Neha Patil (Editor)

Hudson Park and Boulevard

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Postal code
  
10001, 10018

Length
  
366 m

Commissioned
  
2014

South end
  
33rd Street

East
  
Hudson Park and Boulevard Hudson Park amp Boulevard Hudson Yards Development Corporation

Other name(s)
  
Hudson Park, Hudson Boulevard

Maintained by
  
Hudson Yards / Hell's Kitchen Alliance

North end
  
36th Street (phase 1)39th Street (phase 2a)42nd Street (phase 2b)

Hudson Park and Boulevard is a greenway and boulevard in Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan in New York City, being built as part of the Hudson Yards Redevelopment Project. It lies between 10th and 11th Avenues. When complete, it will be 4-acre-long (1.6 ha), six-block-long north-south, and run between 33rd and 39th Streets. The boulevard will be in the center of the park when complete. Construction will be in two phases; the first phase, located between 33rd and 36th Streets, was under construction from 2012 to August 2015. The second phase has no timeline. The total cost of the project is more than $30 million.

Contents

Hudson Park and Boulevard Construction Update Hudson Park amp Boulevard New York YIMBY

History

In January 2005, the New York City Council approved the rezoning of about 60 blocks from 28th to 43rd Streets, creating the neighborhood of Hudson Yards; the need for a park in the area was seen when Hudson Yards was being planned.

Hudson Park and Boulevard Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates Inc

The park and boulevard was developed concurrently with the New York City Subway's 7 Subway Extension to 34th Street. The park contains the two entrances to the 34th Street station. The first entrance is located between 33rd and 34th Streets, and a second entrance is between 34th and 35th Streets, in the park.

Hudson Park and Boulevard 55 Hudson Yards Parks Hudson Yards

Phase one of the park's layout, led by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, was finished in January 2012. Construction began in January 2012. Since the boulevard is brand-new, it will conform to New York City Department of Transportation standards set in 2012. A traffic signal will be installed at 34th Street to facilitate pedestrian flow through the park.

Hudson Park and Boulevard Tour Hudson Boulevard and Park the City39s Next Park Avenue Curbed NY

A business improvement district for the park, started in early 2014, is being led by Robert J. Benfatto Jr., of Manhattan Community Board 4. The BID has a $1.2 million budget in its first year, which will go up to $3 million in subsequent years. Its budget is used for Hudson Park maintenance and operations, district-wide services and improvements, administration and advocacy.

Hudson Park and Boulevard httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

As of August 14, 2014, the section of the park between 33rd and 34th Streets is completed, and was to open at the end of 2014. However, the section between 34th and 36th Streets was delayed to August 2015, while the 33rd to 34th Streets section was not to open until the 34th Street station opened on September 13, 2015.

Description

Hudson Park and Boulevard Hudson Park amp Boulevard Hudson Yards Development Corporation

The boulevard is to be split into two, with a Hudson Boulevard East and a Hudson Boulevard West. The park is to serve as a median. The boulevard will start from a dead end/restricted driveway (extending from 31st Street westbound) at 33rd Street and be one-way northbound to 35th Street, with the park to the west of the roadway. North of 35th Street, a southbound roadway will form and the park will be between the two roadways up to 39th Street (although the western roadway ends at 38th Street, the eastern roadway and the park go up to 39th Street), where the boulevard will end. Then, a High Line-style promenade above the Lincoln Tunnel entrance will be constructed in the second phase to connect the greenway to 42nd Street. The boulevard's southern end will be integrated with the Hudson Yards Public Square, an L-shaped public square that is intended to be Hudson Yards' centerpiece.

The first phase of the park and boulevard has lawns, a fountain, a café, wooden benches, planting beds, and a playground. Three fountains between 34th and 35th Street are able to detect wind speeds and shut off during high winds. A 50-foot-high pole designed by James Carpenter between 35th and 36th Streets was built as a café location. Additionally, the Amtrak Empire Connection will run underneath the park. The park will be owned by the city. It, along with the High Line, Hudson Yards public square, and Hudson River Park, will create a pedestrian-friendly greenway. The first phase and part of the second phase of Hudson Boulevard West is already completed.

The boulevard is bordered on the west and east between 33rd and 34th Streets by the future locations of 55 Hudson Yards and 50 Hudson Yards, respectively. Currently, the 55 Hudson Yards space is occupied by a subway ventilation building, with a facade containing a U.S. flag pattern on the side of the building facing the park and boulevard. On April 30, 2014, Tishman Speyer said in a press release that it had purchased land between the Hudson Park & Boulevard and Tenth Avenue, between 34th and 35th Streets; which will be razed to make way for a "Hudson Spire", to be the tallest building in America with a potential height of over 1,800 feet (549 m) and 108 stories.

Although the boulevard is six blocks long, the 30-foot-wide (9.1 m) park extends as a non-vehicular greenway north to 42nd Street via a pedestrian bridge, and through the Hudson Yards development south to 30th Street and connecting with the High Line.

One side of the park is to be commercial and the other side residential.

Notable sites along the boulevard

  • 3 Hudson Boulevard, planned building
  • 34th Street, subway station, serving the 7 <7> trains
  • 50 Hudson Yards, planned building
  • 55 Hudson Yards, planned building
  • References

    Hudson Park and Boulevard Wikipedia


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