We will explore opportunities
to create new land by constructing decks over transportation
infrastructure
Throughout the city, in all five boroughs, highway and
rail infrastructure is essential to life in the city.
But for the most part, they are places where communities
stop; where neighborhood is divided from neighborhood.
This need not be so. (See photos above: Creation of
Park Avenue)
Exposed railyards, highways, and rail lines that cleave
neighborhoods apart have periodically been built over
to open up surrounding land for development-most notably
along Park Avenue in Midtown. Just a few blocks west
sits Caemmerer Yards in the Hudson Yards area, which
will be decked over for housing, offices, a cultural
center and public open space. There are numerous opportunities
to reknit the city's neighborhoods together.
As our search for land becomes more pressing in the
coming decades, we must be prepared to work with communities
to explore the potential of these sites.
Probably, the most frequently cited opportunity to
use existing infrastructure sites more creatively is
the Sunnyside Yards in Long Island City, Queens. With
transit access nearby, and new commuter rail access
planned as part of the East Side Access project, it
has often been looked to as a potential development
site. The open railyards span nearly 200 acres; developing
even the first section could create hundreds of housing
units with stores, schools, playing fields, and parks.
The site could also include an intermodal transportation
facility at the intersection for seven subway lines,
the Long Island Rail Road, and Amtrak. Residents could
walk directly and safely to the shopping on Steinway
Street in Astoria; residents in Long Island City could
commute from an LIRR station within their neighborhood
and children from the surrounding communities could
play on new ballfields. By developing the site, the
City could create an entirely new neighborhood, connect
long-separated communities, eliminate the noise and
blight of an exposed railyard, and provide a transportation
hub for anyone traveling to or from Queens and Long
Island.
To be sure, any such development would be complicated.
It is an active and essential rail yard that cannot
be disrupted, and additional infrastructure construction
as part of the East Side Access project is now underway.
As a major portal to Manhattan, the area already suffers
from traffic congestion. On the other hand, it offers
an exceptional opportunity to expand the existing Dutch
Kills and Hunters Point neighborhoods, to provide for
new places of employment, and to connect the areas east
and west of the yards that are now crossed by only a
few streets.
Other examples of possible platform projects are the
former railroad space adjoining the Staten Island Ferry
that could be used to connect the St. George neighborhood
to its waterfront, and the 36th Street Rail Yards on
the southern edge of the Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.
Building on a platform over it could result in substantial
new units of housing.
Exposed highways offer a similar opportunity. One such
site is over the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway (BQE) between
Carroll Gardens and Cobble Hill also in Brooklyn. Just
south of Atlantic Avenue, the BQE dips into a depressed
section of roadway bordered on either side by Hicks
Street. Continuing straight through to the entrance
to the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel, this sunken highway
divides Cobble Hill and Carroll Gardens from the river
and the community along Columbia Street.
A platform could be constructed over the below-grade
section of the BQE to create nine new blocks of housing
while reconnecting two neighborhoods. Another example
of a disruptive highway that could potentially be covered
over includes the Gowanus Expressway.
Some of these areas may be better suited than others
for future development due to their accessibility to
rail and mass transit, and the physical configuration
of the sites. Given market conditions, some may not
be able to support development for many years while
others may make economic sense sooner. We know that
the one-size-fits-all approach of earlier eras will
not work. Building communities requires a carefully
tailored approach to local conditions and needs that
can only be developed with local input. We will begin
the process of working with communities, the agencies
that operate these facilities, and other stakeholders
to sort through these complicated issues. (See table
above: Expansion of Zoned Housing Capacity)
Progress (as of 4/22/08):
DCP is preparing a draft inventory of railyards, rail
lines, and highways that have the potential to be decked
over and redeveloped with housing and other uses. The
decks could be developed with office, commercial and/or
open space. The agency plans to issue a final report
in summer 2008. In addition, the City and the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority (MTA) are moving forward with
plans to deck over the Caemmerer Railyards in Manhattan.
The MTA, the owner of the rail yards, selected a developer
on March 26, 2008. Environmental work is expected to
begin in Spring 2008 with the public review process
to begin in 2009. |