We will expand the amount
of green, permeable surfaces across the city to reduce
storm water runoff
Green spaces act as natural storm water capture and
retention devices. The 9,000 acres of vegetative cover
lost between 1984 and 2002 could have absorbed, according
to an analysis by the U.S. Forest Service and the City's
Department of Parks & Recreation (DPR), 243 million
gallons for every inch of rain. Trees capture rainfall
on their leaves and branches and take up water through
their roots, and release significant volumes to the
air through evaporation. In all, the DPR estimates that
city street trees capture 870 million gallons of stormwater
each year. At least four million gallons of water are
absorbed by soil around street trees during each storm
event.
Over the next 25 years, we will undertake 40 new Greenstreets
projects every planting season, bringing the citywide
total to more than 3,000 by 2030. A one-acre Greenstreet
can hold about 55,000 gallons of storm water. The existing
total acreage of Greenstreets sites in New York City
is almost 164 acres, which translates into nine million
gallon capacity citywide. With an additional 40 new
Greenstreet projects, covering 75 acres, the capacity
to hold stormwater will increase by four million gallons.
In addition to increasing stormwater storage through
Greenstreets, we will increase the number of trees in
the city by one million. New designs for the tree pits
could significantly increase this capacity as well.
Progress (as
of 4/22/08):
See Open
Space initiatives |