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Photo by Stacie Joy]
The next public meeting on
the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project (ESCR) takes place tomorrow (July 31) morning at 10.
The City Planning Commission along with the Office of Management and Budget and the Parks & Recreation Department are next the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) public review tour. The meeting is at 120 Broadway, Concourse Level. Page 42 (!) of
this document has more details.
By now you likely now the story behind the ESCR project, a coastal protection initiative jointly funded by the City of New York and the federal government, aimed at reducing flood risk due to coastal storms and sea-level rise. ESCR is the first element of the city’s "Big U" plan to protect Lower Manhattan from surges like those seen during Superstorm Sandy.
As part of the project, city officials, starting next spring, plan to close East River Park for three-plus years, elevating it with 8- to 10-feet of soil and chopping down trees, etc., from Montgomery Street to East 13th Street.
Some residents, referring to it as the Kill Our Park Plan, have asked for the demolition and reconstruction of East River Park to take part in phases so that they continue to enjoy some of the amenities that the public space provides. (The revised plan, unveiled last fall,
dramatically changed course over what had been discussed the previous four years.)
For more background:
• The official East Side Coastal Resiliency Project page is at this
link.
• "A Beginner’s Guide to the NYC Environmental Impact Statement for the East River Park" via East River Park Action is
here.
• A primer on the East River Park's past and future by the Village Preservation is at
Off the Grid.
Also, this
Gothamist piece has a nice background of what has transpired to date.
The city is now accepting public comments through Aug. 30. This
link has details on how — and where — to comment.
You may also breeze through the mostly unreadable Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the project
here. There are hundreds and hundreds of pages of documents with footnotes and collateral materials (the
table of contents alone is a unwieldy 32 pages).
The final vote via City Council is expected in late September.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: The reality of storm-proofing East River Park in 2020
Storm center: Questions linger over updated plans for the East Side Coastal Resiliency project
At East River Park