Reimagining Central Park
John Hill
30. november 2018
"Mannahatta Plateau for Frederick Law Olmsted" by John Beckmann, Hannah LaSota, and Laeticia Hervy of Axis Mundi Design
LA+ Journal has revealed the five winning designs in its ICONOCLAST ideas competition, which asked entrants to "reimagine Central Park to explore questions of how we represent nature and how we think about public space in the 21st century."
Redesigning Central Park -- akin to refashioning the Statue of Liberty, another New York City icon -- would only have a chance of happening if some worst case scenario came to pass. In the case of ICONOCLAST, it was an "eco-terrorist attack" taking place in 2018, creating an 843-acre clean slate in the center of Manhattan. This ideas competition, though far-fetched in its premise, gave architects, landscape architects, and other designers the opportunity to explore contemporary issues on an otherwise untouchable canvas.
ICONOCLAST garnered nearly 200 designs coming from almost 400 entrants from 30 countries -- rethinking the 150-year-old Central Park was quite a draw. The jury (Lola Sheppard, Charles Waldheim, Jenny Osuldsen, Geoff Manaugh, Beatrice Galilee, and Richard Weller) selected five winners:
- The Geoscraper of the Captive Biomes by Tiago Torres-Campos (Edinburgh, UK)
- Mannahatta Plateau for Frederick Law Olmsted by John Beckmann, Hannah LaSota and Laeticia Hervy (Axis Mundi Design – New York, USA)
- Central Cloud of Breath by Chuanfei Yu, Jiaqi Wang and Huiwen Shi (South East University – Nanjing, China)
- De(Central)ised Park by Joe Rowling, Nick McLeod and Javier Arcila (e8urban – Sydney, Australia)
- Untitled entry by Song Zhang and Minzhi Lin (Song + Minzhi – Shanghai, China)
Included here are some images and words from the entry by the team from New York's Axis Mundi; all of the winners can be viewed on the LA+ website.