Urban Green by Peter Harnik

Urban Green by Peter Harnik

Author:Peter Harnik
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781597268127
Publisher: Island Press
Published: 2012-05-31T04:00:00+00:00


CHAPTER 14

Old Landfills

New parks can be fashioned out of old garbage dumps. It’s not as bad as it sounds.

International Balloon Park in Albuquerque, Cesar Chavez Park in Berkeley, McAlpine Creek Soccer Complex in Charlotte, Red Rock Canyon Open Space in Colorado Springs, Rogers Park Golf Course in Tampa, and hundreds of others, both famous and obscure, have been created from landfills (see table 14.1). And in a few more years New York City’s 2,200-acre Fresh Kills Landfill will have settled in to become that city’s largest park.

Landfill parks go back to at least 1916 (many years before the word “landfill” was coined) when the old Rainier Dump in Seattle was turned into the Rainier Playfield. In 1935 in that same city a more momentous conversion transformed the 62-acre Miller Street Dump into a portion of the now-famous Washington Park Arboretum. The following year, New York City closed the putrid Corona Dumps—famously called the “Valley of Ashes” by F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby—and began preparing the land for construction of the 1939 World’s Fair. Following World War II, as the volume of trash in America mushroomed, so did the number of landfills. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that as many as 3,500 landfills have closed since 1991; the number from earlier years is anyone’s guess.

In an ideal world all trash would be recycled and there would be no landfills. But in a time of severe urban space and resource constraints, closed landfills represent excellent locales for three big reasons: size, location, and cost. A former dump is usually one of the few large, open locations within a dense metro area. There is also the opportunity to correct what may have been a longstanding environmental injustice to the surrounding residents. Finally, there’s a good chance that the landfill—which may be as small as dozens of acres or as large as 1,000 or more—is free or inexpensive to buy or possibly that it even comes with its own supporting funds.



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