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A different vision for West Side flood protection

Talking Point

BY TOM FOX

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The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers recently released a preliminary flood control plan for Manhattan’s West Side waterfront in Hudson River Park between Battery Park City and W. 34th Street. Their simplistic approach to resiliency is to build a 12-foot-high concrete wall along 3 miles of the waterfront — in the Hudson River Park.

The proposed wall would displace the busiest bike path in America, diminish public use and enjoyment of a $1 billion public park visited by 17 million people a year, impede public access to the river, increase air and noise pollution and block views of the river. It would significantly impact the desirability of the park, undermine the quality of life in adjacent neighborhoods, and erode the value of adjacent real estate and the city ’s tax base.

Let’s recall another West Side waterfront project. In 1985, after an 11-year legal battle forced the withdrawal of a U.S. Army Corps Westway permit for an interstate highway buried under 236 acres of landfill in the Hudson River, the governor and mayor established a unique city/state task force. That body brought together agency commissioners and local elected officials, along with community, environmental, business and civic stakeholders to craft a new vision for the West Side waterfront.

Their recommendations were visionary — build a surface-level boulevard and turn the waterfront into a world-class maritime park. The Hudson River Park transformed a dangerous and deteriorating waterfront, preserved the priceless Hudson estuary, made adjacent neighborhoods more livable, increased tourism, created jobs and enhanced the city’s tax base. That progress, and the continued vitality of adjacent West Side neighborhoods, will be undermined by the Army Corps’ current proposal.

In response, the Hudson River Park Advisory Council voted unanimously, on Feb. 13, to request that the governor and mayor establish a new city/ state task force to coordinate public infrastructure investments in order to prevent coastal flooding, protect the Hudson River Park, and redesign Route 9A to meet changing transportation needs without impacting traffic congestion.

The opportunity is unique because three public infrastructure projects could be critical to the future of the park, the estuary and adjacent West Side communities. There has been billions of dollars in public and private investment in the park and in adjacent communities. Coordinating the planning and implementation of major public infrastructure improvements is critical to protecting the benefits that the Hudson River Park has created.

West Side resiliency should include both in-water and shore-based measures. Given that 70 percent of the Hudson River Park is water, mitigating the impact of tidal surges should start in the park’s estuarine sanctuary. Existing natural systems must be preserved as we initiate innovative environmental interventions, such as expanding the current oyster restoration initiative, ecological enhancement of near-shore environments, and wrapping pier piles and surfacing the bulkhead with materials that encourage and support the growth of marine and terrestrial flora and fauna.

The Army Corps regulates all construction in the waterway while the state Department of Environmental Conservation oversees the estuarine sanctuary. In 2018, the governor supported a $135 million estuarine research, restoration and protection plan recommended by the Hudson River Foundation. Roughly $35 million is being spent for new shoreline habitat at ipal water treatment facilities, so stormwater and untreated household waste is discharged directly into the Hudson during periods of heavy rainfall. These discharges wreak havoc on the park’s marine and bird life and create unsanitary conditions for boaters and other park visitors. micro-mobility would support the current and future use of electric bicycles and scooters, food delivery and small, last-mile package delivery vehicles. That would also enhance pedal bicycle and pedestrian safety in the park. Thankfully, the new $1.2 trillion federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act included $110 billion to improve the nation’s transportation infrastructure and provide the opportunity to meet that need.

A stormwater holding system, like the one installed at Brooklyn’s Paerdegat Basin, could provide a model. There, a city Department of Environmental Protection 48-inch sewer line captures and stores stormwater to prevent its discharge into Jamaica Bay. The sewage is then slowly routed to a wastewater treatment plant after the rainfall.

Hudson River Park has created tremendous benefits for the environment, adjacent communities, the city and the region’s economy. Redesigning Route 9A could create an opportunity to expand the park, as well. If the roadway can be narrowed, the park and its bicycle path can be expanded, increasing the opportunity for more creative, and natural, shore-based flood-control measures.

As a West Side Task Force member, I participated in the planning of Route 9A, which was designed to accommodate 1980s traffic levels. The tree-lined, 19-foot-wide median was designed to facilitate pedestrian safety and mitigate air and noise pollution from traffic. Now, the anticipated 20 percent reduction in traffic from congestion pricing argues for a narrower roadway, while new vehicles are trending toward electric propulsion, which is quiet and has no exhaust emissions.

Gansevoort Peninsula off of the Meatpacking District, ecological improvements at Tribeca’s Pier 26, oyster restoration and the design of an estuarium, also in Tribeca.

Last November, New Yorkers passed a

Almost 40 years ago, following the demise of the Westway project, the West Side Task Force recommended a surface boulevard to accommodate north-south traffic flow along the West Side corridor and enhance waterfront access for adjacent communities.

W ith less traffic, one vehicle lane and the median might be removed from the roadway. That would add 30 feet of width to the Hudson River Park. Except perhaps in the section from 14th to 23rd Streets, where the park is extremely narrow, expanding the park would provide room for creative, shore-based measures, such as 12-foot-high, reinforced landscaped berms to increase park elevations. If the new stormwater interceptor sewer can be integrated in the overall design, city Department of Environmental Protection bond funding could contribute toward shore-based measures and complement federal flood control funding secured by the U.S. Army Corps.

$4.2 billion environmental bond act that can help fund the restoration and protection of the park’s estuarine sanctuary and match any federal funding secured by the Army Corps for coastal protection. However, in-water environmental enhancements won’t succeed without substantially improving water quality. That requires stopping the routine discharge from 33 combined sewer outfalls that dump untreated waste directly into the Hudson River.

New York City’s combined sewer system mixes raw sewage with stormwater from local streets. Normally, that waste is routed to municipal wastewater treatment plants for processing. But too much water would overwhelm munic-

But few then envisioned the dramatic transformation of the Meatpacking District and Hudson Yards, redevelopment of Hudson Square, popular new attractions like the High Line and Little Island, or commercial offices at Pier 57. Back then, the state Department of Transportation’s primary concern was moving traffic along the West Side corridor, and they chose the least expensive roadway alternative. Fast-forward to today and development on both sides of the roadway has matured, both conventional biking and electric-powered micro-mobility have increased exponentially, and congestion pricing is expected to reduce Manhattan vehicular traffic below 60th Street by about 20 percent.

The roadway is fast approaching its planned 50-year lifespan. Meanwhile, local community boards, the Hudson River Park Advisory Council and the Manhattan Borough president have requested that one lane of Route 9A be dedicated for electric vehicles used to transport people or goods.

Repurposing Route 9A’s parking lane for

It’s premature to suggest specific designs for these public infrastructure improvements. The task force charged with this mission should be responsible for decision-making with the same meaningful, transparent community participation that created the Hudson River Park. Ultimately, all task force recommendations would need to be approved by the governor, mayor and other elected officials.

Taking a comprehensive approach to public infrastructure improvements on the West Side waterfront can prevent coastal flooding, enhance the public use and enjoyment of the Hudson River Park and redesign Route 9A to meet evolving traffic volumes and transportation needs.

Excelsior!

Fox was a Westway opponent and the first president of the Hudson River Park Conservancy, which completed the final plan and environmental approval of the park, and represents the City Club of New York on the Hudson River Park Advisory Council. His first-person history of the creation of the park will be published by Rutgers University Press in spring 2024.