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Obviously the question is about the size, scale, and location of Central Park. The designer wanted even larger.
Other cities have done the same. Central Park isn’t even the oldest one.
The oldest one in the Americas is in Mexico City: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alameda_Central
... That is tiny. I'm not talking a park. I'm taking a massive park.
Central Park is not even big enough to be listed on Wikipedia’s list of urban parks by size:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_urban_parks_by_size
... Technically inside funky city lines is not the same as being in the heart of a city. Gatineau Park even says North of Ottawa. Not North side, North of. "It is not classified as an urban park by its managing authority.[1]"
I really didn't think I'd have to emphasize Central Park is a massive park in the heart of a city such that is surrounded by high rises. At this point I think you're at least talkng in bad faith. So cheers.
I never said every urban park is the same as Central Park.
You did ask why other cities haven’t copied the concept of Central Park. I’ve pretty clearly demonstrated that the concept of an urban park in a metropolitan area is both not original to Central Park and not unique to Central Park.