A light of dignity in New York's Central Park
Loading...
Early in this first sweltering week of summer, the weather station in New York鈥檚 famed Central Park recorded the city鈥檚 highest temperatures in more than a decade. Now, at week鈥檚 end, this 843-acre oasis in Manhattan marks a high point of a different sort.
On Friday, the park鈥檚 recently completed $160 million Davis Center opens an immense, newly refurbished swimming pool to the public. The facility鈥檚 soaring pavilion, lush landscaping, and inviting waters restore both beauty and accessibility to a formerly neglected and crumbling section of Central Park. The remodeled environment and infrastructure also symbolize a rebuilding of civic inclusion and trust with residents in adjacent Harlem and East Harlem.
From the mid-1970s through the 1990s, when New York City struggled to recover from near bankruptcy, this northeast corner of Central Park became synonymous with urban decay and delinquency. Perceptions of neighborhoods that were predominantly Black or Hispanic conflated poverty and criminality. In 1989, a horrific sexual assault of a woman jogger resulted in the wrongful conviction of five Black and Hispanic teenagers from Harlem. They were exonerated in 2002 and released. But a deep sense of hurt and suspicion lingered within their community.
When the nonprofit Central Park Conservancy launched the restoration after the pandemic, 鈥淭here was a lot of learning about the residual anger and disaffection,鈥 according to its president, Betsy Smith. But conversations with community representatives showed 鈥淭here are a lot of people who care about integrating this community into the park,鈥 she told Bloomberg News.
Prominent among them is Yusef Salaam, one of the wrongfully arrested teens. After his release, Mr. Salaam had written a memoir, 鈥淏etter, Not Bitter.鈥 He married and built a family. And in 2023, he was elected to the City Council.
Speaking at the April launch of the pavilion, Mr. Salaam acknowledged the 鈥渟tunning architectural accomplishment鈥 of the complex. Both the pool and the building are multiuse, multiseason marvels of design and engineering. The pool converts to an artificial turf-topped field in spring and fall, and to a skating rink in winter. The building has a half-acre green roof and floor-to-ceiling glass doors that pivot to let in summer breezes or keep out cold air.
But to Mr. Salaam, the facility is about much more than recreation. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a homecoming ... a healing for me,鈥 he said, according to The West Side Spirit. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a restoration for our community 鈥 not only our land, but our dignity as well.鈥
鈥淭he shadow of injustice loomed large here. Today, we reclaim that light,鈥 he declared.