Reopened 86th Street B,C station boasts new murals inspired by Central Park and Beaux-Arts architecture
Photo © 6sqft
The 86th Street B, C station reopened last week after five months of renovations and upgrades. The improved Central Park West station now features six colorful mosaic and ceramic murals translated from artist Joyce Kozloff’s “Parkside Portals” artwork, which depicts different perspectives of the neighborhood. The art shifts from aerial views of Central Park to close-ups of Beaux-Arts and Art Deco elements found on the iconic facades of surrounding buildings.
The artwork of Kozloff, who was a part of the Pattern and Decoration art movement of the ’70s and lived on the UWS for a decade, uses mapping and geography to create layers of cities and their histories, according to the MTA.
As one ode to the history of the park, the artwork includes a map of Seneca Village, the 5-acre settlement founded by free African American landowners in 1825. The settlement, the first of its kind in the city, lasted until 1857, when the construction of Central Park began.
Kozloff’s style is apparent in the station’s murals, which used Google Earth technology for the aerial park views. The art is framed with the trees of Central Park during the four seasons of the year. Kozloff worked with Miotto Mosaic Art Studios and Travisanutto Giovanni SRL to translate her paintings into tiles and glass mosaics.
In addition to the bright new murals, 86th Street station also received substantial repair work. The MTA fixed structural steel and concrete, repaired stairways, added new railings and guardrails, cleaned and repaired damaged tiles and concrete floors, and replaced platform edges.
The authority also installed new tech features, like digital wayfinding and customer information screens, countdown clocks, USB charging stations, and security cameras.
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All photos © 6sqft