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BRONX, MEET YOUR WATERFRONT Public Presentation | May 18 th , 2011

Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

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MIT Department of Urban Studies and Planning project with community partners like the Harlem River Working Group, Bronx Borough planning office, and the NYC Waterfront planning office to improve access to the Harlem River. Presented to the public at 851 Grand Concourse, Room 915 in the Bronx, NY on May 18, 2011.

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Page 1: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

BRONX, MEET YOUR WATERFRONT Public Presentation | May 18th, 2011

Page 2: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

Agenda

1 History and Future of the Harlem River Waterfront

2 The Overall (Master) Plan 3 Four Priority Site Proposals

Page 3: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

History and Future of the Harlem River Waterfront

Page 4: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

The Harlem River is an 8-mile stretch of water that connects the East River with the Hudson, Manhattan with the Bronx

Page 5: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

Most residents in the Bronx don’t feel like it’s a part of their neighborhood

Page 6: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

The Bronx has been seen as a thoroughfare

Major Deegan Expressway

Page 7: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

A place of superhuman infrastructure built along what was the most open public space – the water

High Bridge

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Designed for machines and not humans to access

Pedestrian bridge to nowhere

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The river has been an afterthought

Mill Pond Park

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Roberto Clemente Park

River Park Towers

Washington Bridge Alexander

Hamilton Bridge

High Bridge

Yankee Stadium

149th St Bridge

Mill Pond Park

Hud

son

Riv

er

Macombs Dam Bridge

Lincoln Avenue

Har

lem

Riv

er

4.5 miles

Page 11: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

4.5 miles

Lincoln Avenue

Roberto Clemente

Park

Existing conditions

1 - 3 - Poor - Few

Page 12: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

4.5 miles

Roberto Clemente

Park

Lincoln Avenue

1 - 3 - Poor - Few

1 place to get on the water

Harlem River Community Rowing

Existing conditions

Page 13: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

1 - 3 - Poor - Few

4.5 miles

Roberto Clemente

Park

Mill Pond Park

Mill Pond Park

Depot Place

(proposed)

3 public open spaces near the water Lincoln Avenue

Existing conditions

Page 14: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

1 - 3 - Poor - Few

4.5 miles

Roberto Clemente

Park

Poor pathways from people to existing waterfront destinations

Lincoln Avenue

Existing conditions

Page 15: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

1 - 3 - Poor - Few

4.5 miles

Roberto Clemente

Park

Few residents who view the Harlem River as part of their neighborhood

Lincoln Avenue

Existing conditions

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The Harlem River, 1852

Fishing

It wasn’t always like this

Page 17: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

The Harlem River, 1890

Waterfront access

Page 18: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

The Harlem River, 1890 The Harlem River, date unknown

Working waterfront

Page 19: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

The Harlem River, 1902 Community boat race

Page 20: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

While we can’t easily undo the past, we can make targeted investments for the future

BRONX, MEET YOUR WATERFRONT PLAN

Page 21: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

We started by building on the work that came before

Previous Bronx Harlem River reports

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We collected some data

Students within 1 mile of Lincoln Avenue

Page 23: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

We did some analysis (paralysis)

Harlem River waterfront edge analysis

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We did some math

Stormwater run-off calculation

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We met with leaders of the community and where possible the general We did some walking

Pedestrian bridge

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We shared sandwiches with community leaders We may have gone to some places perhaps we shouldn’t have gone (to find new possibilities!)

Under the Major Deegan

Page 27: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

We shared sandwiches with community leaders

Boar’s Head in Harlem River Park Towers

Page 28: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

We shared sandwiches with community leaders

Drawings on trace paper in the MIT studio

Based on what we learned and heard, we did some sketching

Page 29: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

MIT Bronx studio

. . . and re-imagination

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Throughout this process, we tried (as best we could) to work closely with partners in the community

Mid-review meeting with representatives of the Harlem River Working Group in March

Page 31: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

Theme 1. Create more obvious paths to destinations along the water

BRONX, MEET YOUR WATERFRONT PLAN

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Theme 2. Find creative ways to re-use and celebrate existing infrastructure (like bridges!)

BRONX, MEET YOUR WATERFRONT PLAN

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The Harlem River, 1890

Theme 3. Restore the river’s natural ecology by cleaning the water (where possible and appropriate)

BRONX, MEET YOUR WATERFRONT PLAN

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The Harlem River, 1890

Theme 4. Pop-up events for residents to gather and re-imagine their waterfront

BRONX, MEET YOUR WATERFRONT PLAN

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The Overall (Master) Plan

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4.5 miles

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4.5 miles

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4.5 miles

Today

Page 39: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

4.5 miles

Future

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4.5 miles

Future

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Four Priority Site Proposals

Page 43: Bronx Meet Your Waterfront Plan (Part 1 of 3)

HIGH BRIDGE & DEPOT PLACE Innovative entrances to the bridge and to the High Bridge community

HB!Pedestrian only bridge across Harlem River with amazing views, opening to public in 2013

HB!

4.5 miles

Roberto Clemente

Park

Lincoln Avenue

Priority Areas

MACOMBS DAM PARK-IT PLACE Significant paved space adjacent to largest regional destination in the area with Heritage field opening in 2012

Low-cost, flexible hard space for pop-up food and tailgating

MD!

MD!

PIER 5 WATER PARK Largest available soft space along the waterfront adjacent to existing amenity (Mill Pond Park) and the 149th St bridge

Natural patch with flexible soft

space for mid-scale cultural programming

P5!

P5!

LINCOLN AVENUE Direct access to the water adjacent to cultural corridor along the South Bronx

Treatment and prime access to

the water and arts

LA!

LA!

Depot Place

(proposed)

Mill Pond Park