New Orleans plans jazz district central park
Posted on: Tuesday, 30 May 2006, 16:07 CDT
By Peter Henderson
NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - New Orleans plans a new $700 million jazz district and central park, aiming to use the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina as an opportunity to rebuild the damaged core of the city.
Standing in front of the still-shuttered Superdome stadium, city and state officials on Tuesday described the 20-acre (8-hectare) National Jazz Center and Jazz Park, a performance center, museum complex and park that would provide a new cultural anchor for the city known as the home of jazz.
"This project will put New Orleans back on the map," said Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco.
Nine months after Katrina swept through the city, the area to be transformed is only partly functional and has little foot traffic. The Hyatt hotel, which served as a command center for Mayor Ray Nagin during the storm and will be redeveloped in the plan, is riddled with broken windows.
Workers still are repairing the roof of the Superdome, the stadium that served as the shelter of last resort for thousands in last year's storm.
Supporters hope their plan will attract more residential and mixed-use development by better promoting New Orleans' musical heritage, supporters said. Fewer than half the city's pre-storm residents have returned, nearly every main street has some closed businesses and tourism, the lifeblood of the local economy, has not fully revived since the hurricane.
The six-block-long park would link the Hyatt and the Superdome while an extended trolley line would run to the French Quarter's historic maze of shops and restaurants about half a mile away.
TWO TO THREE YEARS OF WORK
Nagin estimated the project would take two or three years and said it would be a year before construction would begin as tax breaks and additional funding were lined up.
While billed as a major commercial initiative started by Strategic Hotels & Resorts Inc., owner of the New Orleans Hyatt, most of the estimated $716 million investment would come from government agencies in the form of donated land, tax breaks and incentives.
Strategic Hotels plans to invest about $50 million, in addition to insurance settlements, said Strategic Chief Executive and Chairman Laurence Geller.
Jazz is part of the cultural life blood of New Orleans but it has been scattered throughout the Mississippi River city, found primarily in the streets of the French Quarter and on small stages crammed into smoky bars.
Trumpeter Irvin Mayfield, artistic director of the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra which will be based in a new performance hall designed by modernist architect Thom Mayne, described the park and center as a homecoming for the music.
"I am grateful to be alive at this time to witness such wonderful cultural triumphs," said Mayfield, whose father was killed in the storm.
Planners would demolish some court and city buildings to make way for the park. It would aim to offer room for picnics, green space and access to jazz.
The area is deserted at night now but will become a 24-hour draw and anchor urban residential and other development, if all goes as planned.
The concept designed by Mayne includes a new civil court building with a silvery wave emerging from the side. The performance center appears as a circular mass with a curving core surrounded by a translucent curtain of glass.
"We should have the first great American city of the 21st century," Geller said.
(Additional reporting by Jeffrey Jones)
Source: REUTERS
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