Category Archives: Programs and Projects

Resident Activities

Two Bridges Neighborhood Council (TBNC) works with residents from surrounding buildings (Two Bridges Tower – 82 Rutgers Slip, Lands End I – 275 Cherry St and Lands End II – 265 Cherry St.) to provide activities and resources that are informed by resident feedback and participation, some of which include Free Family Movie Nights and monthly Community Outreach Tables.

Free Family Movie Nights – Goldie Chu Community Room, 82 Rutgers Slip

  • Movies are selected by residents through dot voting activities every month.
  • RSVP is required for non 82 Rutgers Slip residents.
  • Past movies: Beauty & the Beast, Moana

Community Outreach Tabling (275 Cherry, 265 Cherry, 82 Rutgers Slip)

  • TBNC promotes programs and invites other organizations to provide social services that are needed by residents.
  • Past resources: SNAP Enrollment, World Trade Center Health benefits, New York Cares SAT Prep
  • Future tabling resources: Financial Literacy, Community Service Projects and College Preparation.

Do you live in 82 Rutgers, 265 Cherry, or 275 Cherry and have a suggestion for programming or resources?

Are you an organization and want to co-host a Community Outreach Table with us?

Email us at info@twobridge.org.

 

Cooper Lumen Design Challenge

Creating a Working Prototype for a Solar-Powered Public WiFi Hotspot & Charging Station

The Cooper Lumen Design Challenge is an innovative, cross-disciplinary design challenge for students at Cooper Union, aimed at creating a working prototype for a solar-powered public WiFi hotspot.

Unlike other solar powered products, the “Cooper Lumen”  will uniquely combine the functions of providing public wireless internet, emergency lighting, and a charging station for computers and mobile devices.

The semester-long design initiative commenced in January 2014, and will include students from the Cooper Union schools of Art, Architecture, and Engineering.

Engaging Innovative Student Design to Enhance Community Resiliency in Post-Sandy NYC

The resulting design(s) will become candidates for deployment in the WiFi-NY People’s Emergency Network, which will place these units along Manhattan’s East River Waterfront and in common areas in and around the Two Bridges, Lower East Side, Chinatown, East Village and other New York City neighborhoods.

These neighborhoods — much of which are made up of high-rise affordable housing developments — were particularly impacted by Superstorm Sandy’s storm surge, leaving thousands of vulnerable families and elders trapped without power, communications, transportation, or supplies.  For many buildings, it took weeks to restore power and communications.

The overall goal of the Cooper Lumen Design Challenge is to help residential corridors impacted by Superstorm Sandy come back even stronger by encouraging the development and implementation of durable and reliable devices that will anchor these neighborhoods for years to come.

Support the Cooper Lumen Design Challenge

We hope that you will join us in supporting this momentous endeavor. Please check out the various ways you can support and give at any level you can.

All proceeds raised will go towards covering the costs of materials and physical hardware the students will need in order to conduct their work, including solar cells, batteries, charge controllers, LED lights, wireless equipment, and structural elements.

Please note: all support is tax-deductible. Two Bridges Neighborhood Council, a longstanding community organization, is serving as the 501(c)(3) fiscal sponsor of this project.

Thank you in advance for your support!

Project Team 

The project team acknowledges the ongoing work and support of LES Ready!, (formerly known as the Lower East Side Long Term Recovery Group), a coalition of over 70 community groups and institutions that are working to cooperatively coordinate response, resources, preparedness planning and training in response to Hurricane Sandy and in the event of future disasters. 

Two Bridges Rain Garden

Two Bridges Neighborhood Council has been awarded a Green Infrastructure Grant from the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (NYCDEP) for the construction of a rain garden at Two Bridges Tower.

The Rain Garden will provide:

  • New and improved seating/social areas
  • Shade and localized cooling benefits
  • Mitigation of particulate matter and hydrocarbon pollution generated by the FDR and South Street Truck Route
  • Training and educational opportunities for residents interested in gardening
  • A play area for children in the building as well as the Hamilton-Madison House Day Care & Headstart programs

The garden will be designed by dlandstudio, pllc, a multidisciplinary design firm based in Brooklyn. Check out ourAugust 2012 articlediscussing the opportunities for deploying green infrastructure throughout our neighborhood, including the rain garden at 82 Rutgers Slip. We thank our local elected officials for their ongoing support of this project: Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez, State Senator Daniel Squadron, and Councilmember Margaret Chin.


Frequently Asked Questions

Will there be standing water? No, the rain garden is designed to absorb water so that it does not run off into storm drains.

Will the rain garden prevent us from using the “back yard”? No, the rain garden is intended to provide a healthier, more pleasant and enjoyable social space, and to encourage its use.

I heard there will be sewage treatment back there. Is that true? No. Only clean rainwater is infiltrated into the rain garden—that’s why it is called a rain garden. The confusion may have arisen from the fact that we are keeping clean rainwater out of the storm sewer, and helping cut down on storm sewer overflows in rain events, which can cause sewage to be sent untreated from the sewer to the river. Only water that falls on the roof and surface of the 82 Rutgers Slip property will be absorbed in the rain garden.

I heard you are taking away our playground. Is that true? No. The current play equipment is out of date and in need of replacement. While the rain garden grant does not cover the cost of new equipment, Two Bridges is committed to working with residents and Hamilton-Madison House to design and implement an age-appropriate play area within the garden that will include both educational and physical recreational components.

What about furniture deliveries? All deliveries can still take place through the garden area. There will be a sidewalk, just like in the current design.

How Does A Rain Garden Work? Rain gardens cut down on the amount of stormwater being sent into storm drains by using plants to infiltrate rainwater. At 82 Rutgers, rainwater will be diverted from the building roof to a new lawn, trees and planting beds. Plants have a lot of surface area to capture raindrops and allow the water to slowly infiltrate into the soil below. A deep bed of gravel below the soil further slows the water so it has time to infiltrate completely.

What Else Does a Rain Garden Do? In addition to being functional, rain gardens can be beautiful. They also provide localized cooling benefits, shade, and improved air quality. On a south-facing exposure like 82 Rutgers Slip, summer sun can make it unbearably hot, and hard surfaces like concrete and paving trap and radiate this heat. A rain garden can help create a cooler microclimate in this area, making it more pleasant to sit, socialize or play.

Rain garden directly remove pollutants from the air. As an essential social space for residents, air quality is important. The residue of heavy vehicular exhaust– particulate matter–generated by the South Street Truck Route and the elevated FDR Drive can be seen on windowsills, and unseen chemicals in vehicular exhaust are suspended in the air in urban areas. Particulate matter and hydrocarbons from burning fossil fuels are extremely harmful if breathed in. Plants can trap particulates on their leaves; some can even break down environmental pollutants, like hydrocarbons, keeping them out of our soil, water and bodies.

Gardens have a proven positive impact on our mood and health. The rain garden at 82 will create opportunities for residents interested in gardening, and provide a living science laboratory for children participating in Two Bridges’ after-school and summer camp programs.

How Do Rain Gardens Help Protect Water Quality? New York City relies on an outdated sewer design called a “Combined Sewer Overflow” or CSO. During storm events, rainwater falling on hard surfaces like buildings, sidewalks and streets, runs off in to storm drains, bringing with it oils, trash, and other pollutants from the streets. The stormwater is combined with raw sewage and piped to sewage treatment plants. When overwhelmed by excessive stormwater runoff, CSOs divert the combination of polluted stormwater and raw sewage away from treatment plants, allowing it to flow directly into the surface waters around New York.

There are sixteen (16) CSO outfalls between the Brooklyn Bridge and Montgomery Street in the Two Bridges neighborhood, meaning that there are 16 pipes sending raw sewage and polluted stormwater into the East River every time there is a heavy rainfall. This is not only bad for the health of the river and animals that depend on it, but for the health of people living along it. In addition to smelling bad, raw sewage has the potential to spread infectious disease to those coming into contact with it.

Background

Two Bridges provides leadership and advocacy to protect the interests of and to engage residents in the improvement of South Street and the East River Waterfront. We are pleased to partner with residents, other community-based organizations, and city agencies to address these concerns, for which we have advocated for over 30 years.

Since Hurricane Irene in August 2011 demonstrated the potential for contaminated water to flood the Two Bridges neighborhood, Two Bridges has been looking for ways to limit stormwater runoff, which pollutes our waterways, and to provide environmental benefits to the residents of our buildings in the low-lying East River Waterfront.

The vulnerability of our tenants and buildings, as evidenced by the experience of Superstorm Sandy and the realities of climate change, compels Two Bridges and Settlement Housing Fund, the sponsors of Two Bridges Tower, to address environmental issues in new, innovative ways.

Long-Term Sustainability of Our Waterfront Community

In the darkness of Monday evening, October 29th, Hurricane Sandy’s nearly 14′ high storm surge flowed up and over and into the homes and businesses of coastal New York City, wreaking havoc on its most essential infrastructure: Power, Transportation, Communication. The human impacts were even greater–lives lost, homes destroyed, and many people isolated and cut off from food, water, medicine. The Lower East Side was among the hardest hit neighborhoods of Manhattan, especially along the shore, where large campuses of high-rise public and subsidized housing stand on low-elevation fill, barely above sea level.

This storm event gives us all pause, especially in thinking about the long-term sustainability of our waterfront community and the deeper level of planning and design necessary to keep residents in place and safe in this neighborhood.The short term recovery in Manhattan’s Lower East Side is going to be hard, but the longer term planning and approaches to urban design of the neighborhood will be much more complicated. Two Bridges Neighborhood Council has been thinking deeply about this ever since last year’s Tropical Storm Irene flooding, when we first recognized the vulnerability of the neighborhood to sea level rise and storm events.

When the emergencies have subsided, we will continue to push to engage the city in dealing meaningfully with issues of stormwater & storm surge in the neighborhood. In the meanwhile, here is a link to an article written this summer about the issue, complete with a sadly accurate storm surge map:

Click here for more information.

Advocacy & Planning

Two Bridges weighs in on critical issues concerning not only quality of life, but the future of our neighborhood. Whether through our own initiatives or in partnership with others, we work to engage residents and other local stakeholders in participatory planning processes to ensure that everyone understands the issues at hand, and everyone’s voice is heard.

Chinatown & Little Italy Historic District

Chinatown & Little Italy, forged in same dynamic period of American history, were declared a single National Register Historic District in 2010. Two Bridges received the New York State Historic Preservation Award for Outstanding National Register Nomination for the Chinatown & Little Italy Historic District Designation Report. The historic district’s remarkable architectural variety includes landmark examples of religious, civic and institutional architecture, standing alongside row houses and tenements that housed waves of immigrants from around the world throughout the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. By the 1870s, Chinese and Italians began settling along Mott and Mulberry Streets and the intersecting cross streets, bringing their respective cultures, traditions and tastes to New York. Ultimately, these neighborhoods became best-known for the Italian and Chinese families who settled here.

While there were obvious cultural and language differences, the Chinese and Italian immigrants who made this area their home shared many parallel experiences: both groups fled civil unrest and dwindling economic opportunities in their homelands; they chose to settle among fellow countrymen for linguistic and cultural reasons; and both Chinese and Italian immigrants brought distinctive food cultures to New York, which have profoundly influenced American cuisine.

The contributions of Chinese and Italian immigrants constitute a large part New York’s cultural history, which remain relevant and resonant today. This single district, encompassing the historic core of Little Italy and Chinatown, acknowledges the long and ongoing relationship and common history of these two immigrant communities.

Download the Chinatown & Little Italy Historic District Map Guide

Click here to view the National Register of Historic Places Registration form

Points of Interest

Columbus Park — (Mulberry, Worth, Baxter & Bayard; Calvert Vaux, 1888). Public park replacing notorious slums of Mulberry Bend and Five Points. Dedicated as Columbus Park in 1911 to honor the Italian community. Now a center of Chinatown community life.

Church of the Transfiguration — (23-31 Mott). Ashlar and brownstone gable front church with copper tower, built ca. 1801; 1815; 1861-68. NYC Landmark.

Public School 23 — (70 Mulberry; C.B.J. Snyder, 1891-93). A five-story fortress-like Romanesque and Renaissance Revival brick & brownstone school, now housing the Chinatown Senior Center and the Museum of Chinese in America’s archives.

Doyers Street — The crooked path of narrow Doyers Street was known as the “Bloody Angle,” for the numerous gangland battles that took place there in late 19th & early 20th century. A distinctive part of the core of historic Chinatown, originally confined to Doyers, Pell and lower Mott.

Chinese Opera House — (5 Doyers). Opened by actor Chu Fong in the early 1890s. Performances of traditional Chinese opera were held there until sometime around 1905. Chinese revolutionary leader Dr. Sun-Yat Sen spoke here in 1911.

Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association — (60 Mott). The “town hall” of Chinatown since the 1880s. The current (1960) building was designed by Poy G. Lee, Chinatown’s premiere Chinese-American architect of the mid-20th century. The Eastern States Buddhist Temple is on the first floor at 64 Mott.

On Leong Tong/Chinese Merchants Building — (83-85 Mott). A modern pagoda erected in 1948, and a character-defining building in the district, featuring Chinese-style architectural elements and motifs.

Church of the Most Precious Blood — (113 Baxter). Begun in 1891 by the Scalabrinian Fathers to serve the Italian population, the church was completed by the Franciscans in 1901. Schickel & Ditmars for Ireland, architects.

San Gennaro Shrine — (109-111 Mulberry). In recognition of the large local Napolitani population, the Feast of San Gennaro, patron saint of Naples, was first celebrated on Mulberry Street in September 1926. The shrine contains the statue carried in the procession along Mulberry Street during the annual festival.

Banca Stabile/Rowhouses — (181-189 Grand). An intact row of five brick Greek Revival rowhouses, built ca. 1835 as artisan’s workshops & residences. No. 189 housed the Banca Stabile, an important bank serving the Italian immigrant population from the late 19th into the early 20th century. Now the Italian-American Museum.

L’Ordine Figli d’Italia Order of the Sons of Italy — (203 Grand). Established in 1905 as a support system to assist immigrants in their transition to American citizens. By 1921, 125,000 members met in 887 lodges country-wide. In over a century, the Sons of Italy has grown into a national organization promoting study, understanding and appreciation of Italian-American heritage.

Engine No. 55 — (363 Broome). A three-story Indiana limestone engine house with mansard roof clad in slate and copper. Robert H. Robertson designed this Beaux-Arts-style building, which was built in 1898. NYC Landmark.

Church of San Salvatore/Holy Trinity Ukrainian Church — (359-361 Broome). Built by the Italian Mission of the Protestant Church of New York, designed by architects Hoppin & Koen, 1901.

Hook & Ladder No. 9 / G. LaRosa Bakery — (209 Elizabeth). ca. 1885, three-story brick building with limestone belt course, extensive use of molded brick tiles, and a well-preserved cast iron storefront/garage bay.

14th Ward Industrial School — (256 Mott). Distinctive brick and terracotta former school is a striking symbol of the educational & social welfare work once conducted there by the Children’s Aid Society. Designed in 1888 by Calvert Vaux of Radford & Vaux, the designer of Columbus Park.

Basilica of St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral — (Mulberry, Prince & Mott). The second Catholic Church in New York and the Church of the Holy See for the first 60 years of its existence, St. Patrick’s has been central to the local Catholic community for 200 years (Joseph-Francois Mangin, architect, 1809). The churchyard is surrounded by a tall, brick & brownstone wall, erected in the 1830s to protect the church from anti-Catholic hostilities.

St. Michael’s Chapel — (266 Mulberry). A red brick & limestone Gothic Revival chapel designed by the firm Renwick & Rodrique in 1859.

Other Cultural Attractions

Museum of Chinese in America 215 Centre Street • 212.619.4785 www.mocanyc.org

New Museum 235 Bowery • 212.219.1222 www.newmuseum.org

Lower East Side Historic District Boundary Increase

In 2003-04, Two Bridges sponsored the boundary increase to the existing Lower East Side Historic District. The increase resulted in the addition of 108 buildings to the National Register, including some of the most historically significant examples of twentieth-century affordable housing in the neighborhood: the Amalgamated Dwellings cooperative (1931); and Vladeck Houses (1940), the first public housing jointly funded by the New York and U.S. Housing Authorities. These buildings stand alongside examples of Federal-era dwellings and nineteenth century tenements as the evidence of the changing philosophies of housing the poor and working class on the Lower East Side

Click here to view the National Register of Historic Places Registration form

Neighborhood Preservation

Neighborhood preservation — economic, social, cultural, and architectural — is central to the mission of Two Bridges Neighborhood Council. Since 2002, Two Bridges has worked to have over 1000 buildings in Chinatown, Little Italy, the Lower East Side, the Two Bridges, and the Bowery Historic Districts listed in the State and National Register of Historic Places. We undertake these projects not only to celebrate and highlight our rich cultural and architectural heritage, but preservation of these historic building often means preservation of affordable, rent controlled or stabilized housing units and affordable commercial space, occupied by long-term tenants.

National Register listing also creates the opportunity for property and business owners to tap into the generous tax benefits, grants, loans, and technical assistance offered by the National Register and associated programs in these historic districts. Property and business owners now have access to tens of millions of dollars in State and Federal Historic Preservation tax credits, as well as grants and low or no-interest loans through the New York Landmarks Conservancy, to encourage the preservation of our historic resources.

In 2010, Historic Districts Council presented Two Bridges with its Grassroots Preservation Award in recognition of our work documenting and celebrating the historic neighborhoods we serve.

Tenants’ Rights & Anti-Displacement Efforts

Since 2005, Two Bridges funded the work of the long-time tenant advocacy organization, It’s Time, Inc. Since 2009, it has operated as the Two Bridges’ Anti-Displacement Project. To date, we have served hundreds of families and individuals—many of them senior citizens—at risk of losing their homes. Our tenant advocacy staff is fluent in Chinese & English.

For more information about Two Bridges’ anti-displacement and tenants’ rights advocacy, please contact:

Debbie Leung
50 Madison Street
p: (212) 349-3724 x9580