The Lowline in Manhattan is a soon-to-be-completed underground park, using skylight technology to provide sunlight for a year-round garden. Co-founders hope to inspire others to transform unused spaces into cultural and educational oases. The park is expected to open to the public in 2021. Other notable parks in New York City include Central Park, Flushing Meadow-Corona Park, and Staten Island’s Greenbelt Park.
New York City isn’t exactly the kind of place you’d go to “get away from it all,” but a place in Manhattan strives to help people go underground when they need to, literally. The district is currently working to complete the Lowline, which bills itself as “the world’s first underground park.” The acre of space was once a trolley terminal, but has been essentially abandoned since 1948. That all changed thanks to co-founders Dan Barasch and James Ramsey, who hope the Lowline will soon offer a lush, beautiful space where people they can take a break from the busy world above by venturing just below the surface. There, they will be surrounded by a year-round garden that uses state-of-the-art skylight technology to provide the greenery with all the sunlight it needs. Barasch and Ramsey hope the project will inspire others to follow suit, transforming unused spaces into cultural and educational oases. The Lower East Side is expected to officially unveil the Lowline to the public in 2021.
Parks in the Big Apple:
In 1858, New York’s Central Park became the first landscaped park open to the American public.
Flushing Meadow-Corona Park in Queens opened the country’s first playground that is fully accessible to children in 1984.
Staten Island’s Greenbelt Park is three times the size of Central Park and is considered one of the most biologically diverse green spaces in America.
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