This document outlines a panel discussion on New York's waterfront in transition. The panel will include four sessions over several months discussing topics like waterfront parks, ongoing waterfront projects, and reviving the estuary through science and education. The panelists include representatives from organizations working to restore and develop parks and green spaces along New York's waterfronts, such as the New York Restoration Project, Friends of the High Line Greenway, Hudson River Park Trust, and the Rockaway Waterfront Alliance.
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
Turning the Tide: Waterfront Parks: Old, New, Green, Blue
1. Moderated by: Dr. Rutherford H. Platt
Panelists: Amy Gavaris• Dr. Vicky Gholson • Peter Mullan •
Connie Fishman • Jeanne DuPont
2. TURNING THE TIDE:
NEW YORK’S WATERFRONT IN TRANSITION
Session Dates and Topics
Feb. 24: “Opening Out Toward the Water”– The Big Picture
Mar. 17: Waterfront Parks: Old, New, Green, Blue
April 7: Seizing Opportunities: Waterfront Works in Progress
April 28: Reviving the Estuary: Science and Education
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3. This series is inspired by:
The Humane Metropolis:
People and Nature in the 21st Century City
University of Massachusetts Press and
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, 2006
4. New York’s Waterfront
is a Grand Experiment
in creating a more humane
megacity . . .
Environment Magazine
July/Aug. 2009
Posted at:
www.humanemetropolis.org
6. New York Restoration Project
New York Restoration Project (NYRP) carries out
Founder Bette Midler’s dream of a cleaner, greener New
York City. NYRP restores, revitalizes and develops under-
resourced parks and community gardens throughout the
city’s five boroughs, working to ensure that every
neighborhood has access to vibrant, green spaces. By
providing enriching educational and community
programming, NYRP works to instill individual and civic
respect for nature and responsibility for contributing to
New York City’s environmental sustainability.
63. Hudson River Park:
• Five miles from Battery Park to
59th Street
• 550 acres, including a 400-acre
marine sanctuary
• Continuous pedestrian esplanade
and bike path
• 13 New Public Park Piers for
active and passive recreation
• Commercial nodes to generate
revenue for park maintenance