Hudson Square Pushes to Reclaim Pedestrian Space

Street scene in  Hudson Square (Courtesy Hudson Square Connection)
Street scene in Hudson Square (Courtesy Hudson Square Connection)

A major transformation of the once-industrial Hudson Square neighborhood in Lower Manhattan aims to bring pedestrian vitality to streets originally designed for delivery trucks servicing printing houses.  Crain’s reports that Hudson Square Connections, the local business improvement district, has selected a design group led by Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects from a pool of 23 respondents to create a new streetscape to improve the area’s image.

Map of Hudson Square (Courtesy Hudson Square Connection)

Hudson Square, bounded by Greenwich Street, Houston Street, 6th Avenue, and Canal Street, is becoming increasingly residential as large art-deco buildings are converted into hip offices and dwellings.

Details are currently being worked out, but a plan is expected to be in place by the end of 2011.  Mathews Nielsen brings experience from nearby Hudson River Park and the pedestrianization of Times Square.  The team, including Rogers Marvel Architects, Billings Jackson Design, ARUP, and Open graphic design, plans to work with the NYC Department of Transportation on the design.

With such a background, it’s clear that space will be reclaimed for pedestrians.  Ellen Baer, president of Hudson River Connection, told Crain’s, “There are very few places where people can sit and enjoy lunch here. We want to create those oases and green spaces.”

[ Via Crain’s. ]

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