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The Pavilion 1998

by Demetri Porphyrios, 1949

Rising from the scenic lawns of Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Park below the junction of River Terrace and Warren Street, The Pavilion occupies a unique position in the landscape, as if negotiating a common ground between the greensward and the city beyond. Because the structure has no walls, both the park and the hubbub of downtown are eminently visible through its posts. The Pavilion is crowned by a handsomely crafted square wooden roof, supported along its edges by twelve thin wooden pillars and at its center by four Doric style brick columns. Between the columns is an upraised platform girded by a bank of low stone steps, which provide ground-level seats for people-watching, hiding from the sun and looking out on the great lawn below. With its pared-down, classical elegance and appealing mix of styles, The Pavilion is a functional and symbolic way-station and a gracious response to the architectural cacophony of the surrounding city.

via Battery Park City Authority

Timeline

1992 The Pavilion installed

Reference Links

link Battery Park City Authority: Public Art
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Location