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LANDSCAPE/ENVIRONMENTAL: East Side Coastal Resiliency Project

The East Side Coastal Resiliency project uses a series of berms, flood walls, flood gates and raised parklands to create a continuous 2.4-mile barrier to protect 110,000 residents of the Lower East Side in Manhattan from future coastal and tidal flooding.

NYC Department of Design and Construction (DDC) Commissioner Thomas Foley announced Aug. 1 that the East Side Coastal Resiliency (ESCR) Project, which is enhancing parks while creating a 2.4-mile long flexible flood barrier extending from Montgomery Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side up to Asser Levy Playground at East 25th Street, has been awarded “Envision Gold” for sustainability from ISI.

ESCR is a $1.45-billion climate resiliency project that will provide flood protection and improve open spaces for more than 110,000 New Yorkers, including 28,000 residents in NYCHA housing. This is especially significant for neighborhoods in the ESCR project area that were severely impacted by Superstorm Sandy in 2012. Managed by DDC, the project involves significant upgrades to public open spaces and five parks, including improved waterfront access through reconstructed bridges and entry points. It will also upgrade existing sewer systems to capture and manage precipitation during storms.

Quotes:

NYC Department of Design and Construction Commissioner Thomas Foley: “DDC is honored to bring flood protection and improve open spaces for 110,000 New Yorkers who were affected by Sandy and who live in an area with limited recreational opportunities. DDC and all of City government are taking climate change seriously and targeting our efforts to the communities that need it most. I’d like to thank the Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure for recognizing this project with its Envision Gold Award.”

Mayor Eric Adams: “It is affirmational to be honored for our work to protect New Yorkers from the impacts of climate change. In the face of the biggest environmental threat we all face – we will continue to plan ahead, innovate, and get stuff done for New Yorkers.”

View the full announcement in our Project Directory.

LAND/ENVIRONMENTAL: Omaha Riverfront Revitalization Project

The Riverfront Revitalization Project (known locally as The RiverFront) is the first in Nebraska to earn an Envision® award for sustainability, and to the team’s credit, they earned a Platinum sustainability rating.  The project will transform downtown Omaha along the Missouri River by connecting three parks near the city’s downtown core, including the Gene Leahy Mall (GLM), Heartland of America Park (HOA), and Lewis and Clark Landing (LCL).

The project’s goal is to create an iconic riverfront with a variety of functional spaces that will be a catalyst for downtown growth and community connectivity —creating a regional destination that will attract residents, visitors, and businesses to the area. Each park is integral to The RiverFront.

Project Context

Gene Leahy Mall

The GLM is transforming a 14.5-acre site by draining most of the old lagoon and raising it to street level, and ensuring that it can support land-based amenities and activities. Construction is already in progress to install extensive landscaping, including trees, flower gardens, and native plants. Amenities in the western portion of the park include a sculpture garden, art plaza, canopies picnic area, event lawn, playground, performance pavilion, and a plaza. The east and west portions of the park are divided by a pedestrian promenade, which will improve pedestrian access to and from the adjacent entertainment districts. Amenities in the eastern side of the park also include the following:

– a slide terrace
– the Cascade interactive water feature
– a pond and cove water feature
– a dog park
– overlook gardens, and
– an event lawn.

GLM connects to the HOA via 8th Street, which is being reconstructed as well to allow for easier pedestrian access between the two parks.

Heartland of America Park

This 21.8-acre park is being regraded to include walking paths, lawn space for activities, a skate ribbon that will accommodate rollerblading in summer and ice skating in winter, and botanical gardens. An existing 10.7-acre lake and fountain will continue to be part of the revitalized park. The project includes extensive landscaping, including trees, native grasses, and flower gardens. Additional amenities and improvements include:

– a lounge garden and prairie gardens
– an event plaza
– Farnam Promenade and Pier
– bocce courts
– an amphitheater, and
– additional play areas with slides and seesaws.

An existing pedestrian bridge connection between HOA and LCL is being incorporated into the design.

Lewis and Clark Landing

This 25-acre park already had walking paths, recreational trails, a marina, a boardwalk, and sculptures. The project is enhancing the area and adding community amenities, including:

– a destination play area
– an urban beach
– plazas
– volleyball courts
– prairie gardens.

Trees, native grasses, and planting enhancements will be added throughout the park. The existing marina and sculptures will remain, and Riverfront Drive is being realigned to allow for easier access from the park to downtown Omaha. A multi-use trail will be located on the west side of Riverfront Drive to extend the trail system to the downtown area.

KEY SUSTAINABILITY ACHIEVEMENTS

Innovation and exceptional performance. This project scored exceptionally well in the Envision Quality of Life credit category, earning the highest level of achievement possible for eight credits, and earning an additional eight “bonus points” for innovations, and going above and beyond Envision credit requirements. For example, this project earned special recognition for implementing a best-in-class children’s environment, restoring community assets and local character, implementing a digital media initiative at the Gene Leahy Mall that will showcase specialized lighting displays during national holidays and local events, and managing public opinion and perception about building a recreational amenity on a capped brownfield.

Stimulating sustainable growth and development by employing a large percentage of local workers throughout design and construction.

Rehabilitating, restoring, and repurposing existing community assets, both in the natural world and in the built environment to improve community attractiveness for businesses, visitors, and residents. Thus, improving Omaha’s prospects for continued sustainable economic growth and development well into the future.

Improving community mobility and access by improving connections between the three parks; setting aside open space at the heart of Omaha’s downtown to prevent urban sprawl; providing ample opportunities for residents to gather (both informally and for programmed events and activities); by adding bike lanes and bike sharing facilities, and by adding pedestrian sidewalks, crosswalks, pedestrian bridges, and walking paths.

Fully preserving the character-defining features of several significant historic and cultural resources and incorporating them into the design of the revitalization project, including the Burlington building (an historic architectural resource), the Nash Block building (another historic architectural resource also known as The Greenhouse), the Gene Leahy Mall slides and stone arch (important cultural resources for the community).

Adding a significant amount of public space and a wide variety of amenities as part of this project and improving their safety and connectivity to maximize enjoyment. Community stakeholders, including the public, are overwhelmingly supportive of the additions, which include sculpture gardens, event lawns, art plazas, playgrounds, performance pavilions, and an amphitheater, interactive water features, an area for remote control boats, a dog park, swings, river overlooks, boardwalks, an urban beach, and more.

Preserving undeveloped land and remediating a brownfield. To preserve undeveloped land, one-hundred percent of the project has been located on previously developed areas. The Lewis and Clark Landing, representing approximately 41% of the site, is located on a brownfield site where a lead smelting and refinery company operated for decades. A response action to install a geosynthetic clay liner was started in the late 1990s to cap the contaminated soils and was fully completed in 2016.

SOUNDBITES

 

Roger Dixon, President & CEO, the Metropolitan Entertainment & Convention Authority: “The RiverFront project stands out, not only for its dedication to transforming and reactivating space, but for its commitment to the reuse and recycling of materials when possible. From day one, details in design and process have been pillars of this endeavor, which resulted in a first of its kind recognition in Nebraska. Our community can be proud that an already award-winning park is coming to life in the heart of downtown Omaha.”

 

Kristi Wamstad, Verification Director, ISI: “This is the very first project in Nebraska to earn an Envision award, and, wow, did the project team think big! Look at all of the amenities; a person would be hard-pressed to find something not to enjoy. What is also fantastic is that the project team is preserving undeveloped land by only building on previously developed areas. Kudos to the project team for spectacularly transforming the space and earning an Envision Platinum award.”