Thursday, May 9, 2013

is this the point of no return? am I there yet or soon to arrive?

the damaged heart; how many times until it finally gives way, and flesh falls away revealing the skeletal structure and from there it is fire and cinder, vapor and a few bone fragments, Aftwards, no heaven, no hell, no purgatory, nowhere erewhon, bla
ck before my eyes, but eyes can not see they are no more. shades wandering aimlessly unable to talk but only an occasional squeak. What a view of mortality. Now only, this instant, gone, irretrievable and the  beads of life sparkle and then the next bead, dimmer yet until finally darkness, no motion, no swirling and wandering , no walking sound, sight, taste, smell, touch no longer exist for that little scintillating little glint and then a mere particle that sinks to the ground or rises in a droplet forever passing through the cycle of nature, earth's nature until the universe explodes and then there is no more perhaps never again or possibling reconfigured. a particle, so small it cannot be seen but it has ways on its unscripted path


 

Monday, May 6, 2013

The New York Public Library , Research Branch, for staters, stags have now been emptied; demotion about to occur

SAVE THE 42ND STREET LIBRARY
The Committee to Save the New York Public Library
SAVE THE 42ND STREET LIBRARY
The Committee to Save the New York Public Library
PLEASE SEE FOLLOWING URL

http://www.savenypl.org


 see above URL for a readable and well designed version of the same material as below. In either case, we-ALL- are about to lose a huge factor in NYC, its principal research Branch. But that is only the beginning. The little branch libraries will be mice for the rats to cat and excrete in the form of slender glass receptacles for the half of one percenters. Why should they care? Did the barbarians, so-call care, when libraries were torched. Remember Bimyan Buddhas? a comparable mindset is at work here.

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DON’T GUT THE 42nd STREET LIBRARY!
Rally at the 42nd Street Library Wednesday May 8th!
3:30-5:30PM Rain or Shine More info

STOP THE CENTRAL LIBRARY PLAN

SAVE THE 42ND STREET LIBRARY
The Committee to Save the New York Public Library

 SearchMain menu
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The Truth About the Central Library Plan
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DON’T GUT THE 42nd STREET LIBRARY!
Rally at the 42nd Street Library Wednesday May 8th!
3:30-5:30PM Rain or Shine More info

STOP THE CENTRAL LIBRARY PLAN



 SearchMain menu
Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
Home
The Truth About the Central Library Plan
Donate
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News and Events
Resources
DON’T GUT THE 42nd STREET LIBRARY!
Rally at the 42nd Street Library Wednesday May 8th!
3:30-5:30PM Rain or Shine More info

STOP THE CENTRAL LIBRARY PLAN

The Central Library Plan (CLP), at enormous cost to New York City and its taxpayers, would irreparably damage the 42nd Street Research Library – one of the world’s great reference libraries and a historic landmark. The CLP would demolish the library’s historic seven-story book stacks, install a circulating library in their stead, and displace 1.5 million books to central New Jersey. The new circulating library would replace the Mid-Manhattan Library (at 40th and 5th Avenue) and SIBL (Science, Industry and Business Library, at 34th and Madison), which would both be sold off.

• It will be hugely expensive, costing a minimum of $300 million (probably much more), of which $150 million will come from New York City taxpayers. There is great concern that the Library’s focus on a highly-complex construction project will absorb desperately-needed funds which might otherwise pay for renovations of branch libraries, and replenish slashed curatorial and acquisitions budgets.

• It will radically reduce the space available for the Mid-Manhattan and SIBL.

• It will threaten the 42nd Street Library’s status as one of the world’s great research libraries.

• It will threaten the architectural integrity of the landmarked 42nd Street building.

• It does not take into consideration more efficient and less destructive alternatives, such as combining SIBL and the Mid-Manhattan into a rehabilitated and expanded building on the Mid-Manhattan site.

Underlying the widespread concern is the closed process through which the Library administration has made its decisions. Despite the fact that the 42nd Street building is owned by the city and is one of our most iconic structures, the plan was formulated with minimal public notification and no public input. The $150 million that the city has earmarked for the project was awarded without oversight by the City Council and with no public hearings. If alternatives have been considered they have never been disclosed, and no cost-benefit analysis or detailed budget has ever been presented.

Famed architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable, writing in the Wall Street Journal, attacked the Central LIbrary Plan as

a plan devised out of a profound ignorance of or willful disregard for not only the library’s original concept and design, but also the folly of altering its meaning and mission and compromising its historical and architectural integrity. You don’t ‘update’ a masterpiece.

New York Times architecture critic Michael Kimmelman derided the design for the new circulating library which would replace the book stacks in the 42nd Street building as having “all the elegance and distinction of a suburban mall,” and called it an

awkward, cramped, banal pastiche of tiers facing claustrophobia-inducing windows, built around a space-wasting atrium with a curved staircase more suited to a Las Vegas hotel.

The Committee to Save the NYPL calls for a halt to the CLP until an independent agency can conduct a detailed cost analysis. This analysis should also evaluate the costs of an alternative proposal suggested by both Huxtable and Kimmelman that the 42nd Street building be left intact and attention directed instead to a renovation of the Mid-Manhattan building. As Kimmelman writes, “A new Mid-Manhattan branch should cost a fraction of gutting the stacks and could produce much better architecture.”

For an in-depth analysis of the Central Library Plan, please see The Truth About the Central Library Plan.

We are investigating all avenues of opposition to the Central Library Plan and we need your help! All donations are fully tax-deductable.




It has become increasingly apparent that the CLP is part of a larger effort by New York City’s public library systems to shrink their capacity and sell off valuable real estate, which started with the controversial sale in 2008 of the beloved Donnell Library to real estate developers.  For more information, visit the site of our allies at Citizens Defending Libraries: http://citizensdefendinglibraries.blogspot.com/

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