A new era of metropolitan re-use and restoration is taking hold in cities around the world. On New York’s Lower East Side, two visionaries are taking the urban greenspace movement to the next level by putting it underground. With a planned debut in 2020, the LowLine project promises to create a calm, cultivated woodland atmosphere in an abandoned trolley terminal sprawled out beneath Delancey Street. Buried in New York’s Lower East Side lives a secret space and futuristic opportunity. In 1908, the Williamsburg Bridge Trolley Terminal debuted. The one-acre property located under Delancey Street primarily served trolley passengers traversing Manhattan’s submerged passageways. Though it’s been shuttered for more than 60 years, the original vaulted ceilings and cobblestone walkways still sit, patiently waiting for a new era of city residents to venture below. If James Ramsey and Daniel Barasch have their way, those Big Apple visitors will soon be enjoying a belowground wonderland, outfitted with hidden nooks, man-made stalagmites, trees and maybe even a hitchhiking frog or two all lit-up by the latest in solar-refraction technology. Christened the LowLine, this subterranean greenspace is part botanical garden, part laboratory, and part social experiment. For co-founders Ramsey and Barasch, the LowLine offers the chance to add much-needed greenery to one of the city’s most urban environments. A Shared Vision Manhattan’s Lower East Side represents a microcosm the borough’s transformation from humble, insular neighborhood into a jubilant melting pot of immigrants, boutique businesses, corporate high-rises and creative visionaries. When Ramsey learned of the Williamsburg trolley terminal in 2008, he was struck by its potential. He envisioned plants and trees thriving in a sort of “park” that would benefit the entire community. “It’s not every day that you find 60,000 square feet in New York, right?” Ramsey recently stated...