Photo: Frank da Cruz, 18 May 2017
See Oval Park Gallery
Williamsbridge Oval Recreation Center
in Williamsbridge Oval Park in the Bronx, built by the WPA in 1934-37 from
granite quarried and cut onsite. Architect: Aymar Embury II.
References:
- Electic
[sic] Group
of New York City-Area Properties Nominated for Historic
Designation, Wall Street Journal, 6 April 2015: "The
Williamsbridge Oval Park in the Bronx was once a 41-foot reservoir before it
was rebuilt into a 19-acre public park in 1937 as part of the New Deal-era
Works Progress Administration program, which took on relatively small
projects with otherwise unemployed and unskilled workers. New York City
received the most federal money for parks in the mid-1930s and, by 1936,
more than 70,000 people were employed in city park projects, according to
state historic preservation records. Mr. Moses, the controversial urban
planner and "master builder" of New York City, searched for any idle or
vacant land and found the obsolete Williamsbridge Reservoir in Washington
Heights, purchasing it from Department of Water Supply, Gas and
Electricity. He tasked Aymar Embury II, who had built several
city landmarks including the Central Park Zoo, Prospect Park Zoo and the New
York City building at the 1939 New York World's Fair, to design it."
Besides this reference, numerous Wikipedia and Gpedia pages credit Embury
for the design of the Recreation Center and Gilmore David Clarke as the
Park's landscape architect, but definitive official records remain to be
found; nevertheless, it looks like an Embury work, with its welcoming
gently curving "arms".
- Promenade
to Cap Huge Play Center, New York Times, Thursday, May 9, 1935,
p.15:
"The recreation building will be of severely simple architecture in the
modern manner. It is proposed to build it of granite salvaged from the
top of the embankment. On the ground floor, opening onto the playground,
there will be a large lobby flanked by locker rooms and showers. Upstairs
on the street level will be a recreation room forty-six feet long and
twenty-two feet wide. At the end there will be a loggia, and the roofs
over the locker rooms will be utilized as terraces. A distinctive feature
of the façade will be a two-story vestibule behind a row of huge granite
piers."