The new World War I Memorial replaces Pershing Park. Courtesy GWWO Architects.
Pershing Park, a secluded pocket near the White House, is being converted into a national World War I memorial. At the behest of its promoters, the memorial removes the active spaces for people that made the park popular, while keeping secondary elements that close off the park from the city and keep it desolate.
The previous park was built around features meant to encourage social activity before budget cuts and poor management left it in disuse. Already isolated by berms meant to shield it from Pennsylvania Avenue on the south, it became an underused hole in the urban fabric.
The $46 million memorial conversion only slightly alters the physical spaces, but completely reverses the use of the park. Gone are its two core active uses, the pool that doubled as an ice rink and concession stand. A sculpture wall, quotations, and other educational elements take their place.
The new memorial. Image from National Captital Planning Commission (NCPC).
This set of isolated tweaks looks nothing like the first visions for the memorial, unveiled in 2015. In entries to a design competition, designers proposed razing the entire park and building anew. However, the memorials backers rushed to bypass the politics of its design. In doing so, they threw their designers into a grinding bureaucratic process that, at the end of the day, was not able to save what made the park an attraction.
Defenders of the existing park used historic preservation to save the physical landscape, and won, in a way. But that forced officials to only balance important physical features, with war commemoration. Any consideration of creating a useful, lively urban space was completely squeezed out.
All of the conference-room politicking and meetings couldnt make up for the shambolic competition and the anti-urban ambitions of its organizers. Worse, we lost the opportunity to adapt the park to changing conditions, and rethink the car-centered assumptions that led to its biggest deficiencies.
Ultimately, the new design illustrates how, when it comes to urban spaces, process is not a substitute for the right goals.
Pershing Park started with a good design but declined due to poor operation
Pershing Park was built in 1981 by the Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation (PADC), an organization set up to revitalize Pennsylvania Avenue as a monumental but still vibrant live-work area. The Market Square complex, containing apartments, offices, retail, and the Naval Memorial, embodies the balance of urban uses the PADC sought.
The original park design by M. Paul Friedberg, whose firm also designed Yards Park, consisted of three elements: a sunken pool that could convert to an ice skating rink, a small memorial to General Pershing, and a glazed concession stand.
A diagram of the three elements of existing park design. Images from NCPC.
The pool was separated from the noise of 14th, 15th, and E Streets by imposing berms topped by walkways and benches. The park was more open to the northeast, towards the hotels and theaters north of Freedom Plaza.
Why the berms? Remember that in 1979, that part of Pennsylvania Avenue was busy. E Street south of the White House was open to traffic as a direct route to I-66. At the same time, the Willard Hotel and theater and restaurants on the north side of Freedom Plaza were big draws so the designers logically opened the park to the busier street.
Pershing Park in front of the Willard Hotel. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, photograph by Carol M. Highsmith. Ice rink licensed under Creative Commons.
The park and its ice rink were popular into the 1990s, when competition from spaces like the National Gallery Sculpture Garden ice rink drew people away and Congress disbanded the PADC. Maintenance of the park was turned over to the National Park Service (NPS).
Pershing Park. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, photograph by Carol M. Highsmith. Image licensed under Creative Commons.
That agencys chronic budget problems, combined with poor oversight of the parks notorious operator, Guest Services, Inc., led to a slow decline until 2012, when neither the fountain, concession stand, nor ice rink worked.
The WWI memorial bypasses regular process and gets mired in controversy
At the same time, a group trying to build a National World War I Memorial was blocked from appropriating DCs World War I Memorial, south of the Reflecting Pool, for national purposes. With some encouragement from NPS and other groups, memorial promoters got Congress to unilaterally pick Pershing Park in the 2015 military budget.
This authorization from Congress to enhance the existing site let them skip the lengthy site selection process most memorials go through, meaning that if nothing went wrong, they could break ground in November 2017. However, this jump meant they also skipped due diligence about other planning objectives like livability or historic preservation, not to mention the politics of DCs limited space.
As a result, planners conducted the open-ended historic preservation analysis at the same time as the memorial was soliciting ideas through a design competition. The rules given to entrants and judges are critical for getting good results. The World War I Memorials design guidebook discouraged active uses and food sales while downplaying the significance of the existing landscape. Its no surprise that so many submissions were extravagant knockdown schemes.
The Honor proposed placing a reflective Brodie helmet on a plateau above the street. Image by WWI Centennial Commission.
The problems with this became apparent quickly as planners issued warnings, and groups like the Cultural Landscape Foundation rallied to defend the existing park. Then one of the competition judges, the respected landscape architect Laurie Olin, resigned in protest over the level of demolition. By 2016, finalists already had to significantly rework their designs.
Joe Weishaar, Sabin Howard, and GWWOs winning design "The Weight of Sacrifice" would have demolished most of the park.
Skipping site selection clearly became a mistake in July 2016, when the Historic Preservation Office determined that Friedbergs design was indeed historically significant. The Park Service and the various design review agencies were now obligated to follow strict rules in the Section 106 process, while the existing parks defenders, like the Cultural Landscape Foundation and the Association of Oldest Inhabitants of Washington, gained the upper hand.
By Fall 2016, the alterations were limited to the core of the park. Image from National Park Service.
The memorial organizers shortcut had sent their designers to a bureaucratic Donner Pass, where three years of long meetings stripped the design to the bare bones of what the congressional mandate of enhancement could justify in the face of preservation law.
By June 2017, the Section 106 process had led to the preservation of the fountain.Image fromNational Park Service.
In the end, the park will reopen by the beginning of next year, but the bronze sculptural centerpiece will not be completed until 2024.
In the final design, approved in October 2019, the memorial wall is freestanding.Image fromNCPC.
The park keeps the forms, but changes the function
In the new design, the basic layout remains but the use is fundamentally altered. A long wall of sculpture and a stone plaza now occupy most of the pool. A large stone fountain, which doubled as a zamboni shed, is gone. In its place, water features on the sculpture wall pick up the slack. Likewise, the concession stand is gone, replaced with an overlook outlining the history of the war.
The preservation process left the walls and statues of the Pershing Memorial itself largely intact, with minor adjustments.
The kiosk is replaced with a belvedere with history exhibits.Image fromNCPC.
In the remaining areas of the park, the renovation adds quotations, bronze QR codes that cue up online exhibits, new lighting, and a number of accessibility improvements.
However, the large berms that separate the park from passersby remain on three sides. Rather than a balance of activity, reflection, and commemoration like an urban Neapolitan the memorial is three scoops of the same flavor, buried in the same tough shell. Its a departure from the original vision.
Historic elements got protection; an active park lost out
Framing the impacts on the park around narrow federal preservation rules left the active uses only lightly protected. While some people on the National Capital Planning Commission and the Commission of Fine Arts lamented the loss, they had little leverage. The dialogue was structured as one of preserving the historic fabric versus commemoration. It was accepted that the social function could go.
In this sense, I would consider the new memorial an adaptive re-use, but not one the park needed. Remember, the berms that seemed to close off the park from the city existed to shield traffic coming to and from I-66. But that traffic isnt there anymore, and we shouldnt be planning Pennsylvania Avenue Americas Main Street as a noisy, polluted traffic sewer anyway.
The memorial park will still be pulled back from the street.Image fromNCPC.
Wouldnt a design that made those edges more inviting but preserved the core functions be better from both urbanism and preservation perspectives? We will never know, because the World War I Memorials organizers rushed to squeeze their dour vision onto a once-thriving park. The preservation process saved its stones, but institutional inertia left one of the few lively places on Pennsylvania Avenue to be embalmed.
Neil Flanagan grew up in Ward 3 before graduating from the Yale School of Architecture. He is pursuing an architecture license. He really likes walking around and looking at stuff.
Originally posted here:
As downtown DC's Pershing Park becomes a World War I memorial, process preserves a landscape but doesn't save the park for people - Greater Greater...
- Landscape architect to share her expertise - The Montana Standard - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Vessel reopens in Hudson Yards with steel mesh netting - The Architect's Newspaper - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- Charles and Ray Eames changed the landscape of design with "just a few chairs and a house" - Dezeen - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- At Tech+ Dallas, AEC leaders convene to explore the latest tools and AI innovations in the industry - The Architect's Newspaper - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- MAD Architects disrupts Denvers burgeoning skyline with One River North, a building with an open-air canyon - The Architect's Newspaper - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- A place of collaborative conversation - Penn Today - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- AIA Board alleges coordinated campaign to discredit leadership - The Architect's Newspaper - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- LMN Architects completes the Field Arts & Events Hall in northern Washington - The Architect's Newspaper - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- Facades+ returns to Chicago on October 4 - The Architect's Newspaper - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- Jahn/ lines a residential building in Chicago with aluminum spandrels drawing interest to a glass curtain wall facade - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- HDR wraps a new research facility in Minnesota for Mayo Clinic in aluminum scrim - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Women in Carbon documents relationship between motherhood and climate change - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- August Architecture Billings Index drops again, amid an impending cut to interest rates - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- schlaich bergermann partner completes Williams Crossing pedestrian bridge over Arkansas River in Tulsa - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Perkins&Will designs student housing for UC Law San Francisco using fluted aluminum panels - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Landscape architect transforms property that was pit stop for wayward animals - Boston.com - August 4th, 2024 [August 4th, 2024]
- Bruck Elected to Prestigious American Society of Landscape Architects Council of Fellows School of Landscape ... - UF College of Design, Construction... - June 13th, 2024 [June 13th, 2024]
- 12 Long Island Interior Designers, Architects, and Landscape Designers You Need to Know - Architectural Digest - June 13th, 2024 [June 13th, 2024]
- "Outstanding" landscape architect Lynn Kinnear dies aged 64 - Dezeen - March 31st, 2024 [March 31st, 2024]
- Marco Bay, the gardens of the San Domenico Palace in Taormina - Abitare English | Architecture and Design Magazine - March 31st, 2024 [March 31st, 2024]
- Too much West Coast land deemed 'outstanding landscape architect - 1News - March 23rd, 2024 [March 23rd, 2024]
- Landscape Architect Sara Zewde Reimagines the Land at Dia Beacon, New York - ArchDaily - March 14th, 2024 [March 14th, 2024]
- Department of Landscape Architecture Celebrates 90 Years UF College of Design, Construction and Planning - UF College of Design, Construction and... - March 14th, 2024 [March 14th, 2024]
- About Our Studio - SCAPE - March 24th, 2023 [March 24th, 2023]
- On Solid Ground: 10 Top Landscape Architecture Firms in 2021 - Journal - March 24th, 2023 [March 24th, 2023]
- What's Next After the Wiggle Trend? We Asked 9 Designers for Their Predictions - Architectural Digest - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Review | The Power Of Scenery: Frederick Law Olmsted And The Origin Of National Parks - National Parks Traveler - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Obituary: Richard Rogers, pioneering architect who re-imagined the urban landscape - HeraldScotland - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Roses and thorns 12-26-21 - The Commercial Dispatch - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Most of us will first experience climate change through water - MIT Technology Review - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- FAITH: Hearts in Touch - When life takes a twist - Orange Leader - Orange Leader - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Visual art in 2021 explored big issues and didnt shy from controversy - SF Chronicle Datebook - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- 10 books we loved this year - The Spaces - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Casa S is an amoeba-shaped home on the coast of Chile - Dezeen - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- $30m secured to begin Phase I of the Arvene East project in New York - Construction Review - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Duck, Duck, Beer: What makes Stuttgart, Arkansas, the duck hunting capital of the world? - Oklahoman.com - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Green Gardening: Enjoy the bounties of nature that native plants bring - Palm Beach Daily News - December 28th, 2021 [December 28th, 2021]
- Julie Bargmann Is the Winner of the Inaugural Oberlander Prize; a Pritzker Prize for Landscape Architecture. - Metropolis Magazine - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Bell Bowl Prairie Proponents Have a Proposal to Save Rare Land and Allow Rockford Airport to Expand - WTTW News - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Mies van der Rohe town house with walls of glass ticks all the boxes for artists, architects - Detroit Free Press - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Why Ecology Is the Infrastructure of the Future - The Nation - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Differences of working at a practice in another part of the world - Archinect - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Moving ahead with plans for Washington Park | News, Sports, Jobs - timesobserver.com - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Princeton and Trenton are settings for latest novel by author Lauren B. Davis that explores marginalization, othering - Planet Princeton - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Peter Thiel's luxury New Zealand lodge opposed by environmental group - CNBC - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Archinect's Fellowship Watch Part II: Check out employment and academic fellowship opportunities listed on Archinect Jobs - Archinect - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Eight recommended books for those who love architecture - Creative Boom - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- City moves to expand tree-protection rules | News | Palo Alto Online | - Palo Alto Online - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- OSU's College of Engineering, Architecture and Technology announces 2021 Hall of Fame inductees and Lohmann Medal recipients - Oklahoma State... - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- A New Observatory Suspended Nearly 1,300 Feet in the Air Is Redefining New York City's Skyline - Architectural Digest - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- OMA's 'al daayan' health district in doha reimagines the future of hospitals - Designboom - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- West Lafayette Public Library to be closed in November for construction - Journal & Courier - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- WALLACE BAINE: On the anniversary of the '89 quake, imagining a Santa Cruz where it never happened - Lookout Santa Cruz - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- Presenting the Investor Track for the 2021 Golf Inc Summit - Golf Inc. - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- "I'm Convinced that Good Architecture Creates the Good Life": In Conversation with Dorte Mandrup - ArchDaily - October 22nd, 2021 [October 22nd, 2021]
- NBBJ's spiraling glass Helix will anchor Amazon's HQ2 in Arlington - The Architect's Newspaper - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- How an Unlikely Plot of Land Will Transform Miami - Architectural Digest - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Paris's Champs-lyses will get a pedestrian-friendly green overhaul - The Architect's Newspaper - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Sustainable architecture: innovative and inspiring building design - Wallpaper* - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Couple creates website, hoping to adopt - liherald - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Public To Weigh In On Revamped Beachfront Park In City's Pursuit Of $8.5 Million Grant - Lost Coast Outpost - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- City staff give updates on Albemarle Business Center, downtown projects - The Stanly News & Press | The Stanly News & Press - Stanly News... - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Secrets From Tel Avivs Eclectic Era Are Hiding All Over the City - Atlas Obscura - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- For landscape projects, know which type of professional you need to hire and how to find one - NOLA.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- French hotel combines nature and architecture - Construction Specifier - The Construction Specifier - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Midlands landscape architect begins the year on a (green) high - Premier Construction Magazine - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Gloria Kloter: Bringing the Industry of Architecture and Design to Even Greater Heights - Influencive - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Exec. of the Month: Thomas Perrino president and CEO of the Spiezle Architecture Group leads nationwide expansion - New York Real Estate Journal... - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Midwest On the Scene: January 2021 | 2021-01-18 - Engineering News-Record - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Winners of the 2021 AIANY Design Awards | Livegreenblog - Floornature.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- With an All-New Urban Design Category, the AZ Awards Kicks Off a New Decade. Now's the Time to Submit your Best Work. - Archinect - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Top 5 most-read stories on SummitDaily.com, week of Jan. 10 - Summit Daily News - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- P&Z Watch: Trees to Be Felled at 100 East Putnam are Focus of Discussion - Greenwich Free Press - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Zoning Approves Howard Wharf Hotel - Newport This Week - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- How have urban farms helped during the COVID-19 pandemic? - World Economic Forum - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Virtual workshop offered Jan. 30 on rain gardens and native plants - KPCnews.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Dickinson review: Everybody's stuck and frustrated in season 2, episode 4 - Cult of Mac - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Global Construction and Architecture Software MarketSize, Share, Value, and Competitive Landscape 2020 - NeighborWebSJ - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- After The Coup Attempt And Ahead Of Inauguration, DC Residents Are Feeling On Edge - BuzzFeed News - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Developer seeks rezoning to build new townhomes on Commerce Drive - Decaturish.com - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]