Reconstruction of the Tompkins Square Park field house is expected to start next month.
And according to a Parks Department official, during this 18-month project, the city will not provide any portable toilets for public use.
A resident shared an email from a Parks official, who explained that porta potties were not part of the contract "and cannot be supplied during construction."
The alternative for public use during this period: The restrooms at the
McKinley Playground on Fourth Street between Avenue A and First Avenue adjacent to P.S. 63/the Neighborhood School. (The official incorrectly stated that McKinley is on Avenue A.)
Hopefully, the construction workers will have access to a closer temp toilet during the reconstruction.
The other day, we walked from the center of the Park (the muddy entrance to where the lawn used to be) to McKinley.
Walking at a fairly brisk clip took us five minutes and 40 seconds to get to our temp restroom destination ...
So roughly 12 minutes to and from, not counting time at McKinley.
Meanwhile, we've had a possible sneak preview of what's to come during the reconstruction in Tompkins Square Park. As we've reported (
here and
here and
here), the public restrooms have been locked to the public since early November.
Parks officials told us last November that a malfunctioning boiler and a broken pipe in the basement of the field house are to blame. And the Parks Department decided to wait for the reconstruction to make the repairs.
In recent months, readers and residents have noted an uptick in people relieving themselves around the Park (photo below by Derek Berg) and between cars parked along Avenue B and Seventh Street.
Granted, the restrooms in Tompkins, with missing doors and toilet seats, among other things, desperately needed a makeover ... though they were suitable for prompting some nostalgia...
A 2019 comptroller's report found that Chinatown and the Lower East Side had the highest percentage (at 40%) of parks restrooms rated as "unacceptable" in the five boroughs.
As for the renovation, per the Parks
website, the work is slated to be completed in September 2024.
So that's two summers without toilets for Park visitors (unless a local elected official can find some financing for the rental and maintenance). The city does provide toilets for the Park's major events, including the
Dance Parade in May and the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival in August.
Perhaps adult diapers and
portable toilets will become the
must-have accessories for gatherings in Tompkins Square Park in 2023 and 2024.