[View the story "The Lowline — Irrigated With Sunlight" on Storify ]The Lowline — Irrigated With Sunlight Sallan imagines the Lowline -- takes a first glimpse of a future underground. Storified by the Sallan Foundation · Sun, Sep 23 2012 20:56:20
The shuttered Essex Street City Market is hosting an installation to introduce the Lowline. The brainchild of James Ramsey and Dan Barasch, the Lowline is envisioned as a year round public space in an abandoned 1.5-acre trolley terminal that runs under Delancey Street.
undefinedStaticflickr
Built in 1903, the terminal was a place where trolleys that completed their Brooklyn to Manhattan run over the Williamsburg Bridge turned around for the return trip, but this cobblestoned terminus was left derelict in 1948.
undefinedStaticflickr
The Lowline installation includes computer generated graphics of Manhattan traffic flows by Experiments in Motion and Columbia University student projects for 21st century underground mobility enhancements. But the biggest attraction is found in a vast, dark, curtained-off space where light bounces off a curvy panel system onto an islet composed of a tree on a mossy mound where mushrooms grow on scattered logs.
undefinedStaticflickr
Above, the solar distributor canopy consisting of 600 unique laser-cut light-reflecting aluminum panels is suspended from the ceiling. These panels diffuse sunlight brought into the space through a tube containing special fiber optics. The light tube gathers and concentrates sunlight collected on the building roof and can transmit it for a 100 feet. Enough light enters to allow plants that grow on forest floors to thrive in underground New York City spaces.
undefinedStaticflickr
Close your eyes and think of other urban locations that would benefit from becoming irrigated with sunlight.
undefinedStaticflickr
What do you see? Subway platforms, underground concourses, garages and basements take on a whole new look. Suddenly, prospects brighten for all kinds of subterranean spaces. What a value proposition! Originating 93 million miles away, sunlit urban interiors now could be in easy walking distance.
The twitterverse is abuzz with responses to the call #lowline as the installation comes to a close on Sunday, September 23rd.
THANK YOU to the thousands of supporters who've shared the journey to the exhibit with us! http://ow.ly/i/XzyVlowline
Recent articles written about the Lowline:
High Time for the Lowline - The Architect's NewspaperWell aware that the areas of greatest density often have the least public space, James Ramsey, the principal of RAAD Studio, set out to t...
This Is Science! The Low Line is Not Just A Subterranean High LineThe fact that it was underground was not the only aspect of the Low Line that set it apart from its railroad friend, the High Line. "Ther...
Tunnel Vision: Subterranean Park to Stay Sunny with Fiber-Optic Skylights [Slide Show]: Scientific AmericanThe proposed "Lowline" in New York City would transform an abandoned belowground trolley depot into a recreational public space complete ...