|
High Tide 3:49am
|
Low Tide 10:42am
|
High Tide 4:47pm
|
Low Tide 10:58pm*
|
|
|
 The West 8 team of landscape designers, engineers, architects and other urban planners has released, through GIPEC, a detailed, 176-page master plan for Governors Island. The tiny [sorry] rendering above shows proposed new topography of swooping hills created from demolition detritus. The public is encouraged to take the planning tome to bed for some relaxed reading, dream about the future of the historic island and then submit comments to GIPEC and the designers. See the story below for more details and a link to download the plan.
|

|

|
Events on the Waterfront
|
EarthFair: Indoors & Outdoors 4/22-24, Grand Central Terminal, 10a-8p Earth Day at Times Square 4/22, 11a-2p Earth Day Celebration: Enviromedia Mobile 4/22, 11a-5p, Bronx Community Coll. Fundraiser: Rocking the Boat 4/22, 5:30p, New York Yacht Club, 37 W. 44th Street Exhibit and Panel Discussion: Minds in the Gutter stormwater designs 4/22, 6:30p, Museum of the City of NY, 1220 Fifth Ave. (at 103rd St.) Workshop: Brooklyn Greenway 4/22, 6:30p, Brooklyn Brewery, 79 N. 11th St. Performance: A Thousand Thousand Slimy Things 4/23-5/9, Waterfront Museum and Showboat Barge, Red Hook, 7p Walk: Roosevelt Island Historical Society: 3rd Annual Cherry Blossom Walk 4/24, 11a, Tram Plaza, Roosevelt Is. Festival: Get Green: South Bronx Earth Fest 4/24, 12p-4p, St. Mary's Park, St. Ann's Ave. & 147th St. Beach Clean-Up 4/24, 11a-1p, Beach 26th St., Rockaway Celebration: Enviromedia Mobile 4/25, 1p, IKEA Red Hook, Erie Basin Park Meeting: Newtown Creek Environmental Benefits 4/26, 3p and 6p, NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation, 47-40 21st St., Long Island City Public hearing: Brooklyn Bridge Park 4/26, 6p, NYU-Polytechnic Institute, 6 MetroTech Center, Rm RH116, Bkln. Ribbon cutting: Harlem River Park phases 2 and 3 4/28, 1:30p, 142nd St. entrance
Panel: Reviving the Estuary: Science, Politics, and Education 4/28, Roosevelt House Public Policy Institute, 47 E. 65th St. 5:30p Meeting: Brooklyn Bridge Park New Community Boathouse 4/28, 6p, Water Street Restaurant & Loung, 66 Water Street, Brooklyn Meeting: Chelsea Waterside Park Association 4/28, 6p, Chelsea Cove Discussion: Pen World Voices: Can we turn back the tides of global warming? 4/29, 8p, Metropolitan Museum of Art Sailors Ball 4/30, 9p-1a, 60 Pine St. Walk: The Great Saunter 5/1, 7:30a, meet at Fulton & South Sts.
Amazing Bronx River Flotilla 5/1, 9a Bike Tour: Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway 5/1, 10a, Greenpoint Celebration: Earth Day Rockaway 5/1, 11a-3p, 160 Beach 29th St. Seminar: Understanding channel Construction & Consequences of Habitat & Restoration 5/4, 10:30a, Hudson River Foundation, 17 Battery Place
Gala: Friends of Hudson River Park 5/6, 6p, Chelsea Cove, Pier 62
|

|
MWA Blue Bulletin Board
| The 3rd Annual City of Water Day Festival is July 24, 2010To Volunteer for City of Water Day, please contact Louis Kleinman ( lkleinman [at] waterfrontalliance.org) We've moved!Come see us at 241 Water Street, 3rd FloorNew York, NY 10038. Email Address Update:Our waterwire.net email addresses are no longer in service. All MWA emails end in waterfrontalliance.org. |
|
Join Our List
|
|
|
|
|
|
BLOOMBERG ADMINISTRATION MAKES WAVES
|
| City Hall Embarks on a New Era with the
Waterfront Vision & Enhancement Strategy Announcement Comes Five Days After the Kick-Off Public Meeting to Update the City's Comprehensive Waterfront Plan
 Catching the civic wave of waterfront revitalization that has been building for several years, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn announced a new blueprint for the City's 500+ miles of shoreline. The Waterfront Vision and Enhancement Strategy-- WAVES, for short -- is an inter-agency initiative that establishes a three-year Action Agenda for implementing priority waterfront plans, a new Waterfront Management Advisory Board of government agency commissioners and civic leaders, and the longterm Vision 2020 Comprehensive Waterfront Plan."After
decades of abandonment and neglect, our Administration made it a priority to
increase access to and jobs on the waterfront, and from the construction of
Barretto Point Park in The Bronx to the expansion of Howland Hook Marine Terminal on Staten Island, we've made enormous headway over the past eight
years," said the Mayor at the April 13 news conference on the banks of the Harlem River, at the newly unveiled Mill Pond Park. "Now, the Waterfront Vision and
Enhancement Strategy
we're launching today will create a new framework that will drive our efforts to
restore New York City's waterfront to a vibrancy not seen in
generations." He paused. "We encourage you to dive right in," he said.  Mayor Bloomberg and officials involved with waterfront planning gathered at the banks of the Harlem River to announce the WAVES initiative. From left to right are Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, Economic Development Corporation President Seth Pinsky, New York Secretary of State Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez, City Planning Commissioner Amanda Burden, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, Mayor Bloomberg, Deputy Mayor for Economic Development Bob Lieber, Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance president Roland Lewis, Congressman Jerrold Nadler, Congressman Jose Serrano and City Council Waterfronts Committee Chair Michael Nelson. Top photo: Mayor Bloomberg and Speaker Quinn keep Capt. Vicente Lucante of NY Waterway company as they head up the East River to the press conference. Photos for nyc.gov by Spencer Tucker.
Speaker Quinn, who presided over the signing of landmark legislation last year that requires the City to come up with an effective waterfront plan each decade, beginning with 2010, followed the Mayor to the podium. "Today, we're embracing the water's significance," she declared. Referring to the City's ongoing outreach to waterfront stakeholders
to craft the WAVES strategy, she noted, "this plan is not just informed by the government, but by the public." The kick-off meeting to gather input for the updating of the Comprehensive Waterfront Plan took place April 8 (see story below), and public workshops to discuss waterfront strategy and specific neighborhood goals will begin in all five boroughs this spring. To keep abreast of plans and meetings, click here to get to the Vision 2020 page on the Department of City Planning web site, and click here to subscribe to the City's Comprehensive Waterfront Plan newsletter. Expect to see new waterfront projects in development soon. Projects will be announced by the NYC Economic Development Corporation via the Waterfront Action Agenda, which will be shaped by the expertise of the new 12-member Waterfront Management Advisory Board (in formation). The Board is expected to foster close cooperation between city, state and federal partners working with representatives from the worlds of maritime industry, labor unions, transportation and real estate. "New Yorkers are reconnecting to the
water that surrounds them as never before," said Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance President and CEO Roland Lewis. "The hundreds of organizations that
champion waterfront education, recreation, transportation, economic development
and environment are the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance. We pledge to work
enthusiastically with the Mayor, City, State and Federal agencies through WAVES to help create the 21st
century waterfront and harbor that are as diverse and alive as the City that
surrounds it." (back to top) |
REMAKING THE COMPREHENSIVE WATERFRONT PLAN
|
|
New Yorkers Put In Their 2 Cents
"We should be thought of as the greatest harbor city in the world, don't you think?" asked Dept. of City Planning Commissioner Amanda Burden at the start of the April 8 meeting about the Comprehensive Waterfront Plan. A chorus of yesses answered her, and soon waterfront stakeholders began lining up to offer opinions and suggestions on the DCP's list of preliminary issues and goals for the waterfront. Here's a sampling of comments:
Sharon Berman, Roosevelt Island: Provide Roosevelt Island with docks and the opportunity to engage in recreational boating.  Photo of Roosevelt Island by Jonathan Laventhol, from Wikipedia Commons.
Marcha Johnson, landscape architect: Relocate residences away from the lowest part of the waterfront. Consider changing how the waterfront is categorized; an area labeled as "industrial" or "natural," for example, is often a fusion of these descriptions. Emily Gallagher, co-chair of NAG ( Neighbors Allied for Good Growth, based in Williamsburg and Greenpoint): The City should enhance public access to the Brooklyn waterfront by acquiring private land parcels. Expand water taxi service. Create a Monitor Ironclad Museum. Alice Labrie, consultant, Harlem River area: Focus on the industrial and commercial waterfront because anything that adds to the tax base is extremely important. Expand planning for waterfront security and evacuation plans.
 Gerard Thornton, tugboat operator, Thornton Towing and Transportation: Continue critical support of the industrial and commercial waterfront. "Right now you probably want a job before you want a park bench." Betsy Haggerty, North River Historic Ship Society: Include docking infrastructure for vessels in planning for piers and waterfront edges. Make piers useful, not just a decoration. Ed Kelly, Maritime Association of the Port of New York and New Jersey: "The NY waterfront is grossly underutilized compared to other waterfronts. We do a poor job of moving people and freight on the waterfront and this needs to change. We are a region with multiple jurisdictional issues, but we need to have homogenized oversight that would simplify regulations. We need a network of landing facilities connected to mass transit: the marine highway. You'll never find a pothole in the water. Dredging is necessary, but we need to make sure we treat the environment respectfully."
Inspired to comment? Click here to give your input on the new Comprehensive Waterfront Plan. (back to top) |
|
|
|
RULES AND COOPERATION IN THE NEW YORK CITY WATERS
|
|
NY City Council Schedules Hearing on Boating Safety A variety of boats can be seen in this shot of New York Harbor: kayaks, a ferry, a tug, a pleasure boat and a cruise ship. Photo by Robert Simko | The Committee on Waterfronts has scheduled a hearing on "Rules and Cooperation in the NYC Waters" on Friday, April 30 at 1pm in the 16th floor hearing room at 250 Broadway. All are invited to attend and testify. This is an opportunity for stakeholders to contribute to a discussion about multiple uses of the Harbor and safe interaction. Ed Kelly, executive director of the Maritime Association of the Port of New York and New Jersey, an alliance of commercial maritime interests, referred to the spirit of cooperation on the waterways at a recent meeting on the City's Comprehensive Waterfront Plan (see story above). "We need to de-conflict the waterways; there is room for
everyone," he said. (back to top) |
RESIDENTS FROM ONE END OF THE CITY TO ANOTHER RECLAIM THEIR WATERFRONTS
|
| Design Charrettes in the Rockaways and Inwood Elicit Great Ideas
New Yorkers are taking back their waterfronts with great enthusiasm. Recently, design charrettes in both Inwood and the Rockaways tackled the future of neighborhood shorelines -- and each community came out in full force to participate.  In the neighborhood of Inwood, along the Harlem River, a crowd of committed stakeholders attended a charrette sponsored by the NYC Economic Development Corporation to talk about the future of Sherman Creek. "This community has been talking of revitalizing the Sherman Creek waterfront for many years," commented Alejandro Baquero-Cifuentes, EDC assistant vice president for development, who moderated the session. At left is an image from the public workshop presentation showing a 1902 boat parade in the Sherman Creek area of the Harlem River. Below is part of Sherman Creek today.  One of those attending was Elizabeth Ritter from Community Board 12. She's lived in the neighborhood for 26 years. "In the last century there were dozens and dozens of boathouses. It was
a regular thing for people to go rowing," she said. "But now there's very little
access to the water. People think of the waterfront as an abstraction. People don't realize
that we have the right to be able to expect to get to the water and
enjoy the water." Part of the goal, she said, is "letting people know the water is there, and that it's theirs." In 2004, several City agencies conducted an extensive planning process for the Sherman Creek area, encompassing transportation, land use, economic development and waterfront revitalization. Pocket parks at five street ends (202nd through 206th Streets) were one result; a clean-up of the shoreline just south of the Sherman Creek Inlet, conducted in tandem with the New York Restoration Project, was another. With the planning discussion restarted, Mr. Baquero-Cifuentes is pleased at the diversity of stakeholders still enthusiastic about reclaiming the waterfront. "We had property owners show up, residents of the Dyckman Houses, representatives of CDCs [Community Development Corporations], the local Council and Assembly members; a real cross section." Everyone spoke up. "People want to see passive and active recreation, and boating activities where feasible," Mr. Baquero-Cifuentes said. Acknowledging that busy streets and other physical impediments prevent
many people from getting to the Harlem River shoreline, he talked about the importance of creating "gateways,"
such as a plaza and green area at the intersection of 201st Street and
10th Avenue. "If possible, people would like to have concessions along the esplanade," he reported, "like food or things for bike riders." "We need a way to walk along the water," Ms. Ritter said. "There needs to be more of a way to draw people to the river but there also needs to be more to do at the river. The opportunities for getting in the water up here are pretty limited. We need put-ins. We need a boathouse." A design/planning team from WXY Studio is developing options for the area based on the March 20 charrette. The EDC will present preliminary design options this summer, elicit further feedback from the public, and release the Sherman Creek Waterfront Esplanade
Master Plan by the end of the year. Funding for the planning process came from the State's Environmental Protection Fund and the NYC Industrial Development Agency. At this point funds for development have not yet been obtained. Meanwhile, across the city, Queens residents are working on the first community-based
public space plan for the Rockaway and Broad Channel waterfronts. The
Rockaway Waterfront Alliance is organizing a coalition. "We want to
make sure this is a very inclusive process," said Jeanne Dupont,
executive director of the Alliance.  Images courtesy of the Rockaway Waterfront Alliance
The City owns most of the waterfront property in question, but not all. "Rockaway Waterfront Alliance, the American Littoral Society and Jamaica Bay Ecowatchers have all worked to transfer property to the Parks Department," Ms. Dupont said, "but it's just that there's no plan for it."  A planning meeting held in late January (photo at right) will be followed by a second meeting in June, at which point participants will begin to put together a design charrette. Ms. Dupont is simultaneously looking for funding for the planning process and asking landscape architects and other professionals if they would consider donating their services to the project. The January meeting was a great success. "Overwhelmingly the community was enthusiastic," Ms. Dupont said. "After breaking into
groups they all came back to the table with the same input: there are
a lot of reasons to focus on Rockaway now, including stormwater management and climate change." "I know how vulnerable Rockaway is," she continued. "We're one of the only parts of New York City that has all this public land just sitting and waiting, which puts us in great danger if a developer looks this way. We're next in line for gentrification. This community is willing to sell its soul with all the homes foreclosed. But right now, because there's a pause from developers, it's a really good time to get people together to plan for the future. "My hope is that we can influence the City's new Comprehensive Waterfront Plan. With 11 miles of waterfront on both sides of the Rockaways, we don't have a single public dock. There used to be thousands of boats and a lot of marine commerce -- but now we don't have any infrastructure. This planning is absolutely necessary and it's the right time." (back to top) |
PUBLIC MAY COMMENT ON JUST-RELEASED MASTER PLAN FOR GOVERNORS ISLAND
|
| With the City Now in Charge, Redevelopment Plans are Moving Forward
As predicted, the City took charge of Governors Island on April 11 with an announcement by Mayor Bloomberg that an agreement on development, funding and governance had been reached with the State. The day also marked the release of a detailed master plan for the historic island and the start of an approval process that will lead to the release
of $41.5 million from New York City's capital
budget.  The 176-page Governors Island Park and Public Space Master Plan (see it at www.govislandpark.com) offers imaginative design ideas and forward-thinking strategies for sustainable building and financing. Design highlights includes 19 acres of pavement replaced with greenery, collection and reuse of stormwater, 1,300 new trees, a raised edge that anticipates future storm surges and sea level rise, reuse of demolished material, and much more. A careful and affordable operations and maintenance plan was developed for the 87 acres of public space. The plan was created by West 8, a Netherlands-based firm working with Rogers Marvel Architects, Diller Scofidio + Renfro, Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects and other experts. The operation and redevelopment of the island is guided by the Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation (GIPEC). For more information, advocacy and calendar listings, go to the Governors Island Alliance. Read the
Governors Island blog and weigh in. For an assessment of the master plan by the architecture critic of The New York Times, click here. This year, Governors Island opens to the public on June 5 and will be open every Friday through Sunday through October 10. Schematic
design and environmental review of the master plan will begin later this year and continue through
2011. Community review will take place in 2012, and the first phase of construction is expected to begin in late 2012.  State Senator Daniel Squadron was one of numerous elected officials who worked together to transfer the island from State to City. "Just as with our recent
agreement on Brooklyn Bridge Park, the transfer of Governors Island to the City
will create a dependable funding stream, protect the parkland, and give the
community a stronger voice," he said at the press conference on April 11. "Today marks another significant step toward
building a unified Harbor Park -- a central park for the center of the city --
linking Governors Island to the Manhattan and Brooklyn waterfronts." (back to top) |
JOHN J. HARVEY FIREBOAT FEATURED ON A NEW POSTAGE STAMP
|
|  The U.S. Postal Service has been issuing sets of state stamps in alphabetical order for the past few years, and this year it was Montana through North Dakota's turn. Part of this batch of 10, the New York features an image of a fireboat -- none other than the John J. Harvey -- against the urban skyline.
"To all of us here in the New York City
maritime community, when you mention fireboat, we think of the
Harvey," said a proud Bernard Ente, whose original photograph of the fireboat was used as the basis for the stamp's artwork. "Now she will live forever as an image on a United States postage
stamp." On April 16, at the First Day of Issue ceremony for the 10 new state stamps, the USPS Senior Vice President and General Counsel Mary Anne Gibbons said, "The flags depicted in nine of these stamps we dedicate today
represent contributions these states have made to the development and
growth of our nation." Present at the ceremony were Mr. Ente, pilot Robert Lenney (ret. FDNY), chief engineer
Tim Ivory and acting chief engineer Jessica DuLong.
Click here to purchase the Flags of our Nation stamps. (back to top)
|
EARTH DAY AT THE URBAN WATERWAYS
|
| Minds in the Gutter
Sponsored by the NYC Environmental Fund, the Stormwater Infrastructure Matters (SWIM) Coalition and the North Brooklyn Compost Project, Minds in the Gutter gathered submissions earlier this year about how to divert stormwater from roadways before it reaches the sewer system. On Earth Day, April 22, at 6:30pm, selected submissions will be exhibited and discussed at the Museum of the City of New York (1220 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street).  Minds in the Gutter encourages submissions from a variety of disciplines. Here's a great graphic from the Minds web site showing who sent in ideas. Reservations are required to attend the Museum event. SWIM members pay only $6. To reserve your discounted tickets, call 917-492-3395 or email programs@mcny.org and identify yourself as a SWIM member. The Minds in the Gutter website will upload designs on an ongoing basis. Look for a traveling exhibition of creative stormwater management techniques at City of Water Day and at other summer venues. (back to top) |
MWA PARTNER SPOTLIGHT
|
|
Expanding every week, the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance is more than a coalition; it's a force. We are
ferry captains, shipping executives, park directors, scientists,
sailors, paddlers, swimmers, teachers, urban planners, architects and
more. Together, we advocate for the best possible waterfront in the
best possible city, a waterfront that is clean and accessible to all,
with a robust maritime workforce and efficient, affordable waterborne
transportation. Join us! Contact Louis Kleinman at lkleinman@waterfrontalliance.org. Meet the 400th Partner of the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance: - SS United States Conservancy http://www.ssunitedstatesconservancy.org
The SS United States Conservancy is a national nonprofit organization
founded in 2004. The Conservancy seeks to preserve and revitalize the
SS United States, the largest and fastest ocean liner ever built in her
namesake's country. The Conservancy works to ensure that the nation's
flagship will endure for future generations as the ultimate expression
of the United States Merchant Marine and American transatlantic
passenger shipping. The organization is developing plans to re-purpose
the vessel as a multi-purpose stationary attraction in a large
metropolitan waterfront. (back to top)
|
WATERFRONT NEWSLINKS
|
|
Ferry riders cling to hope as city says service drains cashDaily News, April 22, 2010 City looks to liven up E. River waterfrontCrain's, April 19, 2010 Birdhouses Take Flight Along Gowanus Canal Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 19, 2010 Seamen's Church Institute embarks on novel study of piracy's effectsEpiscopal Life, April 16, 2010 Local season opener shows its true stripersNew York Post, April 16, 2010 City Planning floats Rockaway 'Vision 2020' waterfront plan, touts better accessDaily News, April 15, 2010
Historically Speaking: Super Duper GowanusBrooklyn Daily Eagle, April 14, 2010 Governors Island Vision Adds Hills and Hammocks The New York Times, April 13, 20 Mayor Bloomberg's Island The New York Times, April 12, 2010 Brooklyn Assemblyman Joe Lentol ready to swim in polluted Newtown Creek for Google InternetDaily News, April 8, 2010
(back to top)
|
|
|