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A visual journey exploring the birds of Inwood and Northern Manhattan

A Beginner's Guide to Governors Island

Updated for the 2012 season

• Governors Island in New York Harbor, now open to the public on a limited basis, was a military base for 200 years. The Coast Guard closed the island in 1996, and in 2003 the federal government sold much of the island to New York. The National Park Service continues to manage the two historic forts on the island. 

• 2012: Open every Saturday, Sunday, and Holiday Monday through September 30.

• See Graphic Design: Now in Production, an exhibition of contemporary design in all media produced and curated by Cooper-Hewitt with the Walker Art Center through September 3, 2012. Open weekends 10 am-6 pm.

• The views from the island are stunning, and a trip affords a quick getaway from the urban canyons. 

• Visitors to Governors Island can walk the 2.2. promenade around the whole island and enjoy access to the northern part. The southern part is awaiting development.

• The Water Taxi Beach serves food and affordable drinks, including a few tasty beers on tap. Drinking beer on a hot day on a sandy beach while looking at the skyline of Lower Manhattan as viewed between plastic palm trees is an experience both pleasant and surreal. Mostly surreal.


• Because of its strategic location, the island was mainly used for military defense. Now because of its proximity to Manhattan and Brooklyn, the island is seen as the perfect beachhead for sand volleyball, contemporary art projects, cocktails, concerts that will not upset the neighbors, and utopian visions for the urban future.


• Architects McKim, Mead & White designed a structure on Governors Island that once housed an entire regiment.

• The vibe is low-pressured and relaxed. It's possible just to grab a book and a beach towel and go hang out.

• The architecture on Governors Island resembles a college campus. Plans for the island, however,  suggest things may get weirder in the future. See "Governors Island Vision Adds Hills and Hammocks" by Nicolai Ouroussoff, New York Times, April 12, 2010.


• It's possible to rent facilities on the island for a private event. While there on the opening day of the season, I saw a wedding party reception and watched a couple as they danced to their special country music tune. I was finishing my beer and thought I was back in the South.

• There is no apostrophe in the name of Governors Island, a fact that would serve as a point of embarrassment for any website or weblog that inadvertently stuck one between the "r" and the "s."


• The island has been used for high-level diplomatic talks, including a meeting in 1988 between President Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev at the stately Admiral's House. Much more about the meeting on this companion post.

• In 1909 Wilbur Wright inaugurated the first flight over American waters. He took off from Governors Island and circled the Statue of Liberty and came back.


• The deed signed between the federal government and the people of New York prohibited the construction of casinos and permanent housing.

• See Mark di Suvero at Governors Island: Presented by Storm King Art Center on the west side.



• It's easy to bring your own bike on the ferries to the island, but it's also easy to rent one there. Biking Governors Island is one of the best ways to get an overview.


• Ferries leave the Battery Maritime Building in Manhattan at 10 AM, 11 AM and then every half hour until 5:30 PM. Ferries return to Manhattan at 10:30 AM, 11:30 AM and then every half hour until 7 PM. Ferries run from Brooklyn's Pier 6 run between 11 am and 7 p.m.  Click here for official directions. If you know how to get to the Staten Island Ferry, then look for the Maritime Building just to the east. The R subway station is very close. Ferry service will run for special concerts and may involve extra fees if the particular performance costs money. If you're planning on exploring the island, leave on an early ferry.


• The island has become an ideal setting for a range of arts projects, especially outdoor sculpture and interactive displays.

• According to the official site's timeline, the first squirrels were brought to the island in 1895. Many years later, in 1983, a Burger King opened on the island and served beer.

• The TV series, Lost, should have ended with the dramatic surprise that the survivors were, in fact, stranded on Governors Island. That would have been awesome, encouraging a fan-based subculture to develop on the island.



• Tour the renovated Castle William (above) with a park ranger. The fort played an important strategic role in the War of 1812.

A few links:

Official site - Governors Island Preservation & Education Corporation
The Beach @ Governors Island. Music concerts.
• Scouting New York wrote a mind-blowing account in September 2009 of the excavation of a buried town on Governors Island.
Participatory and interactive art projects sponsored by Figment.
Sculptors Guide exhibit titled "Encounters."
• Read on Walking Off the Big Apple - The Reagan-Bush-Gorbachev Meeting on Governors Island: A Debriefing and a Walk.

Images by a sunburned Walking Off the Big Apple.

Comments

everettsville said…
Ha! The minute I read that the island was the site of a meeting between Reagan & Gorbachev my mind flashed on a photo of the meeting that I haven't seen in 22 years. I believe it showed the two looking out from a railing at the Statue of Liberty. The next photo below that bullet point is the spot, I believe.

If I'm not mistaken that photo was a cover for Time or Newsweek or something...or maybe a large print on the inside pages.

When I've flashed on that image in the past it's mostly been when I hear the phrase "Reagan ended the Cold War" or when I think of the probable onset of Alzheimer's in his 2nd term.
Teri Tynes said…
Hey Everettsville (good to see you here, btw, and enjoyed your post on our mutual Edward Hopper obsession),

I had the same flashback on the Reagan & Gorbachev meeting, although your memory seems clearer than mine.

I'm looking forward to going back to Governors Island to follow up on some of the stories there, like this one. I once came across a book with a stunning account of the meeting but can't remember now. Maybe readers can help me out.
Phil Davis said…
Thanks for this post, Teri. It looks like a great place to go. I hope the city doesn't screw it up. Another time Reagan was there was the centennial of the statue of liberty in 1986. I was living in Brooklyn Heights then and had a weekend long party for the event. There was a parade of tall ships and the most spectacular fireworks display I have ever seen, covering the Brooklyn Bridge, the Statue and the Jersey Waterfront. The Reagans and the Mitterands watched from Governors Island. I envied the view. Maybe now I'll get to see it.

Phil
rex Dgrey said…
whoah! are those plastic coconut trees? I take it those thing light up at night. I remember seeing some of them here in my country. they look nice at night. The Local Gov't chuck them out after a few years bec. they all went brittle and can easily be damage by just a single flick.

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