Posts Tagged ‘Liz Berger’

Back to the Future For the Financial District

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Stone Street in the Financial District

By Liz Berger

Our mission at the Alliance for Downtown New York is to advance Lower Manhattan as a global model for a 21st century central business district, a compelling place to work, live and visit.  This objective contemplates the future as well as the past, because for much of the last 400 years our community has been both commercial and residential. Though the canyons of 20th century Wall Street were business-only, the Financial District first took shape in the 1700s as securities traders who lived in the neighborhood met to make deals under a buttonwood tree near what is now 68 Wall.

So it’s back to the future for the Financial District. I’ve been proud to witness firsthand its most recent resurgence—as New York City’s premier live/work community. The transition from business-only to business-plus was just starting when I moved below Fulton Street in 1982.

The neighborhood was starkly different then. In fact, it wasn’t yet a neighborhood, or hadn’t been one for more than a century.  Wall Street was the world’s best-known business address, which meant lots of action during business hours but not much in the evenings or on weekends. Though 10,000 of us lived below Chambers Street, there was only one all-night diner, and forget about buying a quart of milk after hours.

But we loved life on the cusp of New York City’s past, present and future. No supermarket?  We lugged our groceries home on the subway.  No chic Saturday night bistro?  We dined in. No gift shop? We found great things at J&R, Century 21, Brooks Brothers, Dick’s Hardware and the Nassau Street specialty stores memorialized by Red Grooms in Ruckus Manhattan. The adventure was worth the challenge of being pioneers.

Slowly, then all of a sudden, things changed.  The Financial District remains a prime business address, but it has also become a hot residential neighborhood.  New restaurants and markets opened, and old ones expanded their hours. The past 10 years, especially, have brought a dizzying array of companies, merchants, schools and parks—and a new generation of people who call this part of Lower Manhattan home.  Nowhere is this more evident than on Wall Street itself, home to some of the world’s most prominent financial institutions but also to thousands of residents, more than a dozen new retailers and a museum.

In other words, Lower Manhattan has become a community, a place that hosted nine million visitors last year alone and where 309,000 people work and 56,000 live together. There is a powerful commonality of spirit and interest, the shared belief that, here in Lower Manhattan, Wall Street and Main Street are the same street.

This was obvious when the Community Board 1 Financial District Committee recently considered a proposal to open a methadone clinic on Maiden Lane.  The proponents must have been surprised to learn that 20,000 people live within four blocks of the proposed location and that there are four primary and elementary schools within the same radius. Led by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a group of property owners, small-business people and residents made the case that this is not your father’s week-day Wall Street but the heart of a 24/7 residential and commercial district. The application was withdrawn.

As Speaker Silver often says, Lower Manhattan is a great place to live, work and raise a family.  Nowhere is this truer than in the Financial District. No longer Manhattan’s post-modern frontier, Lower Manhattan gets better and better as more companies, more nonprofits, more entrepreneurs, more open space, more hotels, more restaurants, more stores and more people combine to make it New York City’s most dynamic place to work, live and visit.

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance

 

The Greatest City on Earth

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

The Greatest City on Earth by Linda Zacks

The Greatest City on Earth has come to the greatest neighborhood on earth!

The new public art installation, The Greatest City on Earth, was unveiled this weekend on Nassau Street between John and Fulton streets by artist Linda Zacks. It’s part of Re:Construction, a public art program produced by the Downtown Alliance through a grant supplied by the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation.

“As Lower Manhattan continues to grow, construction can be tough on small businesses and confusing for pedestrians. While we look forward to all the great improvements happening downtown, this latest Re:Construction installation is a creative and resourceful way to support small businesses, direct visitors, residents and local workers, and beautify Lower Manhattan all at the same time,” said Elizabeth H. Berger, President of the Alliance for Downtown New York.

So ignore this dreary, winter weather and step outside to see the newest, vibrant installation. You can learn more about the Re:Con program – and all of the other existing installations in Lower Manhattan – by clicking here.

Lower Manhattan Is Where I Want to Be for the Holidays

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011
shooting stars

Downtown Alliance is launching holiday lights for the 2011 season.

By Liz Berger

The holiday season is one of my favorite times of year, a time to appreciate what’s really important in life: family, friends and community.

It’s a time when Lower Manhattan seems most like a little village, with decorative lights glowing warmly from lampposts on cobblestone streets, and great festive trees brightening City Hall Park, the South Street Seaport, the Stock Exchange and countless building lobbies. I love how Lower Manhattan, the city’s oldest neighborhood, seems to harken back to an earlier era, from Stone Street to Front Street to Trinity Church. And, I love how our one square mile has everything we need.

It’s a time to think about all we’ve been through together, all the places we’re going, and the enormous changes that are making our community stronger and even more dynamic. It’s a time to bake cookies for neighbors, nod to the college students who now call Lower Manhattan home and bundle up for a stroll to the water’s edge. It’s a time to meet old friends for hot chocolate, at La Maison du Chocolat or Financier, stop in for a snack at Crepes du Nord or Takahachi Bakery, or use the Downtown Connection to window shop from Front Street to Warren Street and every street in between.

The holidays are a time to take time—to enjoy old favorites, like The Nutcracker at the World Financial Center, The Messiah at Trinity Church, the Family Hanukkah Celebration at the Museum of Jewish Heritage and the Victorian Celebration in the British Garden at Hanover Square, or to start a new holiday tradition with a visit to the National Museum of the American Indian at Bowling Green or the Ellis Island Immigration Museum in New York Harbor.

It’s a time for good cheer—even if the national economy is giving us precious little to cheer about—and a time for presents, small or large, store-bought or homemade. This year, two of Lower Manhattan’s signature retailers are celebrating milestone anniversaries: 50 years in Lower Manhattan for Century 21 Department Stores and 40 years for J&R Music and Computer World. At the same time, T.J. Maxx has opened a brand-new store at 14 Wall Street. That gives Lower Manhattan more than 625 places where shoppers can find the perfect gift, from My.Suit on Broad Street to the World Trade Art Gallery on Trinity Place.

It’s a time for old and new—for exploring restaurants and retailers that have opened in the past year, and for going back to time-honored favorites. And, it’s a time to invite friends and family to see what Lower Manhattan has to offer, perhaps with a stay at one of our 18 hotels.

This year, the Downtown Alliance is making it easy to take advantage of all of Lower Manhattan’s attractions. We’re releasing a new shopping and dining guide, we’ve expanded our mobile phone app, and we’re constantly updating the event calendar and searchable map on our new website at www.DowntownNY.com—all in time for your holiday plans.

Meanwhile, the Downtown Alliance joins City Hall in supporting Small Business Saturday on November 26. American Express cardholders who shop at independently owned small businesses can get $25 off their next credit card statement. For more information, go to www.smallbusinesssaturday.com.

The numbers tell the story. With 56,000 residents, 309,000 workers, and nine million annual visitors, Lower Manhattan is where everyone wants to be—every day, in every season. But home is where the heart is, and during the holidays, Lower Manhattan is more compelling than ever. It’s where I want to be.

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance.

Connecting with Lower Manhattan

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

Earlier today, the new Downtown Connection fleet was officially launched. The Downtown Alliance’s new fleet of buses carry up to 25 people – six more than in previous years – and are accessible to wheelchairs. New York City Council Member Margaret Chin, and representatives from Sen. Dan Squadron’s office and the Battery Park City Authority were on hand for the launch.

Click here to see photos from the Connection launch.

It’s the second announcement in as many days for the Downtown Alliance. On Monday, the non-profit launched the fourth annual Holiday Shopping campaign. Berger was joined by New York City Department of Consumer Affairs Commissioner Jonathan Mintz and J&R’s Rachelle Friedman for the news conference, held at J&R.

Click here to see photos from the holiday launch.


Berger and J&R’s Rachelle Friedman


Berger and Commissioner Mintz

Shopping & Dining for the Holidays

Monday, November 21st, 2011

holiday

Lower Manhattan has arrived as one of the most dynamic and successful live-work communities in the world, which means there is no better place to shop and celebrate the 2011 holiday season. With more than 200 store and restaurant openings since 2005, Lower Manhattan has become a premier holiday destination with an impressive assortment of gifts and dining options for all tastes and budgets.

Not sure where to begin? Look no further than the Downtown Alliance’s new Shopping & Dining Guide. This comprehensive guide is your perfect destination for access to more than 1,300 places to shop, dine, and explore, from world-famous luxury retailers to long-time favorites and new mom-and-pop shops.

To get a free guide, please email ContactUs@DowntownNY.com or download a copy at www.DowntownNY.com/holiday

“With so many options available in one very walkable square mile, it’s time for everyone to discover this secret: Lower Manhattan is the place to shop and celebrate the holiday season!” says Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth H. Berger.

This year, Lower Manhattan is more exciting than ever, offering an incredible variety of seasonal events to enjoy, gift shopping at traditional and new retailers, and many fun attractions and entertainment venues.

Visit www.DowntownNY.com to get the most up-to-date list of all the fabulous things going on in Lower Manhattan.

Putting Down Roots Here? Join Us at Bowling Green

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

Community Planting

By Liz Berger

Lower Manhattan is the city’s oldest—and also newest—neighborhood.

It is where George Washington was inaugurated as President in 1789 and where the first Congress of the United States convened that same year. It is where the New York Stock Exchange has traded on almost every business day since 1817 and where narrow, winding, cobblestone streets laid out by the Dutch in the 1600s are the business address of some of the world’s dominant creative, philanthropic and—of course—financial institutions. And for 56,000 of us, it is home.

I’ve lived south of Fulton Street for almost 30 years. This is where my husband and I bought our first apartment, where we brought our children home from the hospital, and where they went to school. We remember life here before there was a single all-night deli—back when the nearest movie theaters were in New Jersey and Battery Park City was mostly beach.

We wanted to build a new kind of community, where people lived and worked. We wanted a place that was alive and active, clean and safe, local and authentic—amid 400 years of history and character—and we waited for restaurants and stores to match Lower Manhattan’s new dynamic. We loved our neighbors, pioneers all, but we longed for a neighborhood.

Today we have one.

The population of Lower Manhattan has boomed—from under 10,000 in the early ‘80s to 56,000 now. We’re one of the city’s fastest-growing residential neighborhoods, with six new primary and secondary schools that have opened in the last two years alone.

A recent Downtown Alliance survey found that a steady surge of newcomers is moving to Lower Manhattan for the quality of life, excellent housing stock, access to subways and other mass transit, and walkability. Thirty percent of our residents walk to work, and the average commute time for those who don’t is just 22 minutes, about half the citywide average.

As we did three decades ago, Lower Manhattan’s newer residents are putting down roots. Almost two-thirds have lived in the community for five years or more, and the overwhelming majority plan to live here for at least three more. Lower Manhattan today is home to more couples and households with children than singles and roommates. We believe that the number of households with children—already 25 percent — will only increase, because, in a recent survey, 40 percent of households without children indicated that they want to have children within the next three years.

All of which is to say that Lower Manhattan is a new kind of central business district.  A globally recognized business address and international tourist destination, it is also where more and more New Yorkers want to live and raise their families: a newfangled, old-fashioned neighborhood.

Want to meet your neighbors?  Put down real roots? Join the Downtown Alliance team and me at our Fall Community Planting Day on Saturday, October 22 from 10 AM to noon in Bowling Green Park, rain or shine. You bring family and friends, we’ll bring the plants and gardening tools, and together we will plant more than 4,000 tulips in New York City’s oldest park.

Anyone who lives in, works in, or is visiting Lower Manhattan is welcome to drop by and help. This is a fun way to bring together one of the city’s newest residential communities in a park that dates back to 1733. It’s a great way to make Lower Manhattan greener and more beautiful.

Fall Community Planting Day is co-sponsored by Con Edison, the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer,  New York City Council Member Margaret Chin, Community Board 1, Whole Foods and Crumbs.

See you there!

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance

Geranium Lovers Occupy Bowling Green Park!

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

The rain held off yesterday and nearly 4,000 Bowling Green Park geraniums found themselves in the arms of thousands of Lower Manhattan residents and workers. In its fourth year, the wildly popular Adopt-a-Geranium event drew a constant stream of flower lovers, who waited patiently in a steadily moving line that wrapped around the park’s historic gates.

Adopt-A-Geranium Day 2011

Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth Berger and Council Member Margaret Chin pass out thousands of fresh geraniums.

Digging flowers up just as fast as they were given away, hardworking Downtown Alliance staff could barely keep up with demand. Luckily Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth Berger and Council Member Margaret Chin were at the helm, helping eager participants select the perfect plant. You can see some of the proud owners with their new flowers here.

Chef Maximo Lopez May

Andaz Wall Street’s Wall & Water Executive Chef Maximo Lopez May stands with his newly adopted geraniums.

Now that all of the geraniums have found loving homes, the Downtown Alliance is excited to prepare for its next Green Around Lower Manhattan event, Fall Community Planting Day, taking place on Saturday, October 22 from 10 AM to Noon. In preparation for spring, volunteers will help plant thousands of tulip bulbs in the same place the geraniums once proudly grew. What better way to occupy one of New York City’s oldest parks!

A League of Their Own

Monday, September 26th, 2011

The Downtown Soccer Team

The Downtown Soccer League formally kicked off the fall season this weekend with the reopening of the new turf field in Battery Park City. In addition to Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth H. Berger and New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, representatives from Downtown Soccer League, Downtown Little League, Battery Park City Authority, and Community Board 1 attended the event at the field, located on West Street between Murray and Warren streets. And, the field used all recyclable and natural fibers in its design.

The Downtown Alliance is a proud sponsor of the Chicago Fire Team.

THE POST-9/11 TRIUMPH OF LOWER MANHATTAN

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

SOLM_2011_Final_8-10

By Liz Berger

Lower Manhattan is back—and better than ever.

On September 11, 2001, the worst terrorist attack ever on American soil took 2,752  lives in Lower Manhattan. Fourteen million square feet of commercial office space were damaged or destroyed. Sixty-five thousand jobs were lost or relocated. More than 20,000 residents were at least temporarily displaced.

The story of 9/11 is global, but it is also personal.  Ten years ago,  I was standing in front of PS 234 talking to J.C. Chmiel, another parent, when all of a sudden I looked up, thinking, “Do planes usually fly that low?” Forty-five seconds later, all of us ran into the school.  It was the end of life as we knew it, although we didn’t know that until later.

But, even in those first incomprehensible minutes, before the scope and the depth of the horror became clear,  the best of the community—and quickly, of New York City—was there: parents, teachers, neighbors in the school to vote (it was Primary Election Day), and the incomparable Principal Anna Switzer, all supporting each other and our kids.

Outside, passersby directed traffic when the signals failed, merchants welcomed pedestrians into their storefronts, neighbors and colleagues banded together as they determined where to go and what to do.

It was months—in some cases, years—before many of us returned home.  But we did, determined to join with Lower Manhattan’s property owners, businesses, merchants and elected leadership to rebuild what we had lost.

A decade later, September 11th was a day of mourning and remembrance, but there is solace and joy in our community’s recovery and resurgence.

Ten years ago, many doubted that Lower Manhattan had a future, but today, those doubts have been replaced by enthusiasm and excitement. Lower Manhattan is one of New York City’s hottest commercial, residential and tourism destinations, a whole new kind of place in which to live, work, study and visit. To mark the 10th anniversary, the Downtown Alliance has produced a comprehensive review of all that’s happened, The State of Lower Manhattan 2011, and I urge you to take a look at this report online.

The proof of Lower Manhattan’s ascendance is as clear as the rising steel of 1 World Trade Center and 4 World Trade Center, which have already transformed our city’s skyline. When these architectural icons open within the next three years, they will become part of a business district that has more brand-new, high-tech, green commercial and residential office space than any other in the country.

Business and family, history and innovation, global and local, the biggest buildings on the smallest streets – these are the exciting contrasts that make Lower Manhattan unique.  Add triple the number of hotels that were here on September 10, 2001, six new primary and secondary schools in the last two years alone, and 307 new companies in a rapidly and happily diversifying economy, and it’s clear that while there’s still much to do, Lower Manhattan will continue to grow and flourish.

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance.  For a copy of The State of Lower Manhattan 2011, click here.

Downtown Alliance Launches New Public Art in Shadow of 4 WTC

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Art lovers can now “walk” to “work” in Lower Manhattan. Only a few blocks from the international installation Walking Men 99™ is the newest outdoor public art installation, Men At Work, wrapping the base of Silverstein Properties’ fast-rising 4 World Trade Center.

This week, Men At Work–depicting nearly 150 iconic figures from street signs across the globe–was installed along 1,000 feet of construction parapets on the south and north sides of Liberty Street, between Greenwich and Church streets, stretching along the southern edge of the World Trade Center construction site.

Men At Work is the 28th art installation unveiled in the wildly popular Re:Construction program, which adorns construction sites in Lower Manhattan with whimsical, thoughtful and engaging pieces of art. Launched in 2007, Re:Construction is produced by the Downtown Alliance and funded by a $1.5 million grant from the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation.

“Re:Construction is an ongoing opportunity for government, artists, curators, property owners and business people to work together to make something beautiful,” said Elizabeth H. Berger, President of the Downtown Alliance. “And what’s a better example than Men At Work. I encourage anyone who lives in, works in or visits Lower Manhattan to stop for just a moment and explore these wonderful pieces of art.”

Created by Maya Barkai, Men At Work features figures from 148 cities, and is the second project in New York City from the Walking Men Worldwide Initiative™. The installation offers a new look into the cultural presence of “working men.” The signs typically prevent passersby from entering active construction sites and thus become symbols of an environment being transformed.

“Maya’s work captures the spirit of Lower Manhattan and New Yorkers’ enthusiasm for rebuilding the World Trade Center,” said Larry A. Silverstein, President & CEO of Silverstein Properties, Inc. “It also pays tribute to the thousands of men and women involved in this historic effort.”

Walking

The installation is several blocks from the most celebrated piece in the Re:Construction collection, Barkai’s Walking Men 99™. Debuted in 2010, it is a site-specific installation that joins together 99 iconic pedestrian traffic-light figures from cities around the world, a photographic collage stretching along 500 feet of plywood walls that form three street façades facing Church and Barclay streets and Park Place.

The project was conceived as a collaborative effort of international photographers, each contributing a piece to the collage using an interactive platform created by Barkai. Learn more at www.walking-men.com.

Men At Work and Walking Men 99™ were curated by Ayelet Danielle Aldouby and Elinor Milchan from Artea Projects. You can learn more about Artea Projects at www.arteaprojects.com