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From declining rural villages to the inner cities of the world’s great metropolises, ruined buildings and abandoned spaces stand waiting to be repurposed and revived. Doing so not only restores function to these structures but can potentially reinvigorate entire communities. In this episode, Minds Worth Meeting sits down with Dan Barasch, leading expert on the future of architecture and design and co-founder and executive director of New York’s The Lowline, a technology-enabled underground park inside a long-unused Manhattan trolley terminal, the first of its kind in the world. Barasch’s insights can inspire not just designers, architects and urban planners but community leaders and real estate developers. Drawing on his experiences conceiving and directing the ongoing Lowline project, Barasch reveals how to reimagine and rebuild in abandoned spaces in a way that strengthens community bonds, honors the historic character of neighborhoods and towns and contributes to the aesthetic inheritance of humanity. Barasch also discusses his new book, “Ruin and Redemption in Architecture” (Phaidon Press, April 2019), and how it can provide examples and creative motivation to those seeking to resurrect buildings and spaces which have been destroyed or allowed to decay. For more information about the future of design and urban planning and Dan Barasch’s work as discussed in this episode, visit the links below: • The Big Business of Ruins • From Ruin to Redemption: Incredible Before-and-After Images Show How Abandoned Buildings Have Been Given New Leases on Life • The Upside Down: Inside Manhattan’s Lowline Subterranean Park Follow Dan on Twitter: @kineticdb and @thelowlinenyc Dan Barasch is available for speaking engagements and advisory/consulting services through exclusive representation by Stern Speakers, a division of Stern Strategy Group®. For more from Minds Worth Meeting, follow us on social media @sternstrategy, @sternspeakers and visit https://sternstrategy.com/minds-worth-meeting/.
Dan Barasch et James Ramsey ont une idée délirante - créer un parc, plein de verdure, sous la ville de New York. Ensemble, ils sont en train de développer le « Lowline », un espace vert souterrain de la taille d'un terrain de foot. Ils le construisent dans un vieux terminus de métro, abandonné en 1948, en utilisant une technologie qui permet de récolter la lumière solaire au niveau du sol et de la rediriger sous terre. Ainsi, c'est un parc qui peut fleurir, même en hiver.
댄 바라쉬와 제임스 람지는 말도 안되는 계획을 갖고 있습니다. 뉴욕시 바로 아래에 녹색이 가득한 공원을 만드는 계획이죠. 두 사람은 로우라인을 개발하고 있는데 축구장만한 크기의 지하 녹지공간입니다. 그들은 1948년에 방치된 트롤리 터미널에 지상의 햇빛을 수집해서 아래로 끌어와 지하공원을 만듭니다. 그곳은 겨울에도 즐길 수 있는 공원입니다.
Dan Barasch und James Ramsey haben einen verrückten Plan: einen Park mit Grünflächen unter New York zu errichten. Die beiden entwickeln in einer 1948 aufgegebenen U-Bahnstation die Lowline, eine unterirdische Grünfläche in der Größe eines Fußballfeldes. Dazu nutzen sie Technologie, die das Sonnenlicht über der Erde sammelt und nach unten leitet. So kann der Park sogar im Winter blühen.
Dan Barasch e James Ramsey têm um plano maluco: criar um parque, repleto de verde, por baixo da cidade de Nova Iorque. Os dois estão desenvolvendo a Lowline, um espaço verde subterrâneo do tamanho de um campo de futebol americano. Estão construindo-o em um terminal de bondes abandonado em 1948, usando tecnologias que coletam a luz solar da superfície e a direcionam para o subterrâneo. É um parque que pode prosperar mesmo no inverno.
Dan Barasch y James Ramsey tienen un plan alocado para crear un parque lleno de vegetación, debajo de la ciudad de Nueva York. Ambos están desarrollando la Low Line, un espacio verde subterráneo del tamaño de un campo de fútbol. Lo están construyendo en una terminal de tranvía abandonada en 1948, usando una tecnología que capta la luz solar en la superficie, a nivel del suelo y luego la dirige bajo tierra. Es un parque que puede florecer incluso en invierno.
Dan Barasch and James Ramsey have a crazy plan — to create a park, filled with greenery, underneath New York City. The two are developing the Lowline, an underground greenspace the size of a football field. They're building it in a trolley terminal abandoned in 1948, using technology that harvests sunlight above-ground and directs it down below. It's a park that can thrive, even in winter.
Returning to CityTalk are Joshua David and Robert Hammond, co-founders of Friends of the High Line, discussing the park’s last section. Joining them is Dan Barasch, co-founder of the Delancey Underground, sharing his vision for a new park space.