Open Road Park

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The playground in December 2020.

Open Road Park is a small park in East Village, Manhattan, New York City, located east of First Avenue between 11th and 12th Streets. It is among the larger green spaces created in the East Village as a result of community organizing. The site of this park was taken over in 1993 by Open Road, a neighborhood nonprofit that developed the lot into a community garden and playground. Prior to its use as a park, the site was used for many purposes that reflect on the history of the surrounding neighborhood.

In 1833, East 11th Street was regarded as the northern periphery of New York City and selected as the city's third Roman Catholic cemetery after the older burial ground at Old Patrick's Cathedral on Mott Street reached its capacity.[1] After interring 41,016 individuals the Catholic Cemetery reached its limit by August 1848 and the church then began burying its members at Calvary Cemetery in Queens. For the following four decades, the cemetery gradually fell into disuse and was subject to vandalism.[2]

In 1883, the church proposed selling the property[3] and re-interring its dead at Calvary Cemetery. Relatives of the deceased filed a lawsuit to prevent the disinterment and the sale was put on hold.[4][5] In 1907, the church again decided to sell the cemetery.[6] By then, the value of the land had greatly increased while the surrounding neighborhood was no longer dominated by Catholic residents. After the last bodies were disinterred in 1909, the site was sold three years later[7] to the New York City Board of Education and the Fifth Avenue Coach Company.

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