![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj7H8hFbJeK5N2SXDVnDqoIG7x5QWQ-rMM7cuKHhmu4ExTsu8NzNKpf3E_zMvKTONX_7VrYRQhe3AhyphenhyphenCfbqMYACQ1UVJuQhSKabGa8unKpa2uyBp5-aB3uWywY9LY0yWwvJnwM74wAI7d8/s1600/kasmin1.jpg)
[Facade on West 27th Street | Image: Studio MDA/ Related Companies; all renderings via 6sqft]
Atop the gallery is a grid of 28 skylights and a green roof doubling as a sculpture garden. Brooklyn's Future Green describes it as "a verdant extension to the elevated park [that] showcases outdoor art works in a rich seasonal tapestry."
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj4LcW6aAGD0jQc7g7FoxYclkcJwPQ3AjYIs2XZH2vAhM8TdD7JkuN93tSyDPR2ShIxLGoFr_svstNQXTVjGOv-L3h-i4xWvLfMzDJL-_0kZNu0hTEy6aqKDVVJZkdE70DB9TuY6uFlMCA/s1600/kasmin2.jpg)
[Roof plan | Image: Future Green]
At roughly the same height as the High Line and just a short hop away from it, the rooftop sculpture garden echoes many of the adjacent residential developments that don't have access to the park (the city doesn't allow direct access from neighboring properties) but have their own elevated green spaces. A case in point is KPF's 500 West 21st Street (designed with Rees Roberts+Partners), whose mature trees serve as a screen between the busy High Line and the residential interiors.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEho219vVkqirQBCLR-VWWE9M5qm55_o4bBaNOuTXuxhwbbFw6P_PIcvSCzKllY3QkLxCpciWUAPBwgg6QfgeV2EybQBuO8En-3SgfetyiO_i3CrJ4fGMXEv6QlDnfFmAQBdb3nIZouXNVw/s1600/kasmin3.jpg)
[Section through gallery and High Line | Image: Future Green]
This last view, below, hints at another reason for the sculpture garden: to give the residents of 520 West 28th Street a better view, one that melds art and landscape — both off and on the High Line.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjozXNQ8wDG7-yM6TJY_KqkKu2nwsXUnO79zKgY367HWbjKDdNKdZrIwPlZ3SLaS1Dinbun0Rc53yzaGXHbcO1S7wP61wkxiu_gBPHnQImcJ1d8lw01i3gMGlf8QFIPQ9A4TZYqnXsYkOw/s1600/kasmin4.jpg)
[Perspective looking toward the High Line | Image: Future Green]
from A Daily Dose of Architecture https://ift.tt/2FxN25u
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