'Nature' in NYC
John Hill
12. May 2021
Photo: John Hill/World-Architects
Two new installations in Manhattan — Maya Lin: Ghost Forest at Madison Square Park and "The GREEN" at Lincoln Center — take divergent approaches to nature but each give New Yorkers pleasant settings for enjoying the outdoors. World-Architects visited them on a sunny day shortly after they opened to the public.
The GREEN
The GREEN, which opened on May 10, covers the usually hardscape plaza at the center of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts with soft synthetic turf. Designed by Mimi Lien, a set designer, the 14,000-square-foot installation is the centerpiece of Lincoln Center's Restart Stages, which moves the performing arts outdoors to ten stages around the campus. The GREEN is intended to be an inviting place to relax, grab a bite to eat, read a book, and just enjoy being outside — as people were doing on my visit.
Most people will approach from Columbus Avenue on the east and be greeted with a green carpet that even vaults over an empanada stand, on the right. (Photo: John Hill/World-Architects)
The only original part of the plaza not covered by the turf is its iconic fountain, which was reworked by Diller Scofidio + Renfro (with WET) in their transformation of Lincoln Center a decade ago. (Photo: John Hill/World-Architects)
The green surface ramps up on the north and south — making the outdoor space akin to an elongated half-pipe — to provide ample places to sit and lounge. (Photo: John Hill/World-Architects)
Variations of half-pipes and vaults are sprinkled about the turfed plaza ... (Photo: John Hill/World-Architects)
... including a covered space with seats for reading books from a little free library. (Photo: John Hill/World-Architects)
Ghost Forest
Ghost Forest, which also opened on May 10, takes a dramatically different approach to nature: artist/architect Maya Lin transplanted 49 Atlantic white cedar trees from New Jersey's Pine Barrens as a commentary on climate change. According to the Madison Square Park website, "a ghost forest is the evidence of a dead woodland that was once vibrant." This ghost forest draws attention to "the Atlantic white cedar populations on the East Coast that are endangered by past forestry practices and threats from climate change, including extreme weather events that yield salt water intrusion, wind events, and fire."