The Gowanus Canal Conservancy held a public meeting in Carroll Gardens this week to unveil renderings for a park and esplanade that would run along the Gowanus canal. The project’s dubbed Sponge Park because planners hope it will help absorb some of the raw sewage that currently contaminates the canal during heavy rainfall. (Brownstoner believes oily runoff from the nearby Gowanus Expressway is another big problem.) The idea is that when the canal is finally cleaned up sometime after 2020, Sponge Park will help keep it clean, or at least clean-ish.
The park is also conceived as the centerpiece of the ongoing transformation of the neighborhood from post-industrial wild west to residential hotspot. Gowanus Lounge is a bit skeptical of the project – which could take at least ten years – because much of the land Sponge Park would traverse is privately owned, including an old power plant that’s now on the market for $20 million. And the area has yet to be rezoned for residential use; though of course that’s not stopping other developers from planning for condos and additional park.






No one is proposing a park that will absorb sewage. The idea is to soak up rainwater that otherwise goes into storm drains.
Since NYC has a combined sewer system, during heavy rainfall the system overflows, causing both water and raw sewage to dump directly into the canal (and many other waterways). Controlling the amount of storm runoff will help lessen this occurance.
Need a picture? Ok, here you go:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:CSO_diagram_US_EPA.jpg
LOL, where are all the black people?
I love water sports. Will this be ready for the summer Olympics in 2020? And where will the start finish line be located?
Oh you like watersports do ya?