Crossing Delancey, Conservancy Brings Diverse Groups Together
An Urban Parks Institute Success Story
New York City
In New York City's Sara
Delano Roosevelt Park, a
carefully tended garden is host to a daily gathering of Chinese men with
beautiful
songbirds in fancy bamboo cages. This trio of garden, men and birds creates a
sense of
place and destination in a part of this park that seemed forgotten until only
recently.
The garden is the work of an energetic and diverse local community of Italian,
Dominican
and Chinese immigrants who helped build and maintain this unique meeting place.
Project Background
Sara
Delano Roosevelt Park is a seven block long, one-half block wide, Depression-era
park on
New York City's densely populated Lower East Side. While the northern and
southern
ends of the park have seen major renovations, one interior block remained
neglected until
two nearby residents mobilized neighborhood children and their families. The
result was a
careful restoration of the space into a garden for this multi-ethnic
neighborhood.
At first, Federico Savini and Anna Magenta, whose apartment is adjacent to
the park,
simply worked to rid the area of garbage and get the city to enforce sanitation
regulations. They were soon joined by neighbors and local children, mostly
Dominican and
some Chinese, who enjoyed the weekend events, and organized to reclaim their
park.
Confrontations between the residents and the park's usual denizens --
mostly drug
dealers and users, according to Magenta -- galvanized the neighborhood.
In 1994, the non-profit Forsyth
Street Garden
Conservancy was founded, and landscaping work on the park's border
gardens began.
They planted with care -- for example putting in forsythia -- which they thought
was
appropriate given that the park borders on Forsyth Street. When they planted
small
evergreen trees, which symbolize good luck to the Chinese, the conservancy was
approached
by a member of the Chinese community who asked if they would build a garden
there for a
population rarely catered to in New York Parks: older Chinese men, a small group
of whom
had been bringing their songbirds, a special kind of Chinese thrush known as hua
mei
birds, into a central area of the park every morning to sing.
In the spring of 1995, the conservancy built the bird garden with help from
neighborhood children. The garden is a semicircular area of approximately 2000
square
feet, dense with stone paths, boulders, lush perennials, and small native and
Asiatic
shrubs, particularly berry-producing plants that attract wild birds. Posts made
from
1/2" plumbing pipes and planted with climbing vines were sunk into the
ground to
accommodate more bird cages. A paved area in front of the garden is used by a
group that
meets in the mornings for tai chi.
Funding: According to Lenny Librizzi, a Forsyth Street Garden
Conservancy board
member, there is no direct and constant source of funds for the garden. The bird
garden
was built mainly with a $1,750 grant from the Trust for Public Land. An
irrigation system
was installed with help from the Council on the Environment, which has donated
considerable support along the way. Other groups who have given money and tools
include:
Operation Green Thumb, The Citizen's Committee, and the City Parks
Foundation.
Impacts: In nice weather, the garden can be filled with singing birds,
sometimes
as many as 30, along with the men and other residents. The garden's
reputation has
extended all over the city, and people bring their hua mei birds from miles
away. Their
singing nearly drowns out the heavy rumble of traffic coming across busy
Delancey Street.
Encouraged by their success with the original garden, the conservancy has now
turned
their attention to a larger, unrenovated area of the park: a 10,000 square foot
former
wading pool abutting the bird garden. Last year, the Sara D. Roosevelt Park
Community
Coalition -- made up mostly of residents who live in a more affluent
neighborhood several
blocks north of the bird garden -- proposed building a dog run in the old pool,
and began
to bring their dogs there. This situation was bad for the birds, but also for
neighborhood
children, who wanted to use the area as a playground. The children, both Chinese
and
Hispanic, set up tables in the park and collected close to 1,500 signatures over
one
weekend. The petition convinced the community board to reject the dog run
proposal. The
conservancy has applied for a grant to bring in the Manhattan based
Children's
Environments Research Group to design a play area with input from the
neighborhood
children.
Lessons Learned: In cleaning and beautifying their section of the
park, the
conservancy has made the area attractive to other neighborhood groups, some of
whom, like
local dog owners, challenge the special treatment they think other groups are
given. Lenny
Librizzi attributes much of the conservancy's success in maintaining
control over the
park to being "very in tune with the neighborhood." The conservancy
makes sure
to weigh in at any and all hearings and meetings that deal with their park (for
example,
Magenta and Savini, as president and vice president of the conservancy, reply to
every
newspaper article about the park with a clarifying letter). However the
conservancy has
its critics. Recently, there have been disagreements not only with the Sara
Delano
Roosevelt Park Community Coalition, but also with key members of the New York
Parks
Department who, at least initially, favored the dog run.
The conservancy is on public land, and must deal with the consequences.
Savini said
that while he intends to "turn as much of the park as possible to
green," he
does so with the knowledge that the parks department could pave over parts of
the garden
whenever they wish. He hopes that the conservancy's efforts, if seen as an
extension
of the wants and needs of the surrounding neighborhood, will be given the
respect he
believes they deserve.
Contacts:
Anna Magenta/Federico Savini, Forsyth St. Garden Conservatory, 212-966-9351
Lenny Librizzi, Council on the Environment, 212-788-7927
(Spring 1997)
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