Skip to main content

Featured Post

Atlantic Yards/Pacific Park FAQ, timeline, and infographics (pinned post)

Municipal Art Society president abruptly fired; recent controversy over direction includes Ratner award

From the New York Times, 1/7/17, Municipal Art Society Abruptly Ousts Its President:
The Municipal Art Society of New York, long a leading voice in efforts to preserve the cityā€™s history and elegant skyline, has ousted its new president less than a year after her hiring and replaced her with a former city and state parks administrator.
Gina Pollara, the former president, said in an interview that she joined the organization last year with the belief that she had a mandate to increase activism in the face of criticism that it had not been as vocal a development watchdog in recent years. 
...The societyā€™s most renowned preservationist campaign came in the mid-1970s, when it joined forces with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis to block a plan to build a skyscraper atop Grand Central Terminal. More recently, though, there was an outcry [my coverage]  in 2014 when the society gave its signature Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Medal, meant to recognize ā€œan outstanding contribution to New York City,ā€ to executives of Forest City Ratner, the company responsible for the controversial Atlantic Yards development in Brooklyn, which used eminent domain to pave the way for a basketball stadium and apartment buildings. (It also handled such notable projects as a downtown apartment tower by Frank Gehry and the headquarters of The New York Times.)
Here's earlier coverage by the Architect's Newspaper, which was ahead of the story.

Update: a letter from the City Club of New York, via Architect's Newspaper:
More than that, she seized upon MASā€™s apparently recovered will to engage in its traditional advocacy function. She conducted a series of public policy forums. She worked to promote better governance of privately owned public spaces. She spoke out in support of the City Clubā€™s position on Pier 55. She participated in meetings of the City Clubā€™s Urban Design Committee. And we participated with her on MAS projects.
In short, she generated a sense of institutional revival and a spirit of cooperation that the City Club warmly welcomed.

Comments