Spring 2016 - Carnegie Hill Neighbors
Transcription
Spring 2016 - Carnegie Hill Neighbors
CARNEGIE HILLnews CARNEGIE HILL neighbors I Because it’s our home I Spring 2016 / Vol. 37 / Nº1 2016 CHN ENRICHMENT AWARD: IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH PRESERVES GIFT FROM ANCESTORS If you walked down Lexington Avenue to 86th Street last year, you might have noticed the scaffolding surrounding the Immanuel Lutheran Church on the southwest corner at 88th Street. The signs proclaimed that the restoration taking place is “for the next 150 years.” When the scaffolding came down last November, it revealed very little change. To its credit, the church— unrestricted by any landmarks regulations and thus free to alter its historic facade — has preserved the building as it was designed in 1885. For this significant contribution to the architectural character of Carnegie Hill, the Immanuel Lutheran Church is the recipient of the 2016 Carnegie Hill Neighbors Enrichment Award to be presented at our Spring Benefit on May 17. (See more on page 18.) The church was first established on East 87th Street in 1863, in the middle of the Civil War, by German immigrants for a growing Yorkville congregation. They quickly outgrew the space, and after some 20 years the parishioners, who mostly worked in the Third Avenue breweries and local shops, managed to build a sumptuous place of worship. The current church on 88th Street was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1886. It was designed by Arthur Crooks, Continued on page 24 INSIDE... CARNEGIE HILL PROFILE: WARRIE PRICE— A VISIONARY FOR THE BATTERY See page 12. CHN SPRING BENEFIT TO BE AT OTTO KAHN PALAZZO See more on pages 17-19. CARNEGIE HILL IS A MAGNET FOR WRITERS, says author and neighbor Patricia Volk. See page 29. 2 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS CALENDAR news CARNEGIE HILL SPRING-SUMMER EVENTS 3 4 Spring Calendar 6 8 Major Contributors CHN UpFront CHN Activities and Updates List of Advertisers On Museum Mile by Bo Niles 10 12 StreetScape Updates 15 Environmental News A Green Roof on Goat Hill by Bonnie Lane Webber 16 CH Profile: Warrie Price by Suzanne Wiedel-Pace A New World Palazzo The Otto Kahn Mansion Carnegie Hill Doormen by Jennifer Huntley 17 Community Service Award Hunter Schools Schoolyard by Suzanne Wiedel-Pace 18 Come to the Spring Benefit 19 20 Spring Benefit Invitation 23 Safe Neighborhood Subway Safety, Foot Patrol by Garrett Glaser 24 SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE SPRING 2016 Landmark Land by Lo van der Valk Neighborhood News Cooper Hewitt Garden by Bo Niles 27 Shop the CHN Gift Mart 28 Neighborhood Authors by Lenny Golay 29 Carnegie Hill Writers I Know by Patricia Volk 30 Shop Talk by Marion E. Morey 33 Tree Care by Julia Bradford 34 City Skyline–Always in Flux by Cynthia MacGrath 36 CHN Membership Form Editor-in-Chief: Barbara Coffey Editors: Samantha Fremont-Smith, Lenny Golay, Ann Levin, Marion E. Morey, Bo Niles, Shari Thompson, Suzanne Wiedel-Pace Art Director: Cynthia MacGrath Ad Production: Raji Kaur CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS ANNUAL SPRING BENEFIT AND AUCTION The Otto Kahn Palazzo Tuesday, May 17. See Pages 17- 19. THE BRICK PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Park Avenue at 92nd Street 212-289-4400 www.brickchurch.org Strawberry Festival Live music, great food (hot dogs, strawberry shortcake with ice cream), games for kids. Sunday, May 22, 12:30 – 2:30 p.m. HOUSE OF THE REDEEMER/FABBRI MANSION 7 East 95th Street, 212-289-0399 www.houseoftheredeemer.org Fabbri Chamber Concert The American String Quartet. Reception follows. Call for reservations. Thursday, May 19, 7:30 p.m. Annual Garden Party Reception with entertainment, live auction. Please call the office. Wednesday, June 8, 6:30 p.m. EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE HEAVENLY REST Fifth Avenue at 90th Street, 212-289-3400 Canterbury Choral Society canterburychoral.org Jonathan De Vries, Conductor. Works by Duruflé, Poulenc, Saint-Saëns. Sunday, May 22, 4:00 p.m. DILLER-QUAILE MUSIC SCHOOL 14 East 95th Street, 212-369-1484, ext. 18 www.diller-quaile.org Wednesday, April 27, 7:30 p.m. String Quartet IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH Lexington Avenue at 88th Street, 212-289-8128 The Baldwin Festival Chorus of New York R. Douglas Sheldon, Conductor; Jon Tyllian, organist; Steven W. Ryan, piano; Jennifer Gliere, soprano. Haydn Lord Nelson Mass; Mendelssohn Elijah; Goerke Totus Tuus. Friday, May 6, 8:00 p.m. PARK AVENUE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 106 East 86th Street, 212-427-5421. The Spirituals: Expressions of Hope and Healing Choir Concert. Guest artists and choir tell stories of courage through traditional and contemporary song. Sunday, May 1, 4:00 p.m. Rummage Sale Great deals on gently-used clothing, household items, toys, books, more. Saturday, April 30, 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. Children’s Summer Music Camp Ages 3-5 musical exploration. June 6 – 10. MUSEUM MILE FESTIVAL The 38th annual festival and the city’s biggest block party. Free access to all museums from the Metropolitan Museum at 82nd Street to El Museo del Barrio at 104th Street. Live bands, entertainment, art in the street. Tuesday, June 14, 6:00 – 9:00 p.m., rain or shine. NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC CONCERTS IN THE PARK www.nyphil.org Alan Gilbert, Conductor; Anthony McGill, clarinet. Wednesday, June 15: R. Strauss, Mozart; Thursday, June 16: Wagner, Beethoven. Both concerts on Great Lawn 8:00 p.m. CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS BOARD OF DIRECTORS Suzie Aijala • Irene E. Aldridge • Heather Brandes • Mark Brookes • Barbara Calabrese Barbara Coffey* • Kathryn Collins • Dixie De Luca • Samantha Fremont-Smith* • Leslie J. Garfield Mark L. Goldsmith* • Susan Gottridge* • Lisa Sharf Green • Anne Haubenstricker • Ivan Hrazdira Julie Herzig • Jurate Kazickas • Renée Klaperman • Linda Kurtz • Della Leathers Cynthia MacGrath • Joan McLaughlin • Gina Morehead • Virginia B. Pitman • Molly Rand R. Geoffrey Roesch • April Shelton • David J. Stoll • George Stonbely* • Teri Swanson Lo van der Valk* • Gregory Warner • Bonnie Lane Webber * Executive Committee EMERITUS: Ronald Spencer • Margaret M. Ternes CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS IS DEDICATED TO PRESERVING THE ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD, LANDSCAPING THE MALLS, ENHANCING STREETSCAPES, CARING FOR TREES, NETWORKING WITH BUILDINGS, AND PROVIDING SECURITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL GUIDANCE. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 3 CHN UPFRONT TAXUS HEDGES REPLACED, BLOCK BY COLORFUL BLOCK “ Look for pink Dragon Wing begonias from May to November SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE T he Park Avenue malls are a joy to behold, with tulips and cherry trees blooming in the spring and lush Dragon Wing begonias all summer and beyond. The lawns and shrubs are part of the year-round landscape and require constant care. The taxus yew hedges are showing their decades-old age and need to be replaced. In March, CHN began the process, planting new taxus hedges in the mall on the north side of 86th Street, where Carnegie Hill begins. Replacement of yews on the other malls to the north, and their significant cost, will be spread over the next few years. PARK AVENUE APARTMENT BUILDINGS AND FRIENDS SUPPORTING THE MALLS 1040 1045 1049 1050 1060 1065 1070 1075 1088 1095 1100 1105 1111 1112 1120 1125 1130 1133 1150 1155 1160 1165 1172 1175 1185 1192 1199 1220 1230 1235 49 East 86th St. 55 East 86th St. 64 East 86th St. 120 East 87th St. 120 East 90th St. 47 East 91st St. 130 East 94th St. 1082 Park Avenue The Brinberg Family The Brick Presbyterian Church Church of St. Thomas More The Spence School PROTECT CARNEGIE HILL TREES. HELP KEEP OUR SIDEWALKS CLEAN! T Monica Green, Nina Whiting, Cee Cee Belford, and Georgia Burger socialize as they personalize CHN party invitations. SPRING BENEFIT COMMITTEE APPEALS TO FRIENDS embers of the 2016 Spring Benefit Committee gathered over three days in early March to write notes urging friends to come to the benefit. Maybe you received an invitation with a personal note? See more about the benefit on pages 17 to 19, and send in your response card to CHN. M 4 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS here has been ample evidence that many dog walkers are not curbing their dogs or cleaning up after them. Before we ask the New York Sanitation Department to assign an officer to patrol our neighborhood and give summonses to offenders, we will try blanketing the neighborhood with “Curb Your Dog” signs. We hope this reminder will encourage people to keep their dogs out of the tree beds, guide their dogs to the curb, and pick up! If there is no “Curb Your Dog” sign on a tree in front of your building, stop by our office and take as many free signs as you need. CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS STAFF LISTSERV TO AID COMMUNICATIONS “H ow can Carnegie Hill Neighbors help us reach out to the community?” asked the Reverend Matt Heyd, rector of Church of the Heavenly Rest. Maybe with a listserv, CHN members and organizations in Carnegie Hill could post events and information online to share with the community. CHN is developing a Carnegie Hill Community Bulletin Board that will be open to all members and local groups with a password, but LL CARNEGIE HI as with the blog on the CHN website, items will be cleared by CHN before posting to be sure that they are suitable and respectfully worded. YOUR THRIFT SHOP DONATIONS WORK TWO WAYS Spring cleaning means making some hard decisions about what to keep and what to give away. If you come across quality items you no longer need, please think of the CHN online thrift shop and call the office. All proceeds from this project support our StreetScape efforts to help keep Carnegie Hill graffiti-free. Wanted: Volunteers to research, photograph, and write item descriptions for our eBay posting. PLEASE SUPPORT THE DOE FUND T he Doe Fund workers sweep the sidewalks and empty the trash baskets in Carnegie Hill several times a week, helping to keep our neighborhood clean. Please remember their service when you receive a fundraising appeal from the Doe Fund. CORRECTION: In the Fall 2015 article about Church of the Heavenly Rest outreach, the name of the pastor was mispelled. The correct spelling is the Reverend Matthew Heyd. We apologize! Lo van der Valk, President Monica Hirsch, Executive Director Raji Kaur, Office Administrator Eve Lowman, Communications and Database Manager Call: 212-996-5520 email: chn@carnegiehillneighbors.org CHN ONLINE Join the social network of Carnegie Hill. Catch the latest CHN activities and events. Check out Carnegie Hill Neighbors on Facebook. See www.carnegiehillneighbors.org. Do we have your email? Receive electronic updates and the CHN Electronic Newsletter with important announcements. (CHN does not share email, names or addresses.) PLEASE SUPPORT OUR ADVERTISERS 90th Street Pharmacy Page 13 Canterbury Choral Society 32 Carnegie Hill Yoga 13 Carnegie Park Tower 26 Collina Italiana 32 Corcoran Group 2 E. B. Cohen & Associates 11 Eli Zabar Manhattan 11 Patricia Ellis, Douglas Elliman 25 M. Epstein, Language Tutor 32 Feta Bar & Grill` 32 Dr. D. Green, Psychotherapist 13 Holland Court 25 Holly Hunt, Halstead 32 Hotel Wales 14 House of the Redeemer 31 Integrated Security Systems 22 Kleier Residential Page 32 Della Leathers, Douglas Elliman 35 LC Fitness NYC 22 Joan McLaughlin, Corcoran 13 Mind Your Body Pilates 25 Mister Wright Wines & Spirits 32 Moving Mentor 25 Organiza Wizely 32 Paola’s Restaurant 9 Portraits, Inc. Gallery 13 S. Feldman Housewares 25 Stribling 7 TECNY 25 Tre Otto 13 Urban Garden Center 13 Val More Salon 31 Anne Young, Amanda Young Brown Harris Stevens 11 PLEASE SUPPORT OUR MERCHANT MEMBERS 90th Street Pharmacy 92nd Street Y ABV Alyssia Hair Salon ACB Retail/Ann Crabtree Arc-en-Ciel Pre-School Biscuits & Bath Bloomie Nails & Spa Carnegie Hill Cleaners Carnegie Hill Massage Children’s General Store Collina Italiana Dorothy’s Day Spa Doyle New York E.A.T. Earl’s Beer & Cheese Eclat! On Madison Eli’s Essentials Flessas Design Food Liberation Olivia Hutchinson, MD Jaico Hair Salon K&D Wines & Spirits Kent’s Fashion House Kollageworks Too Lane Farms Market Lichten Craig Architects Linda Horn Antiques Madden & Warwick Mister Wright Wines & Spirits Mr. Richards Cleaners National Academy Museum Paola’s Restaurant PHS Cleaners S. Feldman Housewares Tre Otto Vinyl Wine Works Gallery Yura on Madison Zigzag Jewelry Design CALL CITY OFFICIALS FOR HELP (212) Carolyn Maloney, U.S.Congress Liz Krueger, State Senate Dan Quart, State Assembly Rebecca Seawright, State Assembly Dan Garodnick, City Council Ben Kallos, City Council Gale Brewer, Borough President Latha Thompson, Community Bd. 8 George Sarkissian, Community Bd. 11 Jenny Fernandez, Landmarks (LPC) Police, 19th Precinct Police (above 96th St.), 23rd Precinct 860-0606 490-9535 605-0937 288-4607 818-0580 860-1950 669-8300 758-4340 831-8929 669-7923 452-0600 860-6411 repcmaloney@mail.house.gov liz@lizkrueger.com dquart@assembly.state.ny.us seawrightr@assembly.state.ny.us garodnick@council.nyc.gov BKallos@council.nyc.ny.us bp@manhattanbp.org info@cb8m.org info@cb11m.org jfernandez@lpc.nyc.gov fax: 452-0652 CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 5 CHN MAJOR CONTRIBUTORS MANY THANKS TO OUR GENEROUS DONORS CARNEGIE HILL DIDN’T JUST HAPPEN. AP CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS AND OUR VALUED MEMBERS HAVE HELPED MAKE IT THE SPECIAL NEIGHBORHOOD IT IS TODAY. CHN THANKS ITS MAJOR CONTRIBUTORS, WHOSE GENEROSITY ALLOWS US TO KEEP MEMBERSHIP DUES LOW AND STILL MAINTAIN A FULL SCHEDULE OF ACTIVITIES. 6 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 7 ON MUSEUM MILE EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHTS by Bo Niles NEUE GALERIE NEW YORK www.neuegalerie.org The Expressionist Nude. Leading artists in early 20th-century Germany and Austria radically re-envisioned the human body. Challenging the romantic ideal that originated with the Greeks, artists such as Egon Schiele, Oskar Kokoschka, and Alfred Kubin imbued their studies of nudes, including children, with psychological undertones that challenged painterly conventions—and taboos. Through June 13. Munch and Expressionism. Norwegian artist Edvard Munch’s The Scream has become a symbol of modern angst. Munch was highly regarded for his exploration of dark themes, including alienation, sin, and human vulnerability. This exhibition examines works by Munch, some never seen in the U.S., and his influence on his German and Austrian contemporaries. Through June 13. NATIONAL ACADEMY MUSEUM www.nationalacademy.org Miriam Schapiro, A Visionary. The first career-spanning exhibit of New Yorker and Academician Miriam Schapiro includes examples culled from every area of this feminist artist’s oeuvre— from Abstract Expressionism to pieces using computer software to figurative paintings devoted to women artists—plus paintings reflecting her love of dolls. Method Order Metric. Dedicated to the idea of “systematic planning” approaches utilized by artists working in a wide range of styles, this exhibit highlights notable artists whose work is included in the Academy’s permanent collection. Contemporary Highlights from the Collection. Also drawn from the museum’s holdings, this exhibit features significant gifts from artists, including Louise Bourgeois, Robert Motherwell, and Robert Rauschenberg, who were honored as Academicians from the mid1950s through the mid-2000s. All three exhibits run through May 8. 8 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS COOPER HEWITT, SMITHSONIAN DESIGN MUSEUM www.cooperhewitt.org Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial. The perennial question “What Is beauty?” is dissected and given shape by 63 designers from around the world through various “lenses” and strata of meaning. Exploiting materials, both physical and digital, and myriad approaches to craftsmanship, the over 250 works on display reveal the seductive, at times transgressive, and transformative power of the creative process. Through August 21. Thom Browne Selects. Exploring concepts of reflection and individuality, designer Thom Browne curates Cooper Hewitt’s historic mirrors and frames. Through October 2. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM www.guggenheim.org Moholy-Nagy: Future Present. Surrealist Laszlo Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946) was a self-proclaimed “utopian” artist who believed that art and technology would work together “for the betterment of humanity.” This long overdue retrospective illustrates how the artist developed his theories through various media, including drawing, sculpture, and photography. May 27 – September 7. THE JEWISH MUSEUM www.thejewishmuseum.og Isaac Mizrahi: An Unruly History. Applauded for his irreverence and wit for over three decades, polymath Isaac Mizrahi has created trailblazing designs in fashion, film, theater, opera, dance. Besides original drawings and photographs, the exhibit showcases video clips of his runway shows, his cabaret Les Mizvahi, and a documentary, Unzipped. Through August 7. Roberto Burle Marx: Brazilian Modernist. A renowned landscape architect, horticulturalist, and pioneer ecologist, Burle Marx (1909-1994) created over 2,000 gardens worldwide. He was equally revered for his paintings and sculpture, theater designs, tapestries, and jewelry––all amply represented in this homage to his 60-year career. Through September 18. THE MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK www.mcny.org Picturing Prestige: New York Portraits, 1700-1860. Beginning in the 18th century, New York’s well-to-do denizens commissioned paintings of themselves and loved ones to display in their homes as indicators of prestige. Drawn from the permanent collection at MCNY, the exhibition features portraits painted by leading American artists of their day. Through October 11. Roz Chast: Cartoon Memoirs. Well-known to readers of The New Yorker since the 1970s, Brooklyn-born Roz Chast creates cartoons depicting her unique encyclopedia of the neuroses and absurdities of daily life––as well as its simple pleasures––embodied by characters as familiar as family. Through September 5. EL MUSEO DEL BARRIO www.elmuseo.org Antonio Lopez: Future Funk Fashion. The son of a seamstress and a mannequin maker, Puerto Ricoborn Antonio Lopez (1943-1987) made his name with high-fashion illustrations for Women’s Wear Daily, The New York Times, Vogue, and Andy Warhol’s Interview Magazine, as well as with his shoe and jewelry designs. He collaborated with noted designers such as Charles James and Karl Lagerfeld to establish a new paradigm of fashion illustration equally attentive to race, gender, and the body. June 14 – November 26. The Illusive Eye. Mounted as a celebration of the Museum of Modern Art’s 1965 survey of optical art, geometric abstraction, and kinetic art, this exhibit highlights the many prominent Latin American artists whose work was not included in that show. The Illusive Eye questions why some artists may be included in a collection and others not, as a focus of curatorial vision. Through May 21. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 9 STREETSCAPE by Susan Gottridge TREE GUARDS TO GRACE 96th STREET LIBRARY T here are two trees in front of the New York Public Library branch (an Andrew Carnegie library, of course) on 96th Street, unprotected from pedestrians and dogs. But not for long. This spring, CHN’s Park Avenue malls contractor will enlarge the tree beds, install tree guards, and keep tree beds planted with flowers. We thank all our members for supporting CHN; your membership dues helped to fund this beautification project. If you would like to make a donation towards our efforts to protect more trees with guards and plantings, please contact the CHN office. Tree beds at this writing... ...and coming very soon 86TH STREET SUBWAY ENTRANCE COULD CHANGE New York City Transit (MTA) and the developer of the new building coming to the northeast corner of 86th Street and Lexington Avenue plan to move the subway stairway on the 86th Street side now within the building to the sidewalk. The plan also includes adding an elevator to the subway on the 86th Street sidewalk, to be widened. While the elevator is a welcome addition, it, and certainly the stairway, should be inside the building. There is significant pedestrian traffic on the sidewalks near the subway entrances. This subway stop is the ninth busiest in the system. At a Community Board 8 committee meeting in March, community groups, including CHN expressed strong concerns about these intrusions on the sidewalk. The committee voted to limit the sidewalk intrusions and seek more information from the developer and the MTA. CHN REPORTS PROBLEMS AND GETS RESULTS n Last fall, Quality of Life Manager Josephine Mazur contacted MillionTreesNYC with a list of tree beds in Carnegie Hill that needed trees. This spring, 40 new trees adorn our sidewalks. n CHN receives many complaints about newsracks that clutter our sidewalks. Last fall we sent an eblast to neighbors with a link to a newsrack complaint form on the Department of Transportation (DOT) website. If enough complaints are logged for a particular rack, the DOT will investigate it for removal. To report a newsrack that is not maintained, go to the CHN website, select Quality of Life/StreetScape and click on the News Box complaint form. n Although the DOT has not allowed the public to paint over graffiti on lampposts and traffic signal posts, Ms. Mazur asked the DOT for permission for CHN to use nonconductive paint on the posts. Within two weeks, DOT responded with the information CHN needed to proceed. n There has been a spate of graffiti on solid security gates in Carnegie Hill. The CHN Security Patrol guard scanned the neighborhood and noted all problems, and Ms. Mazur called 311 with locations. Our security company representative met with the 19th Precinct’s Community Affairs officers to provide details of the graffiti; the precinct will work on removing it. Please contact our office (see top of page 5) if you would like to become involved in any of these activities. 10 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS EAST 86TH STREET BID MOVES FORWARD The Business Improvement District effort for East 86th Street has the support of several major real estate owners in the area. Two of them co-chair the steering committee, which is in the process of recruitng participation in the BID among property owners in the corridor. The committee is meeting with owners, working on details such as exact boundaries, services and budget, and following the many city-required procedures. In the interim, corner buildings are adopting the city trash cans on their sidewalks. This means the city will provide trash bags, and building staff will empty and rebag the cans. CHN has supported the effort to form the 86th Street BID and its goal to improve the sanitation and security of the area. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 11 WARRIE PRICE: A VISIONARY WHO TRANSFORMED THE BATTERY by Suzanne Wiedel-Pace S itting in her living room in her Carnegie Hill apartment on a cold, rainy February evening, Warrie Price’s eyes sparkled with energy and enthusiasm as she described The Battery’s new Seaglass Carousel, where children and adults ride inside large, colorful glass fish, swirling around as though through water. Warrie (she prefers to be called by her first name) is The Battery Conservancy founder and president, New York City's Battery administrator, and director of New York State's Harbor Park's Heritage Area. She is also the visionary behind the creation of the redesigned park at the tip of Manhattan. “In many ways,” she observed, “the project began with work I did here in Carnegie Hill, the neighborhood I love so much.” “Once I see it, I have to do it,” Warrie said as she described how she was able to realize her In The Battery, vision for The Battery, a children and vision that enabled her, adults ride with the help of others, inside a carousel to raise $144 million of of swirling, city, federal, and private colorful glass funds, beginning in 1994. fish. Today, in addition to the carousel created by George Tsypin (the Russian designer for The Little Mermaid and Spiderman), the Battery encompasses vast perennial gardens designed by Dutch horticulturist Piet Oudolf, an urban forest, and an organic urban farm where 3,000 children plant gardens and learn to value the environment. Resilient stormwater management sets a new standard in public landscape design in the area where New York City had its earliest beginnings, and where George Washington walked the streets. Warrie’s journey to the Battery from her childhood in Texas has had many fortuitous turns. She credits her passion for beauty to her grandparents’ gardens and farm and to the open space. “These taught me to value the beauty of the environment and that belief has always been central to who I am.” In an unexpected twist, Warrie’s college roommate was Lynda Johnson, and when Lyndon Johnson suddenly became president, she was invited to live in the White House with the family. “There we were, right at the center of the U.S. government.” This had a major influence on Warrie; later, she became a founding director of Lady Bird Johnson’s Wildflower Center. Warrie’s journey also included a stint as one of the State Department’s youngest Foreign Service officers and a post 12 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS at the American embassy in Santiago months before Salvador Allende was elected president. This was followed by a fellowship to Harvard’s Kennedy School to study government and urban policy, where she earned an M.A. in public administration in 1972. Warrie describes her next stop as the critical one. A position with New York’s Bureau of the Budget brought her to New York City, and her marriage to James David Price brought her to her beloved Carnegie Hill. While raising their three sons, she became involved in an increasing number of volunteer civic organizations, including Trees New York, CIVITAS, and the 96th Street Task Force. As a member and chair of Community Board 8, she became involved with everything from potholes to major water usage issues and learned a lot about how the city’s private and government sectors worked. “I loved that period, I adored Carnegie Hill, and I knew that I loved creativity and innovation, and I thought a lot about what should come next.” When her youngest son was 12, and with the encouragement of Betsy Barlow Rogers, Warrie restarted her public career. In 1994, she applied her vision and political and environmental know-how to the design and renovation of The Battery. Over the past 22 years, she has spearheaded the 25-acre park’s dramatic transformation by forging partnerships with overlapping jurisdictions of city, state, and federal agencies; private sector organizations; and individual donors. “New York, with its culture of philanthropy and generosity, is probably the only city in the world where you could raise that amount of money for a park,” she said. “You can bring private energy to motivate government to do the extraordinary, and, ultimately, I believe beauty draws support.” The Battery project has faced challenges, including 9/11 and Hurricane Sandy, whose destruction still affects the area. But now it is a place of beauty, education, and healing for the approximately 25,000 people who visit it every day, some on their way to the Statue of Liberty or Staten Island ferries. And there is more to come. On a sunny spring day in her office overlooking the park and 11,000 acres of harbor, Warrie’s eyes shone with excitement as she held up a tiny model of the puppet theater that will be constructed in the park this summer with space for children to design and perform. SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE CHN PROFILES TRE OTTO Ristorante * Bar SERVING AUTHENTIC ITALIAN CUISINE OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH, DINNER AND DELIVERY CHECK OUT OUR EXCITING NEW MENU!! 1410 Madison Avenue (97th/98th Street) (212) 860.8880 www.treotto.com CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 13 14 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS ENVIRONMENT by Bonnie Lane Webber SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE GOAT HILL ROOFTOP GOES GREEN M any brownstone owners have thought about installing a green roof, and now there is one, appropriately, on Goat Hill (the block on 95th Street between Park and Lexington). Where goats once roamed, there is a lawn above one of the stately neo-Grec Romanesque homes. The owners, who moved here from London and prefer to remain anonymous, bought the house a few years ago. They say they love Carnegie Hill, especially the fact they can walk north where it is being gentrified, but is still diversified. They consider themselves environmentalists, so when their architect, Robert Finger of Fogerty Finger, suggested a green roof, they agreed, to have better insulation and to help improve the air quality in the city, regardless of the additional cost. According to landscape architect Steven Tupu of Terrain (terrain-nyc.net), clients are choosing this option mostly because green roof plantings slow down the flow of storm water into our city drainage system. This green roof includes a mixture of sedum plantings that grow low, are very drought-tolerant, and do not require irrigation after they get started. Two things made the project feasible: the owners were adding an additional story to the house that would require a completely new roof in any case, so they could start from scratch, and they did not need to use the roof for outdoor living space. Although the cost of going green was higher than adding a conventional roof, they expect to reap energy savings. However, they have no statistics from before this renovation for energy-usage comparison. The green-thinking owners know it makes a big difference in the summer and are happy they could do a good turn for the planet. ORGANIC COMPOSTING STARTS uilding composting has finally begun in Carnegie Hill. In mid-March, a NYC Organics Collection bin was delivered to the first of four neighborhood buildings, whose staff completed the online composting program. Thanks to Brian Moore, building manager at one of the pioneer buildings, for gathering this composting information. To enroll your building (high rise with 10 or more units) in the Department of Sanitation’s (DSNY) Program, follow these steps: B 1. Submit an online inquiry to www1.nyc.gov/assets/dsny/contact/ programs/apartment-programsinquiry.shtml. All eligible candidates will be invited to attend a training session. 2. Attend a training session, or schedule a site visit with a DSNY representative. Complete a service agreement. 3. Once service agreement is approved, receive bin delivery and schedule of service. ENROLLMENT DEADLINES FOR ORGANIC COMPOSTING APPLICATIONS FOR SERVICE TO HIGH RISE BUILDINGS IN 2016: n Summer—June 6 n Fall—August 8 n Winter—October 3 MOUNT SINAI GREENMARKET SPONSORED BY GROWNYC Madison Avenue and 99th Street Open Wednesdays June 29 to November 23 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Textile Recycling and Compost Collection 8:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. MORE THAN THREE TONS OF ELECTRONICS COLLECTED The CHN Annual Electronics Recycling Day held Sunday, January 31 in front of the 92nd Street Y collected 6,378 pounds of electronics from 149 households. This was a good turnout, considering people have the option to bring items to electronics stores. Many supers brought items they had collected in their buildings, and one of them said, “It’s much more difficult to dispose of electronics now. We rely on community initiatives like this.” CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 15 NEIGHBORHOOD CHN BENEFIT AT NEW WORLD PALAZZO by Nalina Moses, with Cynthia MacGrath O n the evening of May 17, supporters of Carnegie Hill Neighbors attending the Spring Benefit will enter through the porte cochère of the Otto Kahn Mansion on the corner of East 91st Street and Fifth Avenue and step into another world. The building, which now houses the middle and upper school of Convent of the Sacred Heart, is one of the best preserved early 20th-century homes in the city. Behind its serene limestone facade lie sumptuous period interiors. The mansion, the city home of financial baron Otto Kahn, was completed in 1918. Kahn’s architect took his inspiration from the Palazzo della Cancelleria in Rome. Like that Renaissance monument, the mansion has a fortress-like ground floor, a second floor or piano nobile, and higher floors that are quietly articulated. Its facade looks not so much sculpted as etched, as if its trims and moldings were inscribed into the surface of the limestone. It makes a fitting New World palazzo. Inside there are several remarkable spaces. There is a music hall with a vaulted plaster ceiling that sweetens acoustics; there is a tall, second-floor foyer with stone floors and a gilded coffered ceiling; and there is a ballroom whose walls are trimmed with dramatically veined green marble. But the mansion’s most memorable space is its second-floor courtyard, which overlooks Central Park and offers an intimate glimpse of the greenery and the reservoir. Its stone walls and balustrade shape a comfortable urban enclave. Kahn was an avid supporter of the arts. He patronized the Metropolitan Opera, supported numerous American writers, and invested in movie houses and Broadway plays. George Gershwin, Mark Twain, and Giacomo Puccini were frequent guests at his home, and Enrico Caruso was among the singers and musicians who performed there. The mansion still bustles with activity. After classes, one group of Sacred Heart students may be gathered in the foyer discussing assignments, another rehearsing a musical in the music room. That Otto Kahn’s mansion is still filled with conversation and song seems a fitting legacy. In May 2011, CHN held its Spring Benefit for the first time at the Otto Kahn Mansion. Be sure to join us when we return May 17. 1170 Fifth Avenue: FATHER-SON DOORMEN TEAM oey and J.V. Quiambao are unique father-son doormen at 1170 Fifth Avenue. Joey Quiambao had a long, successful career in law enforcement in the Philippines before immigrating to the United States. He has a B.A. degree in criminology and worked for the government, eventually serving as an intelligence agent for the Philippine Coconut Authority. For eight years Mr. Quiambao went undercover, infiltrating black-market gangs that were smuggling governmentsubsidized copra meal, the main coconut by-product used in feed. “I lived with them and traveled with them to Palau, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia. We made many arrests,” he says, but he admits it was dangerous. “My wife never slept when I was away.” In 1997 relatives in New York urged him to bring his family to the U.S. For a short time he worked as a meter reader before a friend recommended him for doorman at 1170 Fifth Avenue. His son, J.V., was hired five years later as summer relief and then full-time doorman. Longtime 1170 resident Elizabeth Flinn says the Quiambaos are efficient and considerate and do more than is necessary. This spring Mr. Quiambao will retire, and says he is sad to leave. “They treat us like their own family.” He plans to divide his time between the Philippines and New York City, visiting his seven grandchildren in both countries. Is there a favorite doorman in your building you would like to see featured in our newsletter? Please tell us. 16 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS JENNIFER HUNTLEY J by Jennifer Huntley SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD HUNTER MAKES GIFT TO COMMUNITY by Suzanne Wiedel-Pace “W The Hunter schoolyard is open to the public at 5:00 p.m. weekdays and all day on weekends during the school year and periods when there is no summer school. A guard is present until 10:00 p.m. ? e are all very excited about the Community Service Award that CHN is giving us for our––and your–– renovated courtyard,” said Dean Ketchum, director of Hunter College Campus Schools and principal of the Elementary School. We were watching 6th graders practice their tumbling routines on the new synthetic green turf at the center of the schoolyard. Mr. Ketchum observed that the dramatic renovation of the courtyard and playground between 94th and 95th streets and Park and Madison avenues was made possible by Hunter College President Jennifer Raab’s collaboration with Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, City Council Member Dan Garodnick, and Comptroller Scott Stringer, who allocated money for the project. At the opening ceremony last November, Dr. Raab called the project “a labor of love” that is a gift not only to HCCS but also to the community. “It is also,” Mr. Ketchum noted, “a testimony to the warm relationship between the Hunter School and its neighborhood.” For years residents of Carnegie Hill have taken their children to the school’s jungle gym after school hours, and in the summer given them a last swing on the monkey bars or run down the slide before bed. Over time, the playground grew scruffy, as Summaiya D’Adamo, current president of Hunter’s PTA acknowledged. “The reconstruction,” she said, “took at least three years of fundraising and planning, but after only a summer of work, here it is, to our delight.” It now offers students and neighbors a full-size basketball court, a handball court, and a soccer and lacrosse area with recycled fiber turf. A deep sand base provides drainage. At lunchtime, some students relax there, others tumble. “It’s so bouncy, we really feel good,” said practicing gymnasts Cindy and Sherema. The playground also has a life-size chess board with recycled 8-by-10-inch squares. The resurfaced brick steps on the Madison Avenue side of the courtyard have long been popular with students and neighborhood residents, and now they are safer, as is the entire area and particularly the surface under the jungle gym, where young children practice acrobatic skills. “The neighborhood is good to us,” said Mr. Ketchum, “and we want its residents to enjoy our wonderful new space.” CARNEGIE HILL VILLAGE FOR SENIORS I t is a given that Carnegie Hill is a wonderful place to live, but it can be a challenge for aging residents who want to remain active and independent. A growing committee of interested residents is exploring a way to provide support, using as a model the Beacon Hill Village in Boston. Its solution is Carnegie Hill Village, a nonprofit enterprise with a membership fee, which would provide services to enable seniors to continue living at home in Carnegie Hill. In order to determine the feasibility of this venture, Carnegie Hill Village has inserted a survey in this issue of Carnegie Hill News. Please complete it and return it as directed. Later in April, a CHN eblast will provide a link to a similar online survey. Carnegie Hill Neighbors is pleased to support the concept of Carnegie Hill Village. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 17 SPRING BENEFIT 2016 The Spring Benefit co-chairs invite you to CELEBRATE SPRING AT THE OTTO KAHN MANSION CHN is fortunate to once more have three terrific co-chairs spearheading the 2016 Spring Benefit. NINA WHITING (center) has been co-chair of the last two events and LEIGH HRAZDIRA (left) was a co-chair last year. For 2016, they are joined by CEE CEE BELFORD (right), long active on past benefit committees. Cee Cee and her husband Jeb have lived in Carnegie Hill since 2004 and have two children, who go to Buckley and Nightingale-Bamford. Cee Cee studies painting at the National Academy and the Art Students League and has a background in book publishing and interior design. A s co-chairs of the benefit committee, we would like to extend a personal invitation to all of you to join us at the CHN Annual Spring Benefit on Tuesday, May 17. This is always a festive evening among friends and neighbors, and even though we have been spared a season of snow, ice, and slush this past winter, we should all be ready to kick up our heels and celebrate spring! This year we will return to 91st Street, but this time to the Otto Kahn Mansion, an Italian Renaissance-style palazzo, now the middle and upper school of Convent of the Sacred Heart. As when the impresario Khan entertained a century ago, a trip up the stunning stone staircase will lead you to delicious food (by Yura), an open bar, and music in the ballroom, and, weather permitting, the courtyard overlooking Central Park. We doubt Kahn ever had a magician entertaining his guests, as we will. The benefit will also feature the popular silent auction with such items as a weekend at the rustic Beaverkill resort, dinner for four at the superb Barbetta restaurant, and hors d’oeuvres and wine for 12 in your home. Fabulous raffle prizes include a week in St. Maarten for two in an oceanfront villa, a two-day stay at the Hotel Wales, a necklace from Blue Tree, and more. The 2016 CHN Enrichment Award (see page 1) will recognize the Immanuel Lutheran Church. CHN will also salute Hunter College Campus Schools (see page 17). You can purchase Spring Benefit tickets using the form on the following page or by visiting our website: www.carnegiehillneighbors.org. Members and friends of CHN will receive an invitation in the mail in mid-April. We look forward to seeing you at this year’s CHN celebration! Leigh Hrazdira • Nina Whiting • Cee Cee Belford 2016 CHN Spring Benefit co-chairs The award-winning former firehouse, recently restored by hosts Mark Shafir and Hillary Schafer, was the festive venue for the Spring Benefit Committee planning party. Alan Morehead and Hillary Schafer, holding baby Charlotte SPRING BENEFIT COMMITTEE 2016 Lisa & Robert Abel Suzie & Ainar Aijala Renee & Sumner Anderson Irene Aldridge & Steve Krawciw Phoebe P. Barnard Jeb Belford Kitty & Charles Berry Heather & Philip Brandes Georgia & Nicholas Burger 18 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS Susan Burke-O’Neal & Michael O’Neal Barbara & Michael Calabrese Devon & Scott Caraher Barbara & John Coffey Orla Coleman & Rikki Tahta Paige & Matt DeFusco Norah & John Daly Dixie De Luca Ninna & Breck Denny Lynn & Bob Ducommun Blair & Jack Enders Alex & Dan Fallon Samantha & Matthew Fremont-Smith Julie & Manish Gautam Arlene & Mark Goldsmith Susan Sullivan Gottridge Lisa & Eric Green Monica & Holcombe Green Lisa & Robert Guida Katherine & Alex Harman Anne & Tom Haubenstricker Paula & John Hornbostel Ivan Hrazdira Holly & Ernest Hunt Erica & Robert Juneja Jurate Kazickas & Roger C. Altman Elizabeth & Daniel Keegan Rosalind & Kevin Kruse Linda & Glenn Kurtz Lisa & Brad Larson Della & John Leathers Cynthia MacGrath Christine & Richard Mack Joan & Jay McLaughlin Warren & Bill Miller Gina & Allan Morehead Tracey & Ken Pontarelli Molly & William Rand Hillary Schafer & Mark Shafir April & Mark Shelton Nancy & John Sipp Natalie & Eiko Stange Christine & George Stonbely Carmen C. Torruella Lo van der Valk Melissa & Conrad Vlak Gordon J. Whiting Suzy Woldon & Jon Horowitz Alisa & Alastair Wood CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS ANNUAL SPRING BENEFIT Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / 6:30 – 9:00 pm / THE OTTO KHAN MANSION / 1 East 91st Street Open Bar & Hors d’oeuvres, Music, Silent Auction, Raffle Prizes CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS ANNUAL SPRING BENEFIT Please reserve the following tickets to be held at the door: (Unreserved tickets at the door are $200) $175 Friend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ $125 Friend (under 35) . . . . . . . . . . . .$ PREMIUM TICKETS (Admits two and includes listing in Benefit Program and Carnegie Hill Newsletter) $600 Supporter. . . . . . . . . . . . $ $2,500 Leader. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ $1,000 Benefactor. . . . . . . . . . $ $5,000 Carnegie Circle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ $1,500 Patron . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ $50 Raffle Booklet includes 6 chances . . . . .$ CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS 2016 ENRICHMENT AWARD to Immanuel Lutheran Church For the sensitive and authentic restoration of the 19th-century church roof and steeple that respects the gift of the congregation's ancestors and preserves the building for future generations. We cannot attend, but support CHN with a tax deductible contribution of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ (Please list guests’ names on reverse) Number of guests: Name: (as you would like to be listed in the program-must be received by May 13) Address: Carnegie Hill Neighbors. e-mail: Check enclosed Visa Master Card Please print name exactly as it appears on card Acct.# Benefit tickets (minus $100 per guest) and all other contributions are tax deductible. Please make checks payable to Phone: Payment: TOTAL: $ Exp.Date: AMEX For more information or additional invitations, please call 212-996-5520 To purchase online, please visit our website: www.carnegiehillneighbors.org CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS 2016 COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD to Hunter College Campus Schools For the exciting renovation of the Hunter schoolyard, and particularly for opening it to the Carnegie Hill community after school hours to the delight of neighborhood children. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 19 LANDMARK LAND by Lo van der Valk CHN AT WORK TO PRESERVE TWO GEMS... ANOTHER VICTORY FOR 1143 FIFTH AVENUE STAN HONDA L ast November, the proposal to add six stories to this J.E.R. Carpenter gem, a seven-story apartment building at 1143 Fifth Avenue, was resoundingly turned down by the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC). This was largely due to the outpouring of support by neighbors and experts organized by Friends of J.E.R. Carpenter, which spearheaded the effort; 500 petition-letters collected by CHN from the community; and the critical backing by our elected officials. A revised proposal was submitted March 1, which reduces the six additional residential stories to two set-back floors, but with large glass windows plus two stories of mechanical equipment, all of which would be highly visible. Written tesitmony was submitted by CHN and Friends of J.E.R. Carpenter pointing out these deficiencies. At the March hearing the LPC instructed the developer to reduce the size of the residential addition, as well as the two upper floors of mechanical equipment. The revised proposal could be resubmitted soon. A STACK OF SUPPORT FOR THE CHURCH OF ST. THOMAS MORE The landmarking effort for the Church of St. Thomas More continues with a petition-letter campaign that has now exceeded 3,000 letters. CHN is awaiting a determination of eligiblity certifying that the St. Thomas More complex could qualify for listing in the State Register of Historic Places, which would provide additional support for landmark designation when presenting these petition-letters to the LPC. Copies will also be presented to City Council Member Dan Garodnick and Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer. NEW ZONING RULES TO INCREASE AFFORDABLE HOUSING BY RAISING BUILDING HEIGHT LIMITS FOR SOME AREAS ayor Bill de Blasio’s two city-wide rezoning proposals, Zoning for Quality and Affordability (ZQA) and Mandatory Inclusionary Housing (MIH), were designed to create or preserve 200,000 new affordable housing units within the next 10 years. Introduced early last year, the City Council made major changes in both ZQA and MIH before voting to approve them in March. ZQA primarily provides voluntary zoning incentives to create affordable senior housing, but major reliance is being placed on MIH, which offers incentives for market-rate housing if affordable housing targets are met. MIH applies only to specifically created districts. No such districts are currently proposed for Carnegie Hill, but ZQA could have an impact on Lexington Avenue. CHN, along with many other preservation and civic groups, strongly opposed the original proposals because, in exchange for new affordable housing, the main incentive was to allow building heights to increase, thereby reducing M 20 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS street light and air and diminishing neighborhood character. Also, many argue that on a net basis the current stock of affordable housing would be decreased through demolition. Due to this opposition and the help of our elected officials, especially Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer and City Council Members Dan Garodnick and Ben Kallos, several important changes were made. An early victory rescinded the height limit for narrow mid-block streets that was to increase from 75 to 85 feet. Three other improvements were made at the last hour: the sliver law (which prohibits construction of stand-alone tall buildings) was kept intact; certain height increases without compensatory affordable housing creation were scrapped; and affordable senior housing was barred from encroaching on rear yards. However, the original provisions to allow a height increase from 170 to 200 feet and a modest increase in floor area, in exchange for creating 20 percent affordable senior housing, will remain for most of Lexington Avenue below 96th Street. ...AND TO PROTECT THE SKYLINE MARYMOUNT SCHOOL PLANS TALL CONSTRUCTION arymount School is seeking to build a new middle- and upper-school building on an L-shaped, mid-block, through-lot between 97th and 98th streets and between Park and Lexington avenues at the northern end of Carnegie Hill and in the district of Community Board 11 (CB11). The plan calls for a school building, illustrated at right, that, at 229 feet in height, is substantially taller than any school on the Upper East Side or East Harlem, and will require a number of major zoning variances from the Board of Standards and Appeals (BSA). Even though the applicable zoning for most of East Harlem (R7-2) imposes no height limits and makes very generous scale and bulk provisions for schools and other community facilities, the school is still in need of variances. It is seeking a tower-type building allowed by zoning, which typically has a small base supporting a narrow and tall tower. But to accommodate its needs the school is seeking both a taller base and a wider tower than allowed. The school’s plan is further encumbered because it shares the zoning lot with a residential mid-block tower whose height was made possible in exchange for permanent open space assigned to the school’s portion of the lot. This makes it even harder for the school to meet the zoning requirements. The plan was reviewed at four CB11 hearings, where CHN and a group of neighbors opposed it. In March, CB11 voted to recommend disapproval to the BSA, on the grounds that the building’s height and massing would adversely impact the neighborhood character. The BSA is expected to consider the application this spring. AT LAST, A MOVE FOR A LAW TO LIMIT TOWER HEIGHTS hile tall buildings were increasingly appearing on streets near the southern end of Central Park, a proposal for a 600-foot-tall tower in Sutton Place galvanized this close-knit residential neighborhood to lead the first effort in recent years to seek height limitations to counter super-tall buildings. This effort elicited a sympathetic response from elected officials, especially City Council Member Ben Kallos, to fast-forward the lengthy process of seeking a zoning change to limit building heights to 210 feet for the area. Council Member Kallos is also looking to limit the height of buildings on First, Second, and Third avenues, which now have no height restrictions. Concurrently, at the edge of Carnegie Hill, a proposal for a building at 180 East 88th Street at Third Avenue (pictured at left) is seeking a height of almost 500 feet. CB8, with civic groups including CHN, is looking into ways to challenge this plan. This building’s L-shaped lot surrounds three small corner buildings and faces both the avenue and street. The 22-foot wide front on 88th Street is narrow enough to invoke the sliver law, which limits a building (or building section) under 45 feet wide to a height roughly commensurate with its neighbors. But if applying the sliver law is successful, it may only impact a part of the building without reducing the overall height. W If granted the necessary zoning variances, Marymount School’s planned 229-foot tower would be substantially taller than its neighbors. THE DALTON SCHOOL SUIT IN NEW APPEAL CHN and two buildings near The Dalton School lost the appeal brought to prevent the school from adding another two stories to the building that already exceeds the mid-block height limit by 70 feet. Our response brief for the second appeals round was filed March 18. Three to four judges will make a decision in this round, as oposed to only one judge who turned down the initial appeal. A decision is not expected for a number of months. PLANS FOR A NEW BUILDING on the northeast corner of 86th Street and Lexington Avenue are covered in StreetScape. See page 10. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 21 COOKFOX ARCHITECTS, LLP M 22 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD thank you PATROL CAR PROGRAM SUPPORTERS! DON’T SLEEP IN THE SUBWAY, DARLIN’ (and other useful tips for navigating New York’s underground) R eported crime in the New York subways was up 36 percent this January over last. It turns out about half of the theft victims were napping, according to NYPD Commissioner William Bratton, who has announced a new policy: Subways are not for sleeping! In an interview with Time Warner Cable’s NY1 he said, “I know a lot of people are tired. They work very hard. But our officers are going to be instructed to start waking people up. By sleeping, you make yourself, as reflected in our crime stats, a very easy victim to lose your phone or your wallet.” Vincent Bassi, a retired NYPD Transit sergeant who specialized in preventing subway crime for 20 years, knows a lot about subway safety. He worked in the plainclothes AntiCrime Unit, riding the subways, protecting the riders, addressing quality-of-life conditions, and apprehending criminals. For the last 10 years, Mr. Bassi has been a managing director at Integrated Security Services, the firm that provides the guards for CHN’s Security Program, and is now CHN’s point man. We recently asked Mr. Bassi for tips on riding the subways by Garrett Glaser If your building is not listed on the chart below, please ask your board to consider participating. The cost is only $45 per apartment unit per year. Call CHN at 212-996-5520 to arrange for our team to tell your board and managing agent about our Security Program. safely, especially in the wee hours. He replied, “It’s the 21st century and anyone should feel free to travel on mass transit, but you’ve still got to follow safety rules, especially at night. With better trained cops and new technology underground, crime-fighting efforts have paid off, but the bad guys are still looking for the ‘loner rider’ who may be inattentive. Hand-held devices are not only the target for thieves, but attract criminals to distracted riders. Behavior like falling asleep and/or slouchy body language makes an easy target.” Mr. Bassi recommends, “Avoid sitting by the train doors where bad guys can easily run with your bag, jewelry from your neck, or other items. When possible, ride in the conductor’s car located in the middle of the train.” FIFTH AVENUE 1056 1060 1067 1080 1107 1115 1120 1125 1133 1136 1140 1148 1150 1158 1165 1170 1130 1133 1150 1155 1160 1165 1172 1175 1185 1192 1199 1220 1230 PARK AVENUE 1040 1045 1049 1050 1065 1070 1075 1082 Here are some other tips from Mr. Bassi: n Follow your instincts. If someone near you is making you uncomfortable, move. n Wait for trains from behind the yellow line, not close to the edge of the platform. n Use the “Off Hours Waiting Area” in every station. It is denoted by bright yellow signs, a talk-back intercom box, and closed-circuit cameras. n Do not wear exposed jewelry in the subway. n Keep your wallet and cash out of sight, and never in your rear pocket. n Hold on to your handbag, even one with a shoulder strap. n Beware of noisy incidents nearby. Pickpockets can stage these as a distraction. n Look alive. Be alert. If you start to doze, 1088 1095 1100 1105 1111 1112 1120 1125 LEXINGTON AVENUE 1349, 1435 EAST 86th STREET 25, 49, 55 EAST 87th STREET 11, 21, 47, 55, 115, 120, 153 EAST 88th STREET 2, 4, 5, 19, 40, 47, 60, 111, 121-123 EAST 89th STREET 17, 45, 50 stand up. Never fall asleep on a train. EAST 90th STREET 14, 21, 51, 115 EAST 91st STREET 15, 108 EAST 92nd STREET 12, 46 EAST 93rd STREET 55, 125, 134, 155 CHN ADDS FOOT PATROL FOR SECURITY The CHN Security Program is now augmented by a new foot patrol. Former NYPD officers Keith Hockaday and Jimmy Velasquez, at left, take turns patrolling every weekday, 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. The foot patrol will focus on the 96th and 86th Street subway stations and recent crime locations, as well as blocks near schools in Carnegie Hill. EAST 94th STREET 40, 64 EAST 95th STREET 3, 4, 17, 19, 27,30 EAST 96th STREET 8, 14, 16, 17, 60, 70 EAST 98th STREET 2 CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS SECURITY PATROL, 365 DAYS A YEAR Patrol Car: Weekdays 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. Weekends 8:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. Foot Patrol: Weekdays 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 23 NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS by Bo Niles A fter months of anticipation, Cooper Hewitt’s Arthur Ross Terrace and Garden finally opened this winter as a free and accessible green space that can be enjoyed by the public weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Saturdays 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., and Sundays 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Rockery Inspired by the original Richard Schermerhorn Jr. garden design commissioned by Andrew and Louise Carnegie being installed in 1901, Hood Design Studio in collaboration with RAFT Landscape Architecture and Diller Scofidio + Renfro, near entrance carpeted the outdoor “room” with a lawn, which they surrounded with lush border plantings along the restored to the gift wrought-iron fence to echo plantings in Central Park, across Fifth Avenue. shop and cafe. One significant geological feature—also inspired by the Park—is a charming rockery located near the entrance to the museum’s Tarallucci e Vino cafe and gift shop. The interior cafe and gift shop can be accessed and enjoyed separately without going through the museum itself. Tables and chairs invite passersby and museum-goers alike to stop and have a bite, or simply sit and enjoy the serenity of a quiet oasis of green space. The opening of the garden marks the final phase of Cooper Hewitt’s renovation of the Carnegie Mansion and museum campus. thank you, COOPER HEWITT, for this beautiful gift to Carnegie Hill! CHN ENRICHMENT AWARD to Immanuel Lutheran Church The church underwent an earlier renovation in 1953 and an extensive interior repair in 1969, (Continued from page 1) when the construction of the nearby an English architect known mostly Gimbels East department store for Roman Catholic ecclesiastical caused the plaster on the vaulted buildings in New York, in a neoceiling to collapse. The beams and Gothic style popular at the time in truss work of the vaulted ceiling Germany and northern Europe. were then left exposed, revealing Even with the use of Maine granite, the exquisite wood that had been limestone, and massive buttresses, installed in 1885-86. the exterior presents a lovely, almost More recently, it became apdelicate impression. parent that the frequently repaired Inside, the church is 100 feet slate roof would soon need to be deep, 60 feet wide, and seats 1,200. The vaulted ceiling replaced, and for seven years the congregation saved for To its credit, the rises 75 feet above ornate chancel woodcarvings, hand- church has preserved the inevitable project. Pastor Reverend Gregory Fryer says, the building as it was “One weekend a leak dripped into the chancel by the carved in the Black Forest of Germany. Lancet-arched designed in 1885. stained-glass windows alternate with slender stone communion rail, and I placed a bucket to catch the drips. buttresses. The octagonal steeple is flanked by peaked At the Sunday service, a concerned parishioner saw the gables and conical pinnacles. The 200-foot bell tower houses three leak and said, ‘It is time for a new roof!’ and made a substantial bells, a gift to the new congregation from Empress Augusta Victoria contribution to back up the proclamation.” of Germany. The bells were inscribed “Glaube, Hoffnung, and Liebe,” John G. Waite Associates, an architectural firm intent on Faith, Hope, and Love, quoting from Corinthians, 13:13, “And now quality restoration, was engaged and worked with the congregation. these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.” Pastor Fryer continues, “We are proud of this project and the results. Adjacent to the church on 88th Street is the parish house. The people sacrificed to fund it for the generations to come and The five-story neo-Grec building, now painted, retains some original preserve the gift from our ancestors.” details including window cornices and bracketed sills, and a This dedication to preservation exemplifies the spirit encourcast-iron roof cornice with modillions and a decorative frieze. aged by Carnegie Hill Neighbors in our historic community. 24 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE THE GIFT OF A GARDEN CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 25 26 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS HOW WELL DO YOU KNOW CARNEGIE HILL? TAKE OUR ARCHITECTURAL QUIZ W e live in Carnegie Hill and walk our streets every day. We pass by elegant mansions, venerable apartment buildings, charming rowhouses, grand townhouses, and know there is something special about this unique neighborhood. Each building has a story—a certain architectural style, perhaps a famous archiect, a unique design, a century-old history. Some buildings have quiet details that may not be noticed in a routine stroll. 5. 1. 6. 7. 2. 3. 8. 4 Test your knowledge of our hidden-in-plain-sight gems with our Architectural Quiz. Find the answers in the Carnegie Hill Architectural Guide, along with descriptions of every building in Carnegie Hill, the history of the neighborhood, biographies of 180 architects, and eight self-guided walking tours. All for just $20. (And if you promise to buy the Guide, we will tell you where to find the answers to the quiz: page 30.) ORDER YOUR CHN GIFT MERCHANDISE TODAY — BY PHONE, EMAIL, OR WEB, OR CLIP AND MAIL THIS FORM Item Quantity Price Tax ARCHITECTURAL GUIDE $20 (TAX $1.78) _______ _______ ______ UMBRELLA $25 (TAX $2.22) _______ _______ ______ OPEN TOTE $25 (TAX $2.22) _______ _______ ______ (TAX $3.11) _______ _______ ______ JUMBO TOTE $35 SHIPPING: $5 PER ITEM CHN GIFT MART CHN UMBRELLA Green and white. $25 ________ Total Goods, Tax, Shipping __________ FREE DELIVERY WITHIN CARNEGIE HILL FOR CHN MEMBERS Name_______________________________________________________ Address____________________________________ Apt. #___________ City___________________________State_________ Zip _____________ Telephone_____________________email__________________________ Payment: ® Check enclosed Please charge my: ® Visa payable to Carnegie Hill Neighbors, Inc. ® MasterCard ® Amex _____________________________________________________________ Print name exactly as it appears on card _____________________________________________________________ Account Number CHN OPEN TOTE White cotton, 13” x 11”. $25 CHN JUMBO TOTE White with green straps, zip closure, 23” x 15”. $35 Expiration Date Mail form to Carnegie Hill Neighbors, 170 East 91st Street, New York, NY 10128 • PHONE 212-996-5520 • EMAIL: chn@carnegiehillneighbors.org • www.carnegiehillneighbors.org CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 27 ARCHITECTURAL PHOTOS BY DAVID BALDERSTON CHN GIFT MART NEIGHBORHOOD AUTHORS by Lenny Golay HUMOR & HISTORY, O pening Belle, Maureen Sherry’s whip-smart and funny novel, takes readers into the adrenaline-fueled chaos of a Wall Street trading desk. It is 2008 and Isabelle appears to have it all: an Upper West Side apartment, three healthy children, a handsome husband, and a high-powered job. But her reality is something else. Enter Henry, the former college fiancé she never quite got over, now a hedge fund mogul. He becomes her largest client, and Belle gets to see the life she might have had with him. JFK and the Reagan Revolution: A Secret History of American Prosperity is an eye-opening look at one of the most important yet least understood episodes in American economic history. In a blow-by-blow narrative of the tax battles within the Kennedy administration, Lawrence Kudlow and Brian Domitrovic reveal how Kennedy drew upon his deep reading of history to opt for tax cuts and a recommitment to the gold standard. CRIME & REDEMPTION In The Detective & the Pipe Girl, Michael Craven delivers a richly atmospheric, humorous, and fast-paced mystery that introduces private eye John Darvelle, a man of specific tastes and opinions. One of Tinseltown’s most powerful men hires Darvelle to find a young woman named Suzanne Neal, an incandescent beauty. What starts as an easy assignment soon has Darvelle on a twisting, turning journey that puts him face-to-face with the LAPD, a ruthless underground crime operation, and a cold-blooded killer. There will be a reading at The Corner Bookstore on Wednesday, June 22, at 6:00 p.m. A threnody is a poem or song of lamentation, and Tenement Threnody, as its title suggests, is a book of laments, but it is also a unique book of celebration. Meredith Trede’s evocative poems of Irish-American tenement life and their speakers are alive and human, and their voices are perfectly captured in sonnetsized forms. These are portraits and voices from a lost world. Ellen Feldman’s Terrible Virtue is the provocative and compelling story of Margaret Sanger. One of the most fascinating and influential figures of the 20th century, she was the daughter of a hard-drinking, smooth-tongued free thinker and a mother worn down by 13 children. The founder of Planned Parenthood, she vowed her life would be different and, at great personal cost, shaped the sexual landscape we inhabit today. This is her compelling story. The Grievance: A Real Life-and-Death Story is Lawrence Abram’s moving personal memoir of the whirlwind of circumstances, decisions, and emotions surrounding the death of his vibrant wife of more than 50 years. Her living will, which stated what medical procedures were not acceptable, was handed to staff upon arrival at “The Hospital,” a teaching hospital in New York City, where it languished in a loose-leaf binder. Diane Williams is America’s short fiction’s grand master. Her very short stories have been aptly called “folk tales that hammer like a nail gun.” Her 40 new ones in Fine, Fine, Fine, Fine, Fine are sharper than ever. They are unsettling, frequently revelatory, and more often than not downright funny. Their originality, precision, and power bring the familiar into startling, enchanted relief. Not a single moment here is what you might expect. Ellen Tovatt Leary, a frequent contributor to Carnegie Hill News, grew up in Greenwich Village in the 1940s, the shy, introverted only child of a glamorous, flamboyant, and eccentric divorcée who was also an artist’s model. An actress on Broadway and OffBroadway, she paints in her memoir, Mother Once Removed, a vivid, colorful, detailed portrait of New York bohemian life in the 1940s and ’50s. Jay Greenfield’s stunning decades-spanning debut novel, Max’s Diamonds, is about a man forced to confront his moral culpability, the legacy of impossible loss, and the claims of his Jewish identity. Paul Hartman grows up haunted by the specter of his cousin Max, an Auschwitz survivor, and Max’s mysterious cache of diamonds. When a stranger from his past confronts him with an impossible demand, Paul must make choices that will change his fate forever. There will be a reading at The Corner Bookstore on Tuesday, May 3, at 6:00 p.m. 28 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS In his hilarious debut, Bill Keenan, whose hockey obsession began on Lasker Rink in Central Park when he was 5, tells how he overcame multiple obstacles to find fulfillment and redemption in the strange world of European minor-league professional hockey. Part fishout-of-water travelogue, part coming-of-age memoir, Odd Man Rush: A Harvard Kid’s Hockey Odyssey from Central Park to Somewhere in Sweden— with Stops along the Way, will capture the interest of both hockey fans and fans of good writing. CARNEGIE HILL WRITERS I KNOW by Patricia Volk We have noted the extraordinary number of authors who live in Carnegie Hill and asked Patricia Volk, one of our frequently published writers, Why so? Ms. Volk is the author of Stuffed: Adventures of a Restaurant Family; Shocked: My Mother, Schiaparelli, and Me; To My Dearest Friends; and All It Takes: Stories. She lives and writes in Carnegie Hill. T hirteen Carnegie Hill writers are scheduled to read at The Corner Bookstore this year. Some I know because I live on 95th Street and have since 1977, when New York was contemplating bankruptcy and you could pick up an eight-room apartment for less than a studio will set you back today. I’m lucky to be living here because writers thrive on quiet, and New York neighborhoods don’t come quieter than Carnegie Hill. The streets are safe and tree-lined. Chewing gum-constellations rarely pock the sidewalks. And Central Park, ideal for writing in your head, is 47 steps from my awning. Several Carnegie Hill writers are friends. Heading to Morton Williams, “Why, hello Mary Stewart Hammond, Daphne Merkin, and Amanda Vaill!” I’ve spotted Adam Gopnik, Paula Deitz, Kate White, Philippe de Montebello, Francine du Plessix Gray, Renata Adler, and Peggy Noonan. There’s Michael J. Arlen spatziering into Patrick Murphy’s, and Michael J. Fox walking his dog. Around the corner, Andrew McCarthy is teaching his little girl to ride a bike. Isn’t that Paul LeClerc examining mushrooms at Fairway? Some of Carnegie Hill’s writers have moved. Amy Hempel migrated from 1361 Madison Avenue to Gainesville, Florida. Polly Blitzer and Woody Allen now homestead in the 70s. Erica Jong sold her townhouse, but her daughter Molly Jong-Fast is still here. Some have died, including Al Hirschfeld, Martin Bergmann, Brendan Gill, the adorable and brilliant Andrew Sarris, spirited Alice Alden, and a former beau, the writer/editor, Jonathan Dolger, who wound up marrying another Carnegie Hill writer, Jane Isay. Jonathan lived across the street from Gordon Lish, also a writer/editor, who once took a short story of mine for his literary magazine, The Quarterly, on the condition that I change the word “pee” to “piss.” (He was absolutely right.) I used to run into Lish on his way to Patti Marx’s place. But Patti has moved from 19 East 88th Street to the 50s (Carnegie Hill writers refer to that as “downtown”). I miss her but am grateful three of my dearest writer friends have stayed put. I met Frances Kiernan when she was an editor at The New Yorker. We reconnected when former Carnegie Hill writer Sheran James invited us to tea at Sarabeth’s. Then Frannie introduced me to Lily Tuck. And then to Molly Haskell one windy afternoon in front of 45 East 89th Street, the building that Lish says “creates its own weather.” If you live in Carnegie Hill, you know what he means. Now Frannie, Lily, Molly, and I walk around the reservoir together. We meet at the Engineer’s Gate at 7:30 (where we often bump into Ellen Feldman and spot Ricky Lauren) and loop the bridle path talking about, what else? writing. Then we head for cappuccinos at Church of the Heavenly Rest. Back home, we hit our computers, charged for the day. Alas, this walk is falling apart. Frannie is writing her Mavis Gallant book mostly at her country house. Molly broke her knee last year tripping over a sidewalk Christmas tree. And Lily is off to Prague again. It’s through Lily I met Roger Angell. He lives in her building and came to a party I threw when she won the National Book Award for The News From Paraguay. Because of his annual Christmas poem in The New Yorker, I made sure to let Roger know all the words that rhyme with Volk. “Yolk,” I said. “Poke, joke, folk. Toke!” He laughed, but I have yet to appear in a poem. For every Carnegie Hill writer mentioned above, I’m betting I’ve missed three. I’ll hear about it. “What? How could you forget _______?” So apologies to each and every one from our beautiful, clean and quiet paradise. Happily, our beloved Corner Bookstore hasn’t morphed into a nail salon, couture baby boutique, or designer eyeglass store. We have more of those per capita than any other New York neighborhood. The only thing that could improve Carnegie Hill for this writer is a Dollar Tree. And Roger, if you’re reading this: Coke and soak. Okey-doke? CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 29 SHOP TALK by Marion E. Morey EAT, DRINK, WORK OUT FETA BAR AND GRILLS, (formerly Cantina), 1436 Lexington Avenue (between 93rd and 94th streets), opened in March with a Greek flair for wine, cocktails, and a full menu including keftedakias, loukaniko, lamb chops, Greek burgers, and baklava. Owners Stacy and Constantine host this friendly place. 646-852-6872. www. Fetabarandgrills.com. Monday – Friday, 11:30 a.m. – midnight, Friday and Saturday, 11:30 a.m. – 2:00 a.m., Sunday, 10:30 a.m. – 10:00 p.m. FIVE PILLARS YOGA, 1298 Madison Avenue, second floor (between 92nd 93rd streets), offers 75-minute classes from basic to vinyasa, ashtanga-based, prenatal, and restorative yoga. New clients get unlimited class time for seven days for $50. Manager Brad Brownson’s instructors keep clients in top shape. 212-426-6111. www.fivepillarsyoga.com. Open daily; hours vary. CARNEGIE CUP CAFE, 1080 Park Avenue (northwest corner at 88th Street), is a top-notch coffee bar and snack shop, family-owned and just opened. Wake-up coffee never tasted so good, freshly ground for each cup from an exciting range of international coffee beans. 646-590-3195. Monday – Friday, 7:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m., weekends, 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. VAL MORE SALON, 1323 Madison Avenue (between 93rd and 94th streets). Owner Val brings 15 years of experience to Carnegie Hill with a colorist and six stylists for hair enrichment, skin smoothing, make-up, spray tanning—all in an elegant setting. 212-300-4169. www.valmoresalon.com. Monday – Saturday, 9:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m., Sunday, 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. 30 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS ...AND LOOK GREAT! PURE BARRE, 1325B Lexington Avenue (between 88th and 89th streets), opened its Carnegie Hill branch in February, featuring low-impact, easyon-the-joints exercises for all ages. This bi-level studio holds up to 20 clients per 55-minute session. In addition to classes, DVDs, apparel, equipment and client retreats are offered. 646-484-5447. www.purebarre.com. Hours vary. Moved... EDÍT, 1298 Madison Avenue (between 92 and 93rd streets), moved from Lexington Avenue, but still showcases international women’s clothing designs, from Chloé to McCartney, day and evening wear. 212-876-1368. www.editnewyork.com. Monday – Saturday, 10:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m., Sunday, 11:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Renamed... RIGBY & PELLER (formerly Intimacy), 1252 Madison Avenue (southwest corner of 90th Street), offers swimwear, nightgowns and fitted underwear, which “nobody will see, everybody will notice.” 212-860-8366. ww.rigbyandpeller.com. Monday – Saturday, 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m., Sunday, noon – 6:00 p.m. Opening Soon... GINA AMERICANA, 27 East 92nd Street (between Fifth and Madison avenues), in the former site of Ciao Bella. 222-360-6900. Answers to Architectural Quiz, page 27 1. 114 East 91st Street 2. 24 East 95th Street 3. 17 East 90th Street 4. 120 East 95th Street 5. 2 East 88th Street 6. 1217 Park Avenue 7. 1040 Park Avenue 8. 23 East 92nd Street BEN ASEN SINCE 1963, AND NOW REINCARNATED: BLACKER & KOOBY I n November 1963, Joseph Blacker and Fred Kooby were signing their partnership agreement when they heard on the radio that JFK had been shot. That partnership forged 50 years ago launched Blacker & Kooby, Carnegie Hill’s beloved purveyor of fine papers and writing instruments, upscale stationery, and art supplies for over half a century. If you grew up on the Upper East Side, you probably bought your school supplies at Blacker & Kooby. In time, however, a depressed economy coupled with sharp rent increases in commercial real estate forced out many longstanding family-run businesses, including Blacker & Kooby, the last original business on their block at 88th and Madison Avenue, which closed its doors in January 2014. Vanessa Kooby and her staff relocated to 1390 Lexington Avenue, directly across from the 92nd Street Y, where for the past two years, they shared space with Richard’s Interiors, fulfilling orders for monogrammed stationery, or personalized materials like wedding invitations under the name “Blacker & Kooby by Vanessa.” There they frequently heard comments such as, “We miss your old store.” “There is nowhere to buy the things you used to carry.” “I grew up in your store.” So when Richard’s Interiors left the premises this past December, Vanessa Kooby knew it was time to take over the space and bring back the old Blacker & Kooby. They have completed construction and have expanded their offerings to meet the needs of the neighborhood. Says Ms. Kooby, “I worked side by side with my father for 27 years, and I picked up a thing or two. He was helping me every day before I lost him in September. The business was in his blood, and it was something he and I shared. I miss him dearly, and his legacy lives on with the new store and with me. My mother helps me to do the buying and fills in at a moment’s notice. We will take what still works from before, give it some tweaks, and fill the void that grew when we left Madison Avenue.” Carnegie Hill residents will rejoice to hear the news. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 31 FRENCH & SPANISH TUTORING English as a Second Language Conversation, Essay Writing Skills, Test Preparation, Schoolwork, Accent Reduction, Playgroups (ages 3 and up), Private and Small Group Lessons, all levels. Dynamic teachers with extensive experience abroad and in NYC private schools. Michele Epstein 212-722-5793 stefalex23@gmail.com 32 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS TREE CARE CITIZEN PRUNERS GROUP BRANCHES OUT SUZANNE GOLDSTEIN by Julia Bradford C arnegie Hill Neighbors’ 15 new Citizen Pruners recently received their licenses from Trees New York which authorize them to care for our trees. Most of our original pruners were trained in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and our numbers have diminished due to relocation, age, and shifts in interests. But with the help of Linda Kurtz and April Shelton, our committee is being revitalized. At a Carnegie Hill Neighbors’ welcome breakfast last fall, Linda and April challenged attendees to join them in becoming Citizen Pruners, and many expressed interest in signing up for the course. An email went out to everyone on the CHN’s email list, and more potential pruners signed up. Because CHN could guarantee that at least 10 people would participate, Trees New York offered to hold a class in Carnegie Hill. Linda and April shepherded the process. They contacted all interested parties, arranged for class space at the Church of St. Thomas More, coordinated the class schedule with Trees New York and the participants so that it did not conflict with national holidays and school vacations, and held a welcome breakfast for those who had signed up, where they learned more about the CHN Tree Care program and history. The pruner course, taught by Sam Bishop, Trees New York’s director of education, began in late January and ended in late February, and all 15 pruners passed the final test. On March 12, the class used their newfound knowledge on trees on East 95th Street between Lexington and Third avenues during the CHN pruning class practices newfound skills on East 95th Street. mandatory pruning outing, where they learned the proper use of pruning tools, including a hand saw, hand pruner, pole saw, and lopper while they practiced their tree-identification skills. The committee co-chairs are excited to welcome the new pruners to our 2016 spring and fall outings. Our city trees are under stress. Not only do they grow in small tree pits, which supply them with barely enough nutrients, but also suffer from too much salt in the winter and not enough water in the spring, summer, and fall. Temperatures this winter fluctuated wildly and averaged well above normal. As a result, many trees were ready to bud out all winter. The infusion of new pruners will help the committee members maintain the tree canopy that makes Carnegie Hill one of New York’s most beautiful neighborhoods. And who knows, if another 10 Carnegie Hill neighbors want to become Citizen Pruners, we might be able to host another class again here in Carnegie Hill. Thank you, Linda and April, and thank you, Mr. Bishop and Trees New York. ROSES (AND TULIPS) TO... SHARI THOMPSON, for having the plaque commemorating the late Al Hirschfeld again affixed to his former house at 122 East 95th Street after an absence of more than six years. The plaque from the Historic Landmarks Preservation Center was placed in 2006 on the front of the salmon-pink rowhouse, where the famous “caricaturist” lived and drew for 55 years. It was removed when new owners renovated the building and assumed lost when the house was sold again. Ms. Thompson tracked down the missing plaque and persisted until it was put back in its rightful place. CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 33 TIMELINE PROPOSED: 97-98TH STREETS by Cynthia MacGrath THE CITY SKYLINE: ALWAYS IN FLUX. EVEN IN CARNEGIE HILL. PROPOSED: 180 EAST 88TH STREET COMPLETED 2014: 1110 PARK AVENUE Marymount has plans for a middle and upper school on a mid-block lot between 97th and 98th streets, and Park and Lexington avenues. See page 21. UNDER CONSTRUCTION: 152 EAST 87TH STREET SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE UNDER CONSTRUCTION: 200 EAST 95TH STREET ORIGINAL BUILDINGS 1856 (2-story addition 1985) ORIGINAL ALLAN GARAGE 1930 1110 Park (originally 1108 and 1110 Park, built in 1856.) A 15-story condominium was completed in 2015. A CURRENT: 147-151 EAST 86TH STREET SUZANNE WIEDEL-PACE 152 E. 87th Street, for 85 years the Allan Garage, was stripped of ornamental terra cotta in 2009 and demolished in 2015. Under construction: a glassy 19-story complex with up to 60 apartment units and a smaller public parking garage. CURRENT: VACANT LOTS 180 East 88th Street, once the location of a 4-story brownstone, will combine with lots 1558 and 1560 Third Avenue to create a 31-story skyscraper, at almost 500 feet, the tallest tower north of 72nd Street. PROPOSED 200 East 95th Street/1681 Third Avenue, The Kent, will be a 30-story condo tower; completion scheduled for late 2017. It replaces several 4-story mixed-use buildings. 147-151 East 86th Street, at the northeast corner of Lexington Avenue, now consists of low mixed-height commercial units. Demolition is scheduled for this spring to build a 21-story development; 50 condo units will occupy floors 5 to 21. lmost half of Carnegie Hill is protected, either as a historic district or as individually landmarked buildings. However, since the Carnegie Hill Architectural Guide was published just eight years ago, there has been a spate of new and proposed buildings. One is completed and several are under construction. All are in areas not protected by landmarks designation and most will be high-rise condo towers. Will they cast shadows, both literally and historically, on our unique residential neighborhood? 34 I SPRING 2016 • CARNEGIE HILL NEWS CARNEGIE HILL NEWS • SPRING 2016 I 35 PRESRT STD U.S. Postage PAID New York, NY Permit No. 2154 CARNEGIE HILL neighbors 170 East 91st Street, LL New York, NY 10128 TELEPHONE 212-996-5520 • FAX 212-996-8313 • EMAIL chn@carnegiehillneighbors.org • www.carnegiehillneighbors.org CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS—FULFILLING OUR THREE MISSIONS FOR 46 YEARS—BECAUSE IT’S OUR HOME. QUALITY OF LIFE u SECURITY u PRESERVATION For just a $75 membership, you can help ensure that these efforts continue. Join now! CARNEGIE HILL NEIGHBORS MEMBERSHIP FORM All contributions are tax deductible 501(c)3. Please indicate your preferred membership category: c c c c c c $5,000 or more Carnegie Circle $2,250 Leader $1,250 Patron $750 Benefactor $350 Supporter $150 Contributor c $75 Basic c $__________ Other c My gift will be matched by __________________________________ Supporter members and higher are listed in the Spring Benefit program and Carnegie Hill News Mail to Carnegie Hill Neighbors, 170 East 91st Street, LL, New York, NY 10128 or join online at www.carnegiehillneighbors.org. Name:____________________________________________________________________________ If a couple, how would you like to be listed? John and Mary Smith, John Jones and Mary Smith, etc. Address:__________________________________________________________________________ Telephone:______________________email:____________________________________________ Payment: c Check enclosed Please charge my: c Visa c MasterCard _____________________________________ . . Print name exactly as it appears on card Make your check payable to Carnegie Hill Neighbors, Inc. c Amex ________________________________ Account number _______/_________ Exp. Date VOLUNTEER YOUR SERVICES: Contact for Your Building _____ At Large _____ StreetScape ______ Landmarks _____ Tree Care _____ Public Relations/Marketing ______ Membership _____ Fundraising ______ Environment _____ Brownstone Initiative _____ Newsletter Design/Writing _____ Grant Applications ______