Showing posts with label WTC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WTC. Show all posts

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Random Photos

A few random photos from the last month. I've been so busy with school-related work (multiple search committees, thesis projects, etc.) that I haven't been able to get out much. But here are a few images from recent weeks.

The façade of Aljira, a Center for Contemporary
Art, announcing Zachary Fabri's show
From the Wolf to the Fox
,
which closed on January 15 
A detail from Fabri's Areola: Black
Presidents, digital print
Detail, Zachary Fabri, Eu
Mino Minas Gerais
 (I Mine
Minas Gerais, Brazil), 2010.
Rutgers-Newark Chancellor Nancy Cantor
speaking at the opening of Express Newark
at the newly renovated Hahne's Building, Newark 
One of the glassed in reliquary spaces
at the new World Trade Center PATH station 
In Las Cruces, New Mexico 
Las Cruces, New Mexico 
The flyer for the conversation I had
with the utterly brilliant, lovely Christina Sharpe,
who also read from her must-read
book, In the Wake: On Blackness and Being
Marble-polisher, WTC PATH statoin 
Worker relaxing, WTC PATH station
A display being erected or dismantled,
it was unclear which was the case,
WTC PATH station 
Workers polishing all that slippery, easily scuffed
marble, WTC PATH station (perhaps
someone will think of laying rubber pathways
to lessen the possibility of slips and tumbles
when it's rainy or snowy outside)
Union Station, Washington, DC 
What I found when I left my office on Monday;
someone had smashed into my left sideview mirror 
Dorothy Wang of Williams College delivering her talk
at Rutgers-Newark on Amiri Baraka, Ed Dorn,
and the politics of literary history and valuation

Wednesday, March 09, 2016

PATH's New World Trade Center Station

WTC PATH station, with 1
World Trade Center in the background 
Fifteen years in (re-)construction (and it's still not finished), at a cost of $4 billion dollars (and it's still not finished), the main hall of the PATH's new World Trade Center station main's building, designed by starchitect Santiago Calatrava, is on the cusp of opening. But the entire hub is, unaccountably, still not finished. Incomplete or not, it is worth an ogle, and I did so on Tuesday on my way back from an appointment in the city.

The external form of the main hall, or Oculus, retains some aspects of Calatrava's original design, though his plan for a retractable roof, much like bird's wings, gave way to a rigid white steel exoskeleton, with additional security features. Its interior consists of a vast, marble-floored hall surrounded by ribbed arches, as if it were the evacuated belly of some immense white alien. I immediately thought of the movie Prometheus, which seems like a belated influence. 

The Oculus mirrors the futuristic ossuary-like maze of corridors, which I have featured in the past in some random photos, that connect the station to other buildings like Brookfield Place and West Street. As I walked around the atrium space and snapped photos, I did not see many people (as the photos make clear), but I suppose they will start arriving once the shops open and the exits at Vesey Street and Church Street open up.

The headline of critic Michael Kimmelman's New York Times critique of the building, linked above, refers to it as a boondoggle. Yet he does initially praise the Oculus's eye-catching space.  But he concludes that, given its cost, lack of functionality, and insignificance in the New York-New Jersey public transportation system, this glorified vanity sculpture project represents a failure of multiple kinds, as well as a waste of public funds. (Where did all that money go?) 

I know I may sound churlish, but I actually liked the PATH's rough hewn temporary station, which opened not long after the 9/11 attacks. It eventually closed and instead, the site turned into a cardboard-lined warren whose navigability seemed geared to train rats. Given the number of New Yorkers who may find themselves displaced in coming years and undertaking a move to New Jersey, the transit officials probably should do everything they can to ensure that the hub will be able to accommodate as many travelers as possible.

When it will be completed remains a question; the original 5-year-estimate has been exceeded by an order of 3, so perhaps by 2020 or 2025, barring Manhattan being inundated by rising sea water, it will be done. Also, when the connections with the MTA's lines will be open also isn't clear. As confusing as the old WTC station (pre-9/11) was, you could exit the PATH and head directly to the 2, 3, 4, 5, etc., with an array of shops dotting the way. Not today, though. All of that is apparently coming soon. 

The station is worth seeing, though, especially before all that white turns gray and then black (which might have been more appropriate given the graveyard and memorial next door), especially if you don't have to travel through the station during rush hour, and it isn't raining or snowing outside. I can say from experience that all that marble flooring is extremely slippery, like a mid-winter lake rink, making it a major hazard, which I imagine someone must have considered before laying down so much of it, but perhaps they didn't. It looks pretty, though, and that appears to be all that matters, whatever the costs.

Part of the soaring white spine 
The path past the PATH station to the
9/11 Memorial 
Approaching the Oculus, from inside the station
The Oculus, with the skylight visible
The skylight
Another view 
Towards the WTC PATH trains

Wednesday, September 09, 2015

Random Photos

Readers at the Jacob Lawrence: The
Migration Series
event at MoMA
(l-r, Rita Dove, Crystal Williams, Yusef
Komunyakaa, Elizabeth Alexander, Nikki
Finney, Terrance Hayes, Lyrae Van Clief-
Stefanon, Tyehimbe Jess, Natasha
Trethewey, Patricia Spears Jones,
Kevin Young)
Mr. Statue of Liberty,
World Trade Center 
Napping cabbie

Late night ride, MTA 
At the bewitching hour 
The futuristic new WTC PATH
station, which inches toward completion
At Grove St. Station, Jersey City
A local who decided to change
his clothes in public
Original editions of Yugen,
the famous journal edited by
Leroi Jones and Hettie Jones
(found in Ithaca)
Near the World Financial District 
The roofers at work
Author and playwright James Earl
Hardy, at the New York performance
of his play version of his landmark
B-Boy Blues on its 20th anniversary 

Churchyard, Jersey City 
My university office desk,
clean for a change!
Workers in Newark
On the street, Jersey City

Sunday, June 01, 2014

Random Photos

One of the 9/11 Memorial pools
on the footprint of the destroyed
WTC towers (the Museum is visible
directly in the center rear of this photo)

I am still gearing up for the James Baldwin conference in Montpellier, France, and wrapping up edits on my next book, so until soon, posting here remains a challenge. 

Meanwhile, so much is happening in the wider world, and I have many events to blog.... 

Here are a few random photos from my daily circuits. Enjoy!

A ship on the Hudson River 
Only in New York: a shop selling only
high-end cosmetics and the Paris Review! 
Window displays 
Musician, in a violet mood,
on the High Line
(it's actually uncrowded!) 
Looking east, from the High Line
Rainy 14th Street
Two different loaves baked
in the same pot (cinnamon raisin
bread & walnut wheat) 
Laying a seeding carpet
in the St. Paul's Church cemetery 
On the street 
Black carpet opening
TV journalist, across the street
from the newly opened
 9/11 Memorial Museum site 
One WTC (the Freedom Tower)
Flowers in the names
of those lost in the 9/11 attacks

One of the 9/11 Memorial pools 


The 9/11 Museum
The WTC site, from the east 
Behind Asser Levy Pool,
on the east side of Manhattan
In Stuyvesant Cove Park, looking east to
Queens and Brooklyn
Long Island City, from Manhattan
Peter Cooper Village 
East Side Community Junior/Senior
High School, the first school I taught at,
back in the 1990s
One of those giant "scab"
rats, at a union boycott,
Manhattan 
Fresh lobster, 23rd Street
A dancer-performer, strolling
the streets, Manhattan