
I wore tights for the first time this week and switched to hot coffees. Autumn appears to be winning.
This means I need to cram in as many outdoor new experiences, activities and visits as I can – sharpish. So tonight I took advantage of New York’s great outdoors – by visiting a city center waterfall.
After work I jumped on the 6 train and got off at 51st Street. A block away, between 3rd and 2nd Aves, I came across a little-known oasis: Greenacre Park. It’s a privately owned public park and set back a little off the street. And it’s immaculate – wooden tables, perfectly kept flowerbeds, a mini stream and a waterfall. Yes, a waterfall right in the middle of Midtown. And it’s no piddly water feature either.







Apart from how well the whole space is kept, the waterfall is what makes this park so fantastic. Its crashing waters block out the nearby rush hour horns and sirens, so you could be anywhere. I stayed for ages, transfixed by the water (and by the lovely Bauhaus-esque building behind), and only dipped into my book every now and then.


Eventually the autumn chill was too much so I headed past the stream and flowers and back into the noise of New York.
This is a great spot for winding down after work. Yes it was a little chilly – but I’m glad I managed to get here before Winter elbows in.



Hi Lydia,
I’m a design student at the Fashion Institute of Technology and I’m doing a publication about pocket gardens in NYC. I came across your amazing blog while searching for photo examples to add to my publication about GreenAcre Park. I would love it, if I could have your permission to quote your experience and use your photos of the park in my publication article.
Hi there!
I am a graduate student in Landscape Architecture at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia. Thank you for this posting about GreenAcre Park. I definitely need to visit it one day. I hope you don’t mind if I use one of your photos in my Master’s thesis–I am writing a thesis in regards to urban public spaces and how to design for them. You are getting full credit for the photo.
Regards,
Chris
No problem at all, Chris! Thanks for stopping by and best of luck with the thesis!