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Re: Wild Design of the Day: A Skyscraper Prison to Rehabilitate Jersey City's Convicts
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Home away from home
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Also, we could end the War on Drugs so we don't have to create more prisons. Less people in prison means less children who grow up without parents (and will be less likely to go to prison themselves).
Posted on: 2012/4/8 14:01
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Re: Wild Design of the Day: A Skyscraper Prison to Rehabilitate Jersey City's Convicts
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Home away from home
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These two guys are hardly break through architects. They are not only ripping off Tim Burton?s Gotham City architecture, there are also ripping off the idea of having a highrise prison in Journal Square Jersey City. It sort of looked like the one in the picture without the ?arches? . I think you guys should go back to the drawing board.
Our infamous jail was on the corner of Central and Pavonia. It is now a parking lot behind the Court House/ Administration Building. It was closed in the 80?s amid a ton of controversy and ripped down in the 90?s. Inmates moved to the new Kearney jail. A lot of problems arose in the mid 80?s because of the explosion of inmates in county jails around the country. Around the same time as crack started hitting the scene. Also a time when people were still existing JC by the truck load. ?In recent years soaring drug arrests have swelled the inmate population. The Hudson County Prosecutor recently said his caseload had doubled to 16,000 cases in 1989, from 8,000 in 1985.? These paragraphs from the NYT?s (and full links at bottom) will give you a quick picture of what it looked like. (mentally) I can?t find any pictures of it. ?Overcrowding, especially in the last year, has made the (8 story) grimy gray brick-and-stone building on Pavonia Avenue a tinderbox of frayed nerves. Traces of toilet paper and burned sheets from a dozen disturbances hang from the bars.? (the jail was build to hold 300 inmates) ?In May 1982, a Superior Court judge said conditions at the 63-year-old Hudson County jail were deplorable and ruled that inmates were being deprived of their constitutional rights because of overcrowding. At the time, the average daily population was over 500 inmates. As of March 14, the number was 869. With a rated capacity of 302 inmates, the eight-story Hudson jail was at 288 percent of capacity as of that date. Among large county jails, only Passaic County's was higher at 332 percent with 1,511 inmates.? (There was a fire in 1982 it is still listed as one of the top ten prison fires in the US.) ?PRESENT and former inmates at the Hudson County Jail are disputing the official version, given by the County Prosecutor, of the fire in which seven inmates died two weeks ago, according to Howard Moskowitz, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union. Mr. Moskowitz said that he had interviewed more than a dozen inmates who were on the eighth floor of the 56-year-old jail when smoke began coming from Cellblock 8-7. That is where the seven inmates - including one who had admitted during psychiatric evaluation that he played with matches - were trapped. The official version of the tragedy, as given by Howard J. Ruvoldt Jr., the Hudson County Prosecutor, was that a guard about 60 feet from the cellblock was driven back by smoke and flames and unable to free the inmates. He produced a minute-by-minute timetable of what happened from 5 A.M., when the fire was discovered, until it was extinguished nine minutes later. ? ?On May 19, 1982, when Judge Gregory J. Castano of State Superior Court ruled that inmates were being deprived of their constitutional rights because of severe overcrowding, the daily average was about 500 inmates. A month before seven inmates had died in a fire. He ordered a complete renovation or a new jail by 1987. But ground was not broken until that year.? ?In March an inmate died of a beating that gave rise to disturbances amid allegations of a ''goon squad'' of corrections officers. A deputy warden and three guards were indicted on murder charges in his death.? ?In December a 28-year-old inmate was shot to death, hit by .32-caliber pellets in a shotgun shell that authorities said had gotten inadvertently mixed in with shells meant only to stun rioting inmates.? Some things I remember about the jail? -Parents use to take their kids up to it if they were bad. Stand them across the street and tell the kids that they would to wind up in there? If a parent was lucky and inmate would be yelling or throwing crap out of a window for added theatrics. I remember my mother?s sweet voice..?That?s it you?re going up to the jail ..LET?S GO!? (Damm?I knew I should not have lifted that penny gum ball from John?s Bargain Store up Journal Square!) -The Cub Scouts would have annual trips to the jail/courthouse. We would get little badges and be lead into a cell and locked in. Scared the shi* out of me. -There was a tunnel from the jail to the old Court House so inmates could be brought directly into court from jail. -Politicians would hold annual ?spend a night in jail? events. How ironic some actually wound up in a real cell?.like County Executive Robert C. Janiszewski. -There was an under ground parking lot for cops to bring in prisoners. The driveway had the 8 story cell windows lined up on either side of it. The inmates would ?store? up (get ready) piss and crap in containers. As the cop cars were driving down the driveway the inmates would ?christen? the cars with a gift. -Families of inmates lining the streets across from the jail. Yelling up to their loved ones. Too bad the county didn?t hold onto the old jail building instead of making it a parking lot. That would have been a cool place for condo?s. You think the ghosts in the Old Medical Center or Saint Francis Hospital?s are pissed. Just imagine having an inmate as a ghost in your bedroom. Or make it a hotel like Boston?s Liberty Hotel ..cool place? www.libertyhotel.com (you know you urban explorers / newcomers would have dug that) Old-timers got any stories about the jail? Jump in. *** **** links to pieces about jail ***** Warden and 2 Jail Guards Held in Death - March 1989 (the guy was from DTJC) http://www.nytimes.com/1989/03/16/nyr ... tml?pagewanted=all&src=pm (story about the jail) No Headline ? Jan 1990 http://www.nytimes.com/1990/01/26/nyr ... tml?pagewanted=all&src=pm Inmates in Jersey City Set Fires in an Uprising ? Oct 1989 http://www.nytimes.com/1989/10/14/nyr ... fires-in-an-uprising.html
Posted on: 2012/4/8 13:09
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Re: Wild Design of the Day: A Skyscraper Prison to Rehabilitate Jersey City's Convicts
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Not too shy to talk
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I don't believe that architectural solutions can solve serious problems. Didn't extreme architectural determinism get blown up at the same time as Pruitt-Igoe or more locally at Curry Woods?
Posted on: 2012/4/8 11:14
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Re: Wild Design of the Day: A Skyscraper Prison to Rehabilitate Jersey City's Convicts
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Home away from home
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Quote:
... The minds behind the bent-over jail are University of Pennsylvania students Greg Knobloch and Andreas Tjeldflaat... ?Men are born ignorant, not stupid. They are made stupid by education.? Bertrand Russell
Posted on: 2012/4/8 2:12
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Re: Wild Design of the Day: A Skyscraper Prison to Rehabilitate Jersey City's Convicts
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Home away from home
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This is retarded.
Quote: The massing consists of three towers in the shape of an arch. The inherent linear and formal qualities of the ?arch? allowed us to establish our key circulatory concept: UP, OVER, DOWN. Each arch has three primary phases, Incarceration (up), Transformation (over), and Integration (down). The arches begin isolated during the incarceration phase and merge together both physically and programmatically during the integration phase. As the inmates graduate through the facility, they are being exposed to an increasing degree of social interaction, in order to make the transition back into society as soft as possible. To catalyst this process, public program and residential housing units are introduced in the integration phase downwards. Umm, can't this be done in a vertical building and each floor or floors represent the the phases with the bottom floor representing integration. The design is the ugliest thing I have ever seen.
Posted on: 2012/4/7 22:12
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Re: Wild Design of the Day: A Skyscraper Prison to Rehabilitate Jersey City's Convicts
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Home away from home
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After staring at this for a good 5 minutes, I have no idea how I feel about this yet.
Posted on: 2012/4/7 21:51
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Wild Design of the Day: A Skyscraper Prison to Rehabilitate Jersey City's Convicts
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Home away from home
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Behold the 499.SUMMIT, a concept for a skyscraper prison designed to reduce recidivism rates in New Jersey. Who wouldn't want to be locked up here?
The hypothetical hoosegow sits on top of the PATH train line in New Jersey, making the transfer of convicts from all around the region quick and easy. Inside the arch-shaped building are separate high and low-security cellblocks, a work-release program and a public meeting space. The design, which would slide right in with the alien architecture in Half-Life 2, was actually formed by doing origami on the standard prison's floorplan, as you can see here and then here. The minds behind the bent-over jail are University of Pennsylvania students Greg Knobloch and Andreas Tjeldflaat, who are trying to tackle the problem of inmates leaving the system without the proper amount of rehabilitation. Two-thirds of inmates in New Jersey wind up back in prison within five years of their release, they say; to help them better adjust to society, they propose giving their tower a tiered system of gradually expanding freedoms. Here's how the students put it: Our prison system has failed to see advancements throughout the past century and desperately requires innovation and re-imagination. While recent literature begins to question the sociological status of prisons, there has be little exploration of the physical apparatus in which inmates are housed. We as designers must take a critical look at these static institutions, and question how we can play a significant role in the design and function of future prisons. 499.SUMMIT carefully challenges all preconceived notions of the word ?prison?, and proposes simple yet powerful ideas that re-imagine the high-rise as an urban penitentiary. The massing consists of three towers in the shape of an arch. The inherent linear and formal qualities of the ?arch? allowed us to establish our key circulatory concept: UP, OVER, DOWN. Each arch has three primary phases, Incarceration (up), Transformation (over), and Integration (down). The arches begin isolated during the incarceration phase and merge together both physically and programmatically during the integration phase. As the inmates graduate through the facility, they are being exposed to an increasing degree of social interaction, in order to make the transition back into society as soft as possible. To catalyst this process, public program and residential housing units are introduced in the integration phase downwards. It's a bold idea and a fierce design. One commenter on Design Boom has compared it to the revolutionary structures of Danish architect Bjarke Ingels. One wonders, though, how Jersey City's residents would feel about the most eye-grabbing thing in town being a prison. See more renderings of the highrise prison below, as well as a video from the duo featuring an inmate named Squirrel. Lower the volume toward the end unless you love Euro disco riddled with laser noises:Jail on Grove
Posted on: 2012/4/7 21:39
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