Friday, August 22, 2025

Orchard Beach in Summer

Park Odyssey's first trip to Orchard Beach was on a chilly spring day in the early throes of the pandemic. We returned this summer for an Urban Park Rangers tide pool walk, which started at the Nature Center. While there, we made it a "beach day" too. Which, for us, usually means an hour or two at most, taking turns going in the water.

Orchard Beach Nature Center, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC

Down the middle of the photo below you can see the transition between the sparsely populated section with no lifeguards (on the left) and the crowded part of the beach where the swimming zone starts (on the right). The lifeguards were pretty strict about keeping swimmers out of the water outside the zone.

Orchard Beach, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC

The beach is a long curve of sand built on landfill at the innermost armpit of Long Island Sound. The water's very calm, with no waves to speak of. And you can go quite far out and it's still only up to your waist.

Orchard Beach, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC

But back to our main plot: Armed with nets supplied by the Nature Center, our group walked out towards the rocks at a point far from the crowds.

Orchard Beach Nature Center, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC
Orchard Beach, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC

Did this tide-pool excursion mostly draw parents with their kids? Sure. But clearly we, Mr. and Mrs. Odyssey, are in a certain way kids at heart.

Orchard Beach, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC

After catching, viewing, and releasing a whole assortment of small sea creatures temporarily stranded in tide pools (tiny fish, clams, etc. – even a jellyfish), we took a mini-hike to a spot at the edge of one of the adjacent former islands (now attached by landfill) to look at the hermit crabs scuttling in and out of their holes in the sand.

Orchard Beach Nature Center, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC

When the party broke up we headed to the beach to partake of the sun and sand, and do a little "swimming." Other beachgoers, though, were enjoying the grass and trees – or partying like it was Labor Day weekend.

Orchard Beach Nature Center, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC
Orchard Beach Nature Center, August 2025, The Bronx, NYC

Condé Nast Traveler recently named Orchard Beach one of the best beaches near New York City. But there's a caveat: There are no fewer than 17 beaches on the list. So, is Orchard Beach really New York City's "Riviera"? It depends how far you want to stretch your imagination. For sure, though, the Bronx's only beach stretches a long mile-and-change, fronts swimmable waters, and is absolutely right here in NYC.

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All photos © Oren Hope

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Luther Gulick Park

On my recent walk from the F train to check out the new elevated section of East River Park by the Williamsburg Bridge, I passed a small neighborhood park I'd been unaware of. And I admit that the first thing that caught my eye about Luther Gulick Park were the bathrooms, set in a friendly, modern structure.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

This 1.6-acre Lower East Side park has a playground and courts for basketball and handball.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

But it's also a pretty nice place for a break from the urban landscape. The park has well-maintained tree stands and a looping path. In fact, it received a design award from the American Society of Landscape Architects in 2021. And just this year, Luther Gulick Park was cited as an example of best practices for designing family-friendly spaces in a report from the New York City Public Design Commission.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

I assume the ping-pong tables, and maybe the nice bathroom facilities too, were part of the park's $10 million renovation in 2009–10. That work, according to the press release, "transformed the mostly asphalt site into a lush green park that addresses the needs of the community." The renovation was part of Mayor DeBlasio's Community Parks Initiative.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

But who was Luther Gulick? Funny you should ask, because this may be the only New York City park honoring two different people with the same name.

The elder Gulick, Luther Halsey Gulick, Jr. (1865-1918), was a medical doctor and an important figure in the invention of basketball. Also, his "belief in a trilogy of mind, body, and spirit inspired the YMCA’s inverted triangle design," explains the Parks Department. Gulick founded NYC's Public School Athletic League and, with his wife, founded the Camp Fire Girls in 1910, just a year after the foundation of the Boy Scouts. In the early 20th century he served as the head of physical training in NYC's public schools and as president of the American Physical Education Association.

His nephew, Dr. Luther Halsey Gulick (1892-1993), was also a national figure. In 1921 the New York City-based Bureau of City Betterment and its associated Training School of Public Service evolved into the National Institute of Public Administration, later the Institute of Public Administration (IPA). The organization focused on improving cities' administration, and was affiliated over the years with several universities, notably Columbia. A political scientist, the younger Luther Gulick headed the IPA for most of the period between 1921 and 1961.

Alongside its sports and playing areas, Luther Gulick Park has grass, trees, and – in my view, equally important for a New York City park – rocks. Rocks link a park, even if sometimes only symbolically, to the underlying body of the planet. Which city life detaches us from, to our detriment.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

Vegetation around the edges gives the park a somewhat secluded feel.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

Gravel is something people don't usually think about, but it's important to a lot of parks. Gravel takes you off the hard pavement that dominates our city lives. It's not grass, it's not alive, and it's not exactly soft. But it's not pavement either. Dirt-like, it feels like something natural. And it doesn't require the maintenance that grass does.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

Before it was a park, the plot was part of the R. Hoe & Company headquarters. This manufacturer of printing presses and saws had a magnificent factory building.

R. Hoe & Company Headquarters in Manhattan at Grand Street and Sheriff Street,1930

The New York Public Library Digital Collections

They don't make them like that anymore.

But next time you're on the Lower East Side, whether visiting the newly elevated East River Park, shopping at Essex Market, or climbing the walls at the nearby climbing gym, spare a few minutes for under-appreciated Luther Gulick Park.

Luther Gulick Park, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
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All photos © Oren Hope except where noted

Monday, August 18, 2025

John V. Lindsay East River Park: New Elevated Section

After much effort both physical and political, a new raised section of John V. Lindsay East River Park opened this past Memorial Day. When completed, the new park, as part of the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project, should withstand the rising levels and tides of climate change.

Residents and some parks advocates complained as the project was proposed and planned. So many mature tress would be sacrificed. Neighborhood playing fields would vanish for years.

When the new section opened, visitors complained too – this is New York, after all. There's no shade! So much concrete! Plus now, the section north of this one is shut down. All the way up to Stuyvesant Cove.

Well, yes. These huge projects do have to be completed step by step.

Meanwhile, of course there's no shade at this new section by the Williamsburg Bridge: The freshly planted trees are still mere young'uns.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

With all its amenities, this piece of riverfront parkland isn't yet connected to adjacent acreage, so as it's fairly far from the subway it's not so easy to get to if you don't live close by.

But lots of people do live close by.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

The present access is via a footbridge at the the south side of Delancey Street, hard by the soaring arches of the Williamsburg Bridge itself.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

(Biking would be a good option, but not if the biking itself is your reason for going – the bike path within is necessarily a mere stump.)

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

Once inside, you come upon square stone blocks picturesquely fringing snazzy new basketball courts.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

The bridge looms overhead.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

Past new plantings and wide grassy fields the Brooklyn skyline rises. That's right – the Brooklyn skyline. Whodathunk? (That tallest building is called Brooklyn Tower. Get used to it. The years when Brooklyn builders weren't allowed to build higher than the Williamsburgh Savings Bank Tower are long past.)

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

The intervening brick structure in the photo above is the East River Park Fireboat House. The Village Sun reported last year as construction of the park was underway that this "two-story Moderne-style building was erected in 1941 in East River Park for the Fire Department’s Marine Company 66, replacing similar structures that had operated from a pier at the end of Grand Street since 1898." Most recently the building served as the headquarters of our friends at the Lower East Side Ecology Center.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

The barbecue area wasn't in use at 10 in the morning on a Sunday. But it's ready.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

A handful of people were about. Strolling. Fishing.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

The black dog you see in the distance in the next photo ran up to me eagerly, tennis ball in mouth. Dogs, right?

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

The day was already hot, making this fountain tempting.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

The soccer field, baseball field, and tennis courts are already popular. Another complaint: there are only half as many tennis courts as there were before climate change got so urgent. People were already queuing for a court at the Brian Watkins Tennis Center. (It's named for "a Utah tourist and University of Idaho tennis player who was slain in the subway while attending the 1990 U.S. Open," Courts morbidly explains. The Courts article also has some good photos of this part of the park in former days.)

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

It was a slow Sunday morning. But the amount of trash this worker had collected suggested much heavier recent use of the grounds.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC

Some doubted whether this park would actually get off the ground – or off sea level, to be precise. Well, it did. And there's clearly much more to come. A small but maybe not insignificant bit of evidence that this chaotic, almost ungovernable city can actually get important things done. Sometimes.

East River Park elevated section, August 2025, Manhattan, NYC
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All photos © Oren Hope