Home Magazine

Street Creeks: Restoring the Gowanus at Dwell on Design NY

By Dwell @dwell
Architect Ate Atema presents an innovative, aesthetically pleasing plan to divert raw sewage from New York City's waterways. Slideshow Street Creeks, Gowanus

Street Creeks is artchitect Ate Atema's proposal for diverting runoff into a series of curbside channels to ease the burden on New York City's antiquated single-pipe sewer system during rain events. He is looking to Brooklyn's rapidly developing Gowanus neighborhood, and the Gowanus Canal, as a test case.

Image courtesy of Atema Architecture.

New York antiquated sewage system, a relic of 19th-century engineering, works well enough most of the time, but heavy rains cause overflows that currently dump 27 billion gallons of mixed raw sewage into the city’s waterways each year. Ate Atema and his colleagues at Flow Collaborative have come up with a possible solution, using the rapidly gentrifying area around Brooklyn’s polluted Gowanus Canal as a test case.

The plan, called Street Creeks, would involve the creation of a network of covered curbside channels for storm runoff. Catch basins would strain off large pollutants while cisterns would collect and store the water, keeping it from being dumped into the Gowanus Canal as overflow. Meanwhile, the city’s sewer system, its burden of processing stormwater runoff significantly lightened, would be able to focus on its core function of treating the city's sewage.

Atema will share his concept in a presentation titled "Street Creeks: Restoring the Gowanus" in the Humanscale discussion area at Dwell on Design New York at 2 p.m. on Saturday, October 11.


Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog