1 Police Plaza
One Police Plaza | |
---|---|
In 2005 | |
Alternative names | 1PP |
General information | |
Architectural style | Brutalist |
Location | New York City, New York |
Coordinates | 40°42′44″N 74°00′06″W / 40.712204°N 74.001676°WCoordinates: 40°42′44″N 74°00′06″W / 40.712204°N 74.001676°W |
Current tenants | New York City Police Department |
Construction started | 1968 |
Completed | 1973 |
Inaugurated | 1979 |
Renovated | 1984 |
Cost | $58 million |
Owner | City of New York |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 14 (above ground) |
Design and construction | |
Architecture firm | Gruzen & Partners |
Main contractor | Castagna & Sons |
One Police Plaza (often abbreviated as 1PP) is the headquarters of the New York City Police Department (NYPD). The building is located on Park Row in Civic Center, Manhattan near New York City's City Hall and the Brooklyn Bridge. Its block borders Park Row, Pearl Street, and Police Plaza. 1PP replaces the NYPD's previous headquarters at 240 Centre Street, approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) north of 1 Police Plaza.
Description
Like Boston City Hall, One Police Plaza is rectangular in plan and is an inverted pyramid in elevation. It is a 13-level, horizontally-oriented Brutalist building designed by Gruzen and Partners in 1973. A 22,000-square-foot (2,000 m2) expansion project was completed in 2011. Although the project did not add any new floors to the building or any new employees to police headquarters, it does have new computers and equipment. Angry Lower Manhattan residents held a rally on August 27, 2008 near One Police Plaza to protest the addition, and tenants of three neighboring co-ops filed a lawsuit to force the NYPD to undergo environmental and land use reviews.[1]
Located on the eighth floor of One Police Plaza is the Real Time Crime Center, an anti-crime computer network which is essentially a large search engine and data warehouse operated by detectives to assist officers in the field with their investigations. The Major Case Squad and the Technical Assistance Response Unit are also located at 1PP.
Inside 1 Police Plaza, a room on the second floor affectionately called "The Shack" serves as the police bureau office for local press outlets. Its tenants include the Associated Press, the Daily News, New York Post, The New York Times, Newsday, Staten Island Advance, El Diario La Prensa, NY1 News, and WINS Radio. Its police counterpart is on the 13th floor, the office of the Deputy Commissioner of Public Information (DCPI). Also inside 1PP is the "Fourteenth Floor", the NYPD commissioner's office.
Park Row closure criticism
Park Row, historically a major artery linking the Financial District to Chinatown and the Bowery, has been closed to civilian traffic since 2001.[2] The NYPD asserts that this is necessary to protect its headquarters from a truck bomb attack. Chinatown residents are increasingly frustrated at the disruption caused by the closure of the thoroughfare, especially nearby residents. People who live nearby argue that the police department has placed a chokehold on an entire neighborhood and that if One Police Plaza is such an obvious terrorist target, perhaps it should be moved from a residential area.[3] Members of the Civic Center Residents Coalition have been fighting the security perimeter around the building for years.
The NYPD has stated that it will not be moving despite the numerous complaints from residents, explaining that they had tried to alleviate the impact of the security measures by forbidding officers from parking in nearby public spaces and reopening a stairway that skirts the headquarter's south side and leads down to street level near the Brooklyn Bridge. The department also plans to redesign its guard booths and security barriers to make them more attractive, and is involved in efforts to convert two lanes of Park Row into a pedestrian green-way.[2]
In the media
- The characters of McCloud relocated to 1 Police Plaza at the beginning of the 1974 season, so the building was featured in establishing shots.
- One Police Plaza was a made-for-TV movie, based on the identically titled novel by William Caunitz, which aired in 1986. It was a crime drama about a veteran policeman's investigation of a woman's murder which led him to the discovery of corruption in high places.[4]
- The opening of each season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent ends with an image of the main characters walking outside the One Police Plaza building.
- The offices of the title character in the TV series Eischied were depicted as being in 1PP, though, in the TV-Movie pilot, To Kill a Cop, based on the novel by Robert Daley, they were shown to be in the original headquarters at 240 Centre Street.
- The building is also in the television series Blue Bloods, where the character of Frank Reagan (Tom Selleck) is often seen in his office on the 14th floor.
- One Police Plaza was used as the first level of a controversial mass killing simulator game, Hatred; the player is required to kill everyone inside the building.
See also
References
- ↑ "Lower Manhattan Residents Rally Against NYPD".
- 1 2 Buckley, Cara (2007-09-24). "Chinatown Residents Frustrated Over Street Closed Since 9/11". The New York Times.
- ↑ Dave Hogarty (2007-09-24). "Park Row Paralysis". Gothamist. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
- ↑ "One Police Plaza (TV Movie 1986)". IMDb. 29 November 1986.
External links
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