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EDITOR'S PICK Revitalizing an Icon


By Marcy Marro, Editor


New York City’s Tavern on the Green undergoes a major renovation


New York City’s Tavern on the Green in Central Park is one of the city’s most recognized restaurants. Originally built in 1871 as a sheepfold, the Victorian Gothic struc- ture underwent a number of alterations over the years in response to changing programmatic needs. In 1934, it was converted into a restaurant, and over the next seven decades, the building continually expanded, adding more interior dining and support spaces. In the mid-1970s, the last major dining area addition was made, the glass and steel-framed Crystal Room. From 1934 to when the restaurant closed in 2009, the original 8,000-square-foot building grew to approximately 31,000 square feet. In 2010, the city removed the Crystal Room to


create a temporary Visitor’s Center in the build- ing’s north wing. The next year, in an attempt to re-establish Tavern on the Green as a true public amenity, the city retained Swanke Hayden Con- nell Architects, New York City, for a core-and-shell rehabilitation to restore the building envelope and infrastructure for a subsequent interior fi t-out by a new restaurant concessionaire. The12,000-square-foot restoration focused on


rebuilding the facility as a restaurant, serving the needs of park visitors and neighborhood residents, rather than the large catering facility it had become. Working with a food services consultant, Swanke determined that by greatly reducing the building’s footprint, the restaurant could be viable and eco- nomically successful. By removing years of inappro- priate additions and restoring the building footprint back to what the originally conceived restaurant was, Swanke was able to reduce the building’s footprint by more than 50 percent. Swanke Hayden Connell’s Director of Historic


Preservation, Elizabeth Moss, emphasized that the main goal of the project was to restore as much of the 1934 historic structure as possible, while meeting demands of modern restaurant needs. “By reducing the building footprint through the demolition of poorly maintained non-historic addi- tions, we were able to restore the historic structure


64 METAL CONSTRUCTION NEWS December 2013


and courtyard, as well as reestablish the building’s historic relationship to Central Park.” Wherever possible, historic drawings and photographs were used as the basis of design. All elevations previously hidden by additions


were carefully uncovered and restored, along with the semi-circular cocktail lounge added onto the building’s north side in 1947. The building’s deterio- rated slate and copper roofs were replaced by all new matching roofs, with all exterior masonry restored with matching materials. Existing infi ll from the 1940s was removed from the courtyard, allowing the historic wings to be extended back to their original confi guration with the replacement of missing doors and dormers. All fenestration was removed and replaced with energy-effi cient and period-appropriate wood windows and doors. Keeping the original ornamental sheet metal


details the same was key to the project. Since the lead-coated copper cupola and underlying wood framing was too deteriorated to restore, Hudson Val- ley Roofi ng & Sheet Metal Inc., New Windsor, N.Y., and Tri-State Metals LLC, Elmsford, N.Y., prepared an accurate replication that required 160 hours in the shop and 60 hours of fi eld fabrication. Hudson Val- ley and Tri-State also replicated the radius standing seam roof and ventilator at the restored 1947 north bar addition. Tri-State Metals also fabricated the lead-coated


copper, refurbished the large steel fi nial by straight- ening it out, sandblasting it and giving it a new black powder-coated fi nish. CopperCraft by Fabral, Grapevine, Texas, fabricated the small red copper cupola and the wall red copper louvers. Tri-State also utilized 16-oz cold-rolled copper gutter for the built-in gutters, along with 20-ounce cold-rolled copper for the fl ashings, ridge caps, standing seam roof, louvers and ventilators. Lancaster, Pa.-based Fabral supplied the copper sheets. The project also features 1,220 snow guards from Berger Building Products, Feasterville, Pa. The famed restaurant will reopen in December,


and in compliance with New York City Local Law 86, is designed to achieve LEED Silver certifi cation.


Tavern on the Green Rehabilitation, Central Park, New York City


Owners: NYC Department of Design & Construction, Long Island City, N.Y.; Central Park Conservancy, New York City; and NYC Depart- ment of Parks and Recreation, New York City Architect: Swanke Hayden Connell Architects, New York City Civil engineering: Philip Habib & Associates, New York City MEP engineering: Excel Group, Albany, N.Y. General contractor: Atlas Restoration Corp., Astoria, N.Y. Structural engineering: LPE Engineering, New York City Point-supported glass addition: APG International, Enclosure Specialist, Glassboro, N.J. Roofi ng contractor: Hudson Valley Roofi ng & Sheet Metal Inc., New Windsor, N.Y. Metal fabricator/distributor: Tri-State Metals LLC, Elmsford, N.Y. Liquid-applied roofi ng system: Kemper System, West Seneca, N.Y. Copper: Fabral, Lancaster, Pa., www.fabral.com, Circle #78 Red copper cupola/louvers: Copper Craft by Fabral, Grapevine, Texas, www.coppercraft.com, Circle #79 Snow guards: Berger Building Products, Feasterville, Pa., www.bergerbp.com, Circle #80


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