ESCR Project Will Help Protect Communities from Future Storm Surge and Sea-Level Rise, Improve Access Via Expanded Connections Between Communities and Waterfront, Provide Enhanced Public Space with Upgraded Facilities and Resilient Design
Project Will Create Nearly 1,000 New Jobs for New Yorkers
New York City Mayor Eric Adams today celebrated the completion of the first part of the East Side Coastal Resiliency (ESCR) Project that represents a new class of resilient infrastructure for New York City. The project will offer coastal protection that protects New York City’s waterfront neighborhoods from devastating storm surge and regular tidal flooding, while also improving accessibility, increasing ecological diversity, and delivering improved recreational amenities to a vibrant and highly diverse community. The entire project — expected to be complete in 2026 — is also creating nearly 1,000 new jobs in New York City and has involved a multitude of city agencies, including the New York City Department of Design and Construction (DDC), the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation (NYC Parks), the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), the Mayor’s Office of Climate and Environmental Justice (MOCEJ), the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC), the New York City Department of City Planning (DCP), and the New York City Department of Transportation (DOT).
“Climate change is here, and with it are hotter temperatures, heavier rainfall, and more dangerous flooding,” said Mayor Adams. “The East Side Coastal Resiliency project is more than infrastructure; it's how we will protect our city from rising seas and stronger storms. This one project will create good jobs, put cutting edge technology and engineering into action, and, most importantly, protect more than 100,000 New York City residents from extreme weather. New York City is leading the way on climate, and we will continue to address the extreme weather threats that every neighborhood faces with the urgency it demands.”
“It’s simple powerful logic, we need strong walls to protect against increasingly stronger storms,” said Deputy Mayor of Operations Meera Joshi. “Today we celebrate an important milestone in completing New York City’s 2.4-mile corridor of storm protection, as the city models how to protect cities and citizens from the dangerous effects of climate change.”
“One of the nation’s largest resiliency projects doesn’t just prevent flooding, East Side Coastal Resiliency also enhances open spaces and recreational spaces for more than 110,000 residents,” said DDC Commissioner Thomas Foley. “Asser Levy Playground is the first of five park areas to reopen with new resilient play equipment and flood protection integrated into the landscaping. Other local parks will be rebuilt with new bridges, better pedestrian access, new play areas, and thousands of new trees. This comprehensive approach to planning and integration is a model for future coastal protection projects that seek to improve waterfront access.”
“Preparing our city for more frequent and more intense storms requires a visionary transformation of our public spaces, our infrastructure, and our approach to how our built environment serves New Yorkers,” said Kizzy Charles-Guzman, executive director, MOCEJ. “The completion of the first section of the East Side Coastal Resiliency project marks a critical milestone in one of the most ambitious and technically complex climate infrastructure projects in New York City history. The new Asser Levy Playground has been rebuilt as infrastructure to protect the community it serves from storm surge and sea level rise, and is an example of our work to ensure New Yorkers can live, learn, work, and play in safe, healthy, resilient, and sustainable environments, even as the climate changes.”
“ESCR is making beloved waterfront parks resilient and providing lifesaving flood protection for surrounding communities,” said NYC Parks Commissioner Sue Donoghue. “Thanks to this innovative project, Asser Levy Playground now has an upgraded basketball court and new play equipment — and, more importantly, the site is better protected to ensure it will continue serving New Yorkers for generations to come.”
“DOT is proud to be part of the great team of city agencies contributing to the vitally important East Side Coastal Resiliency Project,” said DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez. “We are thrilled to see the Asser Levy Playground reopen and we are excited for the upcoming improvements along the waterfront, including a wider and safer East River Greenway for pedestrians and cyclists, as well as three new pedestrian bridges. We commend Mayor Adams and our sister agencies, who have already made such significant progress on this massive project.”
“This revamped Asser Levy playground not only looks great, but it is also adding critical flood protection for this East Side neighborhood. This area was severely battered by Superstorm Sandy. We are proud to have played a role in planning for this public amenity and in protecting New Yorkers from the serious risks of coastal flooding,” said DCP Director Dan Garodnick.
Asser Levy Playground is home to the northern end of the ESCR Project, a $1.45 billion project that will create a 2.4-mile flood barrier of berms, floodwalls, moveable gates and raised parkland that will protect 110,000 East Side residents — including 28,000 NYCHA residents — from future storms and tidal flooding. Of the $1.45 billion, $338 million of funding is being provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The entire span of the ESCR project — located within the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) 100-year floodplain — will incorporate 18 movable gates from Asser Levy Playground (located along Franklin Delano Roosevelt Drive from East 23rd Street to East 25th Street) down to Montgomery Street. The entire project is being installed in phases to ensure the community has access to recreational areas during construction. This project is a crucial part of the Adams administration’s work to ensure that New York City is better prepared to withstand the impacts of climate change.
Asser Levy Playground now features 320 feet of new floodwall, along with a new 79-foot-long, 45-ton sliding steel floodgate. The first protective flood gate — measuring 42 feet and weighing 16 tons — was installed as part of the flood wall near Stuyvesant Cove Park in February. Once ESCR is completed, the floodgate will be closed ahead of any future flooding event. The wall will protect the adjacent Margaret Cochran Corbin VA Campus and Hospital, as well as the park's recreation center and outdoor pool, allowing it to stay online after a major storm. The playground and basketball court areas have also been rebuilt with resilient materials and play equipment that has been designed to withstand future flooding. In the event of a storm, the playground will be able to reopen more quickly due to these new resiliency features.
The ESCR project is also upgrading East River Park, Corlears Hook Park, Murphy Brothers Playground, Stuyvesant Cove Park, and other open spaces in the area, making them more resilient and accessible for all, while adding new and improved amenities, including improved waterfront access through reconstructed bridges and entry points. East River Park will be elevated approximately eight feet with upgraded recreational facilities, new passive-use areas, and approximately 2,000 trees — including 50 different species selected for their ability to withstand salt spray and extreme weather. The ESCR project will also build footings for a future pedestrian bridge elevating the Manhattan Greenway over its narrowest point along the East River, improving community access to the park.
NYC Parks has additionally made numerous improvements to local parks and open spaces as part of the city’s response to the community’s need for supplemental recreational resources during project construction. New Yorkers looking for more information on where to play and relax during construction can visit NYC Parks’ Recreational Resources map.
The level of flood protection provided by ESCR is equal to the region’s “worst-case” anticipated 100-year storm in the 2050s, based on future climate change projections produced by the New York City Panel on Climate Change (NPCC), an independent body composed of climate scientists that advises city policymakers on local resiliency and adaptation strategies. The project uses an adaptive design that can accommodate the addition of two more feet of elevation throughout the project area should sea levels in the coming decades rise faster than current projections anticipate.
The city previously sponsored an ESCR “Call For Art” for New York City students from kindergarten to 12th grade plus local artists highlighting the importance of coastal protection and resiliency. More than 40 pieces were selected based on themes varying by grade level. Each piece was rated on the responsiveness to the theme, creativity, originality, artistic quality, composition, visual impact, and overall impression. Selected pieces have been reproduced on 12-feet by 5-feet vinyl banners and are on display throughout the East Side Coastal Resiliency project area. Students whose works were selected for display were honored at a ceremony at Asser Levy Playground in June.
“We’re incredibly happy to see this vision come to life,” said Amy Chester, managing director, Rebuild by Design. “This project has shown that adapting to climate change will be hard and will require tradeoffs. We can learn from the past and work together to ensure that we are creating climate infrastructure that enhances communities every day — and helps protect us when we are hit with devastating weather.”
“We are proud to have worked alongside the city on this vital infrastructure project,” said Bruce Tucker, interim medical center director, VA New York Harbor Healthcare System. “By protecting our facility and the surrounding neighborhood from climate-related events, the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project will help us continue to deliver world-class health care to New York’s Veterans.”