
A broken lamp and overgrown walkway.
'Highbridge Park' is located in
Washington Heights on the banks of the
Harlem River near the northernmost tip of the
New York City borough of
Manhattan, between
155th Street and
Dyckman Street. The park is operated and maintained by the
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.
It was once an urban oasis on the order of
Central Park, but delayed upkeep following the closure of the High Bridge has caused the park to deteriorate significantly.
History

Highbridge Park, 2002.
The land for Highbridge Park was acquired starting in 1865 from the New York City Water Commission. The park grew over the next 50 years. Upper-middle class New Yorkers would promenade along the wide boardwalks in top hats and bustles. The park provided access to the
Harlem River and places for horseback riding and other outdoor sports. In the 1890s, the City of New York built a racetrack along the river (for horses) known as the
Harlem River Speedway. In 1940,
Robert Moses turned significant portions of the Speedway into the
Harlem River Drive, a 6-lane highway from the Manhattan end of the
Triborough Bridge at
125th Street to the tunnels under Manhattan connecting to the
George Washington Bridge. New fences blocked public recreational access to the riverfront. Robert Moses also built a huge swimming pool and several playgrounds in the park. By this time, Highbridge was a park for working class emigrant families.
At the turn of the century the Speedway was rehabilitated and reopened as the Harlem River portion of the
Manhattan Waterfront Greenway.
The High Bridge

The High Bridge.
High Bridge is a
footbridge in the park that connects
The Bronx to
Manhattan and is the namesake of the park. It is the oldest surviving bridge in New York City, built in 1848 during the construction of the
Croton Aqueduct. Although the disused bridge is structurally stable, it has been closed since the 1970s, purportedly because of incidents of rock-throwing.
The Park today
The
New York Restoration Project (chaired by
Bette Midler) has been working since 2000 or so to restore the park. As the fortunes of Washington Heights have lifted, the park has improved and is no longer a haven for petty crime. The infrastructure of the park has decayed significantly and has not been fully restored.
The cost of rebuilding the crumbling stairs and pathways and installing bike ramps for the High Bridge is estimated at over $6 million.
Mountainbiking in Highbridge Park
May 19th 2007 saw the opening of New York City's first legal mountainbike trails and dirt jumps in Highbridge Park. New York City Mountainbike Association in association with New York City Parks and the International Mountainbike Association (IMBA) has been working together on the trails and the opening weekend featured a festival and cross country mountainbike race.
External links
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nycgovparks.org: Highbridge Park
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New York Restoration Project: Highbridge Park
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Washington Heights & Inwood Online
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wirednewyork.com: Highbridge
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Parks Even the Parks Dept. Won't Claim - ''New York Times'' By Timothy Williams Published
July 6,
2005
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New York City Mountainbike Association