It Was For The Birds
Sure, spin it as a way to save the birds:
They spent $1.7 million to re-light the Parachute Jump earlier this summer — but the landmark will soon go dark to save birds.
Last week, the Parachute Jump became the first Brooklyn building to join the “Lights Out New York” program, which encourages tall buildings to douse their lights to protect migratory birds.
“On a foggy night, when the birds don’t have the moon or the stars as a navigational guide, they [can] start circling lighted towers,” said Yigal Gelb, of New York City Audubon.
Once the birds begin circling, they get disoriented, and crash into each other or the tower. And sometimes they get so tired flying around that they drop simply from exhaustion.
. . .
The Parachute Jump is the program’s only Brooklyn member, and one of only six members citywide, a group that includes the Chrysler and Citicorp buildings.
Parachute Jump lightning designer Leni Schwendinger said she was more than happy to re-program the tower’s lighting scheme during the fall and spring migratory seasons.
“I’m happy to be a poster child” for the “Lights Out” program, Schwendinger said.
But careful readers may remember that the lights weren’t all that bright to begin with:
Posted: September 25th, 2006 | Filed under: Brooklyn, Smells Fishy, Smells Not Right, You're Kidding, Right?The reviews from those assembled were muted. Phyllis Carbo, 70, who rode on the Parachute Jump as a girl, hesitated when asked for her opinion. “I’m running for Assembly on the Republican line, so I have to be very careful,” she said. “I’m impressed.”
Even the evening’s master of ceremonies, Dick Zigun, one of Coney Island’s leading boosters, pronounced the light show “very subtle.”
Others were less restrained.
“Did they light it already? Is this it?” asked Joe Joya, 63.
His wife, Jane, 61, said, “I thought it was going to be a lot brighter. I thought that the lights were going to be more of a Vegas type of thing.”