The Ballplayers House or Ballfields Café is a 450-square-foot (42 m2) building in Central Park in Manhattan, New York City, designed by the architecture firm Buttrick White & Burtis. Completed in 1990,[1] it replaced an older building, architect Calvert Vaux's Boys Play House of 1868, which stood on the northern edge of the Heckscher Ballfields until it was demolished in 1969. Vaux's building was a 1-1/2 story (plus basement), 52-foot (16 m) long clubhouse and dispensary for bats and balls,[2][3] whereas Buttrick White & Burtis' building is a 1-story food concession half the length of the original.
Design
editThe Ballplayers House recalls Vaux's design, albeit much altered in form and detail. In contrast to the brick and bluestone facade of Vaux's building, with its pointed arches and polychrome voussoirs, the facade of Ballplayers House is composed with graphic stripes of highly contrasting brick. An encaustic tile frieze with a simple flower motif and a zig-zag pattern, symbolizes a ball bouncing across a baseball field.[4] In lieu of Vaux's bracketed eaves, pointed pinnacles and chamfered chimney, the new building boasts a simple roofline, topped with a sleek, factory-made, metal cresting.
Elizabeth Barlow Rogers, president of the Central Park Conservancy when the Ballplayers House was built, described its design as "a contemporary interpretation of Vaux's style."[5]
Historic gallery
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Boys Play House, built in 1868 and demolished in 1969.
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1868 Map of Central Park, showing the Boys Play House just south (left) of "Road No. 1"
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Ball Field and Boys Play House, 1869
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An 1870 Stereoscope view of the Boys Playground with architect Calvert Vaux's Boys Play House in the distance.
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A sketch of the Boys Playground in 1871
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A View of the Boys Play House
References
edit- ^ Branch, Mark Alden (1991-08-12). "Flirting with Folly in Central Park" (PDF). Progressive Architecture. Retrieved 2021-04-10.
- ^ Eleventh Annual Report of the Board of Commissioners of the Central Park, 1868, page 26.
- ^ In 1903, the Boys Play House was "converted into a comfort station and a house for the storage of paraphernalia of croquet players." (The City Record, November 23, 1903, page 9679).
- ^ Susanne Stephens. “Snack stand for Central Park Ball Field,” The New York Times, July 12, 1990, Section C, page 3. According to the article, the frieze was designed by William Braham, an architect at Buttrick White & Burtis, and fabricated by Brenda Bertin.
- ^ Elizabeth Barlow Rogers, "Robert Moses and the Transformation of Central Park." Site/Lines, A Journal of Place (Fall 2007), Volume III, No. 1.