Saw Mill Playground
SAW MILL PLAYGROUND RECEIVES $8 MILLION UPGRADE UNDER THE COMMUNITY PARKS INITIATIVE
SAW MILL PLAYGROUND RECEIVES $8 MILLION UPGRADE UNDER THE COMMUNITY PARKS INITIATIVEFriday, June 7, 2019
No. 43
http://www.nyc.gov/parks
NYC Parks’ Bronx Borough Commissioner Iris Rodriguez-Rosa, today joined New York City Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) Bronx Borough Coordinator Effie Ardizzone, students and administrators from P.S. 369, P.S. 352, and P.S. 179, and local community members to officially cut the ribbon on a total reconstruction of Saw Mill Playground under the Community Parks Initiative (CPI). The project was funded by $6.6 million from Mayor Bill de Blasio and a $1.4 million allocation from DEP for green infrastructure that will help to improve the health of the Harlem River.
“We are elated to cut the ribbon on the transformed Saw Mill Playground. With the new amenities and features, we are confident it will be a community hub,” said Bronx Commissioner Rodriguez-Rosa. “We just want to thank the Mayor and our partners at DEP for this critical investment that improved the park and the quality of life for this community. We look forward to unveiling the brand new comfort station in the fall.”
“DEP is proud to be a partner in NYC Parks’ Community Parks Initiative which is transforming neighborhood parks across the city,” said NYC DEP Commissioner Vincent Sapienza. “We are always looking for ways in which we can reduce the stormwater that enters our sewer system and we were able to do just that with this project at Saw Mill Playground. The newly installed green infrastructure at this playground will help to reduce stormwater runoff, improve the health of the Harlem River, and beautify the neighborhood.”
The newly transformed Saw Mill Playground features revamped basketball courts, new play equipment, youth fitness equipment, a synthetic turf field, multi-purpose area, and spray showers. In the fall, a newly constructed comfort station will open, bringing an added convenience to Saw Mill Playground and the Mott Haven community.
To manage stormwater runoff, green infrastructure has been added throughout Saw Mill Playground, which, combined, are able to capture 1.3 million gallons of stormwater every year. DEP has committed approximately $50 million in funding for green infrastructure installations at CPI sites throughout the city, helping to reduce sewer overflows that sometimes occur during heavy rainfall, improve air quality and lower summertime temperatures.
Launched by Mayor de Blasio in October 2014, CPI strives to make NYC Parks a more equitable and accessible parks system by investing in smaller parks that are located in New York City’s densely-populated neighborhoods with higher-than-average concentrations of poverty. Through CPI, the City is investing $318 million in capital dollars to make renovations to 67 parks citywide that have not undergone significant improvements in decades.
This playground is named for the Saw Mill Creek, also known as the Mill Brook, which once flowed by this parkland. The creek originated in Gates Place in the North Bronx, ran along what is now Brook and Webster Avenues, and emptied into the Bronx Kill. Sawmills flourished along the many tributaries of Bronx waterways for more than two hundred years. The early sawmill, devised in 1352 in Europe, was dependent on water as both a power source and a means of transporting goods. Logs were floated downriver to sawmills, which cut raw lumber into standardized shapes and sizes for building purposes. Another byproduct of the sawing process was wood pulp, from which paper is made. Due to the abundance of lumber and waterpower in the Hudson River Valley, sawmills became a popular and lucrative industry for 17th Century European settlers.
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