Designers Float Six Ways to Reinvent the Coastline

Ring of Protection: A series of berms and flip-down flood barriers aim to help fortify a 10-mile, U-shaped ribbon of lower Manhattan against storms. The project would also include a 'reverse aquarium' in Battery Park.
Rendering Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG)

Protecting the Hub: The 1-sq-mile Hunts Point peninsula is a low-lying food supply hub. This project, which includes the planting of native species such as eelgrass, will protect the existing wholesale food markets by constructing concrete levees made of locally sourced panels.
Image: Courtesy of PennDesign/OLIN

Wetlands Revisited: The focus of this plan is to redefine the 30-sq-mile section of this vast, marshy swath of land by restoring some of the wetlands and creating a public wildlife refuge that would be surrounded by a berm to keep floodwaters at bay.
Rendering Courtesy of MIT Team

Wetlands Revisited: The focus of this plan is to redefine the 30-sq-mile section of this vast, marshy swath of land by restoring some of the wetlands and creating a public wildlife refuge that would be surrounded by a berm to keep floodwaters at bay.
Rendering Courtesy of MIT Team

Reef Street: This project calls for building a string of concrete breakwaters off the coast of Tottenville, a hard-hit neighborhood on Staten Island's south shore, to buffer against wave damage, flooding and erosion. It includes a 'reef street,' micropockets of habitat for marine life.
Image Courtesy of Scape/Landscape Architecture

Pumped Up: With the Hoboken waterfront prone to severe flooding, this plan calls for a system of pumps to collect water that would otherwise overwhelm sewers and pipe it away from streets.
Rendering Courtesy of Team OMA

Ring of Protection: A series of berms and flip-down flood barriers aim to help fortify a 10-mile, U-shaped ribbon of lower Manhattan against storms. The project would also include a 'reverse aquarium' in Battery Park.
Rendering Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG)

Reef Street: This project calls for building a string of concrete breakwaters off the coast of Tottenville, a hard-hit neighborhood on Staten Island's south shore, to buffer against wave damage, flooding and erosion. It includes a 'reef street,' micropockets of habitat for marine life.
Image Courtesy of Scape/Landscape Architecture

Protecting the Hub: The 1-sq-mile Hunts Point peninsula is a low-lying food supply hub. This project, which includes the planting of native species such as eelgrass, will protect the existing wholesale food markets by constructing concrete levees made of locally sourced panels.
Image: Courtesy of PennDesign/OLIN

Ring of Protection: A series of berms and flip-down flood barriers aim to help fortify a 10-mile, U-shaped ribbon of lower Manhattan against storms. The project would also include a 'reverse aquarium' in Battery Park.
Rendering Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG)

Wetlands Revisited: The focus of this plan is to redefine the 30-sq-mile section of this vast, marshy swath of land by restoring some of the wetlands and creating a public wildlife refuge that would be surrounded by a berm to keep floodwaters at bay.
Rendering Courtesy of MIT Team

Current Event: Focusing on improving the corridor around the Mill River, the first phase of this project, dubbed 'slow streams,' calls for replacing asphalt on the streets near the river with landscaped trenches, or bioswales, to filter stormwater runoff.
Rendering Courtesy of Interboro Partners

Ring of Protection: A series of berms and flip-down flood barriers aim to help fortify a 10-mile, U-shaped ribbon of lower Manhattan against storms. The project would also include a 'reverse aquarium' in Battery Park.
Rendering Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG)

Reef Street: This project calls for building a string of concrete breakwaters off the coast of Tottenville, a hard-hit neighborhood on Staten Island's south shore, to buffer against wave damage, flooding and erosion. It includes a 'reef street,' micropockets of habitat for marine life.
Image Courtesy of Scape/Landscape Architecture

Current Event: Focusing on improving the corridor around the Mill River, the first phase of this project, dubbed 'slow streams,' calls for replacing asphalt on the streets near the river with landscaped trenches, or bioswales, to filter stormwater runoff.
Rendering Courtesy of Interboro Partners

Ring of Protection: A series of berms and flip-down flood barriers aim to help fortify a 10-mile, U-shaped ribbon of lower Manhattan against storms. The project would also include a 'reverse aquarium' in Battery Park.
Rendering Courtesy of Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG)

Pumped Up: With the Hoboken waterfront prone to severe flooding, this plan calls for a system of pumps to collect water that would otherwise overwhelm sewers and pipe it away from the streets.
Rendering Courtesy of Team OMA

Protecting the Hub: The 1-sq-mile Hunts Point peninsula is a low-lying food supply hub. This project, which includes the planting of native species such as eelgrass, will protect the existing wholesale food markets by constructing concrete levees made of locally sourced panels.
Image: Courtesy of PennDesign/OLIN
Center for Advanced Urbanism, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Zones Urbaines Sensibles
De Urbanisten
Deltares
75B
Volker InfraDesign
LIVING WITH THE BAY TEAM:
Interboro Partners
Apex Engineering
Bosch Slabbers
Deltares Systems
H+N+S Landscape Architects
Palmbout Urban Landscapes
IMG Rebel with Center for Urban Pedagogy
David Rusk
New Jersey Institute of Technology, Infrastructure Planning Program
Project Projects
RFA Investments
Delft University of Technology
BIG U TEAM:
Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG)
One Architecture
Starr Whitehouse Landscape Architects and Planners
James Lima Planning + Development
Green Shield Ecology
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