High Line A Park to Look Up To

The High Line

A Park to Look Up To

  • ISBN: 9781647004033
  • Publication Date: May 2, 2023

Format:

Price: $17.99
Description

An illustrated history of New York City’s internationally famous High Line, one of the world’s most innovative and inspiring public parks.

Imagine a very different New York City—one whose streets are filled with horses and buggies and people on foot. Now imagine the block-long freight trains that shared the same roads delivering goods to the west-side factories. How did New York solve the problem of trains barreling through busy city streets? They built a train track above all the hustle and bustle, and the High Line was born. Once trains were no longer needed to transport goods, the High Line sat abandoned, ready for demolition.

But the city had other ideas. The High Line opened as a 1.45-mile-long park in 2009. It quickly became an iconic, must-see attraction and a marvel of landscape architecture, admired worldwide for its history, beauty, and creative union of urban design with greenspace. As the High Line became a global inspiration, longtime residents of the neighborhood surrounding it also advocated to keep the park feeling like home.

Packed with facts and gorgeous watercolor illustrations by Victoria Tentler-Krylov, The High Line: A Park to Look Up To is the story of an innovative idea and the people who made it possible—from the ingenuity of those who first built it for the needs of industry, to those who reimagined it as a community space for art, recreation, and the preservation of nature.

Praise

“Documents a real triumph of urban renewal and innovative land use. In the bright, stylish watercolors, diverse crowds of figures work and socialize both on bustling city streets and, later, on swooping pathways amid abundant carpets of well-kept wildflowers and grassy swards. A vibrant, if somewhat formalized, tribute.”
Kirkus Reviews

“The text and author’s note are informative, and the illustrations, watercolor paintings with digital elements, capture the energy of the city as well as elements of the park and adjacent neighborhoods. A handsome introduction to the High Line.”
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