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This River is a Place: Activating a City's Waterfront

Waterfront Wednesdays in Hudson, NY (Photo by David McIntyre)

This River is a Place:

Activating a City’s Waterfront

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(This event will be held in person (live stream available to registrants). Presented in conjunction with the current exhibition “To Flow Both Ways: The Past, Present, and Future of Hudson Waterfronts” at the FOCUS Lab in Troy, NY. )

Cities across the county are engaged in cleaning up their waterfronts, developing abandoned spaces, and reconnecting their downtowns with their waterways. Long neglected and often deeply damaged by a legacy of pollution, waterfronts have suddenly turned into valuable land. But the development of waterfront space is only the first step—cities are discovering that in order to truly transform a place, they must activate it through programing, community partnerships, jobs, arts, culture, and commerce. People must have a reason to come to the water.

Kingston’s Weaving the Waterfront plans on display in Kingston Point Park

In this event, we will explore three Hudson Riverfront cities and hear about their journeys to activate their waterfronts, how they formed public and private partnerships, what has worked and what has not worked, and what steps cities just starting on the process should take.

Jeff Anzevino, Director of Land Use Advocacy at Scenic Hudson, will talk about overall waterfront activation strategies as outlined in the Revitalizing Hudson Waterfronts Plan, and then explore the case study of Beacon's waterfront, where he was deeply involved in the development of Long Dock Park. From Hudson, Adam Weinert, founder of the Hudson Arts Coalition will tell us about the organization of Waterfront Wednesdays, a hugely successful weekly community festival along Hudson’s waterfront. And from Kingston, NY, Julie Noble, Sustainability Coordinator for the City of Kingston, will narrate her role in the city’s Weaving the Waterfrontproject and developing Kingston Point Park into both a place of climate resilience and a community nexus.

The event will take place live at the FOCUS Lab. A live stream will be made available to those who register for the event. Light food and drink will be served.

TICKETS: $10 GA/$5 students. Scholarship opportunities are available.

 

Kayaking lessons at Kingston Point Park (Photo by Julie Noble)

 


SPEAKERS:

JEFF ANZEVINO | Director of Land Use Advocacy, Scenic Hudson

ADAM WEINERT | Chair, Hudson Arts Coalition

JULIE NOBLE | Sustainability Coordinator, City of Kingston

Moderator:

REIF LARSEN | Founder, Future of Small Cities Institute


This event is being co-hosted by the Hudson River Watershed Alliance.

 
 


 

Kaisokah Moko Jumbies perform at Waterfront Wednesdays in Hudson, NY

Students explore ecology at Long Dock Park in Beacon, NY

 
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June 30

Hudson River Resilience: Designing Our Future Waterfronts

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WINDSHIPPED Screening