Through a master planning process, the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation (NYC Parks) explored the best and most innovative opportunities to enhance public access and environmental conditions for Mariners Marsh and Arlington Marsh. As ecological and restoration design consultant on a team led by SWA/Balsley, Biohabitats helped craft a strategic approach to restore and remediate the sites in a way that transforms the land to benefit the local ecology and adjacent human community. The team developed a phased restoration and remediation strategy and a plan for site-sensitive landscape design that provided safe public access to the site and leveraged its significant ecological assets and improvements to date.
To inform the plan, Biohabitats performed an assessment of the site’s ecology. In addition to studying ecological assets, the team also evaluated factors such as potential coastal resiliency measures, access and circulation, community park needs, and opportunities for integration with regional systems. Using jargon-free language, Biohabitats communicated findings to stakeholders, public agencies, and the local community.
Biohabitats worked with SWA/Balsley to develop holistic design plans that integrate function, maintenance, material, and operations considerations into innovative and sensitive designs. Design plans aim to spark public imagination, foster waterfront access and environmental education, and create opportunities for partnerships and local stewardship. The final result of Biohabitats efforts was an actionable master plan that compiled plan goals, prioritized investments, identified capital inefficiencies, included recommendations for balance of restoration/protection and public access/reactivation, and presented an implementation strategy, phasing plan, and preliminary cost estimate.
TAGS
Owner: New York City Department of Parks & Recreation
Bioregion: Hudson River
Ecoregion: Hackensack Meadowlands
Physiographic province: Piedmont
Watershed: Arthur Kill-Upper Bay
Collaborators: SWA/Balsley, Matrix New World Engineering