Robert F. Wagner, Jr. Park

Robert F. Wagner, Jr. Park was the final and southernmost waterfront park to be developed in accordance with the 1978 Battery Park City Master Plan. OLIN was fueled by a desire to break from traditional garden design and make the park reflective of New York City at the end of the 20th century. The landscape utilizes traditional, familiar garden forms, but in a decidedly deconstructivist move, the forms are rearranged to suggest human uncertainty. The familiar garden forms were inspired by the Renaissance Revival plan of the Conservatory Gardens in Central Park and spilled out to the Hudson River, as if reaching for the Statue of Liberty. The statue is further acknowledged through the transformation of park pavilions into a partially buried colossus that seemingly gazes in the direction of Lady Liberty. In keeping with this image, materials in the landscape and architecture are reminiscent of Flavian brickwork as seen in the ruins of Ostia Antica and throughout Rome.

Location

New York, NY

Project Types

Park, Resilience, Waterfront

Status

Completed 1996

Owner

Battery Park City Authority

Key Team Members

Laurie Olin, Partner-in-Charge

Lucinda R. Sanders, Senior Associate

OLIN / Sahar Coston-Hardy Peter Mauss / Esto Peter Mauss / Esto Peter Mauss / Esto Peter Mauss / Esto Peter Mauss / Esto Peter Mauss / Esto
Awards

2003, American Society of Landscape Architects, Merit Award

2003, American Institute of Architects, Urban Design Category, Honor Award

1998, American Institute of Architects, Urban Design Category, Honor Award

1997, Philip N. Winslow, Award for Design of Public Space

Related Projects

Battery Park City