Renderings Revealed for West Side of Lincoln Center Campus

John Hill | 20. May 2025
Aerial view from Amsterdam Avenue looking east; visible are new streetscape, gardens, and theater. (Visualization: Brooklyn Digital Foundry)

This week's release of before photos paired with renderings comes two months after Lincoln Center announced the team of Hood Design Studio (landscape architect), WEISS/MANFREDI (design architect), and Moody Nolan (architect of record) were selected to reimagine the Amsterdam Avenue side of Lincoln Center's roughly 16-acre campus. The process started in 2023 and a participatory planning process that generated feedback from thousands of New Yorkers. The focus has been on making the campus more welcoming and accessible, and paramount is improving access along Amsterdam Avenue, where Lincoln Center currently greets visitors with a blank, impenetrable wall three blocks long.

Current view from Amsterdam Avenue looking at wall and Bandshell with line of people for Summer for the City programming. (Photo: WEISS/MANFREDI)
View from Amsterdam Avenue looking into Damrosch Park; visible is new streetscape. (Visualization: Brooklyn Digital Foundry)

Suitably, the design team has focused on opening up Lincoln Center to Amsterdam Avenue at Damrosch Park, a sizable landscaped open space in the southwest corner of the four-block campus. The predominantly hardscape park features rows of trees and, at its western end, a bandshell. Most visitors to Lincoln Center shy away from Damrosch Park, outside of the Summer for the City performances that take place there, and the Big Apple Circus that has also called the park home. 

Current view in Damrosch Park looking west at Bandshell and NYCHA Amsterdam Houses behind. (Photo: NADAAA)
View from within Damrosch Park looking west; visible are new water feature, lawn, and trees. (Visualization: Brooklyn Digital Foundry)

The preliminary design shows a new amphitheater in the southeast corner of Damrosch Park, shifted from the bandshell's location along the park's western edge. Combined with the removal of the wall at Amsterdam, the trees, fountains, and steps navigate the grade change along the sidewalk present a softer edge to the west and the residential neighbors across Amsterdam.

Current view from Josie Robertson Plaza looking towards Damrosch Park (Photo: Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts)
View from Josie Robertson Plaza looking towards Damrosch Park; visible are amphitheater and landscape. (Visualization: Brooklyn Digital Foundry)

In addition to purported improvements in sound and audience experience, moving the performance venue away from Amsterdam Avenue will put the stage closer to the main plaza of Lincoln Center, better connecting the two tangential open spaces. It also effectively splits Damrosch Park into two halves: performance space on the east and community space on the west. The capacity of the new amphitheater is expected to be 2,000.

Aerial view of amphitheater and audience area during performance, looking east. (Visualization: Brooklyn Digital Foundry)
View of amphitheater and audience area during performance looking southeast towards 62nd Street. (Visualization: Brooklyn Digital Foundry)

In addition to improvements to Damrosch Park, the design for the west side of the campus also includes (wording per a statement from Lincoln Center):

  • Sidewalk improvements, including an improved bus waiting area, an expanded
    sidewalk between 62nd and 65th Streets, increased greenery and shade along this edge, and more benches and lighting for an enhanced pedestrian experience;
  • Gardens at the new entrance to Damrosch Park, with a variety of spaces to sit, relax, and meet friends right at street level;
  • Art and light interventions within the concourse connecting Amsterdam Avenue to the 1 train subway entrance on Broadway;
  • New opportunities for seating at the West 65th Street corner of campus, where
    hundreds of area high school students engage with Lincoln Center every day.

Construction is expected to begin in spring 2026 and be completed by spring 2028.

Current view from Amsterdam Avenue and 65th Street looking at New York Public Library for the Performing Arts and entrance to Lincoln Center at street level. (Photo: Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts)
View of SE corner of Amsterdam Avenue and 65 th Street looking at New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, with seating area and mirror facade. (Visualization: Brooklyn Digital Foundry)

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