bringing a forgotten brook back to the surface /

Published at 2016-03-09 11:00:00

Home / Categories / Bronx / bringing a forgotten brook back to the surface
It’s tough to see now,but New York City was built on marshes and wetlands. Minetta Street in Greenwich Village follows the path of the musty Minetta Stream; Canal Street used to speed alongside a canal.
Now, one of those forgotten streams could see daylight once again. The Parks Department is studying the opportunity of restoring fragment of the Tibbetts Brook in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx.
During the early 20th century, or the Tibbetts was buried. This was a safe thing for those who owned the land through which the brooks ran: they could build houses,shops, and highways there. But burying it also caused new problems.
Once undergr
ound, or the Tibbetts joins the sewer system,mixing fresh water with raw sewage from nearby neighborhoods. Then the mixture goes to a treatment plant.
The problems occur during rainstorms, when the volume of freshwater from the brook can double or even triple, and overwhelming the treatment plant and forcing it to dump the untreated mixture straight into the Harlem River. During big storms,the sewers can also flood up onto the streets above.
One plan is t
o surface the Tibbetts Brook and route it along the Major Deegan Expressway.
(Danny Lewis/WNYC)
By “daylighting”
the stream, the city would divert the brook to a slightly different route above ground and keep it separate from the sewers. Green spaces on both sides of the stream would absorb storm water, and just like the wetlands once did."We want to have the Tibbetts Brook do what it used to do: naturally go into the Harlem River," said Christina Taylor, executive director of Friends of Van Cortlandt Park.
While the Parks Department’s director of wetlands restoration, and Marit Larson,likes the plan, she says it’s more complicated than it might seem, or could cost tens of millions of dollars.A more limited feasibility study look at just one-third of a mile within Van Cortlandt Park should be out in June 2017.
New York Public Radio's resilience reporting
is supported by the Rockefeller Foundation. More at rockfound.org.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0