Special offer

Morningside Park Designated a Scenic Landmark

By
Real Estate Agent

Morninside Park

Morningside Park Entrance

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission unanimously granted scenic landmark status to Morninside Park. Designed by Fredrick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux (co-designers of Central Park) Morningside Park in Manhattan was chosen for its unusual topography, scenic views and noteworthy public sculptures.

Located on along a rocky ledge extending from 110th to 123rd streets and between Morningside Drive and Manhattan Morninside Avenues, the park is comprised of approximately 30 acres that were excluded from the street grid under a proposal by Andrew Haswell Green, a commissioner and comptroller of Central Park.

Olmsted and Vaux developed a design for the park in 1873 that was revised 14 years later, partly because of a sharp decline in the city's economy. Such important institutions as Columbia University, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine and St. Luke's Hospital decided to build along Morningside Drive across from the park before it opened in 1895.

Morningside Park features a massive buttressed masonry retaining wall with a parapet, overlook bays, imposing entrance stairways, natural rock outcroppings, and curving pathways across the site. It also boasts three important sculptures: Lafayette and Washington (1890, by Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi, the sculptor of the Statue of Liberty); the Carl Schurz Monument (1909-1913, by sculptor Karl Bitter and architect Henry Bacon, who is responsible for the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.) and Bear and Faun/Seligman Fountain (c. 1910, by Edgar Melville Walter, a sculptor and student of Auguste Rodin).

Built on a steep incline, multiple playgrounds nestle at the bottom of its cliff-like hillside, and visitors pause along its heights to take in a unique view. Winding paths bordered with flowers and trees lead to a cascading waterfall, across from which local teams play on its baseball fields. Parents bring their children to play in its playgrounds and learn in its after-school program, and on Saturdays local farmers sell their goods in an outdoor market.

Morningside Park brings to 10 the total number of scenic landmarks in New York City.

For more information events and schedules: Morningside Park: NYC Department of Parks and Recreation 

Morningside Heights Real Estate

Posted by

©Mitchell Hall 2022

All content/images, unless noted, are the property of Mitchell Hall & may not be used without permission. 

nyc BLOG estate

 
          Call Mitchell Hall @ 917-312-0924
          Email: mh@MitchellHall.com

Comments (5)

Lenn Harley
Lenn Harley, Homefinders.com, MD & VA Homes and Real Estate - Leesburg, VA
Real Estate Broker - Virginia & Maryland

These are wonderful shots.  I hope the city is doing the necessary infrastructure maintenance of these majestic structures so folks can enjoy them 100 years from now.

Jul 19, 2008 12:52 AM
Mitchell J Hall
Manhattan, NY
Lic Associate RE Broker - Manhattan & Brooklyn

 Barbara, Thanks for your comment. It's one of Manhattan's hidden treasures. It is quite beautiful.

Lenn, According to the Landmarks Commissioner, "with the designation as a scenic landmark, this park will remain intact and all of its essential features forever".

In 1968 student and community protests halted construction of a large gymnasium in the park intended for Columbia University and the public. The excavated foundation crater was converted into an ornamental pond and waterfall in 1990 as part of a $5 million capital reconstruction of the park.

Jul 19, 2008 02:09 AM
Rich Dansereau
Positive Real Estate Professionals - Knoxville, TN

I think parks are a really big asset for any community. It is good that its new status will ensure its continued use and beauty.

Jul 19, 2008 09:55 AM
Mitchell J Hall
Manhattan, NY
Lic Associate RE Broker - Manhattan & Brooklyn

Hi Rich, Thanks, I agree, parks are really important.

Jul 19, 2008 11:08 AM