top of page

Urban Botanic Island / 

Hunters Point / Queens, New York.

Hunters Point Urban Botanic Island

Hunters Point Urban Botanic Island

The Hunters Point Botanic Island Project creates a new model for development and ecological remediation on post-industrial urban waterfronts.

Resulting Ecologies

Resulting Ecologies

Our proposal goes against the trends in typical private and public development, which do not stray far from the Corbusian model of the ‘tower in the park,’ parsing ‘left-over’ open space into small green slivers at the bases of monolithic architecture.

History of Thought & Place

History of Thought & Place

These ‘left-over’ green patches, in the Industrial Model, have little positive impact on the urban landscape, as they lack the diversity, volume and density of vegetation that are needed to create habitat and remediate contaminated sites. They also tend to lack the strength of design needed to sustain vibrant public space. In the Botanic Model we create density where both the urban and natural can thrive.

No 'Tower in the Park'

No 'Tower in the Park'

Our proposal also moves away from the attempts of many contemporary architects and landscape architects to blur the boundary between the natural and the man-made, often creating architecture that mimics landscape either in form or in performance. Instead, our proposal seeks to reinforce this boundary – essentially, to draw a line in the sand – in order to create a polarity between the hyper-urban and the hyper-wild, in order to make both ends of the spectrum more productive.

Bees & Butterflies

Bees & Butterflies

At the canal, the botanic garden is pushed up against the face of the city, creating vertical greenhouses that climb up the southern facades of existing buildings.

Island Park

Island Park

By cutting a navigable canal straight through the existing peninsula where Newtown Creek meets the East River, we create a large artificial island that will support a diverse ecosystem.

Canal Ecologies

Canal Ecologies

The island’s edges will recreate native wetlands, tidal marshes and shellfish reefs, while the island’s interior will house grass meadows and an upland forest.

Shifting Coast

Shifting Coast

The design is intended to transform over time as the water levels rise.

Change through Design

Change through Design

On Hunters Point South, we create this polarity by cutting a navigable canal straight through the existing peninsula where Newtown Creek meets the East River, creating a large artificial island. This island becomes the seeding ground for our new botanic garden, which will support the entire spectrum of native vegetation that existed on the island of Manhattan before the 1600s.

Design Research. 
In collaboration with Rebecca Popowsky

The Hunters Point Botanic Island Project creates a new model for development and ecological remediation on post-industrial urban waterfronts. Hunters Point in Queens is an excellent demonstration site, due to its proximity to downtown Manhattan, its long history of industrial contamination and its draw for future high-density development.



Our proposal goes against the trends in typical private and public development, which do not stray far from the Corbusian model of the ‘tower in the park,’ parsing ‘left-over’ open space into small green slivers at the bases of monolithic architecture. These ‘left-over’ green patches have little positive impact on the urban landscape, as they lack the diversity, volume and density of vegetation that are needed to create habitat and remediate contaminated sites. They also tend to lack the strength of design needed to sustain vibrant public space. 


Our proposal also moves away from the attempts of many contemporary architects and landscape architects to blur the boundary between the natural and the man-made, often creating architecture that mimics landscape either in form or in performance. Instead, our proposal seeks to reinforce this boundary – essentially, to draw a line in the sand – in order to create a polarity between the hyper-urban and the hyper-wild, in order to make both ends of the spectrum more productive.
 

On Hunters Point South, we create this polarity by cutting a navigable canal straight through the existing peninsula where Newtown Creek meets the East River, creating a large artificial island. This island  becomes the seeding ground for our new botanic garden, which will support the entire spectrum of native vegetation that existed on the island of Manhattan before the 1600s. The island’s edges will recreate native wetlands, tidal marshes and shellfish reefs, while the island’s interior will house grass meadows and an upland forest. At the canal, the botanic garden is pushed up against the face of the city, creating vertical greenhouses that climb up the southern facades of existing buildings. This hyper-urban version of the botanic garden includes research, housing, and public gardens.



 

AWARDS /

2010 Seoul International Design Fair / Design for All

bottom of page