coastal landscapes and how they must adapt to climate change
TRANSCRIPT
Coastal Landscapes:
Considerations for Healthier Ecosystems
while Adapting to Change
Enterprise Community Partners Rotterdam-NYC Roundtable on Urban Coastal Landscapes
Sept. 20, 2016
MORE RESILIENT, SUSTAINABLE COASTAL LANDSCAPES
can be located and designed to respect both human life and the life in
our adjacent ocean and estuarine ecosystems
Marcha Johnson, ASLA, PhD Landscape Archictect
and Ecological Restorationist, NYC Parks
Floodable coastal communities around the world are growing; most of the structures in these communities are not able to easily tolerate changing coastal conditions and water level.
Many coastal landscape and engineering projects continue to disregard the connection between what we do on the shore and the impact on life in the ocean.
LIVES AT STAKE
Barrier beach homes being raised and moved inland
Hudson R. Park, NYC GoogleEarth.com
Irregular natural habitats contain a lot of variety and include changeable, ephemeral patches. New methods, materials and arrangements are being explored to enhance biodiversity on in-water structures, to offset some of their habitat displacement impacts:
.
SURFACES AND STRUCTURES
In-water infrastructure is typically uniform in texture and straight; biodiversity
much lower than natural habitats. Even new, otherwise well-designed
structures often meet the water with biologically sterile materials.
Photo: Biodiversitysnapshots.net.au.
5
Athens, NY Greenwall
Photo by the designers: Anchor-QEA, Seattle
Photo by the manufacturer: LI Precast,
GRADUAL RELEASE FROM HARD STRUCTURES - a few examples
Bulkheads which intercepted bluff
material feeding an eroding pocket
beach were removed at Seahurst
Park, in a Seattle suburb. After loss
of 4 vertical feet on the beach, it is
now rebuilding, restoring itself. Marsh grass boxes in Newtown Creek, Sarah Durand, Carter Craft
RESPONSES TO TURBULENCE AND FLOODING:
• Zonation in response to gradients of light, wave exposure, etc.
• Moveable substrate
• Fractal arrangements, clustering,
• Conical, streamlined forms,
• Flexible, regenerating structures
• Complex surface textures
• Taking advantage of temporary pools
ANCIENT TECHNIQES Some earlier North American coastal cultures adapted to rapid oscillations in sea level 4000 years ago: • Raised surfaces of earth and shells.• Seasonal settlements (summers at the beach, inland in winter) • Flexibile, light, portable or temporary structures easily transported to higher ground• Stacked elements adjustable in place• Built to be easily replaceable with inexpensive, local materials • Integrated with range of water level
Raised shell rings built 5- 20’ high, built 4000 years
ago in what is now coastal salt marsh,
Georgia and S. Carolina The Kincaid Site in Massac Co., Illinois, showing platform mounds above floodstage. Illustration by artist Herb Roe
THE NEW NORMAL OF INLAND MIGRATION:
Storms accelerate the inland shoreline movement during eras of sea level rise.
Photos: NYC Mayor’s office PLANYC
Beach 94th St: Dune developedBefore storm “Sandy” Oct. 2012 After storm. Sand moved from
beach inland onto lawns and streets
After storm “Sandy.” Sand added to dune face; more of jetty is exposed
Beach 56th St. Remnant dune. Before storm “Sandy” 2012
Project
Area
HARLEM R. AND RANDALL’S IS. LIVING SHORE
Queens
Manhattan
Bronx
NewJersey
ProjectArea
Harlem R. Park
Randall’s Is.Living Shore
Funded with Dept. of State Coastal Resources grants for research + capital project -- demonstrating innovative, sustainable waterfront design
• Reuse site resources
•Convert seawall to softer edge
•Increase diversity of substrate, slope
•Conserve existing plants, animals, habitats
•Improve near-shore water quality via biofiltration
•Raise public awareness of coastal dynamics
•Make tidal and sea level change more visible in a playful way
•Plant native species in community/guilds
•Demonstrate ways to accommodate floods, sea level rise, coastal dynamics as a normal park experience
“Designing the Edge” principles
Much of the material behind NYC seawalls contains contaminated soil and rubble exceeding state Restricted Residential limits.
Below the modern surface rubble is a mix of gravel, broken stone and soil - a stable, porous mix for good drainage behind the seawall.
A possible source of the pollutants esp. PAHs is “clinker” or “boiler slag” from incomplete combustion inindustrial coal burning furnaces.
TYPICAL WATERFRONT LANDFILL
DESIGNING THE EDGE at HARLEM RIVER PARK - Replacing some natural floodplain functions.
Harlem R. Park 2011, 2013, 2015
Harlem R. at MacCombs Dam,ca. 1865 Currier & Ives print
•Flood storage capacity•Ecological connections•Wave absorption instead of reflection.•Resistance to rust, scour, salt corrosion•Self-repairing
HARLEM RIVER PARK, completed 2009
SOFTENING ARMORED SHORES : FLOODPLAIN TERRACES
POROUS SEAWALLSHELLFISH-ATTRACTING MATERIALS
SET-BACKS TO SLOW LAMINAR FLOW, Photo: Ricardo Hinkle, NYCParks
MIX OF EDGE CONDITIONS photo: Fred Landa, NY DOS 2008
CONSTRUCTING URBAN TIDE POOLS:
Gabions with shells, topped with tide pools and coastal upland planting
Harlem River Park, NYC Parks-Ricardo Hinkle, Marcha Johnson, Dewberry Engineers, Harlem R.
Park Task Force
Intentional flooding-Harlem River Park tidepool and porous seawall
A NY HARBOR ESTUARY PROGRAM OBJECTIVE:
INCREASE POROSITY IN FLOODZONES
Unintentional flooding-
Randalls’ Is. seawall
overtopped during very high water
RECONSIDERING FLOODING AS A “HAZARD”
Progressive water levels:
Elevations 5’ and 7’ above existing Mean High Water
MAKING SEA LEVEL RISE PART OF THE PARK
2015 Design for an Adaptable Edge- Randalls Is.
Remnant of old seawall
and toe stones
Berm constructed to “feed” the beach and
stabilize itself by adjusting slope
Vegetation can migrate in relation to water level
and open soil.
Surface of new beach face
PLANT COMMUNITIES THAT MIGRATE INLAND AS WATER RISES
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ACCESSIBLE PICNIC TABLES
FLOOD PLAIN TERRACES
BEACH
PEDESTRIAN ACCESS TO BEACH
BRIDGE STORMWATER INFILTRATION
BANK RUN GRAVEL PATH
PLAQUE
REMNANTS OFSTONE SEAWALL
BERM
GRAVELPARKING (13 SPACES)
HEADWALLS TIDE POOLS
BOULDER EDGE
PEDESTRIAN ACCESS TO WATER EDGE
PICNIC GROVE
Proposed 2015 Changes:Remove upper part of crumbling seawall, reuse stone on site
Improve water edge access, mark water elevations
Public parking area
Cusp beach, berm, terraced slope, tidepools, headland features
Environmental education/citizen science features
Connect planted zones based on coastal ecological communities
DEC-Solid Waste Concerns:Reusing soil contaminated with Lead, Mercury, PAHs
Stockpiling soil for other Randalls Island projects
New beach would be dynamic
Beach surface could have contaminants similar to
present surface but more mobile
Randall’s Island Living Shoreline Recreation Area, Dec. 10. 2015
PHYTOREMEDIATION: Considering a more sustainable alternative to exporting contaminated soil to landfills in other states, exposing communities and the environment to possible leaks.
Benefits:
• Cheaper, cleaner, safer than exporting soil to landfills
• Habitat value
• More efficient use of resources
Concerns:
• Not applicable to every site
• Results not as predictable; natural systems are variable
• Takes longer
Randalls Island Living Shoreline Recreation Area,
From Roux Associates, 2015 “Living Cap” installation
Graphics from: Phyto, by Kate Kennan, Niall Kirkwood, 2015 p. 36-37.
3 Phyto Methods:
Rhizodegradation: PAH molecules are broken down into benign compounds by soil bacteria in root zone.
Phytodegradation: Contaminants are degraded into benign compounds by plants.
Phytoextraction: Plant concentrates metals in its leaves or other tissues.
Randall’s Island Living Shoreline Recreation Area, Dec. 10. 2015
Seawall Condition B
Existing Condition On-site Soil Treatment
• Upper seawall is very unstable / dangerous• Top of stable portion is above mean high water
• Use unstable stones used to make terraces• Dormant cuttings layered between stones extract
metals
Randalls Island Living Shoreline Recreation Area, Dec. 10. 2015
Switchgrass, Panicum virgatumBlack Willow, Salix nigraBlack Locust, Robinia pseudoacacia, Red Mulberry, Morus rubra
Randall’s Island Living Shoreline Recreation Area, Dec. 10. 2015
Build current designTemporary seeding
Plants that extract Mercury Plants that degrade PAHsRed Maple, Acer rubrumWillow, Salix spp.
Plants that extract Lead Sunflower, Helianthus annuusRed maple, Acer rubrumHoneylocust, Gleditsia triacanthos
Sources: Kennan and Kirkwood, Phyto, 2015; Southwesternurbanhydrology, 2015,
EPA https://clu-in.org/download/studentpapers/henry.pdf, 2001
Reduced scope - minimal grading - allowed project to go forward.Trade-off: fewer public benefits.
Randall’s Island Living Shoreline Recreation Area, Dec. 10. 2015
Build current design
Intertidal pockets
Leave as is
Meadow grasses and Trees Build picnic area per 2015 design
Woody phytoremediation thickets
ACCESSIBLE PICNIC TABLES
PLANTED BIOENGINEERED TERRACES
PLAQUE
REMNANTS OFSTONE SEAWALL
GRAVEL
TIDE POOLS
MEADOW PICNIC GROVE
Randall’s Island Living Shore Recreation Area 2016 Site Plan
INTERTIDAL WETLAND THICKETS OF COASTAL SHRUBS
SAPLINGTREES
WOOD CHIP MAINTENANCE PATH
CONSTRAINTS, OPPORTUNITIES AND “BEST PRACTICES” FOR CONTAMINATED SOIL MANAGEMENT
• Common urban soil contaminants add to cumulative public health burden
• Most of our waterfront contains fill, typically not clean materials, variable across a site
• The era of cheap, easy of disposal in leaky, local, open pits and piles is over
• Using 20th C. rules and methods for 21st C. problems is costly, expands environmental impacts, potentially exposes many more citizens to harm
• Managing contaminated soil on-site is complex: more sustainable, may in some cases be safer, cheaper and environmentally sound, but take longer and requires new skill sets and regulatory approaches
Marcha Johnson, ASLA, PhD Landscape
Archictect
and Ecological Restorationist, NYC Parks
(718) 760-6646
This presentation was supported by NYC Parks, the NYS
Dept. of State with funds provided under Title 11 of the
Environmental Protection Fund,
Photo credits: http://www.conservewildlifenj.org/species/spotlight/pinnipeds/ Harbor seal
http://www.fws.gov/northeast/pipingplover/overview.html
www.nydailynews.comhttp://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.1574111.1389357933!/img/httpImage/image.JPG_gen/derivatives/gallery_1200/toddmaisel-1847729.JPGConey Is. July
http://news.maryland.gov/dnr/2012/11/30/funding-available-to-help-coastal-communities-prepare-for-natural-disasters/ Crisfield,MD Houses under water, Sandy
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/special-features/2014/07/140725-outer-banks-north-carolina-sea-level-rise-climate/ House being moved off a beach in Outer Banks, NC
www.Busseltonjetty.com.au purple barnacles www.alamy.com blue mussels on rocks at Gorran Haven, Cornwallwww.telegraph.co.uk Limpets nature’s tough guy revealed
Fig Island photos, S. Carolina Dept. Archives and History, 2007 http://www.sapelonerr.org/education-training/the-history-of-sapelo/
https://www.bamertseed.com/switchgrass/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platform_mound#/media/File:Chromesun_kincaid_site_01.jpghttp://www.arkive.org/horseshoe-crab/limulus-polyphemus/image-G8860.html
Monterrey, California tide pool Photo: www. Coastalcare.org