Upon completion, the residential complex in Ithaca, New York, will include 156 one- and two-bedroom residential units with a wellness center and amenities. These include a full-service restaurant with indoor and outdoor waterfront dining, improved boating and golfing amenities and access to the new Guthrie Medical Office building. City Harbor’s heating and cooling will also be powered by an advanced, effluent-based system.
The urban waterfront will also feature a 1,700-foot promenade that follows the shoreline and ends at the Cayuga Inlet. The pedestrian promenade will be accented with pocket park seating areas and will connect directly to the city’s Waterfront Trail and the Ithaca Farmers Market.
Heather McDaniel, President of Tompkins County Area Development, the region’s economic development group that has worked closely with the city and co-investors to defray public infrastructure costs, said, “City Harbor offers a number of public amenities and effectively opens the lake to more waterfront activity. Most notable among these amenities are the lengthy pedestrian promenade and newly acquired boat access that will bring an operational marina to the underutilized inlet.”
City Harbor’s project team, consisting of Edger Enterprises, Lambrou Real Estate, Bridges Cornell Heights and Morse Project Management, is also drawing on a effluent-based heat pump system for temperature control on different components of the site.
Engineered by EC4B, the system will use clean, treated water headed toward Cayuga Lake as an energy source to heat and cool the complex’s residential and medical areas. The system will use 8-10 percent of the incoming water flow for heat exchange. After a 30-foot stretch, the water will return to the outbound effluent pipe. The system eliminates natural gas usage, reduces the electric load and draws on energy from water that is already onsite.
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The revitalization of this location follows a recent rezone for the district and will address long-standing infrastructure needs such as stormwater facilities, fire accessways, parking and seawall construction supporting the interface with the waterfront.
The City Harbor development team has also partnered with the City of Ithaca to house the spoils of dredging from nearby Cascadilla Creek, to reduce flooding in surrounding neighborhoods. City Harbor is holding the dredging remnants for three months free of charge, in order for the dirt to dry and get offloaded via truck. The project will also make the channel navigable by boat.
City Harbor’s project team includes T.G. Miller Engineers and Surveyors, HOLT Architects and Whitham Planning and Design. The dredging is being carried out by Gorick Construction, Co., whose crews are working double shifts beneath tower lights to ensure progress at the site.