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The '''Grand Concourse''' is likely the most famous street in [[The Bronx]] borough of [[New York City]]. It was designed by [[Louis Aloys Risse]], an [[Alsace|Alsatian]] immigrant who had previously worked for the [[New York Cental]] railroad and was later appointed chief topographical engineer for the [[City of New York]].
The '''Grand Concourse''' is likely the most famous street in [[The Bronx]] borough of [[New York City]]. It was designed by [[Louis Aloys Risse]], an [[Alsace|Alsatian]] immigrant who had previously worked for the [[New York Cental]] railroad and was later appointed chief topographical engineer for the [[New York City|City of New York]].


Risse first conceived of the road in [[1870]], as a means of connecting Manhattan to the parkway in the northern Bronx. Construction began on the Grand Concourse in [[1889]] and it was opened to traffic in November 1909. The street was originally called the 'Grand Boulevard and Concourse,' although the name was later shortened. Built during the height of the [[City Beautiful movement|City Beautiful]] period, it was modeled on the [[Champs-Élysées]] in [[Paris]], but was considerably larger, stretching four miles in length and measuring 180 feet across, seperated into three roadways by tree-lined dividers.
Risse first conceived of the road in [[1870]], as a means of connecting Manhattan to the parkway in the northern Bronx. Construction began on the Grand Concourse in [[1889]] and it was opened to traffic in November 1909. The street was originally called the 'Grand Boulevard and Concourse,' although the name was later shortened. Built during the height of the [[City Beautiful movement|City Beautiful]] period, it was modeled on the [[Champs-Élysées]] in [[Paris]], but was considerably larger, stretching four miles in length and measuring 180 feet across, seperated into three roadways by tree-lined dividers.

Revision as of 08:20, 21 October 2005

The Grand Concourse is likely the most famous street in The Bronx borough of New York City. It was designed by Louis Aloys Risse, an Alsatian immigrant who had previously worked for the New York Cental railroad and was later appointed chief topographical engineer for the City of New York.

Risse first conceived of the road in 1870, as a means of connecting Manhattan to the parkway in the northern Bronx. Construction began on the Grand Concourse in 1889 and it was opened to traffic in November 1909. The street was originally called the 'Grand Boulevard and Concourse,' although the name was later shortened. Built during the height of the City Beautiful period, it was modeled on the Champs-Élysées in Paris, but was considerably larger, stretching four miles in length and measuring 180 feet across, seperated into three roadways by tree-lined dividers.

The cost of the project was $14 million, the equivalent to $310 million by today's standards. The road originally stretched from the Bronx Borough Hall at 161st street north to Van Courtland park, although it was later expanded southward to 138th street after Mott Avenue was widened to accommodate the boulevard.

Subway service first came to the Grand Concourse in 1914, initiating a housing boom amongst upwardly mobile, predominantly Jewish and Italian, families who were fleeing the crowded tenements of Manhattan. By the mid-1930s, almost three hundred apartment buildings had been built along the Concourse. Customarily five or six stories high with wide entrence courtyards bordered with grass and shrubs, among these apartments are many of the finest examples of Art Deco and Art Moderne architecture in the United States.

In 1923, Yankee Stadium opened along the Grand Concourse at 161st Street. South of Fordham Road, the palatial Loew's Paradise Theater, at one time the largest movie theater in New York City, was constructed in 1929.

Although the Great Depression ended the period of tremendous growth, privately financed apartment buildings continued to be constructed. During this period, The Bronx had more amenities than other boroughs: in 1934, almost 99 percent of residences had private bathrooms, and 95 percent had central heating. [1] In the 1939 WPA guide to New York, the Grand Concourse was described as "the Park Avenue of middle-class Bronx residents, and the lease to an apartment in one of its many large buildings is considered evidence of at least moderate business success." [2]

In 1941, the New York City Planning Department proposed converting the boulevard into an expressway, in order to connect the Major Deegan Expressway and the proposed Park Avenue Expressway to the south with the Major Deegan Expressway to the north. However, these plans were abandoned following the southern extension of the Bronx River Parkway in the 1940s and the extension of the Major Deegan Expressway to the north in the 1950s.

The area Grand Concourse began to rapidly deteriorate in the 1960s. Rent controls, established during World War II when empty apartments were scarce, prevented landlords from paying for repairs for ageing buildings. White flight led to the steady exodus of most of the residents of the South Bronx, lured by the dream of suburban life and fear of mounting crime. At the same time, over 170,000 people displaced by slum clearings in Manhattan, mostly black and Pueto Rican, moved to the south Bronx. The city also adopted policies of relocating welfare recipients to the area, paying fees to landlords.

The construction of Co-Op City in the northeastern Bronx between 1968 and 1970 drained the area of many of its few remaining middle-class residents. Most of the buildings in the area were burned down in the wave of arsons that afflicted the South Bronx in the 1970s. However, starting in the 1990s, when the Bronx's population began to grow for the first time in twenty years, a wave of housing construction came to the area. Their has been a effort to restore the Grand Concourse.

Today, the Grand Concourse is set to undergo an $18 million restoration and landscaping that will widen the medians and improve lighting from 161st to 171st Streets.