View Full Version : Randalls Island Water Park
BigMac
January 11th, 2006, 12:56 PM
New York Daily News
January 11, 2006
Making waves
Some pols fear water park may swamp Randalls Isle
BY DAVID SALTONSTALL
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF
http://www.nydailynews.com/ips_rich_content/957-roosevelt.jpg
Proposed water park on Randalls Island
The city is quietly pushing plans to build a massive, Six Flags-style water park on Randalls Island - complete with wave pools, slides, a manmade "adventure river" for rafters and even an indoor, year-round "beach club."
The $168 million theme park, which would be paid for by a private developer under a 35-year lease with the city, faces a critical hurdle today before the city's Franchise and Concession Review Committee.
But the park - which was proposed originally in 1999 by then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani at 12 acres - is drawing concern because of its swelling size, now set at 26 acres.
"It's as if this project has evolved from a wading pool into a tidal wave on the East River," said Jeff Simmons, a spokesman for city Controller William Thompson, who has a seat on the FCRC and is expected to vote against the project at today's meeting. Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer also is expected to vote against the project, citing concerns about its size. Still, it is believed the mayor has enough votes on the board to pass the measure.
In addition to the 7-acre indoor beach club, the park - which was approved by the City Council in 2004 - would include 19 acres of outdoor water slides and rides, with additional space required for 1,800 new parking spots.
City officials hope to cut the ribbon for the park, where an all-day ticket will cost $25 for kids and $30 for adults, by Memorial Day 2007.
Ten of the island's 29 baseball fields would have to be bulldozed, but officials said yesterday that new fields would be created as quickly as possible.
Some of the proposed water slides would tower more than 80 feet over the adjacent East River, making it a highly visible addition to the area's skyline.
City Planning Department officials estimate the park could draw up to 1.3 million visitors a year, most of them between Memorial Day and Labor Day. A year-round swim academy could teach hundreds of kids a year to swim.
Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe yesterday defended the water park as an economic engine that could provide $1 million a year in new tax revenues for city parks, as well as a place for kids to escape the heat.
"As it is now, children from the surrounding neighborhoods have to travel 2-1/2 hours each way to get to a comparable facility," said Benepe, referring to the Hurricane Harbor water park at Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey.
Today's FCRC meeting is required so the Parks Department can begin negotiations with the New York-based Aquatic Development Group to design, construct and operate the proposed park. The company is considered a leading designer of water parks, with clients ranging from Disney to Six Flags.
"Pools, lagoons, geysers with bubbles, lazy rivers, raft rides - there's nothing you can imagine that we can't create," boasts the company's Web site.
All contents © 2006 Daily News, L.P.
MidtownGuy
January 12th, 2006, 06:17 PM
Randalls Island water park plan clears hurdle
January 11, 2006, 6:20 PM EST
NEW YORK (AP) _ Randalls Island could go underwater.
The city's Franchise and Concession Review Committee voted Wednesday to clear negotiations for a proposed $168 million water park on the island below the Triborough Bridge.
The committee still must sign off on any agreement reached between the city Department of Parks and Recreation and the would-be developer, the New York-based Aquatic Development Group.
Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, a proponent of the plan, said he was pleased with the news.
"We've been working on a master plan for Randalls Island for probably the last 10 years, little by little, and this is the last piece," he said.
But opponents of the plan complained that it has expanded substantially since then-Mayor Rudolph Giuliani proposed a 12-acre facility back in 1999. The current plan covers 26 acres of the island, including a 7-acre parcel for a year-round indoor beach club.
City Comptroller William Thompson said he supported development of the island but questioned the bidding process and the scope of development. He complained that the city should have tried to lure additional bidders once the expansion of the plan became clear.
"It is inappropriate to authorize a sole source negotiation on the water park because other firms have not had the opportunity to submit proposals on its significantly expanded scope," Thompson argued before casting a no vote.
The panel passed the proposal 4-2. If the plan passes the next step, city officials could open the water park by Memorial Day 2007.
The 273-acre island is home to a variety of sports fields, the new Icahn Stadium for track and field, a driving range and a tennis center.
Ninjahedge
January 13th, 2006, 09:38 AM
It looks like it could be fun and interesting, but having a waterslide in NYC?
I don't getthe feeling of "amusement park" when I hang out around Randals. I think it would have been better used around Coney Island and the area. I just don't think they had enough contiguous area to be able to make a park that big......
Oh well.
antinimby
January 13th, 2006, 11:43 AM
How does one get onto Randalls Island?
NIMBYkiller
January 13th, 2006, 04:56 PM
Triboro Bridge.
I love this idea and I can't wait to see it open. I wish this was around a few years ago so I could've had a cool summer job. I agree though, it should be at Coney Island if there's room.
Ninjahedge
January 13th, 2006, 05:33 PM
Better to have a water park near the beach, no matter how ironic that is.....
(I always get a kick out of those parks in Jersey. All they need is a "wave pool" and they could not get more absurd.. ;))
CMANDALA
January 13th, 2006, 07:31 PM
You would be adjacent to Bronx Kills, which can become quite fragrant in summer. On the Bronx shore you have waste transfer stations and a railyard full of stinking garbage containers.
Apart from either walking to the park (not easy) or taking the M35 bus, the majority of visitors would be forced to use their cars. This means paying the TBB toll as they enter and depart. Add those fees to a probable parking lot charge.
It sure isn't Coney.
MrSpice
January 13th, 2006, 07:33 PM
What's amazing is that in Russia subway in both St Petersburg and Moscow has been wired for cell phones for several years now. When I was in St Petersburg in June, I saw many people talking on their cell phones inside the trains. And in New York - the capital of the world - we are still debating whether this is necessary or feasable. This subway of ours is so behind...
NIMBYkiller
January 13th, 2006, 09:36 PM
Psst...wrong thread, lol
About the water park, I'm sure new bus services can be started to reach the park. I know that if I start Island Transit here in the LI area, then I'd definately have service there.
I wonder if it'd be possible to have a Metro North stop there. After all, MN has been pushing to run service via the Hell Gate to NYP for New Haven line service.
Scruffy88
January 23rd, 2006, 12:24 AM
totally for the idea. I hung out on randalls island and wards and there is nothing there. could be developed to be fantastic. There is a direct exit to it from the highway. which bridges to three boroughs directly. You can walk there via the 125 st bridge or the 100th street pedestrian bridge (summer only) this is a good idea. in my oppinion they should take a couple steps further and build a full scale amusement park. if they use the whole island, they have more than enough land for it. Just get rid of the mental hospital. the firefighter training center can stay. thats already seperated by the overhead amtrak viaduct.
TranspoMan
January 29th, 2006, 09:28 PM
The Randall's Island Sports Foundation developed a master plan to redevelop portions of Randall's and Wards Islands in 1999. I believe the first project to be completed as part of this plan was the track and field stadium, located on the former site of Downing Stadium. The water park was included in the master plan.
http://www.risf.org/projects2.html
pianoman11686
February 12th, 2006, 04:12 PM
New NYC water park to include indoor beach
(New York-AP, February 12, 2006) - A visit to the Big Apple always promised a great adventure: Times Square, Coney Island, the Empire State Building. There was never a need for some trumped-up theme park in the land of Trump himself.
Until now.
In the latest bit of suburban creep into the nation's largest city, a family-themed water park is due before summer 2007 on a piece of Randalls Island parkland at the juncture of the East and Harlem Rivers, under the vast Triborough Bridge.
The city hopes to lure more than 1.3 million visitors a year to the $168 million attraction that will boast water slides rising 80 feet into the skyline.
So are the five boroughs going Six Flags? A little bit, yes. And not everybody is pleased.
"The citizens of New York like the Brooklyn Bridge," said Billy Tallen, a performance artist who's waged a long (and losing) battle against New York's commercialization. "The consumers prefer the water parks. We insist on being citizens, not consumers."
The water park is just the latest indignity for Tallen and others who fondly recall the corner tavern, the mom and pop drugstore, the local coffee shop. These days, it's more likely a Starbucks (159 locations in the city) or a TGIFriday's (a dozen spots, including one on 42nd Street near the Red Lobster). Last year, a 7-Eleven opened on Park Avenue South at 23rd Street - the first new Manhattan franchise for the 24-hour stores since 1982.
"And Coney Island is going to be turned into another suburban development," said Tallen, fearful of an $83 million redevelopment plan announced last year for the colorful Brooklyn beachfront.
The taming of Times Square is a fait accompli, with adult entertainment emporiums like Peepland and Show World giving way to kid-friendly fare and a comedy club. And "The Shops at Columbus Circle" is a highfaluting name for a (gasp!) mall, with outlets for J. Crew and Sephora.
But city officials and developers portrayed the 26-acre water park - an unlikely attraction in an unlikely location - as more boon than bane for both the citizens and consumers of New York.
"This is good news," said Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, one of the park's boosters. "It has a potential to be a huge draw. We hope to be building a park for the 21st century on Randalls Island."
The water park, designed by the New York state-based Aquatic Development Group, is a virtual done deal. The city's Franchise and Concession Review Committee must still sign off on a proposed 35-year lease with Aquatic Development, but all the other steps in the process are finished. The site is easily reachable by car, bus or footbridges.
And so New Yorkers will now have access to an amenity previously found only in locations like Scotrun, Pa., or Mason, Ill., or Grapevine, Texas.
The New York attraction will include wave pools, action rivers and wading pools, and plenty of slides. A seven-acre indoor beach will give New Yorkers a year-round attraction; Coney Island, in contrast, is strictly seasonal (except to those twisted Polar Bear Club swimmers who take an annual winter dip in the Atlantic).
According to David Sangree, a water park consultant and president of Hotel & Leisure Advisors, the vast majority of the nation's 71 water parks are located far from urban centers.
Wisconsin, with 30, is the state with the most water parks.
The New York facility would operate under unique circumstances. The new breed of water parks are typically attached to hotels, with admission reserved for guests only. The New York operation, since it's on city parkland, will work with day passes and without a hotel.
It took seven years for the city to take the plunge on the water park. The plan was proposed in 1999 by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani as a 12-acre facility. Seven years later, under the Bloomberg administration, the light at the end of the water funnels is here.
Henry Stern, who spent two decades as parks commissioner, was less surprised by word of the burgeoning water park than most New Yorkers. He sorted through various proposals for Randalls Island, including a ski jump, while in office.
"Tennis courts, stadium, concert hall, golf course - people see land, and they want to build," Stern says. "They salivate."
Since its purchase from the local American Indians in 1637, Randalls Island served as a burial ground for the indigent, a home for juvenile delinquents, an asylum for alcoholics and a rest home for Civil War veterans. After the island was designated a city park in 1933, its high points came as a sports and concert venue.
In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt attended the opening ceremonies for a stadium on the island. The Olympic trials were held as the first event, with Jesse Owens warming up for the Berlin Games with victories in the 100 meters and the long jump.
Pele played there as a member of the New York Cosmos in the 1970s. The Dave Matthews Band is one of the musical headliners who played there in recent years. And by next summer, several hundred thousands people will splash and slide their way around Randalls.
As for Stern, he offered another suggestion.
"I think it would be no problem if it was left alone," he said. "It's doesn't have to be a happening. It's an open space, an island in the heart of the city."
Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved
Kris
April 10th, 2006, 05:34 AM
April 10, 2006
Randalls Island Water Park Set for Final Approval Vote
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
http://graphics9.nytimes.com/images/2006/04/10/nyregion/10randalls-map.gif
New York City is moving closer toward opening a water park on Randalls Island — its filtered waters free of soot, gunk and industrial contaminants, and with the added benefit of chlorine.
The $168 million theme park, which will have 26 acres of water slides, wave pools and man-made rivers, is planned for the northwestern end of the East River island, where there are baseball and softball fields.
The plan is scheduled for a final vote tomorrow by the city's Franchise and Concession Review Committee, which is the park's final hurdle. The committee has given the project preliminary approval, and the water park has also gotten the go-ahead from the City Council.
"This will provide an attraction that doesn't exist in this area," said Adrian Benepe, the city's parks commissioner. He said the water park would be "in the middle of a metropolitan area of 20 million people."
Mr. Benepe said construction could start later this spring and be finished by Memorial Day 2008.
The city expects the theme park to attract about 1.4 million people a year, with a 19-acre outdoor section that will open only during summer handling most of the visitors.
Among the attractions will be head-first and feet-first slides and an artificial "lazy" river that people can float down. The year-round portion of the park will feature a two-story restaurant and what could be the world's largest indoor pool.
The agreement between the city and the developer, Aquatic Development Group Inc., would provide the company a 35-year lease on the property. Aquatic Development, based in Cohoes, N.Y.,would guarantee the city a base payment of $1 million annually, and payments could climb as high as $3 million or $4 million, according to the city, because the rate would be based on attendance figures. The money would be used to improve other parkland on Randalls Island.
The plan's critics include Comptroller William C. Thompson Jr., who said the process has been flawed because the city originally sought bids in 1999 for a relatively small 12-acre, $40 million water park that would operate during summer only — less than half the size and one-quarter the cost of the current plan.
"It has morphed into a 26-acre theme park, and we have no way of knowing whether this is the best deal for the city because we don't know who else is interested," he said. Mr. Thompson, who also has raised questions about a past bankruptcy declaration by Aquatic Development Group, said that while he would continue to oppose the process, he would most likely be unable to force the city to reopen the bidding.
Park advocates are concerned about the city's leasing public land to a private company to subsidize the rest of the island's parkland, which they say has been inadequately cared for by the city.
"This deal is based solely on the city refusing to allocate proper resources to maintain the park," said Geoffrey M. Croft, president of NYC Park Advocates, a private, nonprofit group. "Selling off public parkland to make up for these appalling shortfalls is certainly not the answer, and is a terrible precedent."
Other critics point to the daily price of admission — adults will be charged $37, children $30 — as a problem. Scott M. Stringer, the Manhattan borough president, negotiated a deal with the developer last week that will allow discounts for some families and children during July and August to be as high as 45 percent, with smaller discounts the rest of the year.
Mr. Stringer said he had been concerned that not enough had been done to make the park accessible to residents of neighborhoods near Randalls Island, many of them poor, who use the island for picnics and to play baseball and softball.
"This could be a wonderful, fun, exciting New York experience," said Mr. Stringer. "I just want to make sure that everyone in the community gets a chance to enjoy it, and it's not based on income."
Richard J. Davis, chairman of the Randall's Island Sports Foundation, which operates the park, said even without discounts, the admission charge is in line with the area's other water parks.
"We want to make sure the community has access and can afford to go," he said. "Maybe it becomes a family event for once or twice per summer."
Aquatic Development Group, which operates similar water parks around the country, including parks in Ohio and Florida, has said it plans to establish a program in which as many as 2,000 local children a year will get free swimming lessons. The company did not return calls seeking comment.
While the idea of a water park is popular in the neighborhoods near the island, some residents who probably would not qualify for discounts said they wondered whether they could afford to go.
"They say they're helping us by putting it here, but they're really hurting us," said Ruisdael Cintron, 21, who lives in East Harlem. "How many people in this neighborhood can go and say, 'I need to cool off,' and pay $30, $35? It's not going to happen."
Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
NY_Yankees_1979
April 10th, 2006, 04:19 PM
How does one get onto Randalls Island? The Triborough Bridge.
BrooklynRider
April 10th, 2006, 11:17 PM
Wonder if the city hopes to use this to siphon off the low income factor from the beaches in summer to spur big beachfront development.
BigMac
May 22nd, 2006, 12:14 PM
Deseret News
May 14, 2006
Water park to make splash in Big Apple
Massive project on Randalls Island is 7 years in the making
By Larry McShane
Associated Press
http://deseretnews.com/photos/2814055.jpg
Artist's rendering shows Randalls Island, facing south, with 26-acre water park in the island's northwest corner, bottom right. Not everyone is happy to see more of the city's open space disappear.
NEW YORK — A visit to the Big Apple always promised a great adventure: Times Square, Coney Island, the Empire State Building. There was never a need for some trumped-up theme park in the land of Trump himself.
Until now.
In the latest bit of suburban creep into the nation's largest city, a family-themed water park is due before summer 2007 on a piece of Randalls Island parkland at the juncture of the East and Harlem Rivers, under the vast Triborough Bridge. The site is easily reachable by car, bus, bicycle or footbridge from Manhattan, Queens and the Bronx.
The city hopes to lure more than 1.3 million visitors a year to the $168 million attraction that will boast water slides rising 80 feet into the skyline.
So are the five boroughs going Six Flags? A little bit, yes. And not everybody is pleased.
"The citizens of New York like the Brooklyn Bridge," said Billy Tallen, a performance artist who's waged a long (and losing) battle against New York's commercialization. "The consumers prefer the water parks. We insist on being citizens, not consumers."
The water park is just the latest indignity for Tallen and others who fondly recall the corner tavern, the mom-and-pop drug store, the local coffee shop. These days, it's more likely a Starbucks (159 locations in the city) or a TGIFriday's (a dozen spots, including one on 42nd Street near the Red Lobster). Last year, a 7-Eleven opened on Park Avenue South at 23rd Street — the first new Manhattan franchise for the 24-hour stores since 1982.
"And Coney Island is going to be turned into another suburban development," said Tallen, fearful of an $83 million redevelopment plan announced last year for the colorful Brooklyn beachfront.
The taming of Times Square is a fait accompli, with adult entertainment emporiums like Peepland and Show World giving way to kid-friendly fare and a comedy club. And "The Shops at Columbus Circle" is a highfalutin name for a (gasp!) mall, with outlets for J. Crew and Sephora.
But city officials and developers portrayed the 26-acre water park — an unlikely attraction in an unlikely location — as more boon than bane for both the citizens of New York and visitors. Day-trippers from outlying suburbs and tourists from elsewhere are part of the park's target audience, along with the natives.
"This is good news," said Parks Commissioner Adrian Benape, one of the park's boosters. "It has a potential to be a huge draw. We hope to be building a park for the 21st century on Randalls Island."
The water park, designed by the New York state-based Aquatic Development Group, is a virtual done deal. The city's Franchise and Concession Review Committee voted on April 11 to allow the proposed 35-year lease with Aquatic Development Group.
And so New Yorkers will soon have access to an amenity previously found only in locations like Scotrun, Pa., or Mason, Ill., or Grapevine, Texas.
The New York attraction will include wave pools, action rivers and wading pools, and plenty of slides. A seven-acre indoor beach will give New Yorkers a year-round attraction; Coney Island, in contrast, is strictly seasonal (except to those twisted Polar Bear Club swimmers who take an annual winter dip in the Atlantic).
The new construction won't affect any of the other events on the island, including concerts and various track meets in the Icahn Stadium.
According to David Sangree, a water park consultant and president of Hotel & Leisure Advisors, the vast majority of the nation's 71 water parks are located far from urban centers.
Wisconsin, with 30, is the state with the most water parks.
The New York facility would operate under unique circumstances. The new breed of water parks — like the Great Wolf Lodge that opened recently in Pennsylvania and a Six Flags indoor water park that opened in upstate New York — are typically attached to hotels, with admission reserved for overnight guests only. The New York operation, since it's on city parkland, will work with day passes and without a hotel.
It took seven years for the city to take the plunge on the water park. The plan was proposed in 1999 by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani as a 12-acre facility. Seven years later, under the Bloomberg administration, the light at the end of the water funnels is here.
Henry Stern, who spent two decades as parks commissioner, was less surprised by word of the burgeoning water park than most New Yorkers. He sorted through various proposals for Randalls Island, including a ski jump, while in office.
"Tennis courts, stadium, concert hall, golf course — people see land, and they want to build," Stern says. "They salivate."
Since its purchase from the local American Indians in 1637, Randalls Island served as a burial ground for the indigent, a home for juvenile delinquents, an asylum for alcoholics and a rest home for Civil War veterans. After the island was designated a city park in 1933, its high points came as a sports and concert venue.
In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt attended the opening ceremonies for a stadium on the island. The Olympic trials were held as the first event, with Jesse Owens warming up for the Berlin Games with victories in the 100 meters and the long jump.
Pele played there as a member of the New York Cosmos in the 1970s. The Dave Matthews Band is one of the musical headliners who played there in recent years. And by next summer, several hundred thousands people will splash and slide their way around Randalls.
As for Stern, he offered another suggestion.
"I think it would be no problem if it was left alone," he said. "It's doesn't have to be a happening. It's an open space, an island in the heart of the city."
© 2006 Deseret News Publishing Company
LeCom
May 22nd, 2006, 07:16 PM
Great news. I'm all for it. Those who are crying about it need to shut the hell up. There's still plenty open space on the island. Besides, there is no better place in the city to put a water park - very centrally located between boros in a horribly underdeveloped area. It would be great if an amusement park opened nearby, and then the north part of the island would become New York's premier amusement area. Add some more areas and a "main street" in the middle with shopping and all that stuff, and you got a new focal point in the city. It's not like it's a pristine untouched natural park anyway, it's criss-crossed by a cluster**** of bridges already.
antinimby
May 22nd, 2006, 11:40 PM
^ Agreed.
That Billy Tallen idiot is a total moron. That place is so underutilized and is probably used by only a handful of people at any given time. In fact, there's no reason for me to go there the way it is right now, but with the new added attractions, many more people including myself, might just schlepp up there sometime.
TranspoMan
May 23rd, 2006, 12:26 AM
I guess Billy Tallen never went to Randall's Island via the M35 bus (the one that serves to the psychiatric center and the homeless shelter). I've never been on a bus where all of the windows were left open in the middle of the winter to provide fresh air. The water park would add much-needed visitors to the island (and hopefully alternative transportation services).
Scruffy88
May 23rd, 2006, 02:03 AM
Im for this waterpark. I think it should be more than a waterpark and take up more of the island, but at the same point, i went by there a few weeks ago, the spot where this is to take place is all baseball fields and at 8pm on a thursday all of them had games going. About 4-5. So maybe its not as under used as most people think
pianoman11686
October 20th, 2006, 07:56 PM
Randall’s Island water park washed up?
City bonds won’t be used to fund project; developer has no other cash on tap
by patrick arden / metro new york
OCT 20, 2006
MANHATTAN The proposed water park at Randall’s Island could be in jeopardy, with the sinking of a plan to pay for the controversial attraction.
The city’s Industrial Development Agency was set to hold a public hearing on Nov. 9 to discuss the plan to issue $215 million in taxable bonds for the project — almost $50 million more than stated just six months ago.
But now, instead of securing funds through the IDA, the upstate Aquatic Development Group is scrambling to find investors.
“We’re no longer getting bonds from the IDA,” said the firm’s attorney Ralph Bandel. “We’re going privately.”
Aquatic Development hopes to get the cash by borrowing and offering equity to investors, Bandel explained, but no arrangements have been finalized yet. “We’re hoping to close by the end of the year,” he said. “This is something that came up recently after it was put on the [IDA’s] agenda.”
Abandoning the bonds was apparently news to the city IDA.
“They had not completed their paperwork with us,” noted spokesperson Janel Patterson. “They have to provide us evidence of ability [to repay the bonds], and there’s also due diligence we do that we had not completed.”
City Comptroller William Thompson was opposed to the park when it came before the city’s franchise review commission earlier this year.
He wanted the project reopened for bids, since it had doubled in size and quadrupled in cost after the 35-year concession was awarded in 2000. A “seriously flawed process,” he charged, had led to a sole-source bid for a large private project on public land.
When Aquatic Development won the contract under the Giuliani administration, one of the firm’s principal investors was Albany businessman Jerry Abbruzzese. In the mid-’90s Abbruzzese had rescued the company from bankruptcy. Thompson said the Chapter 11 declaration raised questions about the viability of the deal.
Aquatic Development’s president, Herb Ellis, is a partner in another business venture called Steuben Place Partners, which couldn’t repay a $1.5 million loan to the Albany IDA.
“The IDA had borrowed the money from the federal government, and then lent it to Steuben,” said Jeff Sullivan, a spokesman for the Albany Local Development Corp. “The IDA had to cover the obligation on the loan from the feds, but Steuben is still liable.”
Asked whether Ellis’s Albany problems came up in talks with the city IDA, Bandel responded, “I really don’t recall.”
‘Park use’?
Critics believe the parkland should have been alienated by the state before allowing a private attraction to be built. But the Parks Dept. claims the plan serves a “park use,” and “no alienation is required,” said spokesman Warner Johnston. “This contract is terminable at will by us.”
The ability to revoke the concession at will has been determined by state courts to be necessary to avoid alienating parkland. But that same condition could make it harder for a concessionaire to borrow money, said attorney John Siegal, who represented a developer who tried to bid for the Randall’s Island project in 1999.
© 2006 Metro. All Rights Reserved.
antinimby
October 20th, 2006, 10:57 PM
No surprise there.
Now you know why I am always skeptical about any grand projects we hear about.
Believe it only when you see it.
urbanaturalist
October 21st, 2006, 12:29 PM
Wonder if the city hopes to use this to siphon off the low income factor from the beaches in summer to spur big beachfront development.
Wow, could you get anymore more back handedly racist than that.:mad:
lofter1
October 21st, 2006, 12:54 PM
If you knew BrooklynRider you'd see that he meant his comment as a slam potentially racist real estate / development policies ...
NIMBYkiller
March 20th, 2007, 04:34 AM
Sorry to see the project going down like this. Hopefully it'll return. I think Northern Randalls Island is prime for amusement park type development. Use the Triborough as a good way to seperate the area into 3 sections.
1. Water park in the NW corner
2. Sports arena and Concerts in the Southwest corner. I think this would be the perfect location for the Jets. Perhaps use the Jets stadium for the concerts as well. Concerts and other shows during the off season, games during the football season. There's a driving range there already, right? If it can be done, maybe squeeze in a soccer field as well between the two or along the water
3. On the NE corner would remain the small ball fields, as well as a new minor league stadium. Each boro should have a minor league team(with Staten Island obviously being the worst, and Queens second worst, hehe). The ball fields would have to be shifted, probably further south, closer to the FDNY facility.
Parking garages between the triboro and the hell gate tracks. Ground level parking by the Jets stadium and the driving range. More parking garages on the extreme north of the island east of the triboro. The same parking lots can easily be used for all the events. The water park, driving range, concerts, and minor league baseball open during the warmer monthes. Then, use the same parking lots during the football season for game days. The ground level parking lot will allow for tailgating. Obviously, a shuttle bus looping around, connecting all the parking lots, would be needed. It'd also connect to the ferry(I personally think there should be two terminals, one on each side of the island).
The Saltwater marsh would remain, which is great b/c it'll serve as a barrier between the psych hospital and the amusement area. Also, the walkway around the island would be nice
The roller coasters and whatever other amusements can be at Coney Island. This way, they aren't really competing with each directly since it's technically not the same. A ferry would connect the two places.
Also, I'd be strongly against any residential development on the island, I.E, condos. I think the south part of the island works great as a psych hospital and whatever else.
BTW, I would NOT count on a subway on the island....ever
brianac
September 18th, 2007, 06:24 AM
It appears there was a lot of truth in previous posts.
New York Times.
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/timothy_williams/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
Published: September 18, 2007
The developer of a $168 million water park planned for Randalls Island has failed to meet the city’s deadline for arranging financing, Comptroller William C. Thompson Jr. (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/t/william_c_jr_thompson/index.html?inline=nyt-per) said yesterday. In a letter to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/michael_r_bloomberg/index.html?inline=nyt-per), he said that the developer, Randalls Island Aquatic Leisure L.L.C., had not started construction even though work was supposed to have started seven months ago. The company could not be reached for comment last night. Warner Johnston, a spokesman for the Department of Parks and Recreation, said that the city had extended the financing deadline to tomorrow. “In the event that the concessionaire is unable to fulfill its financial commitments under the agreement, the city will take appropriate steps to ensure that development of this major community improvement continues,” Mr. Johnston said in a statement.
http://www.risf.org/projects_waterpark2.html
brianac
April 2nd, 2008, 06:30 AM
20 New Courts and a Stadium Planned on Randalls Island
By JOSHUA ROBINSON
Published: April 2, 2008
Besides the No. 7 train, another way to get directly to a state-of-the-art tennis complex in New York is to practice, practice, practice. While not quite matching the United States Tennis Center in Flushing, Queens, a company that operates sports facilities is hoping to change that.On Thursday, Sportime, in collaboration with the Randalls Island Sports Foundation, will break ground on a $13 million tennis complex on Randalls Island in an effort to boost participation in a city where the sport has lagged in recent years.
“Back in the 1970s, when I was chasing tennis balls for tips, there were probably 100 to 150 more tennis courts in Manhattan than there are today,” said Claude Okin, Sportime’s managing partner. “And then over time, the demands for the square footage pushed them out. Now there’s just a smattering of year-round courts in Manhattan.”
The Randalls Island complex will be next to the existing tennis center and will feature 20 new courts — 10 hard-surface courts and 10 clay courts — and a 4,000-seat stadium, according to Okin.
Sportime has managed the current facility for the last two years, although it needed renovation and featured none of the amenities planned for the new complex: a training and fitness center, a pro shop, a cafe and classrooms.
Sportime hopes to attract young players.
The project is the latest in a wave of improvements on Randalls Island. Icahn Stadium, a track and field facility, opened in 2005, and 60 athletic fields are under development.
Rich Davis, chairman of the foundation’s board of trustees, said the new facility would provide opportunities for children in the Bronx and East Harlem, something that Patrick McEnroe (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/patrick_mcenroe/index.html?inline=nyt-per) said was “certainly needed in the metropolitan area.”
“It’ll be great for kids who want to play just to have something positive to do, as far as exercise and staying in shape,” said McEnroe, captain of the United States Davis Cup team. “But also kids who are looking to be more serious about playing the game. And the end goal would be to find a couple of them who could go on and make it in the pros.”
McEnroe and his brother, John, are active in World Team Tennis. Beginning in July 2009, the Randalls Island complex’s 4,000-seat stadium will be the new home for the league’s New York Sportimes.
“I think it’ll benefit a lot of tennis fanatics in New York,” Patrick McEnroe said. “And maybe it’ll create a few more, too.”
Copyright 2008 The New York Times.
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