View a map of all the POPS. Once the map is open, click on a marker for a specific location to find out the required open hours, amenities, and additional info.
Data Source: Privately Owned Public Space Database (2018), owned and maintained by the New York City Department of City Planning and created in collaboration with Jerold S. Kayden and The Municipal Art Society of New York.
No. Plazas are the most prominent because most common type of POPS are plazas located outdoors, and so they are the most visible. POPS also include arcades, covered pedestrian spaces, through block arcades, through block connections, sidewalk widenings, open air concourses, and gallerias, among others. This chart provides a breakdown of the different types of POPS built in the city.
POPS must comply with the standards under which it was subject to at the time it was created and any City approval for the subject zoning lot. For example, a plaza built in the late 1960s is subject to the plaza standards as set forth in the 1961 Zoning Resolution. Today, if property owners wish to develop a new POPS, they must provide a POPS that meets today’s standards as set forth in the Zoning Resolution. Property owners may voluntarily upgrade their existing plazas by bringing the design in greater accordance with today’s standards.
To find out what amenities are required at a certain POPS, please view a map of all the POPS. Once the map is open, click on a marker for a specific location to find out the required open hours and the required amenities.
Data Source: Privately Owned Public Space Database (2018), owned and maintained by the New York City Department of City Planning and created in collaboration with Jerold S. Kayden and The Municipal Art Society of New York.
Developers chose to build these public spaces in exchange for being to build more usable space (also known as floor area) or receive special waivers for a building. Note that not all public spaces have resulted in additional floor area for a property owner; some spaces can be required for other reasons, such as open space mitigation. Because owners are granted permanent additional floor area, they must provide and maintain the public space in perpetuity.
While both are public spaces that can be found throughout the city, POPS are public spaces provided on private property and maintained by private owners, administered by the Zoning Resolution by the Department of City Planning, and City Parks are public spaces provided by the Department of Parks and Recreation.
The building owners are responsible for maintenance of the POPS. If there is a POPS sign posted on-site, it may include the owner or maintenance designee’s contact information for you to contact should you have any questions or comments.
If you have any questions or complaints about a POPS, please call 311 or fill out the complaint form. Provide the location of the POPS of concern and include as many details as possible. The Department of Buildings will then inspect the POPS and determine if any violations shall be issued.
The Department is committed to ensuring that all POPS serve the public, and continually enhances design standards so that POPS are of the highest quality, useful and inviting for the public.
Property owners who wish to modify an existing POPS or build a new POPS must obtain approval by the Department of City Planning, prior to filing permits with the Department of Buildings. The Department of City Planning reviews all applications related to POPS to ensure that they are meeting the appropriate standards. It also maintains all POPS data and files, including drawings.
The Department of Building (DOB) is charged with enforcement of POPS. If you have any questions or complaints about a POPS, please call 311 or fill out the complaint form. Provide the location of the POPS of concern and include as many details as possible. The Department of Buildings will then inspect the POPS and determine if any violations shall be issued.
The building owners are responsible for maintenance of the POPS. If there is a POPS sign posted on-site, it may include the owner or maintenance designee’s contact information for you to contact should you have any questions or comments.
If you have any questions or complaints about a POPS, please call 311 or fill out the complaint form. Provide the location of the POPS of concern and include as many details as possible. The Department of Buildings will then inspect the POPS and determine if any violations shall be issued.
Yes. Property owners who wish to modify an existing POPS or build a new POPS must obtain approval by the Department of City Planning, prior to filing permits with the Department of Buildings. The Department of City Planning reviews all applications related to POPS to ensure that they are meeting the appropriate standards.
Review Zoning Resolution Section 37-78 (a) for new public plazas, and Section 37-70 et al. to understand the regulations that the plaza will be subject to. Then, please refer to the Department’s Applicant Portal to request an Informational Interest Meeting to discuss your proposal.
For an existing plaza, review Zoning Resolution Section 37-625 for design changes to an existing plaza, and Section 37-70 et al. to understand the regulations that the plaza will be subject to. For all other types of POPS, refer to the prior approvals or regulations under which it was approved. Then, please refer to the Department’s Applicant Portal to request an Informational Interest Meeting to discuss your proposal.
Find out how and by when at DCP Applicant Portal - POPS Signage website.
POPS data is available through the City of New York’s Open Data website.
Data Source: Privately Owned Public Space Database (2018), owned and maintained by the New York City Department of City Planning and created in collaboration with Jerold S. Kayden and The Municipal Art Society of New York.
Starting in the late 1990’s, Harvard professor Jerold S. Kayden, the Department of City Planning, and the Municipal Art Society (MAS) joined forces to conduct a comprehensive analysis of New York City POPS and jointly developed an electronic database with detailed information about each POPS. Based on this work and published in 2000, "Privately Owned Public Space: The New York City Experience," describes the evolution of incentive zoning in New York City from 1961-2000, and profiles 503 public spaces at 320 buildings that had been granted additional floor area or related waivers in exchange for providing these spaces. A qualitative analysis of these spaces found that some POPS were well used, serving as destinations or neighborhood gathering spaces, while others were primarily for circulation purposes or of minimal usability.
This initial POPS database served as the basis for the Department’s current database, on which it maintains all POPS data, and which is critical to the Department meeting its obligations to report on the data and make it publicly available. The Department would like to give special thanks to Jerold Kayden and MAS for their financial support and ongoing contributions to the collection and dissemination of information about POPS, and for their advocacy work, overall.
The new POPS logo adopted in December 2019 can be downloaded at DCP’s Required Signage Symbols page.
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