parks, including Damrosch Park in Lincoln Center in Manhattan, and now Fresh Meadows Corona Park in Queens must be opposed vigorously by the citizens.- We need more green spaces not less. - Keep FMCP earth and family friendly! - The loss of parkland can never be regained. This is so short-sighted. Poor Queens. - How to protect this park forever from being sold off a little at a time. - We of the 99% need space to play, relax and control the stress of a society that truly cares more about the one percent. - I am very much against all of this happening to Flushing Meadow Park. Please keep me informed. Thank you. - I am very opposed to the proposed soccer stadium in FMCP. I believe the Park should be preserved and enhanced, particularly the beautiful remnants of the historic 1964 World's Fair. - Thanks so much for your work. We absolutely must save this park. - Fix the park, don't destroy it. - I am a resident of Corona, as well as a student at Forest Hills High School. Ever since I have caught wind of this project, I have been opposed to it, not only because it would take it parkland that NYC so desperately needs, but because it would take away in essence, a huge part of my childhood, as well as steal it from other people that currently use it. I grew up in that park. I grew up running there, playing soccer with family members and friends, biking there and exploring the numerous niches of the parks, exploring the wonderful historical treasures it provides, as the site of two World Fairs. I grew up seeing people play not just soccer, but almost every other sport imaginable - cricket, baseball, softball, football - in that vast green expense of Flushing Meadows. Now, that prospect of seeing families truly enjoy the park as it should be enjoyed is under threat, solely because out elected officials have long neglected to take care of it. That itself is a shame, as it's one of the crown jewels of the NYC Parks System, due to rich history - but it's not treated as such. Flushing Meadows is not like Central Park, or even Prospect Park. We do not have a well funded, multi-million dollar "conservancy" to take care of it - in fact, we don't even get the same amount resources those parks get from the city - we don't even know how much FMCP gets from the Parks Department! But what FMCP really is, is that it's a park for the working class - a park where people, most of them low-income to working class people - many of them immigrants - can go and get a dose of fresh air, of enjoyment through relaxation and sport, something that FMCP provides. It might not be in the condition it deserves to be, but it serves it's purpose well enough. But it can be much better, yet these proposed "plans" do nothing to improve the FMCP's current state. Instead, it worsens it to a point of near destruction. Barry Lewis, an architectural historian, once said aloud, "Who lives in Queens?" He answered it himself when he said: "The people who live in Queens are really the people who make the city run in a basic, gritty way..." And that is true. The people of Queens are the ones that make this city run. We are the ones that make NYC great - through our diversity, hard work, and determination. As such, we deserve a park that serves in the best interests of the community, not for the best interests of private developers. To do the opposite, to give this treasured parkland away, at a time when NYC needs parkland more then ever, would be anathema to the purpose of parkland - to provide a place where people, the common man, can enjoy themselves freely, and relax - with ample green space. If there is anything I could do to help, please let me know. Now, more then ever, the people of Queens need to stand united and face this threat to our flagship park that would permanently damage our way of life. To let this happen would set a dangerous precedent that our parkland is up for grabs by developers - something that we need to stop in it's tracks now! - Willing to stand before bulldozers to save OUR FMCP. - The mindset should not be what will the community get in return for alienating additional public parkland. Instead, we should join together and "not give up another inch" of public parkland. - Save the NYS Pavilion - The Queens Coalition for Parks and Green Spaces supports all efforts to save FMCP. Pay attention as this attempt is aimed at FMCP today-Maybe your local park NEXT! PARKS are for people, not developers! - This park, the site of two remarkable world's fairs, was a gift to the people of New York. To give one single inch of it to private concerns is unfair and a violation of that gift. The park needs improvement but it does not need to be dismembered and taken from the taxpayers. - I have lived in the Flushing area and now College Point for nearly 20 years and would hate to see this come to fruition. - Please save this historical park! - I hope this petition goes through and our land is saved from ruin. - I am in total agreement with preserving Flushing Meadows-Corona Park as it is. This is outrageous that there seems to be so little regard for the quality of life in our communities. Not every peace of land has to turn into a shopping mall! We have plenty of them as it is. We need to be heard about this vital part of our city we live in. - The proposed retail mall is, in particular, a total outrage and should not be allowed. - A disgusting land grab with no respect of the history of the World's Fair. Spend the money on the park and the remnants of the fair. The park needs a lot of work other than a soccer stadium. - They can play soccer games in Citi Field when the Mets aren't there. And why place a retail center right on top of Citi Field? We need some space to BREATHE. - Stop the rape of public park land in Queens! Flushing Meadows-Corona Park is a people's park. Over the decades it has been slowly taken away from the people! Enough is enough, Bloomburg! You stole the will of the people of this city when you anointed yourself mayor for a third term -- do NOT steal our park land as well! SAVE FLUSHING MEADOWS-CORONA PARK! - I love Flushing Meadows Park and would hate to see parts if it lost to these new development projects. - Please do not build on this park. Please build elsewhere. Thank you - Keep the park a park! - I was able to go to the 64-65 fair a few dozen times as a teenager.In the years since I often ride my bike through the grounds.I also use the pitch and putt course so the park holds a special meaning for me. - I grew up going to this park, What this city needs is to keep the park..... - The obvious choice, is to preserve, restore, celebrate, and honor the historic elements present in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. Even the most basic research into the World's Fairs reveals the immense size and scope of these events, the impact they had is undeniable. NYC should be honored that these events occurred in Queens, but instead they propose stamping out a significant part of the remnants with this soccer stadium. The Pool must be kept. If it is an “eyesore,” the city must fix it up, not destroy it. Clean it, install a smaller fountain in the center, pay homage to what it once was. The stadium does not belong in this park, it should have never been considered, NYC Parks and everyone responsible for even suggesting this should be ashamed. - Please do not continue to build on this land while ignoring the historical and environmental treasure this park has been. Enough is enough! - FMCP is a heavily used park. It is hard to understand why the City of New York and the Parks Department do not protect it the same way that they would Central Park, except as an abandonment of duty to benefit the citizens, in favor of big money. - We don't need private development in our park - we need to restore our landmarks (i.e., The New York Pavilion) and turn into a public space for our community as it was intended. The park belongs to the people, not the privileged rich who only frequent the park during the US Open or a ball game! Let's beautify the park and make improvements and preserve our history and landmarks, not destroy it with eyesore garages and strip malls! - The park is a very welcome oasis in a very developed world. Once any portion of it is paved over it is gone forever. There is no way the city would put any of these projects in Central Park. Why is Queens treated less than an equal borough? - When Robert Moses handed the Park over to the City after the 1964-65 World's Fair, I highly doubt his intentions were to have it built over by structures that would financially benefit private corporate sponsors. Save the Park as intended by Mr. Moses. - We have more than 5,000 children playing soccer on Saturdays from 8:00 AM till 2:00 PM. The same number is divided to play each day of the week from 6:00 till 9:00 PM. Adults also use the soccer field the rest of the weekend. Our community is made of middle and lower class with income from $18,000 to $35,000 This is the most affordable healthy sport that our children can afford. We already have a proposed stadium with lots of promises? - Parkland is for the people, not for others to make a profit! These three projects must be stopped! - Flushing Meadows-Corona Park should only be developed as open space parkland and NOT a shopping mall. The park has been neglected over the years and needs revitalization. Why has the park been allowed to deteriorate? The answer is certainly NOT commercial development! We need more recreational activities in the park. We need concerned elected officials and citizens to maintain, upgrade and enhance the park facilities. - Let's keep the park a park for the people--people who have no back yards---people who take their children there to play and romp around---people who like to see the grass and the trees and enjoy a day out in the fresh air. - Yes, I want to join you and save our park. I was active against the USTA when they proposed it's stadium, but we lost. I was very disappointed with Mayor Dinkins and our borough president when they wholeheartedly supported the tennis stadium. - As a 64 Worlds Fair attendee, I very much want to see the park saved as a reminder as to what was and what the park will be for all those that enjoy a relaxing day either alone or with family in our own park. - We need the park, it's our families' park. You can't just pay to destroy our memories and the ones that are about to be made by our kids! We can't let this happen. - We can't let even an inch of public parkland be taken away from the current Flushing Meadows Corona Park and I will do whatever I can to make sure that doesn't happen. - What is a park, should stay a park! Parks are for everyone and it's wrong to develop Flushing Meadows Park in this way. I have many wonderful memories of enjoying Flushing Meadows park and it would be a shame to deny future citizens the same good times and open spaces that my generation was able to enjoy...Besides, the park is WETLANDS, have you not learned from the disaster of SuperStorm Sandy? From an environmental standpoint it would be disastrous to build up FMCP. We need those wetlands and flood plains to mitigate future superstorms. - This land is my land not Emperor Bloomberg's! - The proposed Tennis expansion and MLS stadium must be stopped. FMCP is choking from over development of commercialism. These proposed projects will destroy the historic core of the park. I would be happy to help in any way to save the park. - Queens park land should be as sacred as Central Park, Bryant Park or Madison Square Park. Why not a stadium in Central Park, a parking lot in Bryant Park and an Indy 500 style oval around Madison Square Park? - It's part of Queens, we don't want it to be damaged in any way. - This is disgraceful. Like we really need another mall in Queens. The tennis center is fine the way it is. Soccer stadium - don't think so. Use Citi Field. And the traffic, the traffic and did I mention the traffic. - Leave the park alone. No more private take overs. - We need to fight to save this park. The following letter was printed in this week's Queens Tribune (sorry, no link available).
To The Editor: The United States Tennis Association has proposed a plan to maintain and improve its infrastructure and operations to keep the US Open a top-rated international event. The bold, multiyear, self funded strategic improvements outlined in the plan did not come about in a vacuum, but rather as a smart response to the international reality that the other Grand Slam Tournaments (Wimbledon, Australia Open and the French Open) are spending close to a combined $1 billion in improvements to their facilities while several other cities and governments throughout the world are currently building top notch facilities. These other activities are occurring for a single purpose, to take away business via elevated sponsor expectations and new industry setting standards, from the US Open, from Queens and from New York City. As Queens residents and New Yorkers, we must simply not allow this to happen. Legitimate concerns have been raised by some community residents and several of my colleagues in elected positions about the protection of parkland in Flushing Meadow Corona Park. Considering the small and precious amounts of parkland in Queens I would tend to agree. However, as a representative of a district adjacent to the park who has recently been able to allocate one quarter of a million dollars to upgrade ball fields so the community can benefit from better facilities in the park, I do believe the characteristics of the space involved in this particular instance deserves to be considered. The fact is that not only is almost all of the upgrading of these facilities to be done inside that land that is currently leased, but the land outside is .68 acres and is currently an underutilized asphalt road. The USTA has clearly done everything in its power to minimize the impact to the park when considering their bold self funded plans; self funding which stands in stark contrasts to almost every other facility that has received matching public dollars for rehabilitation or upgrades to their facilities. The USTA plan for that small parcel of land is to use the current asphalt road, which is one of three right next to each other, as a buffer made of brush to separate the facility from the park which will give that small piece of land in question much more of a feel of a park than it has now. What will also be brought if the expansion is approved is a multi-phase project and new facilities that include top of the line enhancements to the Grandstand, a new Louis Armstrong Stadium at its current location along with a new retail/administration building, additional on-site parking, improvements to Arthur Ashe stadium, a new pedestrian walkway and upgrades to the Northwest and Southerly Tournament Courts. The projected $500 million expansion plan for the Tennis Center will be funded entirely by USTA. The US Open generates over $750 million in revenue a year for New York City. Much of this money is spent on hotels, restaurants, entertainment and other purchases by the spectators. During the US Open, attendees, players, media, sponsors and staff account for 16 percent of the city’s total hotel occupancy. In Queens alone, the US Open is responsible for nearly 2,600 room nights. The US Open also creates 6,000 seasonal jobs, a majority of which go to local residents, and generates 127 fulltime jobs for locals. In addition, the proposed expansion plan would net nearly 800 full-time jobs (some 80 jobs per year) for local residents over a 10-year construction period. These numbers will grow incrementally and significantly as each additional phase of this plan is complete. In sum, residents of the surrounding communities, users of the park, patrons of the US Open and particularly Queens and New York City residents should weigh the benefits and look to coalesce around this project to enable the USTA to retain its top tier status for these international competitions. I believe the USTA has done an outstanding job developing this project and my colleagues and community leaders are right to express their reservations about any process that results in a loss of parkland. I therefore urge, in the strongest terms possible, that all parties involved come together on a plan to solve this issue so we can review it publicly and achieve what’s in the best interest of all New Yorkers. Assemblyman Andrew Hevesi Forest Hills Send your thoughts to Mr. Hevesi. We will have a rebuttal shortly. Listen to internet radio with Feuersteins Fire on Blog Talk Radio Listen to Save FMCP co-founder Al Centola on the Feuerstein's Fire internet radio program discussing the MLS soccer stadium plan. Al comes on at around the 60:00 mark.
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