After this period of change and uncertainty, it’s heartening to find things that can be counted on to stay the same year after year—including the irrepressible optimism of spring in Central Park. Featured here are some of the most recently digitized images from our archive, which contains visuals dating back to the Central Park Conservancy's founding in 1980. Many feature popular springtime destinations in the Park, and we’re struck by the similarities throughout the decades...spring in Central Park in the 1980s and 1990s looked a lot like spring in Central Park in 2021!
These digitized color slides from 30-plus years ago show us that relaxing and strolling among beautiful, blossoming trees and vibrant flowers never grows old, and the changing of the seasons turns out to be one of the most reassuring constants we have.
Visitors to Cherry Hill and Pilgrim Hill lay back and gaze at soft clouds of cherry blossoms, while in the Conservatory Garden, Park-goers rest, read, and pose before an array of tulips, lilacs, crabapple blossoms, and more. There are many other places to enjoy blooms in the Park, from Shakespeare Garden and the Dene Slope to the North Meadow Butterfly Gardens and the landscapes surrounding the Reservoir.
If these archival images inspired you to visit the Park and try out some seasonal photography of your own, we’d love to see your springtime snaps. Be sure to tag us @CentralParkNYC and use the hashtag #CentralParkBloomWatch on social media.
Throughout the years, people have needed Central Park for rest and renewal, which it continues to give—each spring and with every change of season. The Park needs us too, and it takes a community to keep Central Park blossoming. Find out how you can get involved so we can look back on Central Park in another 30 years and reflect on all that it has provided us.
Suggested Reading
-
Health and Fitness
Embracing Wellness Outdoors: 5 Benefits of Being in Nature
As many Park visitors have experienced firsthand, natural outdoor spaces have a positive impact on our physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing. From the benefits of birdsong to the magic of movement, discover five fascinating ways time spent in Central Park can contribute to your overall wellbeing.
Tags: Park Design / Nature Lovers / Plants and Trees / Landscapes
-
About the Conservancy
Power of the Park: Reflecting on a Year of the Pandemic and Central Park
During a year like no other, New Yorkers have rediscovered local parks as essential sources of mental and physical wellbeing and reconnected with our intrinsic human need to spend time outdoors.
Tags: History
-
About the Conservancy
Keeping NYC's Backyard Clean & Green: A Park Lover's Guide to Visiting Central Park
As we experience one of the busiest years in Central Park history, let’s work together to tend to the Park we need, and that in turn, needs us. Read this checklist before your next visit and help us keep the Park healthy this summer and for seasons to come.
Tags: Families / Summer / Conservancy Staff / Flowers / Tips for Visiting / Trees / Nature Lovers / Park Experts / First-Time Visitors
-
Park History
‘A Sense of Enlarged Freedom’: Central Park as Sanctuary
For many New Yorkers right now, Central Park and the City’s other open spaces are more valuable and meaningful than ever.Tags: History