New
York Police Department
Mounted Unit Get New Stables
New Home
for Mounted Unit Clears the Way for the Expansion of Hudson
River Park
(NYC) New
York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Raymond
W. Kelly opened new stables for the NYPD Mounted Unit
at Pier 76 on Manhattan's
West Side. The new 22,500 square foot stables include a 6,500 square
foot
heated training ring, spacious box stalls, locker rooms and office space
for both Troop B and the Mounted Unit citywide headquarters. The construction
firm Skanska USA completed the Pier 76 construction project in less than
six months. The vacancy of the Mounted Unit's old home at Pier 63 paves
the way the continued expansion of Hudson River Park during the upcoming
warm weather months. The Mayor and the Police Commissioner were joined
at the announcement by Hudson River Park Trust Board of Directors Chairman
Charles E. Dorkey III and Friends of Hudson River Park President Albert
Butzel.
"A year
ago we didn't know where we were going to move our mounted
unit," said Mayor Bloomberg. "Through a real team
effort and a lot of hard work we are putting our officers and
their mounts in this spectacular new facility built in just
six months. Not only do they stay in the same neighborhood,
their move also paves the way for the expansion of Hudson River
Park so we can continue to open more of our waterfront for
New Yorkers."
"Their
impressive visibility make our mounted police officers and
their horses great crime fighters and outstanding ambassadors
to the public," said Commissioner Kelly. "It is only
fitting that the horses have the best accommodations possible
in Manhattan, close to the action, where they are often needed."
"This
achievement could only have been possible with the close working
relationship between the City and state that the Trust board
and staff have developed over the past eight years," said
Hudson River Park Trust Chairman Dorkey. "The Mayor's
staff, the Department of Design and Construction, the Trust's
Construction Manager, Skanska USA, and the Friends of Hudson
River Park all worked to ensure that Hudson River Park's Chelsea
Cove would be able to move forward as planned."
"We
are very grateful to the Mayor for helping to find and build
a new home for the mounted troop so that Hudson River Park
can move forward," said Friends of Hudson River Park President
Butzel.
The new Pier
76 facility will have 28 box stalls that measure 10' by 10'
and are more spacious than traditional straight stalls. There
is also a hay loft, a horse shower stall, a saddle room, an
entry lobby with police desk, administrative office space,
and separate locker rooms for police officers, police supervisors
and hostlers - civilians who care and feed for the horses.
The separate shower stall and a hay loft are improvements over
the Mounted Unit's old home at Pier 63. The covered and heated
6,500 square foot exercise ring will allow for training and
workouts for the horses even when weather conditions do not
permit the horses to go out on patrol.
The new stables
were constructed on an underused portion of the Police Department's
Manhattan Tow Pound. Thirty hydraulic lifts that can hold two
cars in a single parking space were installed in the tow pound
so that there is no net loss of parking spots there. A separate
newly constructed parking lot provides 40 new parking spots
for Mounted Unit vehicles and horse trailers. The project also
creates improved facilities for the NYPD Parking Enforcement
Division, replacing offices and storage space that were displaced
to accommodate the Mounted Unit. The NYPD Mounted Unit has
120 uniformed officers and supervisors and approximately 80
horses in its ranks. The Mounted Unit's Troop B, when fully
staffed, has 30 uniformed officers and supervisors, and their
28 mounts. The Mounted Unit also includes troops stationed
at Pelham Bay Park, Fresh Meadows, Coney Island, and at the
1st Precinct in Lower Manhattan.
The Mounted
Unit's former home at Pier 63 will become part of three new
public park piers that comprise a 9.2 acre expansion of Hudson
River Park. This new section of the park, called Chelsea Cove,
will stretch from 22nd to 26th Streets along the waterfront.
The park will feature three new green public park piers, including
a public garden, a carousel with Hudson River animals, a skate
park and a boulder garden designed by landscape artist Meg
Webster. Chelsea Cove has an estimated construction cost of
$61 million that is being split by the City and the state.
The park is being designed by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates.
The accelerated
construction timetable allows the reconstruction of Pier 63
to take place during the warmer weather months, outside of
the Army Corps and DEC annual pile driving moratorium. Had
the construction not been completed so quickly the Chelsea
Cove section of the park could have been subjected to a months-long
delay. The design of the new $8.7 million Mounted Unit facility
was managed by the Department of Design and Construction. Construction
costs will be paid for by the Police Department and facilitated
by the Hudson River Park Trust and their contractor Skanska
USA. Further, Skanska USA subcontracted over half of the construction
to local minority and woman owned construction firms. Works-in-Progress
Associates served as Skanska USA's Women's Business Enterprise
partner and sub consultant and provided project management
and field supervision.