Volume 22, Number 54 | The Newspaper of Lower Manhattan | May 21 - 27, 2010

Pier opens featuring myriad amenities

BY Albert Amateau

The newest section of Hudson River Park on the Chelsea waterfront at Piers 62 and 63 opened Mon. May 17 to throngs of visitors and public officials.

Officials including Governor David Paterson and Council Speaker Christine Quinn paid tribute to the local groups who aggressively advocate for the five-mile-long riverfront park being built by the state/city Hudson River Park Trust.

Friends of Hudson River Park, the advocacy group organized in 1998 right after the state legislation that created the park, was on hand to put money on the line. A.J. Pietrantone, executive director of Friends, presented a $25,500 check – oversized for photo purposes – that will maintain the new garden for a year.

Despite his political problems in Albany, Paterson was enthusiastic about Hudson River Park. And Trust board members and park advocates praised the governor for supporting the park in the present tough fiscal era, especially for the $21 million in state funding two years ago for new construction in the park.

However, at a press conference just after the opening, Paterson said it was “painful” that the state’s fiscal crisis this year has forced him to close down 41 other parks and 14 cultural groups and reduced funding to other parks.

Visitors joined officials in praise of the new section of the park. They were charmed by the carousel on Pier 62, newly built with 36 creatures real and imaginary for children and adults to ride. At the opening, adults outnumbered children on a trial ride before the official carousel opening on Memorial Day.

The Pier 62 Skatepark, built by California Skateparks/Site Design Group, attracted skateboarders with awesome skill and an awestruck audience to watch them.

The Lynden Miller-designed garden was ablaze with color in a cluster of raised planting areas. Stonefield, a group of large and variously shaped stones from New York State and northern Pennsylvania quarries was another impressive feature.

Connie Fishman, president of the Trust along with Diana Taylor, chair of the Trust board and fellow board members Deputy Mayor Robert Lieber and Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer spoke. State Sen. Tom Duane, Assemblymember Richard Gottfried and Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe said they were overjoyed with the glory of the additional nine acres of the park located north of the Chelsea Piers Sports and Entertainment complex.

Leiber and Benepe affirmed the commitment of Mayor Bloomberg, who could not attend the opening, to the Hudson River Park.

“This park is beyond my wildest dreams,” said Quinn, a sentiment echoed by everyone at the event that took place under sunny skies. She praised the Chelsea Waterside Park Association and its founder Robert Trentlyon for envisioning the park more than a decade before it was organized.

Duane recalled that he was the second president of the Chelsea Waterside Park Association in the 1980s. “I just did what Bob [Trentlyon] and Doris [Corrigan, co-founder of the group] told me to do,” Duane quipped.

“This park shows what can be accomplished when partisanship is put aside,” said Stringer, who recalled the determination of former Governor Pataki and Mayor Giuliani, both Republicans, to work together to develop the park.

Gottfried, who is celebrating his 40th year in the Assembly, recalled the long process that led to the 1998 Hudson River Park legislation that he co-authored with then state Sen. Franz Leichter, who also attended the opening.

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