Event Date: 04/28/2010
5:30pm - 7:30pm
Reviving the Estuary: Science, Politics, and Education
New York's future waterfront in 1609 was an arcadian shore of forests, wetlands, beaches, and sand bars, as depicted in Eric Sanderson's book Mannahatta. That landscape is lost forever. By the mid- 20th Century, in Ann Buttenwieser's phrase, the city was "walled off" from its shoreline by wharves, railroads, highways, power plants, and waste facilities. As maritime activity moved elsewhere, visions of a post-industrial, neo-natural, and people-centered waterfront have abounded. Today, with the guidance of PlaNYC and the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance, the transformation of New York's waterfront is in full swing. This colloquium series will celebrate progress to date and highlight what remains to be done.
Moderator: Dr. John Waldman, Queens College
Speaker/Panelists:
-Deborah A. Mans , Executive Director, NY/NJ Baykeeper
-Christopher J. Collins, Executive Director, Solar One
-Murray Fisher, Urban Assembly New York Harbor School (Invited)
-Cortney Worrall, Director of Programs, Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance
-Others TBA
Location: The Roosevelt House for Public Policy Institute at Hunter College, 47-49 E. 65th Street
Registration: http://www.cunysustainablecities.org
Organized by: The Institute for Sustainable Cities, City University of New York
in collaboration with The Roosevelt House Institute of Public Policy at Hunter College
and the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance
Contact: Brigid Ripley
(212) 396 - 6264
bripley@hunter.cuny.edu
This event is a Panel Discussion
Filed Under:
New York City