Jamaica Bay and the Rockaways

The Daily Plant : Monday, April 17, 2006

Renovations Of A Different Tune In Store For Canarsie Park


photo by Daniel Avila

On Tuesday, April 11, Parks & Recreation Commissioner Adrian Benepe joined Council Member Lewis Fidler and seventh and eighth grade students from the St. Jude School to announce the start of construction on the $5.4 million Phase I of Canarsie Park, which will feature a music pavilion, regulation-size cricket field, a picnic grove with tables, and forested wetlands, to name a few of its amenities.

"The neighbors of Canarsie Park have worked hard to get this great park upgraded, and thanks to the support of Council Member Lew Fidler and Borough President Marty Markowitz, we will soon provide the community with a state-of-the-art facility to rival the great parks of this City," said Commissioner Benepe.

"This is the beginning of the transformation of Canarsie Park into one of New York's premier parks," said Council Member Fidler. "I've spent four years fighting for the millions needed to get this done, but the people of Canarsie and southern Brooklyn deserve it."

The completed first phase of Canarsie Park will also include new asphalt pathways, meadows and landscaping, drinking fountains, sidewalks, a perimeter rail, and security lighting. Benches seating will be provided along the primary pathways, and the cricket fields will be outfitted with bleacher seating. The Park’s existing community gardens will receive new perimeter fencing.

Naturalized parkland and forested wetland will be restored in the southwest corner of the Park, which was formerly a Department of Sanitation compost site. It will also include a woodland buffer zone to protect the site from the adjacent Belt Parkway. Phase I will be completed thanks to the allocations of Borough President Markowitz and Council Member Fidler, for $1 million and $4.4 million, respectively.

Council Member Fidler also allocated another $1.1 million towards the second phase of Canarsie Park, which will include further renovations to the pathways and nature trails, and the installation of a hilltop windmill. Further funding is still required for Phase II’s reconstruction.

Canarsie Park, which originally stretched from 93rd Street to 88th Street, was extended three times in the 1930s and 40s to include land from the Department of Docks and parcels of land from the Board of Estimate. In the 1950s, Canarsie underwent even further expansion, with Parks Commissioner Robert Moses’ request for a land transfer of property previously used for temporary housing, and the assignment of another parcel at the corner of Fresh Creek Basin and Seaview Avenue. Canarsie Park now occupies 132 acres and is the fourth largest park in Brooklyn.

 

QUOTATION FOR THE DAY

"The more you earn, the less you keep,
And now I lay me down to sleep.
I pray the Lord my soul to take,
If the tax collector hasn't got it before I wake."

 

Ogden Nash
(1902-1971)

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Park
Paerdegat Basin Park
Ecology Park is a five acre site set within Paerdegat Basin Park. The goal of the park is to promote habitat restoration and ecological improvement, highlighting fourteen native plant community types that exist or once existed in New York City.

Ecology Park is only open at certain times of year when Parks staff are present in order to protect this unique landscape. Want to visit? Check out our Stewardship Projects page for restoration, planting, and educational events.

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