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Curbed New York
70 years of promises, Brooklyn’s newest waterfront park is finally open for visitors.
The first section of Shirley Chisholm State Park
recently made its official debut on a site that was previously known as
the 110-acre Pennsylvania Avenue Landfill. Situated on the northern
coast of Jamaica Bay in East New York, near Starrett City, this vibrant
new green space has opened up the shoreline here for the first time in
generations.
The words “charming” and “fun” don’t often come to mind
when walking around New York City’s polluted landfills. Yet somehow, a
walk through this new park is just that—a surprisingly enjoyable ramble
through a delightfully varied landscape of wildflower meadows, native
grasslands, hidden beaches, and bustling fishing piers. Butterflies and
songbirds fill the air, while cooling breezes waft in from Jamaica Bay.
Though it has only been open for a week, the park is
already a hit with the neighborhood. During its first weekend, the
parking lot was filled to capacity and every two-wheeler was checked out
of its Bike Library, which is run by Recycle-A-Bicycle. Parents pushed
baby strollers along meandering gravel hiking trails, while fishermen
lined the piers along Jamaica Bay, happily pulling in dozens of porgies.
The second section of this park, at the adjoining
Fountain Avenue Landfill, won’t be complete until 2021, but for a
community that has been cut off from the waterfront for decades, any
access to the water is no small thing. “I’ve been waiting for this for
20 or 30 years,” said one fisherman, as he cast out into the waters of
Jamaica Bay. “I moved here in 1986, and they were working on it then,
piece by piece, off and on, over the years.”