As part of the four-year, $129-million (total) project, Stantec will lead design plans for a reconstructed wharf at the southern tip of Manhattan that will raise the waterfront esplanade approximately 5 feet above its current elevation — 11 feet above Mean Sea Level — to protect the park and nearby community, as the Battery currently sits at an elevation that will be submerged as sea levels rise. The project will ensure usability of this public space for millions of yearly visitors over the next 80 years and play a critical role in Lower Manhattan’s growing network of resiliency reinforcements.
“Current sea level rise projections show that the Battery sits in a particularly vulnerable location and needed wharf reconstruction provides a timely opportunity to protect the Battery’s unique character and usability for years to come,” said Brian O’Donnell, Principal-in-Charge, Stantec.
Several complex issues will be addressed in the design, including in-water construction, interior drainage and integration of a new wharf elevation with the existing parkland. The project team anticipates using an adaptive design strategy — one that will continue to provide the views of the New York harbor, relief from sea level rise and nuisance flooding and flexibility for uncertain future conditions. Resilient planting will also be critical in ensuring survivability from major storms.
“Increases in extreme weather events are bringing resiliency to the top of city agendas across the world,” said Gary Sorge, Stantec’s Discipline Leader for Landscape Architecture. “Stantec is in a strong position to meet those needs and has been bringing forward both green and grey infrastructure solutions that will protect the drivers of our economies — our cities. It takes a truly interdisciplinary approach to make communities both resilient and livable for future generations.”
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The interdisciplinary design will be led out of Stantec’s New York City office, which counts more than 300 professionals, and will include landscape architecture, waterfront engineering and environmental review, with the support of several specialty contractors. Design is expected to take 18 months.
Stantec is involved in a number of resiliency projects in New York City, including the Raise Shorelines Citywide project, which involves shoreline reconstruction to protect against rising sea levels, and Newtown Barge Park, which recently opened in Greenpoint, Brooklyn and involved a waterfront reconstruction strategy similar to the approach for the Battery. The firm’s work on Box Street Park, which is currently in design, will convert a Metropolitan Transportation Authority Facility to a waterfront park to boost coastal resiliency and provide needed neighborhood park space.