Flushing Meadows Corona Park

Calvert Circle

This text is part of Parks’ Historical Signs Project and can be found posted within the park.

This circle honors Calvert Vaux (1824-1895) the English architect who spent 40 years of his distinguished career in New York City. He designed private homes, public housing, apartment complexes, and public institutions such as the American Museum of Natural History and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His partnership with Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903) generated the designs for Central Park, Prospect Park, Morningside Park, and Fort Greene Park.

Calvert Vaux, born in London, graduated from grammar school and his aptitude in math earned him an apprenticeship with a prominent architect. As an apprentice he learned contemporary styles and encountered others whose influence is evident in Vaux’s later work. In 1850, Andrew Jackson Downing (1815-1852) who developed the idea for Central Park with William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878), traveled to England, in part for a vacation, but with the primary goal of finding an architect to match his gardening abilities for his landscaping business. He found Vaux, and they returned to Newburgh, New York, designing houses and gardens in the Hudson Valley.

In 1850, Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903), a Connecticut born man who acquired little formal education and choose to learn about the world by traveling, had just returned from England. He turned his travel diary and the letters he sent home into a book, Walks and Talks of an American Farmer in England (although his father bought him two farms, working on them frustrated him) and excerpts were printed in Downing’s Horticulturist. Through the publishing, he met Downing and Vaux who agreed that a well-designed park could foster better character in the people who used them.

On July 28, 1852, Downing died on the steamboat Henry Clay, which had aboard a party of his friends and family. The boiler exploded, and rather than save his life, Downing stayed onboard the burning hulk, throwing deck chairs into the river for the escaping passengers to use as life-preservers. Vaux ran the landscaping company alone until 1856 when he moved to New York City and immediately involved himself with the scandal looming around the construction of Central Park.

In 1857, construction for Central Park began, and through a series of lucky coincidences, Olmsted acquired the position of Superintendent of Construction. Nonetheless, the initial plan for the park, which Olmsted efficiently put to action, fell short of the lofty ideals of beauty to which the commissioners overseeing Central Park aspired. They announced a design competition for a new plan and Vaux sought to enter, but he needed a partner who could provide him a wealth of first hand experience about the territory. He sough out the man he met seven years earlier in upstate New York and whose job it was to know every foot of the land: Frederick Law Olmsted.

Each holding other jobs while they planned their entry, the men worked at night during the winter of 1857-58 to create their vision of Central Park. The resulting design surpassed the others thanks to the combination of Vaux’s excellent rendering skills and Olmsted’s expert knowledge of the park’s topography. The team went on to design Prospect Park in Brooklyn as well as other urban parks throughout the country. In 1895, Calvert Vaux drowned under mysterious circumstances (some say it was suicide) in Gravesend Bay, Brooklyn.

This circle stands in front of Parks Olmsted Center, adjacent to Arthur Ashe stadium, in Flushing Meadows Corona Park. In this building, designers create the plans for all Parks projects from massive park renovations to animal art sculptures that adorn playgrounds. Using the names Olmsted and Vaux in and around the design center serves both as tribute to the great men who designed parks in the past and as inspiration for those people who design for our future.

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Know Before You Go

Marinas
World's Fair Marina
Due to a major planned reconstruction project, Pier 1 at the World's Fair Marina is currently closed. There is presently no transient dockage nor passenger pick-ups and drop-offs allowed. We apologize for any inconvenience. Please check back with the World's Fair Marina in the future for updates.
Recreation Centers
Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center & Ice Rink
Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center Summer Hours

Beginning Sunday, August 10 at 9:00 a.m., Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center reopened and will continue with our summer hours:


  • Monday – Friday, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.

  • Saturday, closed.

  • Sunday: 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
  • Recreation Centers
    Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center & Ice Rink
    Main Phone Line at Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center

    The main phone line at the Flushing Meadows Aquatics Center is temporarily out of service. Please call 347-853-9864 to reach us.

    Recreation Centers
    Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center & Ice Rink
    Parking Prohibited in Parking Lot D

    From Monday, August 18 through Sunday, September 7, parking will be prohibited under the Van Wyck Expressway and in Parking Lot D due to the US Open. We encourage all Aquatics Center members and visitors to use public transportation when traveling to the center during this time.

    Recreation Centers
    Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center & Ice Rink

    Membership Extension



    During the summer, we have had to temporarily reduce operating hours at several of our indoor pools. We understand the impact this has had on our members, and we want to ensure that our members have as much pool time and access as possible.



    That said, we are offering qualifying individuals the opportunity to extend their membership by three months for free. To be eligible to receive the extension, you must meet all three qualification criteria:



            
    • Have obtained your membership prior to June 26, 2025, and were an active member on that date.


    •       
    • Be a paying member who possesses either an adult indoor pool membership or a senior, people with disabilities, or veteran membership.


    •       
    • Have visited a qualifying indoor pool site between January 1, 2025 to June 26, 2025.

            


                    
      • St. John’s Recreation Center

      •             
      • Chelsea Recreation Center

      •             
      • Constance Baker Motley Recreation Center

      •             
      • Gertrude Ederle Recreation Center

      •             
      • Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center

      •       

            


    If you believe you meet these qualifications, you may submit a request by completing the online form. The deadline to opt-in for the extension is November 16, 2025.

    Recreation Centers
    Flushing Meadows Corona Park Aquatics Center & Ice Rink
    Tide Gate Bridge Construction



    Due to construction on the Tide Gate Bridge, located on Meridian Road within Flushing Meadows Corona Park, vehicular traffic will not be allowed to cross the bridge in either direction. Please follow posted detour signs around Meridian Road and plan for additional travel time. Pedestrian traffic will still be permitted to cross the bridge.

    Recreation Centers
    Al Oerter Recreation Center
    Tide Gate Bridge Construction

    Due to construction on the Tide Gate Bridge, located on Meridian Road within Flushing Meadows Corona Park, vehicular traffic will not be allowed to cross the bridge in either direction. Please follow posted detour signs around Meridian Road and plan for additional travel time. Pedestrian traffic will still be permitted to cross the bridge.

    Contacts

    General Park Info: (718) 760-6565
    Pitch N Putt Golf and Miniature Golf : (718) 271-8182
    World's Fair Marina on Flushing Bay : (718) 478-0480
    World's Fair Marina Restaurant: (718) 898-1200
    Terrace on the Park: (718) 592-5000
    Citi Field: (718) 699-4220
    Mets Ticketing: (718) 507-TIXX
    USTA National Tennis Center: (718) 760-6200
    US Open/USTA: (914) 696-7000
    New York Hall of Science: (718) 699-0005
    Queens Museum: (718) 592-9700
    Queens Botanical Garden: (718) 886-3800
    Queens Theatre: (718) 760-0064
    Queens Wildlife Conservation Center: (718) 271-1500
    Sports Permits: (718) 393-7272
    Picnic/Barbeque Permit for Large Groups: (718) 393-7272
    Wheel Fun Rentals: (917) 231-5519
    World Ice Arena: (718) 760-9001
    Al Oerter Recreation Center: (718) 353-7853
    Flushing Meadows Corona Park Pool & Rink: (718) 271-7572
    Special Events Permits: (718) 760-6560
    Tennis Permits: (718) 393-7276
    Volunteer Coordinator: (718) 760-6561