New Meadowlands

MIT Center for Advanced Urbanism as Designers

The ‘New Meadowlands’ project articulates an integrated vision for protecting, connecting, and growing this critical asset to both New Jersey and the metro- politan area of New York. The Meadowlands emerged out of a larger regional analysis that mapped a maximal spectrum of risks to a comprehensive set of vulnerabilities, combining flood risk with social vulnerability, vital network vulnerability, pollution risk, etc. Wherever this hazard sandwich reaches its greatest thickness, federal investments in protection make most sense. This analysis highlights the Meadowlands area as an urgent priority. The proposal offers primary protection against flooding. An elongated green infrastructure 3rd generation berm with occasional gates, along the edges of the Meadowlands and most of its developed areas will protect against flooding from surges coming in from the Atlantic Ocean. Within the protected areas, several substantial fresh-water basins will absorb rainwater flooding, substantially reducing the storm water runoff into sewer lines, and therefore almost eliminating local rainwater flooding from sewer overflow.


An absolutely critical and innovative element is design integration. Designing both systems in full integration with other parts of the area (transportation, ecology, development) will bring benefits to both wildlife ecology and economic development that otherwise remain unaccounted for. Integrated design will allow for the various past and ongoing marshland restoration efforts by the Meadowlands Commission to become connected and legible as one large, regional wildlife refuge, to be made accessible at appropriate places for visitors. We propose to call this the Meadowpark. Integrated design will also allow for this large reserve to act as a major value adder and opportunity for the surrounding development areas. We propose to call the key element to this integrated design the Meadowband. The Meadowband is a civic amenity consisting of a local street, a Bus Rapid Transit-line, and a string of public spaces, recreation zones, and wildlife reserve access points on top of the outer berm and its slopes. The Meadowband is the missing link in the Meadowlands basin: a public space that mediates between the different systems (ecology, development) and the different scales (very local to interstate). In doing so, it provides a critical connective tissue on the scale of the Meadowlands itself – literally taking on the scale of the protection infrastructure. We envision that the audience for this linear, meandering amenity consists of the inhabitants of the existing towns, the residents in new residential developments aligning the Meadowband, as well as tourists and visitors from the region, seeking access and recreation at what will be its biggest regional park.


  The fundamental principle of this project is a new grand bargain. In order to be worthy of substantial federal investment in protecting land from future flooding, it is imperative to use that land more effectively. That means we propose shifting from a suburban-type land-use zoning (single story, freestanding, open-space parking around structure), to a more urban-type land-use zoning. Single-story warehouse zones should be up-zoned to become multi-story; areas around the Meadowband would be zoned to include multi-story residential opportunities. Development footprints along the Meadowband can become smaller in plan, and taller in section.   These decisions over time will enhance the brand and identity of the basin, drive up the value of the land, and the ratable tax returns for the towns concerned. Currently, the Cost-Benefit Analysis for this project yields a factor of 2. That is a significant benefit, itself the result of an integrated design strategy. It is important to acknowledge that the overall result is the essence of a good plan: to bake the cake such that it increases the size of the different parts. This project is not a zero-sum game.


  It will be critical for the success of this venture that good design, planning and integration of parts continue to play a major role should the different projects proposed be executed. The integration effort remains the most fragile, yet most essential to realize the value of the project. We suggest a continuous path of design quality and integration, weaving the different interventions back, with every new move, into a dynamically evolving masterplan that guarantees that the benefits calculated, will effectively be realized.


  Finally, the team has engaged in substantive outreach efforts with various municipalities in the area, with the State of New Jersey, with the Meadowlands Commission. It has worked closely with environmental groups such as the Hackensack Riverkeeper; as well as with the Meadowlands Chamber of Commerce; it has also included major vital network operators and owners such as the NYNJ Port Authority and PSEG. Overall, the notion of a new ‘grand bargain’ has been well received, and afrorementioned stakeholders have decided to participate in several consecutive gatherings and workshop sessions.


  Clearly, this design and planning phase for this project is not over, but 3 pilot areas have been identified for immediate further development and construction. These areas are the northern edge (comprised of sections of Little Ferry, Moonachie, Carlstadt, Teterboro and a sliver of South Hackensack); the eastern part (Secaucus, with a portion of Jersey City); and the southern tip (South Kearny and the western waterfront of Jersey City). In each of these areas, the project consists of a mix of actions, specifically (a) Meadowband berms and public space design and construction; (b) rezoning; and (c) integration with other ongoing initiatives.

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