CUNY Institute For Sustainable Cities

Turning the Tide: Waterfront Parks: Old, New, Green, Blue


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Session 2 Wed. March 17, 2010:
Waterfront Parks: Old, New, Green, Blue
Moderator: Dr. Rutherford H. Platt
Speakers/Panelists
Amy Gavaris, Executive Vice President for the New York Restoration Project
Dr. Vicky Gholson, Friends of Riverbank State Park
Peter Mullan, Planning Director, Friends of The High Line Greenway
Connie Fishman, Executive Director, Hudson River Park Trust
Jeanne DuPont, Rockaway Waterfront Alliance, Queens
In 1609, New York’s future waterfront was an arcadian shore of forests, wetlands, beaches, and sand bars, according to Eric Sanderson's book Mannahatta. That landscape is lost forever, but visions of a post-industrial, neo-natural waterfront are longstanding. In 1944, futurists Paul and Percival Goodman proposed that Manhattan "open out toward the water,” lining its gritty waterfront with new parks. They were prescient: today the water’s edge of Manhattan is evolving from a "no-man's-land" into a "highly desirable zone of parks," in the words of writer Phillip Lopate.
The newly designated “Manhattan Waterfront Greenway” is cobbled together from many bits and pieces like Battery Park City, Hudson River Park, Riverside Park South, restored Harlem River parks, and tiny Stuyvesant Cove Park––each with its own chronicle of past and present struggles among property owners, community groups, developers, politicians, planners, lawyers, and other stakeholders. Elsewhere in the city, Brooklyn Bridge Park, the Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway, Governors Island, the South Bronx Greenway, Pelham Bay South Waterfront Park, the Bronx River Greenway, and Gateway National Recreation Area are among many waterfront works in progress.
The colloquium series will address selected topics and issues relating to what has been achieved and what remains to be done to continue the transformation of New York’s waterfronts.
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CUNY Institute For Sustainable CitiesBy Institute for Sustainable Cities