West 4th Street Courts

West 4th Street Courts (HM2KK5)

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N 40° 43.865', W 74° 0.055'

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.42 acres

These courts serve as a basketball mecca not only in Manhattan, but far beyond the city lines as well. Home to "the Cage," a smaller-than-regulation court that hosts intense pick-up basketball games, the asphalt is also the site of a popular tournament that draws players from around the world.
The park was born out of the need to superimpose a new street system over the haphazard West Village street layout. Since its colonial beginnings, the neighborhood had evolved in an unregulated fashion from marshland to farmland and then from a rural suburb to a densely settled residential, commercial, and industrial neighborhood full of crooked streets. The revolutionary 1811 Commissioners' Plan, which introduced the grid pattern that laid out the streets and avenues of Manhattan, had little immediate impact on Greenwich Village. Intended to provide a system for the orderly development of land between 14th Street and Washington Heights, the grid left the crooked streets of the West Village intact until the advent of the automobile necessitated smoother traffic flow through Manhattan.
Before the 1920s this site marked the end of Sixth Avenue. After traffic became an increasing concern, city planners decided to extend Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Avenues southward, providing much-needed north-south links through the West



Village and up through the west side of Manhattan. The southerly extension of Sixth Avenue was finished in advance of the completion of the Holland Tunnel, and opened traffic routes to the structure. The extension helped changed the look of the Village and created several wedge-shaped plazas in the area, including Minetta Triangle at Minetta Lane, Father Demo Square at Carmine Street, Father Fagan Square at Prince Street, and Soho Square at Spring Street. The change was especially noticeable along Seventh Avenue and Eighth Avenues, after both roads were extended south of 14th Street.
This site, bounded by Avenue of the Americas, West 3rd and West 4th Streets, was acquired by the City in the 1920s in connection with the widening of Sixth Avenue as it pushed through the neighborhood south of Houston, eventually connecting with Canal Street. The remaining land was turned over to Parks on June 8, 1934 under a permit from the Department of Transportation. The playground opened on October 14, 1935. In 1945 Sixth Avenue was renamed Avenue of the Americas at the suggestion of Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia (1882-1947) to honor Pan-American ideals and principles, and the site was formally assigned to Parks on August 27, 1953.
Basketball has been embraced by New Yorkers since the sport's beginnings in the 1890s, and today there are well over 100 courts in Manhattan parks alone. Known for the high quality pick-up basketball games played daily at the site, several NBA players got their start at the West 4th Street Courts. A yearly tournament at "the Cage" showcases this talent, and players come from all over the world to compete.
City of New York Parks and Recreation
Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor
Adrian Benepe, Commissioner
Text written: December 2001
Details
HM NumberHM2KK5
Tags
Year Placed2001
Placed ByCity of New York Parks and Recreatio
Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Sunday, September 8th, 2019 at 8:03pm PDT -07:00
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Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)18T E 584365 N 4509385
Decimal Degrees40.73108333, -74.00091667
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 40° 43.865', W 74° 0.055'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds40° 43' 51.9" N, 74° 0' 3.3" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Which side of the road?Marker is on the right when traveling North
Closest Postal AddressAt or near , ,
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