NYC’s 1st public observatory is coming to the Bronx

New York City’s first free observatory is coming to a Bronx park, and organizers expect to open it to stargazers as soon as this spring.

The Amateur Astronomers Association and the city parks department have agreed to install a small aluminum observatory at Jerome Park on Goulden Avenue, near the Bronx High School of Science. The 800-pound cupola — or dome — that will crown the structure sat atop a building at Nassau Community College on Long Island for more than 40 years, until 2019, when the school replaced it with a green roof and six open-air telescopes. The association hauled the dome off last spring with the help of a boom truck.

Now, the association is on the verge of realizing one of its long-standing goals: opening New York City’s first fully public stargazing facility.

“There were some comments by people who said, ‘why are you putting an observatory in the Bronx?’” said Bart Fried, executive vice president of the Amateur Astronomers Association. “All they’re thinking is, ‘oh, you know, you can’t see anything from New York,’ which is baloney because we’ve been observing all around New York for almost a century now.”

The observatory, which will sit on the banks of the Jerome Park Reservoir, isn’t much bigger than a port-a-potty. The 9.5-foot high, 6.5-foot-wide structure can comfortably fit two or three people. Its dome will house a powerful Celestron Edge HD telescope capable of providing stargazers with views of everything in our solar system, such as comets, asteroids, the sun and all the planets, including the dwarf planet Pluto.

“Once we start doing some astrophotography, I’ll say almost the universe is the limit,” Fried said. “There are literally thousands of objects that can be imaged from New York City and those include a multitude of galaxies, star clusters, gaseous nebulae and really everything and anything in the universe.”

The project has the parks department’s approval, and officials said the department is finalizing…

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