Vision 2020: New York City Comprehensive Waterfront Plan
The Vision 2020: New York City Comprehensive Waterfront Plan was introduced in March 2011 by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn, and the Director of the New York City Department of City Planning, Amanda Burden, this plan provides a framework for the next ten years of waterfront development in New York City. The plan has two components: a three-year action agenda comprising 130 funded projects, including the development of more than of new waterfront parks, creation of 14 new waterfront esplanades, and introduction of new commuter ferry service, providing a framework for the City’s of shoreline for the next decade and beyond.
History
New York City, like many other cities, is experiencing a vast redevelopment of its waterfronts from primarily maritime activities and water dependent uses to parks, housing and economic development activities and expanding the use on the waterways for transportation, recreation and natural habitats. This transformation is due in great part to containerization, which reshaped the shipping industry and required the use of vast, concentrated expanses of waterfront and upland areas. This condensed the Port of New York and New Jersey shipping industry to six locations within the harbor and left many waterfront areas and piers vacant. These six terminals include:- Red Hook Container Terminal, Brooklyn
- New York Container Terminal, Staten Island
- Port Newark Container Terminal, Newark
- Global Marine Terminal, Jersey City
- Maher Terminal, Elizabeth
- APM Terminals, Elizabeth
In order to help preserve the maritime industry and water dependent industry uses that still exist, the Plan also designates 6 areas as Significant Maritime Industrial Areas. These districts were previously zoned for heavy manufacturing and will continue to be used for industry. The designated SMIA’s include:
- Kill Van Kull between Staten Island and Bayonne
- Sunset Park in Brooklyn
- Red Hook in Brooklyn
- Brooklyn Navy Yard in Brooklyn
- Newtown Creek in Brooklyn and Queens
- South Bronx in the Bronx
Goals
The updated Comprehensive Waterfront Plan has identified the following eight goals:- Goal 1: Expand public access to the waterfront and waterways on public and private property for all New Yorkers and visitors alike.
- Goal 2: Enliven the waterfront with a range of attractive uses integrated with adjacent upland communities.
- Goal 3: Support the working waterfront: Support economic development activity on the working waterfront.
- Goal 4: Improve water quality through measurements that benefit natural habitats, support public recreation, and enhance waterfront and upland communities.
- Goal 5: Restore the natural waterfront: Restore degraded natural waterfront areas, and protect wetlands and shorefront habitats.
- Goal 6: Enhance the "Blue Network": Enhance the public experience of the waterways that surround New York – our "Blue Network".
- Goal 7: Improve government oversight: Improve governmental regulation, coordination, and oversight of the waterfront and waterways.
- Goal 8: Increase climate resilience: Identify and pursue strategies to increase the city’s resilience to climate change and sea level rise.
The plan recently won the American Planning Association’s National Planning Excellence Award 2012: The Daniel Burnham Award for a Comprehensive Plan.