Archive for the ‘Green’ Category

A Wi-Fi Meandering

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

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Now that the weather has gotten warmer it was once again time to do my spring check-up on the Downtown Alliance’s Wi-Fi equipment and hotspots. I created my checklist, asking: How is the bandwidth at each location? How much coverage is still accessible at each spot? Has anything changed I should know about?

The reality is that I was pretty sure there were no problems with our hotspots for a couple of reasons. First, the Downtown Alliance only receives only one or two complaints each month. Second, in April we had the most successful month since we launched free Wi-Fi hotspots 8 years ago.

The Downtown Alliance experienced more than 18,500 connections to our Lower Manhattan Wi-Fi Network that month, and in May, we had more than 18,000 connections again.

But, my mantra is: better safe than sorry.

I met a team from Sky-Packets, our Wi-Fi vendor, at the Hive at 55, the Downtown Alliance’s co-working facility at 55 Broad Street, which Sky-Packets helps to sponsor. We walked down Broad to Beaver Street, turned right, and meandered up to the front of Bowling Green Park to start our testing.

(In addition to the testing, I wanted to snap pictures of each hotspot [check out the Downtown Alliance’s updated Wi-Fi page]).

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Everything was working at Bowling Green pretty well, so we moved further south to Peter Minuit plaza, where Broadway turns into Whitehall, for reasons unclear to me (even after a Google search!), and turns east angling to the river. Peter Minuit is the newly redesigned plaza in front of the Staten Island Ferry terminal and it is beautiful, unique-looking chairs, and has a visitor kiosk (staffed by the Downtown Alliance!) like almost nothing you’ve seen before. Seen from above it resembles a windmill, but since you probably won’t get that perspective you can check out this image from our local news source The Broadsheet.

Unfortunately, the Verizon DSL line was down and there was no service there or across the street at the Whitehall-Water Street Pedestrian Plaza. One Sky-Packets staffer stayed behind to address the problem. When we set the hotspot up, we installed what’s called an iBoot, that can check when the line is bad and reboot our Wi-Fi to see if it can get a better level of service. It worked like it was supposed and did provide some stability every time the line went down, but it wasn’t fixed until Verizon was able to solve their problem in the neighborhood (which fortunately happened that same day).

Meanwhile, I continued with the rest of the team, walking up Water Street to 55 Water (where I saw the falcons last month) and the Vietnam Memorial Plaza and Elevated Acre.

Our access points are on the 14th floor and it turned out that someone decided to put a large flood light right in front of one of our access points, but it still worked pretty well, and the other one worked great. While there were definitely some people taking advantage of our free Wi-Fi on the plaza, there was a class of high school students who were actually using pen and paper to work on something. It was strange seeing 20-30 kids, all with papers in front of them and not a single technological device in sight.

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We left that behind and walked up the steps to the Elevated Acre, one of my favorite places in Lower Manhattan, because you really forget you’re in the city and can enjoy a little bit of nature and the excitement of boats whizzing by.

Really not a bad way to spend a morning in Lower Manhattan. I’ll cover the other sites in my next meandering.

Mulching in Lower Manhattan

Monday, January 10th, 2011
NYC Council Member Margaret Chin takes part in MulchFest 2011

NYC Council Member Margaret Chin takes part in MulchFest 2011

It was a brisk, winter’s day, but that didn’t deter hundreds of Lower Manhattanites from taking part in the Downtown Alliance’s annual MulchFest in Bowling Green Park this past weekend.

Thanks to the Chip Trip – the Downtown Alliance’s special route within its Downtown Connection free bus service that day – hundreds of discarded Christmas trees made their way to Bowling Green.

The New York City Departments of Sanitation and Parks and Recreation were on hand, with a chipper and with mascots to greet kids. And, making this even more special was an Electronic Waste Recycling event, held by the Lower East Side Ecology Center and Tekserve. Con Edison, Crumbs and Whole Foods also chipped in.

Residents and retailers alike – and even a busload of students – descended on Lower Manhattan top drop off used televisions, radios, cell phones, laptops, keyboards, and cables.

Of course, given the low temps, the Downtown Alliance made sure everyone could get a free cup of hot cocoa and apple cider and snacks. And, as the trees were turned into mulch, the Downtown Alliance handed out quite a few bags to folks to take home to use in their gardens or houseplants.

You can watch video of the event here. Or, check out all of the photos of the day here.

Winter in Bowling Green

Monday, January 10th, 2011

It was only a few months ago when the Downtown Alliance hosted a Fall Community Planting Day in Bowling Green, and hundreds of folks turned out to pitch in. Well, a visit this weekend shows that things are holding up well, and so we cannot wait until the Spring thaw so we can get to work and watch thousands of tulips crop up. This weekend, we took a peek inside and saw that the ornamental kale that we planted is looking good. We cannot wait until Spring!

Ornamental kale in the snow

Just Recycle Those Old Gadgets! Here’s an Easy Way to Do It

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

Caroline Kruse

By Caroline Kruse

Caroline Kruse is Development Director at the Lower East Side Ecology Center

It may have been you, or maybe it was a friend of yours. It could have even been your parents. But at least one of you got a new computer, iPod, or other fun gadget for the holidays. The shiny new toy is everything you’ve ever wanted (at least for now), but what will you do with the product that got replaced?

In the case of electronic waste, or e-waste, What do I do with this? is a major problem across the country, and especially in New York City. The average American household has more than 24 electronic devices, and the average NYC apartment is simply not conducive to storing, well, anything. The result is that your outdated gadgets quickly become personae non gratae. You have two options: recycle or trash.

Responsibly recycling e-waste is crucial because e-waste contains all kinds of nasty stuff, like lead, mercury, cadmium, phosphors and flame-retardants, and when you put them in the trash, you’re sending those toxic materials to landfills where they can leach into groundwater or to incinerators where they can poison the air.

If that doesn’t sufficiently freak you out, consider the fact that there are large-scale incinerators as close as Newark, NJ. Recycling your electronics means that the toxic compounds are handled responsibly and the metal, plastic, and glass get recycled in a process similar to your curbside recycling. In other words, you’re creating three levels of good karma: putting less trash on your curb, reducing the need for virgin materials to make new products, and keeping toxins out of landfills.

So now that you’re convinced you want to recycle, you can take advantage of an electronic waste recycling event hosted by the Downtown Alliance and the Lower East Side Ecology Center on January 8 from 10 AM to 4 PM at Bowling Green. We’ll be collecting working and non-working computers, monitors, printers, scanners, keyboards, mice, cables, TVs, VCRs, DVD players, phones, A/V equipment, cell phones and PDAs.

The Downtown Alliance also has the how-to-get-to-there question figured out by having Downtown Connection buses make a special Chip Trip to bring you and your e-waste to the event.

The Ecology Center has recycled more than 900 tons of electronic waste in New York City since 2003 and will be holding a total of 10 electronic waste events in January.  For more information about these events and other community-based environmental programs, visit Ecology Center’s website or call (212) 477-4022.

The event at Bowling Green will also include an easy and fun way to get rid of your holiday tree at Mulchfest from 10 AM to 2 PM.  Nothing says welcome to the new year like sipping hot cider and hanging out with recycling mascots while you watch your holiday décor go through a huge chipper. Just remember to take off the lights and ornaments.

Click here for more information about Mulchfest and here for a  Chip Trip route map.

Just Recycle Those Old Gadgets! Here's an Easy Way to Do It

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

Caroline Kruse

By Caroline Kruse

Caroline Kruse is Development Director at the Lower East Side Ecology Center

It may have been you, or maybe it was a friend of yours. It could have even been your parents. But at least one of you got a new computer, iPod, or other fun gadget for the holidays. The shiny new toy is everything you’ve ever wanted (at least for now), but what will you do with the product that got replaced?

In the case of electronic waste, or e-waste, What do I do with this? is a major problem across the country, and especially in New York City. The average American household has more than 24 electronic devices, and the average NYC apartment is simply not conducive to storing, well, anything. The result is that your outdated gadgets quickly become personae non gratae. You have two options: recycle or trash.

Responsibly recycling e-waste is crucial because e-waste contains all kinds of nasty stuff, like lead, mercury, cadmium, phosphors and flame-retardants, and when you put them in the trash, you’re sending those toxic materials to landfills where they can leach into groundwater or to incinerators where they can poison the air.

If that doesn’t sufficiently freak you out, consider the fact that there are large-scale incinerators as close as Newark, NJ. Recycling your electronics means that the toxic compounds are handled responsibly and the metal, plastic, and glass get recycled in a process similar to your curbside recycling. In other words, you’re creating three levels of good karma: putting less trash on your curb, reducing the need for virgin materials to make new products, and keeping toxins out of landfills.

So now that you’re convinced you want to recycle, you can take advantage of an electronic waste recycling event hosted by the Downtown Alliance and the Lower East Side Ecology Center on January 8 from 10 AM to 4 PM at Bowling Green. We’ll be collecting working and non-working computers, monitors, printers, scanners, keyboards, mice, cables, TVs, VCRs, DVD players, phones, A/V equipment, cell phones and PDAs.

The Downtown Alliance also has the how-to-get-to-there question figured out by having Downtown Connection buses make a special Chip Trip to bring you and your e-waste to the event.

The Ecology Center has recycled more than 900 tons of electronic waste in New York City since 2003 and will be holding a total of 10 electronic waste events in January.  For more information about these events and other community-based environmental programs, visit Ecology Center’s website or call (212) 477-4022.

The event at Bowling Green will also include an easy and fun way to get rid of your holiday tree at Mulchfest from 10 AM to 2 PM.  Nothing says welcome to the new year like sipping hot cider and hanging out with recycling mascots while you watch your holiday décor go through a huge chipper. Just remember to take off the lights and ornaments.

Click here for more information about Mulchfest and here for a  Chip Trip route map.

Fall Community Planting Day

Monday, October 25th, 2010
Downtown Alliance staff worked with hundreds of volunteers to plant tulip bulbs around the park.

Downtown Alliance staff worked with hundreds of volunteers to plant tulip bulbs around the park.

Hundreds of community volunteers joined New York City Council Member Margaret Chin to plant tulips at Bowling Green Saturday during the third annual Fall Community Planting Day of the Alliance for Downtown New York.

“This weekend, we brought together the community to help green Lower Manhattan in a sustainable way and keep the planting cycle going at the city’s oldest park,” said Elizabeth H. Berger, President of the Downtown Alliance. “And what a fall scene it was—with pumpkin-painting, cider, pumpkin cupcakes and hundreds of families working together to beautify the community. We look forward to seeing everyone out for our Spring Community Planting Day in May at Mannahatta Park.”

Starting at 10 AM, families and area workers streamed into the park, grabbed tools and gloves, and got to work planting tulip bulbs and ornamental kale. Others painted pumpkins to take home. Staff from the Downtown Alliance and Nielson Elefante Nurseries handed out tools and provided planting advice.

You can view pictures of the event on the Downtown Alliance’s Flickr page and see a YouTube video from the event.

Planting Day came ten days after Adopt A Geranium Day, when the Downtown Alliance distributed more than 4,000 free, potted geraniums to people who live, work or were visiting in Lower Manhattan. Both events are part of the Downtown Alliance’s Going Green Downtown initiative, dedicated to building an environmentally sustainable Lower Manhattan. The series also includes Mulch Mania, a January event that grinds holiday trees into mulch for New York City’s parks, and Spring Community Planting Day, when Lower Manhattan residents, workers and visitors plant flowers in Mannahatta Park on Wall Street in early May.

Fall Community Planting Day was made possible with support from the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation, Partnerships for Parks, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, Council Member Chin, Community Board 1, Whole Foods Market and Crumbs Bake Shop.

Thousands Adopt Geraniums in Bowling Green Park

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Geranium

Thousands of Lower Manhattan residents, workers and visitors showed up yesterday in Bowling Green Park to take home a free plant as the Alliance for Downtown New York held its annual Adopt A Geranium event—part of the organization’s Going Green Downtown initiative.

More than 4,000 geraniums were dug up and distributed to make room for tulips that will be planted in the park during the Downtown Alliance’s Fall Community Planting Day on Saturday, October 23.

Yesterday’s line around Bowling Green’s perimeter included office workers picking up multiple plants to share with colleagues, men who wanted a plant for their wives or girlfriends and a group of curious preschoolers accompanied by their teachers. Even Sad Panda—who often appears on the streets of Lower Manhattan— wanted to get in on the fun.

Special guests included Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, State Senator Daniel Squadron, City Council Member Margaret Chin, Battery Park City Authority Chairman William C. Thompson, Jr. and Madelyn Wils, Executive Vice President for Planning and Development of the New York City Economic Development Corporation.

What struck me in particular was the enthusiasm everyone had for the reusable, eco-friendly, tote bags that the Downtown Alliance supplied for carrying geraniums.  I heard several people mention what wonderful shopping bags they would make for trips to the market. We’re glad they’re keeping it green.

After receiving a geranium, participants could get their picture taken with the plant.  You can view photos of the event on the Downtown Alliance’s Flickr page. We will add more photos to the page throughout the week.  You can also check out a video of the event on YouTube.

Ripe & Ready: Come Pick From Eight Downtown Farmers Markets

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010
Shoppers enjoy the Fulton Stall Market at South Street Seaport.

Shoppers enjoy the Fulton Stall Market at South Street Seaport.

Growing up in an Italian family that planted its own vegetable garden, there’s a certain freshness and tastiness I got to experience from just-picked tomatoes or zucchini straight off the vine that you can’t find anywhere else. Or so I thought.

Thanks to the abundance of farmers markets that have sprung up all over Lower Manhattan, I can now pick from among many other families who grow their own—but on a much larger scale than a backyard in Brooklyn.

I can now take a lunchtime stroll to an outdoor “flea market of fruits and veggies” and choose from among the best selection there is without getting dirt under my fingernails. And not only am I getting top-quality, healthy produce—it’s also saving me a weekend trip to the supermarket.

Battery Park City will finally get its own farmers market on July 15 with the opening of the World Financial Center Greenmarket located on the corner of South End Avenue and Liberty Street.

And on Saturday, July 10, Downtown became home to the first and only farmers market created by a hotel in NYC. The Andaz Wall Street Farmers Market’s participating Hudson Valley sellers supply the hotel’s restaurant, Wall & Water, with their seasonal menu ingredients.  I got to experience this firsthand when I dined at Wall & Water for this summer’s NYC Restaurant Week.  I ate every morsel of my delicious three-course meal prepared by Chef Maximo Lopez May and his staff.

Later this month, the New Amsterdam Market will open just north of the South Street Seaport, offering yet another choice for weekend food shopping in Lower Manhattan.

It seems that wherever you turn in Lower Manhattan, you’re just steps away from good, healthy eating. So don’t let summer go by without checking out at least one of these wonderful markets:

Bowling Green Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Thursdays from 8 AM-5 PM year round

Staten Island Ferry Terminal Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Fridays from 8 AM-7 PM year round

City Hall Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Fridays 8 AM-5 PM, from June through November

Zuccotti Park Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Thursdays from 8 AM-6 PM, from April through December

Fulton Stall Market at South Street Seaport
Open Sundays from 11 AM-6 PM through October; reopens in the spring

• World Financial Center Greenmarket
Thursdays from 8 AM-6 PM, from July 1 – December 31

• Andaz Wall Street Hotel
Saturdays from 8 AM-3 PM starting July 10 through Thanksgiving

New Amsterdam Market
Saturday, July 24, 11 AM-4 PM; Sunday, August 22, 11 AM-4 PM; Sundays from September 12 to December 19

Ripe & Ready: Come Pick From Eight Downtown Farmers Markets

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010
Shoppers enjoy the Fulton Stall Market at South Street Seaport.

Shoppers enjoy the Fulton Stall Market at South Street Seaport.

Growing up in an Italian family that planted its own vegetable garden, there’s a certain freshness and tastiness I got to experience from just-picked tomatoes or zucchini straight off the vine that you can’t find anywhere else. Or so I thought.

Thanks to the abundance of farmers markets that have sprung up all over Lower Manhattan, I can now pick from among many other families who grow their own—but on a much larger scale than a backyard in Brooklyn.

I can now take a lunchtime stroll to an outdoor “flea market of fruits and veggies” and choose from among the best selection there is without getting dirt under my fingernails. And not only am I getting top-quality, healthy produce—it’s also saving me a weekend trip to the supermarket.

Battery Park City will finally get its own farmers market on July 15 with the opening of the World Financial Center Greenmarket located on the corner of South End Avenue and Liberty Street.

And on Saturday, July 10, Downtown became home to the first and only farmers market created by a hotel in NYC. The Andaz Wall Street Farmers Market’s participating Hudson Valley sellers supply the hotel’s restaurant, Wall & Water, with their seasonal menu ingredients.  I got to experience this firsthand when I dined at Wall & Water for this summer’s NYC Restaurant Week.  I ate every morsel of my delicious three-course meal prepared by Chef Maximo Lopez May and his staff.

Later this month, the New Amsterdam Market will open just north of the South Street Seaport, offering yet another choice for weekend food shopping in Lower Manhattan.

It seems that wherever you turn in Lower Manhattan, you’re just steps away from good, healthy eating. So don’t let summer go by without checking out at least one of these wonderful markets:

Bowling Green Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Thursdays from 8 AM-5 PM year round

Staten Island Ferry Terminal Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Fridays from 8 AM-7 PM year round

City Hall Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Fridays 8 AM-5 PM, from June through November

Zuccotti Park Greenmarket
Open Tuesdays & Thursdays from 8 AM-6 PM, from April through December

Fulton Stall Market at South Street Seaport
Open Sundays from 11 AM-6 PM through October; reopens in the spring

• World Financial Center Greenmarket
Thursdays from 8 AM-6 PM, from July 1 – December 31

• Andaz Wall Street Hotel
Saturdays from 8 AM-3 PM starting July 10 through Thanksgiving

New Amsterdam Market
Saturday, July 24, 11 AM-4 PM; Sunday, August 22, 11 AM-4 PM; Sundays from September 12 to December 19

Some Relaxing New Open Spaces Will Grace Downtown's Streets

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010
Imagination Playground at Burling Slip

Imagination Playground at Burling Slip (Photo: NYC Parks Dept.)

As summer heats up, Lower Manhattan’s throngs of workers, visitors and residents will be searching for open spaces to have lunch and soak up some rays.  Happily, they won’t have to look far because open space is increasing in Lower Manhattan.

In 2004, Downtown had 19 parks or open spaces available for public use south of Murray Street. Through this year and the next, seven new or redesigned spaces will come online for public enjoyment—representing an investment of more than $200 million.

This month, I’m looking forward to visiting Burling Slip Playground—a joint effort between the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation and the Rockwell Group. The park will have a maritime theme, consistent with the Seaport area, and will offer many activities for your little bathtub sailors and pirates!

Also in July, the newly designed Delury Square Park is scheduled to open, providing Fulton Street with a 10,000 square-foot respite complete with benches and a small waterfall.

In August, Peter Minuit Plaza is scheduled to open, anchored by the New Amsterdam Plein and Pavilion, which will contain an information kiosk and food concession.  Also in August, sculpture-lovers will find beauty and solace at the newly reconstructed Louise Nevelson Plaza. In September, another renovated Fulton Street respite will be opened—Titanic Park, at the entrance to the South Street Seaport.

Lower Manhattan has never been so green. I hope you will join me in seeking out these new spots for relaxation and recreation.