“We can now get back to doing the public’s business and return a functioning Government Center to Goshen,” the Orange County executive, Steven M. Neuhaus, said in a statement. “It is my hope that this delay will not impact the bid prices.” — artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com
As of this past April, the fate of New York's Orange County Government Center, a boxy brutalist designed by Paul Rudolph, was pretty much sealed. Preservationist had previously fought to restore the structure in the face of much-needed updates to the Center, but their proposals were dismissed, and (at least partial) demolition was looking more or less imminent.
Now, another loss has cleared the way for work to begin. A lawsuit filed by local residents, claiming that the building was worth saving for both its architectural significance and the existence of a cheaper, alternate plan for an updated government center that spared Rudolph's building, has been rejected.
Work on the building will begin in early July.
Chart the rocky history of Rudolph's Orange County Government Center below:
4 Comments
Ok good, let it go.
Such idiots.
Folk Art, Prentice and this... All highlighting the impotence of Twitter preservationists
There needs to be a stronger effort to educate the public about design and architecture. Too much is being destroyed because the public doesn't appreciate it and all they know is that it looks strange.
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