The Center fro the Urban Environment, a respected 30-year-old organization dedicated to green education, closed very suddenly this week. It comes less than a year after a move into an expensive LEED-approved building and many in Brooklyn are wondering why? Was it mismanagement of funds or overspending on the new building? Perhaps their closing is just a casualty of dire economic times? Were any efforts made to save the organization by local politicians or philanthropists. The Center for the Urban Environment sent out this press release earlier today, which provides few specific answers.
After
30 years, the Center for the Urban
Environment (CUE; formerly the Brooklyn
Center for the Urban Environment, or BCUE), closed its
doors this week due to funding delays and shortfalls, and began the process of
dissolving the organization.
“We
are very proud of CUE’s 30-year history of leadership, accomplishments and
service to schools and the broader community. CUE has been at the forefront of
public education about environmental responsibility, sustainability and
greenbuilding. We are deeply saddened
that sustaining CUE as an independent organization is no longer viable. Funding has declined sharply from public and
private sources. And we have just
completed a complex capital project,” explained Charlotte Gemmel, Chairperson
of CUE’s Board of Directors. “While we
had hoped to be able to restructure and maintain CUE at a smaller scale, the
enormity of the challenge before us led to this very difficult decision.”
“Our
best assets have always been the talented, committed and energetic professional
staff of educators, planners and activists who pioneered such dynamic programs
and taught hundreds of thousands of students, teachers and families about the
urban and natural environments around us, and it is with special regret that we
have lost CUE as the home from which they could operate,” Gemmel added. “CUE’s board will work diligently to ensure
that its signature programs, curricula and activities find new homes, perhaps
with some of the many wonderful organizations with which we have collaborated
in the environmental education field.”
CUE
was founded by John Muir as the Prospect
Park Environmental
Center, and for most of its years
operated out of the Tennis House in the park; it recently completed renovation
of a LEED-Gold eligible home in the Gowanus section of Brooklyn.
Through
the years, CUE’s core programs sent specially-trained teachers into thousands
of classrooms all over Brooklyn and in all other boroughs to provide a wide
range of programs about environmental sciences and the urban and natural
environments for children ranging from pre-K to high school. It partnered with a number of organizations
on charter high schools and special programs promoting environmental education issues
and practices. For adults, it operated
weekend tours of neighborhoods and historic sites, organized public events like
GreenBrooklyn, incubated the Sustainable Business Alliance – a growing network
of businesses – and broadened its public programming in its new home.
My late father was born in Brooklyn in 1915 and grew up in Park Slope and several other Brooklyn neighborhoods. He graduated from Erasmus Hall High School and attended Pratt Institute for 2 years before WWII interrupted his plans for a career in art.
After 40 years of military service, he retired in 1975 and began painting again. Though he lived in NJ, Dad’s favorite subject matter was his remembrances of the Brooklyn he knew in the 1920s and ’30s. Working exclusively from memory, Dad filled canvas after canvas with images from the streets, parks and markets of old Brooklyn.
My father passed away in 1996 and now my sisters and I are seeking to donate many of our late father’s paintings to a suitable organization in Brooklyn.
There are more than 50 unframed paintings of various sizes – most are 16” x 20” – in his Brooklyn collection. We want to find a place that will value his artwork and display the paintings. All of these items will be donated free of charge and we will deliver them (hopefully on Saturday, May 24th).
I’m sorry to learn that the Center has closed for lots of reasons, one of which is that I thought they might be helpful in identifying a community center or non-profit neighborhood agency that would like to decorate its walls with free paintings of old Brooklyn. If you know a Brooklyn organization that fits this description that you think might be interested in this artwork, I’d appreciate the suggestion. Thanks.