Flushing Meadows Corona Park

July 8, 2011 – Once upon a time, this Queens, NY, site was a trash dump described as a “valley of ash” by F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby. Then, in 1939 it became the location of the New York World’s Fair. Almost thirty years later, in 1964, it became the location of a second world’s fair. Today it’s a 1,255-acre park called Flushing Meadows Corona Park, and it still features many of the amazing artifacts, buildings, and monuments left over from both of those future-facing international events (although mostly from the second one) in conditions ranging from amazingly well preserved to post-apocalyptic, where said apocalypse is a lost war against a race of intelligent cancers brought to life by a smartphones and a particularly nasty radiation treatment on what would become the Moses of cancers.

The park also has a zoo, Arthur Ashe Stadium (where the U.S. Open tennis tournament is played), Citi Field (home of the Mets), and various museums, soccer fields, pools, meadows, and playgrounds. By contrast, my local park has a creaky swing set and a crooked gazebo where the senior citizens from the nearby retirement home go to make out. Sometimes there’s nothing on TV for me to watch.

The rotting remains of the New York State Pavilion from the
1964 world's fair. Currently most famous for being
the site of the climax of Men in Black.

The observation tower is 250 feet at its tallest point,
while the plaza measures 250 by 350 feet.

The interior floor was covered by a giant mosaic of
New York made up of more than 550 panels.

Form, the once-rotating (maybe still, but
not while I was there) Jose De Rivera
sculpture for th 1964 world's fair.

The dominating feature of the park is the Unisphere,
a massive 12-story-high globe.

The back of the New York Hall of Science, constructed
for the 1964 world's fair and still open today.

A series of about a dozen circular mosaics installed in 1998
at the main entrance to the park celebrates
the art and architecture of the two world's fairs.



Forms in Transit, created by Theodore Roszak
for the 1964 world's fair.

A Mercury-Atlas rocket beside the
Hall of Science.


A Gemini-Titan rocket, also next
to the Hall of Science.

Three of the six playgrounds in the park are
dinosaur-themed, including the Dinosaur,
Jurassic, and Triassic playgrounds.

Freedom of the Human Spirit, the
28-foot-tall Marshall Fredericks
sculpture created for the 1964
world's fair.

The 43-foot-tall Rocket Thrower, created
by Donald De Lue for the 1964 world's fair.

Site of the Vatican Paviliion from the 1964 world's fair.

Location of two time capsules, one from each world's fair,
scheduled to be opened in 5,000 years.
Here's more about the capsules and their contents.

It's all fairs and games until somebody gets hurt. A memorial
 to the two bomb squad officers  who died removing a
time bomb from the fairgrounds during the 1939
world's fair. The culprits were never caught 

The world according to Queens.

4 comments:

  1. You can see the mosaic of New York (although in black and white) in the video for "Don't Lets Start" by They Might Be Giants. The whole video was shot in there. Apparently the floor was still intact in the mid-80s.

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  2. Interesting. I'm fascinated about places that were once "the future" and thriving and are now defunct and decaying, as if mankind finally did itself in and left behind only the concrete and steel to weather away.

    Of course I am familiar with the particular visuals from MIB, but I had no idea the park was as big.

    A few days after I read this piece I came across Iron Man II on TV and watched it. (saw it when it came out, but was not really impressed, so watched it this second time)

    Was surprised to see the same setting of the towers and plaza used for the Stark Expo in the movie. Fitting. Expo then expo now.

    Assuming they really did use the space, or was it all done with sets and CGI? Haven't bothered to research it.

    However, this has sparked my digging around on Youtube for all the cool videos related to the 39 and 65 World's Fairs. The cars of the future, house of tomorrow, etc. All so interesting.

    Your photo of the time capsule marker sparked my own extensive investigation of all aspects of the capsules from both fairs. I learned a lot. Very amazing. Will there be mankind in the year 6939? Will there even be a planet Earth? I got a chuckle out of the contents today, what will "we" think of it 4928 years from now?

    My last thought or query - Why does it seem as if the excitement for the future that seemed so prevalent with the people in these past eras, doesn't feel the same or as energized, or even seems to not exist today?

    Is it because we're jaded, because we're too busy with other "important" things to have a little fun and look toward the future with awe and fascination? Or is it because we "have the future" now and don't see much in upcoming technological leaps and bounds as we did just forty five or seventy two years ago?

    Thanks for this piece. As always I appreciate what OTIS and you, bring to me.

    I may not always have time to post, but I do check in every week or so to see what's new.

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  3. Thanks, Joshua. I appreciate both the philosophizing and the kind words.

    JWO

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  4. We really got to walk through here together..there are places hidden away that i know you would love. Many pavillions have bitten the dust here, the foundations still beneath your feet. We better hurry..every other day something is lost here, or changed or carted off..
    One of my favorite haunts....

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