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Flushing River

The Flushing River, also known as Flushing Creek, is a waterway that flows northward through the borough of Queens in New York City, mostly within Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, emptying into the Flushing Bay and the East River. The river runs through a valley that may have been a larger riverbed before the last Ice Age, and it divides Queens into western and eastern halves. Until the 20th century, the Flushing Creek was fed by three tributaries: Mill Creek and Kissena Creek on the eastern bank, and Horse Brook on the western bank.

Flushing River
Flushing Creek
The river as seen from Northern Boulevard, looking north
EtymologyFlushing, Queens (from Vlissingen, Netherlands)
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CityNew York City
County/BoroughQueens
Physical characteristics
SourceJamaica Yard
 • coordinates40°43′06″N 73°49′52″W / 40.718333°N 73.831111°W / 40.718333; -73.831111
MouthFlushing Bay
 • coordinates
40°45′54″N 73°50′36″W / 40.765115°N 73.843364°W / 40.765115; -73.843364
Length2 miles (3.2 km)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftHorse Brook
 • rightKissena Creek, Mill Creek
WaterbodiesMeadow Lake, Willow Lake
Bridges7

In the 18th and 19th centuries, it divided the towns of Flushing on its right bank, to the east, and Newtown (now part of Corona) on its left bank, to the west. Several bridges were built across the Flushing River in the 19th and 20th centuries. Prior to the 1939 New York World's Fair, the southern portion of the river was expanded into the Meadow and Willow Lakes. A part of the Flushing River was buried prior to the 1964 New York World's Fair. Following accumulations of pollution in the 20th century, cleanup of the Flushing River started in the 1970s, though some portions of the river have yet to be restored.

The modern-day river is 4 miles (6.4 km) long, originating near the Jamaica Yard in Kew Gardens Hills. The river flows through Willow and Meadow Lakes before entering an underground course north of the Long Island Expressway. The Flushing River runs for 2,000 feet (610 m) underground before resurfacing at the Tidal Gate Bridge at the northern end of Flushing Meadows–Corona Park. The rest of the river separates the industrial portions of the Willets Point and Flushing neighborhoods before emptying into the Flushing Bay.

Course edit

Attractions and Geographical Features of Flushing Meadows–Corona Park
 

Attractions and geographical features of Flushing Meadows–Corona Park:
1
Citi Field
2
Flushing Meadows Carousel
3
Flushing Meadows Natatorium
4
Flushing River and Creek
5
Meadow Lake
6
Mets–Willets Point (LIRR and subway stations)
7
National Tennis Center
8
New York Hall of Science
9
New York State Pavilion, Queens Theatre and Queens Zoo
10
Queens Botanical Garden
11
Queens Museum
12
Unisphere
13
Willow Lake
14
World's Fair station (demolished)

The 4-mile-long (6.4 km) Flushing Creek once rose in the present-day neighborhood of Kew Gardens Hills, where Vleigh Place (old Dutch for Valley) traces the valley of the headwaters.[1][2] The river's original source now occupied by the Kew Gardens Interchange, while the reconstructed source is located near Jamaica Yard, emptying from a pipe there.[1][2] The headwaters, fed by groundwater, empty north into Willow Lake and then Meadow Lake, two artificial freshwater lakes,[3][4][5] which are respectively 40 and 100 acres (16 and 40 ha)[6] and comprise the southern half of present-day Flushing Meadows–Corona Park.[7][8] Prior to the lakes' construction, the creek meandered through tidal marshes in the larger valley within the present-day park;[9][10] its mouth was at Flushing Bay, a 6,200-acre (2,500 ha) water body on the East River.[6][10] The two lakes are connected via a narrow channel under Jewel Avenue.[11]

After following a channel north from Meadow Lake, the Flushing River runs for about 2,500 feet (760 m) underneath the ramps between the Van Wyck Expressway (Interstate 678) and Long Island Expressway (Interstate 495).[12] The river then feeds into the Pool of Industry and Fountain of the Planets, built during the 1964 New York World's Fair,[2] running for about 2,000 feet (610 m) under the fountains.[12] Afterward, the Flushing River flows through the Tide Gate Bridge, where the fresh water river mixes with the saltwater from Flushing Bay.[4][13] The channel widens, running between Willets Point to the west and Flushing to the east, finally emptying into Flushing Bay.[2] The northernmost portion of the creek mostly contains bulkheads on the shoreline, with industrial uses on the eastern bank and marshes on the western bank.[9][13][14] The total distance between Meadow Lake's outlet and the river's mouth is about 7,000 feet (2,100 m).[6]

The watershed of the Flushing River is primarily residential, though there are also significant recreational and open spaces, with industrial usages near the mouth of the river.[6] Even though the Flushing River now largely follows an artificial route, the river still regularly overflows into surrounding areas, especially during heavy rain.[2] Meadow Lake, which also overflows during rains, collects sewage from several surrounding neighborhoods.[15] The raw sewage collected in the Flushing River has contributed to the heavy pollution in Flushing Bay.[2]

Tributaries edit

Kissena Creek, known historically as Ireland Mill Creek, is a right-bank tributary of the Flushing River, which begins in what is now Pomonok/Kew Gardens Hills. The creek is now largely buried, running through Kissena Park, Kissena Corridor Park, and Queens Botanical Garden.[16][17] It empties into the Flushing Bay Combined Sewer Outfall Retention Facility, which lies on the right bank of the Flushing River, below the Al Oerter Recreation Center. The facility, completed in 2007, can hold up to 43.4 million US gallons (164,000,000 L) of water from combined sewer overflows during storms, before pumping the water to the Tallman Island Waste Water Treatment Plant in College Point.[18][19][20][21]

Mill Creek is a right-bank tributary of the Flushing River that empties into the river just east of Flushing Bay.[22] Mill Creek was fed by two branches.[23] The southern branch, which has been infilled,[24] originated at Town Pond at the modern-day intersection of Northern Boulevard and Main Street, which was filled in 1843;[25] the creek then flowed north.[23] The northern branch, which still exists in truncated form, originated at the site of the George U. Harvey Playground,[22] near the intersection of 20th Avenue and the Whitestone Expressway in Whitestone,[26] and flowed south through the present sites of College Point Fields, Flushing Airport, and College Point Corporate Park.[22] The two branches merged at Linden Place and 28th Avenue.[23] Following development of the surrounding area, the northern branch begins in the wetlands around Flushing Airport and runs through the former airport site.[27][28] Several underground pipes, as well as man-made drainage ditches on the New York City Police Academy campus and north of 28th Avenue, carry the creek from the airport to the Flushing River.[29] College Point was a peninsula until the mid-20th century, separated from the rest of Queens by Mill Creek's northern branch.[30]

Horse Brook is a left-bank tributary of the Flushing River, which begins to the west in Elmhurst. The creek then ran close to the path of what is now the Long Island Expressway.[31][32] Horse Brook was gradually covered in phases through the 20th century. It is now entirely buried, but its path can be traced by the existence of large superblocks, such as those that contain Queens Center Mall, Rego Center's extension, Newtown High School's athletic field, and LeFrak City.[31]

Bridges edit

The Jewel Avenue crossing, the southernmost crossing of the Flushing River, was built prior to the 1939 World's Fair. It was rebuilt and expanded in 1961 to also pass over the Van Wyck Expressway.[33]

The present-day Long Island Expressway crosses the river to the north, slightly east of the site of Strong's Causeway. The causeway may have been first built in 1801,[34] but definitely dates to at least the 1850s.[35] This crossing, located near the confluence of Horse Brook and Flushing Creek, extended Corona Avenue on its zigzag route toward Flushing. For most of the 19th century it was a narrow bridge, 18 feet (5.5 m) wide.[35] By the 1890s, there were plans to replace Strong's Causeway because it sank every year,[36] though taxpayers protested against the proposal.[37] In February 1896, the causeway collapsed into the Flushing Creek.[38] A new bridge opened at the site on September 2 of that year.[39] The causeway was replaced in 1937 by a bridge carrying the then-newly built Horace Harding Boulevard,[40] and was rebuilt into the present Long Island Expressway in the late 1950s.[41]

 
Looking south from Roosevelt Avenue; the LIRR embankment and Porpoise Bridge can be seen in the background.

Meadow and Willow Lakes and the freshwater section of the Flushing River are separated from Flushing Bay by a flood gate or dam called the "Porpoise Bridge" or "Tide Gate Bridge", located just south of the Long Island Rail Road's Port Washington Branch trestle, at the north end of the Flushing Meadows Golf Center. The dam only permits northward flows toward Flushing Bay to pass, while blocking south-flowing waters.[4][42] As its name implies, the dam also acts as a bridge, carrying pedestrian and vehicular traffic over the creek. It measures 37 feet (11 m) wide and 370 feet (110 m) long.[43]

The LIRR trestle, located directly to the north of Tide Gate Bridge, contains a small opening for water to pass through.[42] It was built in the late 1930s and early 1940s as an embankment.[44]

Slightly downstream, to the north, the Roosevelt Avenue bridge is a double-deck viaduct completed in 1927.[45][46] It was originally built as a drawbridge, and was the world's largest fixed-trunnion bascule bridge at its completion, though it is no longer functional.[45] The bridge carries Roosevelt Avenue, as well as the New York City Subway's IRT Flushing Line (7 and <7>​ trains),[45][47] which were extended to Flushing–Main Street in 1928, a year after the bridge's completion.[48] This bridge was built with the expectation that Flushing River might be converted into a navigable stream in the future. With the 1939 New York World's Fair, the creek was dammed to the south, and the Roosevelt Avenue bridge ceased to be a usable drawbridge.[47][49] When the Van Wyck Expressway was being built in the early 1960s, it went directly under the Roosevelt Avenue bridge.[49]

The LIRR's former Whitestone Branch was carried by a single-tracked wooden trestle north of the Roosevelt Avenue bridge, which contained a small drawbridge span.[50][51] When the branch was abandoned in 1932, the trestle was torn down.[51]

The Northern Boulevard crossing, also called the "Flushing Bridge", is located north of the Roosevelt Avenue bridge and the former Whitestone Branch trestle.[14] Several bridges have existed at the site, the first of which was built c. 1800–1801, making it the oldest crossing of the Flushing River.[14][52] Five additional drawbridges were built at this location. A replacement drawbridge was erected in the mid-19th century, followed by swing bridges in 1866 and 1890, an elaborate bascule bridge in 1906, and a simpler bascule bridge in 1939.[53] It was replaced by the current viaduct structure in 1980.[14]

The northernmost crossing of the Flushing River is that of the Whitestone Expressway.[13] A drawbridge opened in 1939 along what was then known as the Whitestone Parkway. In December 1957, the New York state government approved a $9.5 million project to widen part of Whitestone Parkway from Northern Boulevard to the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge, including constructing a new Flushing River bridge.[54] The new bridge opened in 1963 and included a modernization of the existing draw span.[55] The current fixed span was built in 2008.[13]

Ecology edit

Saltwater section edit

 
Between Meadow and Willow Lakes

Prior to human development, Flushing Meadows was originally a tidal marsh, with Flushing Creek receiving south-flowing waters from the tides of Flushing Bay.[10][56] The northernmost portion of the river, near its mouth, is still a saltwater wetland area. The wetlands consist of invasive phragmites, a genus of wild grasses, as well as cordgrass. However, the addition of fill on the riverfront has raised the wetland habitat to about the same elevation as the upland habitats, thus endangering wetland plant species that cannot grow at such elevations.[57] North of the LIRR embankment, the left-bank wetland on the Flushing River contains plants such as common reed, field horsetail, chicory, common plantain, and native marsh elder and cordgrass.[58] The birds observed on the northern portion of the river include both waterfowl and wading egrets.[59]

Freshwater section edit

Although Willow and Meadow Lakes were built as freshwater lakes and dammed to mitigate tidal effects, flooding continues to affect Flushing Meadows–Corona Park.[10][56] The lakes are also highly eutrophic, due to nutrients such as phosphorus from the former marshland seeping into the water, leading to the death of fish in the lakes. The regular tidal action that would filter the lakes is prevented by the dam.[4][60][61] In addition, the lakes are subject to pollution and storm runoff from the nearby highways, via pipes which feed into the lakes.[4][5][60]

Several fish species native to marine habitats regularly swim into Meadow and Willow Lakes.[62] Fish species native to Meadow Lake include American eel, largemouth bass, northern snakehead (an invasive species), and white mullet.[62] Willow Lake is named for the many species of willow plants which inhabit the area.[63] Phragmites are also abundant,[63][64][65] but attempts to kill the phragmites with pesticides have led to further fish kill.[64][66] Numerous berry-producing trees and shrubs near Willow Lake attract several migratory bird species.[63] The biodiversity of the lakes has been found to be much lower than other water bodies of comparable size.[65]

Recreational usage edit

 
Boat launch on Meadow Lake

Recreational uses on the Flushing River are limited mostly to its southern portion, since its northern portion is heavily industrial, and the central portion is not navigable.[13] The land around Meadow Lake contains open grass, picnic and grilling areas, and baseball and cricket fields as part of Flushing Meadows–Corona Park.[67][68] Meadow Lake contains a boat house, one of two structures that remain from the 1939 World's Fair, the other being the Queens Museum.[69] Rental boats are available at the boathouse for rowing and paddleboating, and Meadow Lake is also the site of rowing activities for non-profit Row New York, with teams practicing on the lake for much of the year.[70] Meadow Lake also hosts the annual Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in New York, and teams from New York practice in Meadow Lake during the summer months.[71] The American Small Craft Association also houses a fleet of over a dozen 14.5-foot (4.4 m) sloop-rigged sailboats, used for teaching, racing, and recreation by the club's members.[72] Bicycling paths extend around Meadow Lake and connect to the Brooklyn–Queens Greenway.[73]

For the 1939 fair, Meadow Lake was temporarily renamed "Fountain Lake" and "Liberty Lake".[74][75] During the fairs, the land on the north shore and part of the eastern shore of the lake was used as an amusement area,[76][77][78] and for the 1964 fair, large parking lots were added on the east and west shores.[77][78][79] The lots were removed and converted to parkland after the 1964 fair.[79]

The Willow Lake area of the park is a nature reserve called the Willow Lake Preserve.[68] The area around Willow Lake originally also contained sports fields and park trails,[1][80][64] until it was fenced off and turned into a preserve in 1976.[1] The Willow Lake Trail, a nature trail around Willow Lake,[81] was reopened in 2013 and is part of the Willow Lake Preserve.[82][83]

History edit

Early years edit

During at least three glacial periods, including the Wisconsin glaciation around 20,000 years ago, ice sheets advanced south across North America carving moraines, valleys, and hills. In particular, bays and estuaries were formed along the north shore of Long Island. During glaciation, the meadows surrounding the Flushing River were formed just north of the terminal moraine that runs across Long Island, which consisted of sand, gravel, clay and boulders.[84][85][86] The moraine created a drainage divide, with rivers north of the moraine such as the future Flushing River emptying into the north shore.[87] The Flushing Meadows site became a glacial lake, and then a salt marsh after the ice melted.[85] Prior to glaciation, the Flushing River valley was used by the Hudson River to drain southward into the Atlantic Ocean.[88] Through the 19th century, wetlands continued to straddle Flushing River.[84] Species inhabiting the site included waterfowl and fiddler crab, with fish using water pools for spawning.[89]

The area was first settled by Algonquian Native Americans of Long Island (referred to erroneously as "Mantinecocks").[90][91] They consisted of the Canarsee and Rockaway Lenape groups,[92] which inhabited coastal wetlands across Queens and Brooklyn.[91][93]

The town of Flushing was settled in 1645 under charter of the Dutch West India Company. Both the town and the creek were thus named after the port of Vlissingen, in the southwestern Netherlands.[52] The first European settler to move to the vicinity of Flushing Creek was Robert Coe, an Englishman who built a house near Horse Brook (now the site of the Long Island Expressway) on the creek's western bank.[94]

19th and early 20th centuries edit

 
Busy Flushing Harbor in 1882. Bridge on the right carries Broadway, later called Northern Boulevard

The earliest fixed crossing of the Flushing Creek was the Northern Boulevard bridge, built in 1801 and rebuilt six times through 1980.[14] Prior to the bridge's construction, a ferry had carried passengers between the two banks of the creek.[94]

In the 1850s, the New York and Flushing Railroad built a railroad line across the river leading to what was then a railroad terminal on the east side of the river in Flushing. The railroad was acquired by the Flushing and North Side Railroad in 1868, and built junctions with the Flushing and Woodside Railroad, the Whitestone and Westchester Railroad, and the Central Railroad of Long Island on the west side of the river throughout the 1870s. The Flushing and North Side also built a spur leading to Flushing Bay just southwest of the Flushing River delta. All lines were acquired by the Long Island Rail Road, and most were later abandoned, except for the former NY&F main line, which became the LIRR's Port Washington Branch.[95]

In the early 20th century, the northern part of the Flushing River was home to a regatta club, the Wahnetah Boat Club. Its clubhouse was located on its right bank near the Northern Boulevard (formerly Jackson Avenue) bridge.[96][97] The club was founded in 1900,[98] replacing the disbanded Nereus Boat Club,[99] and in 1905 was described as one of the first such clubs on the East Coast.[100] By 1917, the boat club appeared to have been repurposed as a veterans' association.[101]

20th century improvements edit

Around 1907, contractor Michael Degnon purchased large tracts of marsh near Flushing Creek.[84][102] At the time, the land was considered "all but worthless", as an archaeological assessment later described the land.[103] Degnon envisioned using the site to create a large industrial port around Flushing Bay, similar to a terminal he developed in Long Island City.[102][103][104] By 1911, Degnon had created a plan along with the United States Department of War and the Queens Topographical Bureau. The plan envisioned widening Flushing River and creating docks for ships, with numerous factories and freight facilities.[105][106] The Rivers and Harbors Act of 1913 appropriated funding for deepening the channel through Flushing Bay into Flushing River.[107] The next year, surveys were made for the construction of a 5.4-mile (8.7 km) canal to connect Flushing River and Newtown Creek, plans for which dated back at least a century.[108] To create the port, Degnon proceeded to fill the Flushing River wetlands using household coal refuse ashes and street sweepings from Brooklyn.[84][102][103][104] The northern end of the site was filled via dredging.[104][109] The filling for the north meadow was complete in 1916,[104] but the prospect of creating a port was halted in 1917 by material restrictions caused by World War I, and a lack of federal support for the project.[104][110] Dumping of ash into the meadows continued, however, fueled by the increased use of garbage incinerators in the city.[111] The pollution was chronicled by F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby.[84][112]

 
Meadow Lake, created in the 1930s by expanding Flushing River

In 1930, New York City parks commissioner Robert Moses released plans for numerous parks and highways in the city, including a Flushing River Park.[113] Five years later, Flushing Meadows was selected as the site for the 1939 World's Fair.[114] Work on the World's Fair site began the next year.[115] The project primarily involved leveling the ash mounds, with the leftover material used to fill other areas of the meadow. Two parts of the river were excavated to create Meadow and Willow Lake, while much of the rest of the Flushing River was diverted into underground culverts.[10] The Tidal Gate Bridge was built at the park's northern end to prevent tidal flow from flooding the lakes.[10][84] In addition to recreation, the lakes would serve as repositories for excess storm runoff.[116] By then, Horse Brook had already been covered over, while Kissena Creek was in the process of being covered over. Dammed and reduced in size, the Flushing River became navigable only north of Roosevelt Avenue. At its southern end, the Jamaica subway yard reduced some of the flow coming from the headwaters.[1] The central portion of the Flushing River was repurposed as part of the World's Fair's Court of States.[35][117]

For the 1964 New York World's Fair, the creek's middle section was filled in for parkland.[60] Flowing out of Meadow Lake, the creek was reduced to a canal beneath the Van Wyck Expressway, narrowing into pipes going into the Fountain of the Planets, a circular pool used for fountain displays. From there, the pipes took the water toward the tidal bridge, reemerging as a creek.[60]

Restoration and redevelopment edit

The Flushing River was once a clear waterway, but during the 1920s, the river was polluted by various industrial wastes, especially along its northern section. Over the years, pollution from the Willets Point industrial area, surrounding highways, and dumping made the river a health hazard. By the 1970s, Flushing River and Flushing Bay had become neglected and polluted.[118]

In 1971, a hundred Flushing residents protested in support of a cleanup of the Flushing River,[119] and state assemblyman Leonard P. Stavisky showed federal, state, and city officials the evidence of pollution in Flushing River.[120] The next year, Councilman Morton Povman, and Flushing Meadow Park Action Committee president Albert Mauro sought to rehabilitate the Flushing River and Bay to their natural conditions and extend Flushing Meadows-Corona Park to the river banks. Both men argued that if these conditions were corrected and made, all of New York City would benefit from it.[121] Furthermore, under the intervention and proposal of both Morton Povman and Peter Vallone, a group of high city officials agreed to begin immediate work on the long-term task of cleaning up this waterway. The late Abe Wolfson, founder of the Queens Historical Society, became active in the fight to restore the river to its original condition. The cleanup involved dredging and rebuilding manholes in the Kissena Park and Kissena Corridor Park sewer systems, which hid the underground Kissena Creek, as well as cleaning up part of the Queens Boulevard sewer system.[118]

In the late 1980s, there were disputes over whether to build a sewage treatment plant in Flushing Meadows Park as part of the Flushing Bay's cleanup.[122] The tank was to be located in the park next to the Flushing River, some 70 feet (21 m) underground.[123] The Flushing Bay CSO Retention Facility, also called the Flushing Creek CSO Plant, was completed by 2007.[18][124] The Al Oerter Recreation Center, located above the facility, opened two years later.[18][125] Additionally, the northern part of the river (near the mouth) was restored as wetlands in 2008 as part of the reconstruction of the Whitestone Expressway bridge over the river.[126] Plans to combine Meadow and Willow Lakes were proposed in 2005 as part of the failed New York City bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics. Following the failure of the bid, the New York City Department of Environmental Protection sought a scaled-back restoration plan for the lakes.[127]

In Flushing, the right (east) bank of the Flushing River remains unrestored.[2] In 1993, the city proposed to rezone the plot bounded by the Flushing River, College Point Boulevard, and the LIRR Port Washington Branch on the right bank of the river.[128] Along this stretch of the river, the most prominent building was the former Serval Zipper Factory, which was later used as a U-Haul storage center.[14][129] While much of this area remained underdeveloped through the 2010s, the Sky View Parc apartment complex was completed between Roosevelt Avenue and the LIRR in 2011,[130] and the rest of the site was proposed as the Flushing West development area in 2018.[131][132] In addition, the redevelopment of the industrial Willets Point neighborhood on the left bank of the river was announced in 2007,[133] and after several delays, was restarted in 2018.[134] Following news of these redevelopments, an organization called the Friends of Flushing Creek was created in mid-2014 to advocate for a greater cleanup of the river and bay.[2][135]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Kadinsky 2016, p. 100.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Kensinger, Nathan (October 9, 2014). "Queens' 'Forgotten River' Looks Ahead to Cleanup and Change". Curbed NY. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  3. ^ Kadinsky 2016, pp. 100–101.
  4. ^ a b c d e PANYNJ Airport Transit Environmental Impact Statement 1994, p. 1⋅11.
  5. ^ a b Mankiewicz & Mankiewicz 2002, p. 19.
  6. ^ a b c d USACE 2017, p. 11.
  7. ^ Historic Preservation Studio 2015, pp. 49–50.
  8. ^ Strategic Framework Plan, pp. 15, 18, 21.
  9. ^ a b USACE 2017, p. 20.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Siegel, Sarah (2006). "Flushing the Meadows – relaxing a post-World's Fair urban landscape" (PDF). International Federation of Landscape Architects. p. 3. Retrieved March 31, 2017.
  11. ^ Dunlap, David W. (August 26, 2001). "A Queens Park's Past Shapes Its Future". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 3, 2017.
  12. ^ a b USACE 2017, p. 13.
  13. ^ a b c d e Kadinsky 2016, p. 107.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Kadinsky 2016, p. 106.
  15. ^ Foderaro, Lisa W. (October 3, 2014). "Long Neglected, Lakes and Ponds in City Parks Will Get Some Attention". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  16. ^ Kadinsky 2016, pp. 109–116.
  17. ^ "Queens Botanical Garden Master Plan" (PDF). Queens Botanical Garden, Conservation Design Forum, Atelier Dreiseitl. 2002. pp. 97−101. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  18. ^ a b c Kadinsky 2016, p. 115.
  19. ^ "Combined Sewer Overflow Long Term Control Plan for Alley Creek and Little Neck Bay" (PDF). New York City Department of Environmental Protection, AECOM USA, Inc. November 2013. pp. 2–12, 2-15 to 2-18. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  20. ^ (PDF). New York City Department of Environmental Protection. pp. 1-1 to 1-2 (PDF p.401−402). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 1, 2018. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  21. ^ . New York City Department of Environmental Protection. Archived from the original on May 21, 2018. Retrieved June 4, 2018.
  22. ^ a b c Kadinsky 2016, p. 116.
  23. ^ a b c Kadinsky 2016, p. 117.
  24. ^ Kadinsky 2016, pp. 120–121.
  25. ^ City History Club of New York; Kelly, F.B. (1909). Historical Guide to the City of New York. F. A. Stokes Company. p. 304. Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  26. ^ "Harvey Park Highlights : NYC Parks". New York City Department of Parks & Recreation. June 26, 1939. Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  27. ^ Robinson, Alex (October 10, 2014). "City to restore wetlands around abandoned Flushing Airport". QNS.com. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  28. ^ Mitter, Siddhartha (October 15, 2015). "Flushing: New York's forgotten airport – and most contested development site". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  29. ^ Philip Habib & Associates (September 3, 2009). "Police Academy, College Point, Queens: Final Environmental Impact Statement" (PDF). nyc.gov. New York City Police Department. PDF pp. 169, 178. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
  30. ^ "College Point Fields Highlights : NYC Parks". nycgovparks.org. June 26, 1939. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  31. ^ a b Kadinsky 2016, pp. 122–131.
  32. ^ "Horsebrook Island Highlights". Horsebrook Island : NYC Parks. June 26, 1939. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  33. ^ "Bridge Approved for Forest Hills; Moses Tells Clancy State Agrees to Build a New Link With Jewel Ave". The New York Times. October 12, 1960. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  34. ^ Antos, J.D.; Theodosiou, C.E.; Young, B. (2015). Corona: The Early Years. Images of America. Arcadia Publishing Incorporated. p. 30. ISBN 978-1-4396-5402-6. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  35. ^ a b c Kadinsky 2016, p. 103.
  36. ^ "Raising Strong's Causeway". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. November 25, 1894. p. 7. Retrieved January 9, 2020 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com  .
  37. ^ "It Sinks Every Year". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. January 5, 1895. p. 7. Retrieved January 9, 2020 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com  .
  38. ^ "Strong Causeway Bridge Collapses". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. February 13, 1896. p. 5. Retrieved January 9, 2020 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com  .
  39. ^ "A New Bridge Opened". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. September 3, 1896. p. 7. Retrieved January 9, 2020 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com  .
  40. ^ "Harding Boulevard Link Now Ready". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. September 18, 1937. p. 7. Retrieved January 9, 2020 – via Brooklyn Public Library; newspapers.com  .
  41. ^ Stengren, Bernard (June 10, 1958). "Road Crews Work on 3 'knots' Here; Queens and Brooklyn Snarls to Be Unraveled by '60, Some Experts Predict". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  42. ^ a b Kadinsky 2016, p. 104.
  43. ^ "Request for Proposals: Porpoise Bridge" (PDF). New York City Department of Design and Construction. May 8, 2013. p. RFP 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 9, 2022. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
  44. ^ "Causeway to be Delayed; Road Gets Extension of Time for Flushing Creek Project". The New York Times. December 17, 1940. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  45. ^ a b c Suriel, Alina (January 6, 2016). "Construction to reduce lanes on Roosevelt Avenue Bridge in Flushing". QNS.com. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  46. ^ "Dual Queens Celebration; Flushing Creek Bridge and New Subway Station Opened". The New York Times. May 15, 1927. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
  47. ^ a b Marchese, Shayna (February 8, 2010). "Roosevelt Avenue Bridge". Bridges of NYC. Retrieved January 9, 2020.
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Sources edit

External links edit

  • at the Wayback Machine (archived December 6, 2013)
  • Across the Mighty Flushing River

flushing, river, also, known, flushing, creek, waterway, that, flows, northward, through, borough, queens, york, city, mostly, within, flushing, meadows, corona, park, emptying, into, flushing, east, river, river, runs, through, valley, that, have, been, large. The Flushing River also known as Flushing Creek is a waterway that flows northward through the borough of Queens in New York City mostly within Flushing Meadows Corona Park emptying into the Flushing Bay and the East River The river runs through a valley that may have been a larger riverbed before the last Ice Age and it divides Queens into western and eastern halves Until the 20th century the Flushing Creek was fed by three tributaries Mill Creek and Kissena Creek on the eastern bank and Horse Brook on the western bank Flushing RiverFlushing CreekThe river as seen from Northern Boulevard looking northShow map of New York CityShow map of New YorkEtymologyFlushing Queens from Vlissingen Netherlands LocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCityNew York CityCounty BoroughQueensPhysical characteristicsSourceJamaica Yard coordinates40 43 06 N 73 49 52 W 40 718333 N 73 831111 W 40 718333 73 831111MouthFlushing Bay coordinates40 45 54 N 73 50 36 W 40 765115 N 73 843364 W 40 765115 73 843364Length2 miles 3 2 km Basin featuresTributaries leftHorse Brook rightKissena Creek Mill CreekWaterbodiesMeadow Lake Willow LakeBridges7In the 18th and 19th centuries it divided the towns of Flushing on its right bank to the east and Newtown now part of Corona on its left bank to the west Several bridges were built across the Flushing River in the 19th and 20th centuries Prior to the 1939 New York World s Fair the southern portion of the river was expanded into the Meadow and Willow Lakes A part of the Flushing River was buried prior to the 1964 New York World s Fair Following accumulations of pollution in the 20th century cleanup of the Flushing River started in the 1970s though some portions of the river have yet to be restored The modern day river is 4 miles 6 4 km long originating near the Jamaica Yard in Kew Gardens Hills The river flows through Willow and Meadow Lakes before entering an underground course north of the Long Island Expressway The Flushing River runs for 2 000 feet 610 m underground before resurfacing at the Tidal Gate Bridge at the northern end of Flushing Meadows Corona Park The rest of the river separates the industrial portions of the Willets Point and Flushing neighborhoods before emptying into the Flushing Bay Contents 1 Course 1 1 Tributaries 1 2 Bridges 2 Ecology 2 1 Saltwater section 2 2 Freshwater section 3 Recreational usage 4 History 4 1 Early years 4 2 19th and early 20th centuries 4 3 20th century improvements 4 4 Restoration and redevelopment 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Sources 7 External linksCourse editAttractions and Geographical Features of Flushing Meadows Corona Park nbsp fullscreen map viewtalkeditAttractions and geographical features of Flushing Meadows Corona Park 1 Citi Field2 Flushing Meadows Carousel3 Flushing Meadows Natatorium4 Flushing River and Creek5 Meadow Lake6 Mets Willets Point LIRR and subway stations 7 National Tennis Center8 New York Hall of Science9 New York State Pavilion Queens Theatre and Queens Zoo10 Queens Botanical Garden11 Queens Museum12 Unisphere13 Willow Lake14 World s Fair station demolished The 4 mile long 6 4 km Flushing Creek once rose in the present day neighborhood of Kew Gardens Hills where Vleigh Place old Dutch for Valley traces the valley of the headwaters 1 2 The river s original source now occupied by the Kew Gardens Interchange while the reconstructed source is located near Jamaica Yard emptying from a pipe there 1 2 The headwaters fed by groundwater empty north into Willow Lake and then Meadow Lake two artificial freshwater lakes 3 4 5 which are respectively 40 and 100 acres 16 and 40 ha 6 and comprise the southern half of present day Flushing Meadows Corona Park 7 8 Prior to the lakes construction the creek meandered through tidal marshes in the larger valley within the present day park 9 10 its mouth was at Flushing Bay a 6 200 acre 2 500 ha water body on the East River 6 10 The two lakes are connected via a narrow channel under Jewel Avenue 11 After following a channel north from Meadow Lake the Flushing River runs for about 2 500 feet 760 m underneath the ramps between the Van Wyck Expressway Interstate 678 and Long Island Expressway Interstate 495 12 The river then feeds into the Pool of Industry and Fountain of the Planets built during the 1964 New York World s Fair 2 running for about 2 000 feet 610 m under the fountains 12 Afterward the Flushing River flows through the Tide Gate Bridge where the fresh water river mixes with the saltwater from Flushing Bay 4 13 The channel widens running between Willets Point to the west and Flushing to the east finally emptying into Flushing Bay 2 The northernmost portion of the creek mostly contains bulkheads on the shoreline with industrial uses on the eastern bank and marshes on the western bank 9 13 14 The total distance between Meadow Lake s outlet and the river s mouth is about 7 000 feet 2 100 m 6 The watershed of the Flushing River is primarily residential though there are also significant recreational and open spaces with industrial usages near the mouth of the river 6 Even though the Flushing River now largely follows an artificial route the river still regularly overflows into surrounding areas especially during heavy rain 2 Meadow Lake which also overflows during rains collects sewage from several surrounding neighborhoods 15 The raw sewage collected in the Flushing River has contributed to the heavy pollution in Flushing Bay 2 Tributaries edit Kissena Creek known historically as Ireland Mill Creek is a right bank tributary of the Flushing River which begins in what is now Pomonok Kew Gardens Hills The creek is now largely buried running through Kissena Park Kissena Corridor Park and Queens Botanical Garden 16 17 It empties into the Flushing Bay Combined Sewer Outfall Retention Facility which lies on the right bank of the Flushing River below the Al Oerter Recreation Center The facility completed in 2007 can hold up to 43 4 million US gallons 164 000 000 L of water from combined sewer overflows during storms before pumping the water to the Tallman Island Waste Water Treatment Plant in College Point 18 19 20 21 Mill Creek is a right bank tributary of the Flushing River that empties into the river just east of Flushing Bay 22 Mill Creek was fed by two branches 23 The southern branch which has been infilled 24 originated at Town Pond at the modern day intersection of Northern Boulevard and Main Street which was filled in 1843 25 the creek then flowed north 23 The northern branch which still exists in truncated form originated at the site of the George U Harvey Playground 22 near the intersection of 20th Avenue and the Whitestone Expressway in Whitestone 26 and flowed south through the present sites of College Point Fields Flushing Airport and College Point Corporate Park 22 The two branches merged at Linden Place and 28th Avenue 23 Following development of the surrounding area the northern branch begins in the wetlands around Flushing Airport and runs through the former airport site 27 28 Several underground pipes as well as man made drainage ditches on the New York City Police Academy campus and north of 28th Avenue carry the creek from the airport to the Flushing River 29 College Point was a peninsula until the mid 20th century separated from the rest of Queens by Mill Creek s northern branch 30 Horse Brook is a left bank tributary of the Flushing River which begins to the west in Elmhurst The creek then ran close to the path of what is now the Long Island Expressway 31 32 Horse Brook was gradually covered in phases through the 20th century It is now entirely buried but its path can be traced by the existence of large superblocks such as those that contain Queens Center Mall Rego Center s extension Newtown High School s athletic field and LeFrak City 31 Bridges edit The Jewel Avenue crossing the southernmost crossing of the Flushing River was built prior to the 1939 World s Fair It was rebuilt and expanded in 1961 to also pass over the Van Wyck Expressway 33 The present day Long Island Expressway crosses the river to the north slightly east of the site of Strong s Causeway The causeway may have been first built in 1801 34 but definitely dates to at least the 1850s 35 This crossing located near the confluence of Horse Brook and Flushing Creek extended Corona Avenue on its zigzag route toward Flushing For most of the 19th century it was a narrow bridge 18 feet 5 5 m wide 35 By the 1890s there were plans to replace Strong s Causeway because it sank every year 36 though taxpayers protested against the proposal 37 In February 1896 the causeway collapsed into the Flushing Creek 38 A new bridge opened at the site on September 2 of that year 39 The causeway was replaced in 1937 by a bridge carrying the then newly built Horace Harding Boulevard 40 and was rebuilt into the present Long Island Expressway in the late 1950s 41 nbsp Looking south from Roosevelt Avenue the LIRR embankment and Porpoise Bridge can be seen in the background Meadow and Willow Lakes and the freshwater section of the Flushing River are separated from Flushing Bay by a flood gate or dam called the Porpoise Bridge or Tide Gate Bridge located just south of the Long Island Rail Road s Port Washington Branch trestle at the north end of the Flushing Meadows Golf Center The dam only permits northward flows toward Flushing Bay to pass while blocking south flowing waters 4 42 As its name implies the dam also acts as a bridge carrying pedestrian and vehicular traffic over the creek It measures 37 feet 11 m wide and 370 feet 110 m long 43 The LIRR trestle located directly to the north of Tide Gate Bridge contains a small opening for water to pass through 42 It was built in the late 1930s and early 1940s as an embankment 44 Slightly downstream to the north the Roosevelt Avenue bridge is a double deck viaduct completed in 1927 45 46 It was originally built as a drawbridge and was the world s largest fixed trunnion bascule bridge at its completion though it is no longer functional 45 The bridge carries Roosevelt Avenue as well as the New York City Subway s IRT Flushing Line 7 and lt 7 gt trains 45 47 which were extended to Flushing Main Street in 1928 a year after the bridge s completion 48 This bridge was built with the expectation that Flushing River might be converted into a navigable stream in the future With the 1939 New York World s Fair the creek was dammed to the south and the Roosevelt Avenue bridge ceased to be a usable drawbridge 47 49 When the Van Wyck Expressway was being built in the early 1960s it went directly under the Roosevelt Avenue bridge 49 The LIRR s former Whitestone Branch was carried by a single tracked wooden trestle north of the Roosevelt Avenue bridge which contained a small drawbridge span 50 51 When the branch was abandoned in 1932 the trestle was torn down 51 The Northern Boulevard crossing also called the Flushing Bridge is located north of the Roosevelt Avenue bridge and the former Whitestone Branch trestle 14 Several bridges have existed at the site the first of which was built c 1800 1801 making it the oldest crossing of the Flushing River 14 52 Five additional drawbridges were built at this location A replacement drawbridge was erected in the mid 19th century followed by swing bridges in 1866 and 1890 an elaborate bascule bridge in 1906 and a simpler bascule bridge in 1939 53 It was replaced by the current viaduct structure in 1980 14 The northernmost crossing of the Flushing River is that of the Whitestone Expressway 13 A drawbridge opened in 1939 along what was then known as the Whitestone Parkway In December 1957 the New York state government approved a 9 5 million project to widen part of Whitestone Parkway from Northern Boulevard to the Bronx Whitestone Bridge including constructing a new Flushing River bridge 54 The new bridge opened in 1963 and included a modernization of the existing draw span 55 The current fixed span was built in 2008 13 Ecology editSaltwater section edit nbsp Between Meadow and Willow LakesPrior to human development Flushing Meadows was originally a tidal marsh with Flushing Creek receiving south flowing waters from the tides of Flushing Bay 10 56 The northernmost portion of the river near its mouth is still a saltwater wetland area The wetlands consist of invasive phragmites a genus of wild grasses as well as cordgrass However the addition of fill on the riverfront has raised the wetland habitat to about the same elevation as the upland habitats thus endangering wetland plant species that cannot grow at such elevations 57 North of the LIRR embankment the left bank wetland on the Flushing River contains plants such as common reed field horsetail chicory common plantain and native marsh elder and cordgrass 58 The birds observed on the northern portion of the river include both waterfowl and wading egrets 59 Freshwater section edit Although Willow and Meadow Lakes were built as freshwater lakes and dammed to mitigate tidal effects flooding continues to affect Flushing Meadows Corona Park 10 56 The lakes are also highly eutrophic due to nutrients such as phosphorus from the former marshland seeping into the water leading to the death of fish in the lakes The regular tidal action that would filter the lakes is prevented by the dam 4 60 61 In addition the lakes are subject to pollution and storm runoff from the nearby highways via pipes which feed into the lakes 4 5 60 Several fish species native to marine habitats regularly swim into Meadow and Willow Lakes 62 Fish species native to Meadow Lake include American eel largemouth bass northern snakehead an invasive species and white mullet 62 Willow Lake is named for the many species of willow plants which inhabit the area 63 Phragmites are also abundant 63 64 65 but attempts to kill the phragmites with pesticides have led to further fish kill 64 66 Numerous berry producing trees and shrubs near Willow Lake attract several migratory bird species 63 The biodiversity of the lakes has been found to be much lower than other water bodies of comparable size 65 Recreational usage edit nbsp Boat launch on Meadow LakeRecreational uses on the Flushing River are limited mostly to its southern portion since its northern portion is heavily industrial and the central portion is not navigable 13 The land around Meadow Lake contains open grass picnic and grilling areas and baseball and cricket fields as part of Flushing Meadows Corona Park 67 68 Meadow Lake contains a boat house one of two structures that remain from the 1939 World s Fair the other being the Queens Museum 69 Rental boats are available at the boathouse for rowing and paddleboating and Meadow Lake is also the site of rowing activities for non profit Row New York with teams practicing on the lake for much of the year 70 Meadow Lake also hosts the annual Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in New York and teams from New York practice in Meadow Lake during the summer months 71 The American Small Craft Association also houses a fleet of over a dozen 14 5 foot 4 4 m sloop rigged sailboats used for teaching racing and recreation by the club s members 72 Bicycling paths extend around Meadow Lake and connect to the Brooklyn Queens Greenway 73 For the 1939 fair Meadow Lake was temporarily renamed Fountain Lake and Liberty Lake 74 75 During the fairs the land on the north shore and part of the eastern shore of the lake was used as an amusement area 76 77 78 and for the 1964 fair large parking lots were added on the east and west shores 77 78 79 The lots were removed and converted to parkland after the 1964 fair 79 The Willow Lake area of the park is a nature reserve called the Willow Lake Preserve 68 The area around Willow Lake originally also contained sports fields and park trails 1 80 64 until it was fenced off and turned into a preserve in 1976 1 The Willow Lake Trail a nature trail around Willow Lake 81 was reopened in 2013 and is part of the Willow Lake Preserve 82 83 History editEarly years edit During at least three glacial periods including the Wisconsin glaciation around 20 000 years ago ice sheets advanced south across North America carving moraines valleys and hills In particular bays and estuaries were formed along the north shore of Long Island During glaciation the meadows surrounding the Flushing River were formed just north of the terminal moraine that runs across Long Island which consisted of sand gravel clay and boulders 84 85 86 The moraine created a drainage divide with rivers north of the moraine such as the future Flushing River emptying into the north shore 87 The Flushing Meadows site became a glacial lake and then a salt marsh after the ice melted 85 Prior to glaciation the Flushing River valley was used by the Hudson River to drain southward into the Atlantic Ocean 88 Through the 19th century wetlands continued to straddle Flushing River 84 Species inhabiting the site included waterfowl and fiddler crab with fish using water pools for spawning 89 The area was first settled by Algonquian Native Americans of Long Island referred to erroneously as Mantinecocks 90 91 They consisted of the Canarsee and Rockaway Lenape groups 92 which inhabited coastal wetlands across Queens and Brooklyn 91 93 The town of Flushing was settled in 1645 under charter of the Dutch West India Company Both the town and the creek were thus named after the port of Vlissingen in the southwestern Netherlands 52 The first European settler to move to the vicinity of Flushing Creek was Robert Coe an Englishman who built a house near Horse Brook now the site of the Long Island Expressway on the creek s western bank 94 19th and early 20th centuries edit nbsp Busy Flushing Harbor in 1882 Bridge on the right carries Broadway later called Northern BoulevardThe earliest fixed crossing of the Flushing Creek was the Northern Boulevard bridge built in 1801 and rebuilt six times through 1980 14 Prior to the bridge s construction a ferry had carried passengers between the two banks of the creek 94 In the 1850s the New York and Flushing Railroad built a railroad line across the river leading to what was then a railroad terminal on the east side of the river in Flushing The railroad was acquired by the Flushing and North Side Railroad in 1868 and built junctions with the Flushing and Woodside Railroad the Whitestone and Westchester Railroad and the Central Railroad of Long Island on the west side of the river throughout the 1870s The Flushing and North Side also built a spur leading to Flushing Bay just southwest of the Flushing River delta All lines were acquired by the Long Island Rail Road and most were later abandoned except for the former NY amp F main line which became the LIRR s Port Washington Branch 95 In the early 20th century the northern part of the Flushing River was home to a regatta club the Wahnetah Boat Club Its clubhouse was located on its right bank near the Northern Boulevard formerly Jackson Avenue bridge 96 97 The club was founded in 1900 98 replacing the disbanded Nereus Boat Club 99 and in 1905 was described as one of the first such clubs on the East Coast 100 By 1917 the boat club appeared to have been repurposed as a veterans association 101 20th century improvements editAround 1907 contractor Michael Degnon purchased large tracts of marsh near Flushing Creek 84 102 At the time the land was considered all but worthless as an archaeological assessment later described the land 103 Degnon envisioned using the site to create a large industrial port around Flushing Bay similar to a terminal he developed in Long Island City 102 103 104 By 1911 Degnon had created a plan along with the United States Department of War and the Queens Topographical Bureau The plan envisioned widening Flushing River and creating docks for ships with numerous factories and freight facilities 105 106 The Rivers and Harbors Act of 1913 appropriated funding for deepening the channel through Flushing Bay into Flushing River 107 The next year surveys were made for the construction of a 5 4 mile 8 7 km canal to connect Flushing River and Newtown Creek plans for which dated back at least a century 108 To create the port Degnon proceeded to fill the Flushing River wetlands using household coal refuse ashes and street sweepings from Brooklyn 84 102 103 104 The northern end of the site was filled via dredging 104 109 The filling for the north meadow was complete in 1916 104 but the prospect of creating a port was halted in 1917 by material restrictions caused by World War I and a lack of federal support for the project 104 110 Dumping of ash into the meadows continued however fueled by the increased use of garbage incinerators in the city 111 The pollution was chronicled by F Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby 84 112 nbsp Meadow Lake created in the 1930s by expanding Flushing RiverIn 1930 New York City parks commissioner Robert Moses released plans for numerous parks and highways in the city including a Flushing River Park 113 Five years later Flushing Meadows was selected as the site for the 1939 World s Fair 114 Work on the World s Fair site began the next year 115 The project primarily involved leveling the ash mounds with the leftover material used to fill other areas of the meadow Two parts of the river were excavated to create Meadow and Willow Lake while much of the rest of the Flushing River was diverted into underground culverts 10 The Tidal Gate Bridge was built at the park s northern end to prevent tidal flow from flooding the lakes 10 84 In addition to recreation the lakes would serve as repositories for excess storm runoff 116 By then Horse Brook had already been covered over while Kissena Creek was in the process of being covered over Dammed and reduced in size the Flushing River became navigable only north of Roosevelt Avenue At its southern end the Jamaica subway yard reduced some of the flow coming from the headwaters 1 The central portion of the Flushing River was repurposed as part of the World s Fair s Court of States 35 117 For the 1964 New York World s Fair the creek s middle section was filled in for parkland 60 Flowing out of Meadow Lake the creek was reduced to a canal beneath the Van Wyck Expressway narrowing into pipes going into the Fountain of the Planets a circular pool used for fountain displays From there the pipes took the water toward the tidal bridge reemerging as a creek 60 Restoration and redevelopment edit The Flushing River was once a clear waterway but during the 1920s the river was polluted by various industrial wastes especially along its northern section Over the years pollution from the Willets Point industrial area surrounding highways and dumping made the river a health hazard By the 1970s Flushing River and Flushing Bay had become neglected and polluted 118 In 1971 a hundred Flushing residents protested in support of a cleanup of the Flushing River 119 and state assemblyman Leonard P Stavisky showed federal state and city officials the evidence of pollution in Flushing River 120 The next year Councilman Morton Povman and Flushing Meadow Park Action Committee president Albert Mauro sought to rehabilitate the Flushing River and Bay to their natural conditions and extend Flushing Meadows Corona Park to the river banks Both men argued that if these conditions were corrected and made all of New York City would benefit from it 121 Furthermore under the intervention and proposal of both Morton Povman and Peter Vallone a group of high city officials agreed to begin immediate work on the long term task of cleaning up this waterway The late Abe Wolfson founder of the Queens Historical Society became active in the fight to restore the river to its original condition The cleanup involved dredging and rebuilding manholes in the Kissena Park and Kissena Corridor Park sewer systems which hid the underground Kissena Creek as well as cleaning up part of the Queens Boulevard sewer system 118 In the late 1980s there were disputes over whether to build a sewage treatment plant in Flushing Meadows Park as part of the Flushing Bay s cleanup 122 The tank was to be located in the park next to the Flushing River some 70 feet 21 m underground 123 The Flushing Bay CSO Retention Facility also called the Flushing Creek CSO Plant was completed by 2007 18 124 The Al Oerter Recreation Center located above the facility opened two years later 18 125 Additionally the northern part of the river near the mouth was restored as wetlands in 2008 as part of the reconstruction of the Whitestone Expressway bridge over the river 126 Plans to combine Meadow and Willow Lakes were proposed in 2005 as part of the failed New York City bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics Following the failure of the bid the New York City Department of Environmental Protection sought a scaled back restoration plan for the lakes 127 In Flushing the right east bank of the Flushing River remains unrestored 2 In 1993 the city proposed to rezone the plot bounded by the Flushing River College Point Boulevard and the LIRR Port Washington Branch on the right bank of the river 128 Along this stretch of the river the most prominent building was the former Serval Zipper Factory which was later used as a U Haul storage center 14 129 While much of this area remained underdeveloped through the 2010s the Sky View Parc apartment complex was completed between Roosevelt Avenue and the LIRR in 2011 130 and the rest of the site was proposed as the Flushing West development area in 2018 131 132 In addition the redevelopment of the industrial Willets Point neighborhood on the left bank of the river was announced in 2007 133 and after several delays was restarted in 2018 134 Following news of these redevelopments an organization called the Friends of Flushing Creek was created in mid 2014 to advocate for a greater cleanup of the river and bay 2 135 See also edit nbsp Rivers portal nbsp New York City portalList of rivers in New YorkReferences editNotes edit a b c d e Kadinsky 2016 p 100 a b c d e f g h Kensinger Nathan October 9 2014 Queens Forgotten River Looks Ahead to Cleanup and Change Curbed NY Retrieved January 9 2020 Kadinsky 2016 pp 100 101 a b c d e PANYNJ Airport Transit Environmental Impact Statement 1994 p 1 11 a b Mankiewicz amp Mankiewicz 2002 p 19 a b c d USACE 2017 p 11 Historic Preservation Studio 2015 pp 49 50 Strategic Framework Plan pp 15 18 21 a b USACE 2017 p 20 a b c d e f Siegel Sarah 2006 Flushing the Meadows relaxing a post World s Fair urban landscape PDF International Federation of Landscape Architects p 3 Retrieved March 31 2017 Dunlap David W August 26 2001 A Queens Park s Past Shapes Its Future The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 3 2017 a b USACE 2017 p 13 a b c d e Kadinsky 2016 p 107 a b c d e f Kadinsky 2016 p 106 Foderaro Lisa W October 3 2014 Long Neglected Lakes and Ponds in City Parks Will Get Some Attention The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Kadinsky 2016 pp 109 116 Queens Botanical Garden Master Plan PDF Queens Botanical Garden Conservation Design Forum Atelier Dreiseitl 2002 pp 97 101 Retrieved May 31 2018 a b c Kadinsky 2016 p 115 Combined Sewer Overflow Long Term Control Plan for Alley Creek and Little Neck Bay PDF New York City Department of Environmental Protection AECOM USA Inc November 2013 pp 2 12 2 15 to 2 18 Retrieved June 4 2018 Flushing Bay Facility Plan Report PDF New York City Department of Environmental Protection pp 1 1 to 1 2 PDF p 401 402 Archived from the original PDF on December 1 2018 Retrieved June 4 2018 Flushing Bay Combined Sewer Outfall CSO Retention Facility New York City Department of Environmental Protection Archived from the original on May 21 2018 Retrieved June 4 2018 a b c Kadinsky 2016 p 116 a b c Kadinsky 2016 p 117 Kadinsky 2016 pp 120 121 City History Club of New York Kelly F B 1909 Historical Guide to the City of New York F A Stokes Company p 304 Retrieved January 1 2020 Harvey Park Highlights NYC Parks New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation June 26 1939 Retrieved January 1 2020 Robinson Alex October 10 2014 City to restore wetlands around abandoned Flushing Airport QNS com Retrieved January 15 2020 Mitter Siddhartha October 15 2015 Flushing New York s forgotten airport and most contested development site The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved January 15 2020 Philip Habib amp Associates September 3 2009 Police Academy College Point Queens Final Environmental Impact Statement PDF nyc gov New York City Police Department PDF pp 169 178 Retrieved January 19 2020 College Point Fields Highlights NYC Parks nycgovparks org June 26 1939 Retrieved January 15 2020 a b Kadinsky 2016 pp 122 131 Horsebrook Island Highlights Horsebrook Island NYC Parks June 26 1939 Retrieved January 9 2020 Bridge Approved for Forest Hills Moses Tells Clancy State Agrees to Build a New Link With Jewel Ave The New York Times October 12 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Antos J D Theodosiou C E Young B 2015 Corona The Early Years Images of America Arcadia Publishing Incorporated p 30 ISBN 978 1 4396 5402 6 Retrieved January 9 2020 a b c Kadinsky 2016 p 103 Raising Strong s Causeway Brooklyn Daily Eagle November 25 1894 p 7 Retrieved January 9 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp It Sinks Every Year Brooklyn Daily Eagle January 5 1895 p 7 Retrieved January 9 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Strong Causeway Bridge Collapses Brooklyn Daily Eagle February 13 1896 p 5 Retrieved January 9 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp A New Bridge Opened Brooklyn Daily Eagle September 3 1896 p 7 Retrieved January 9 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Harding Boulevard Link Now Ready Brooklyn Daily Eagle September 18 1937 p 7 Retrieved January 9 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Stengren Bernard June 10 1958 Road Crews Work on 3 knots Here Queens and Brooklyn Snarls to Be Unraveled by 60 Some Experts Predict The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 a b Kadinsky 2016 p 104 Request for Proposals Porpoise Bridge PDF New York City Department of Design and Construction May 8 2013 p RFP 5 Archived from the original PDF on October 9 2022 Retrieved April 26 2017 Causeway to be Delayed Road Gets Extension of Time for Flushing Creek Project The New York Times December 17 1940 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 a b c Suriel Alina January 6 2016 Construction to reduce lanes on Roosevelt Avenue Bridge in Flushing QNS com Retrieved January 9 2020 Dual Queens Celebration Flushing Creek Bridge and New Subway Station Opened The New York Times May 15 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 a b Marchese Shayna February 8 2010 Roosevelt Avenue Bridge Bridges of NYC Retrieved January 9 2020 Flushing Rejoices as Subway Opens Service by B M T and I R T Begins as Soon as Official Train Makes First Run The New York Times January 22 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 a b Kadinsky 2016 p 105 Journal of Proceedings 1922 p 7008 Retrieved January 15 2020 a b Erlitz Jeff February 19 1932 LIRR Whitestone Branch Long Island Rail Road Photos Maps and History Retrieved January 15 2020 a b Historical Background of Flushing Bay Flushing Meadow Improvement 1 5 R606 4 N56f July 1937 New Flushing Span Dedicated by Mayor Harvey Also Gives Address at Ceremony in Queens The New York Times April 27 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 9 5 Million Project to Aid Boro Traffic PDF Long Island Star Journal December 16 1957 p 1 via Fultonhistory com New 4 Lane Bridge Over Flushing River Opens Today The New York Times June 4 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 a b Strategic Framework Plan p 43 USACE 2017 p 19 USACE 2017 pp 20 21 USACE 2017 p 21 a b c d Strategic Framework Plan p 37 Mankiewicz amp Mankiewicz 2002 p 1 a b Meadow Lake New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Retrieved April 3 2017 a b c Flushing Meadows Corona Park Willow Lake Trail New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved April 3 2017 a b c Colangelo Lisa L November 24 2014 Something is fishy in Flushing Meadows Corona Park s Willow Lake where scores of fish are dying New York Daily News Retrieved April 27 2017 a b Mankiewicz amp Mankiewicz 2002 p 2 Flushing Meadows Corona Park Willow Lake Park Invasive Phragmites New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Historic Preservation Studio 2015 p 46 a b Strategic Framework Plan p 21 Rhoades Liz June 30 2011 Boathouse to reopen soon at Meadow Lake Queens Chronicle Retrieved January 15 2020 Strokes of Genius United Federation of Teachers Archived from the original on April 15 2013 Retrieved October 3 2012 Mission Archived from the original on August 28 2008 Retrieved May 23 2008 Flushing Meadows Corona Park Conservancy mission About TASCA The American Small Craft Association Retrieved April 7 2008 NYC DOT Bicycle Maps PDF nyc gov New York City Department of Transportation 2019 Retrieved May 14 2019 Wood 2004 p 13 Loeb August October 27 1940 Fine Park From Fair Flushing Meadow s New Play Area Will Be Second to None The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2017 Wood 2004 p 108 a b Cotter Bill Young Bill January 20 2014 The 1964 1965 New York World s Fair Arcadia Publishing p 13 ISBN 978 1 4396 4214 6 Retrieved April 26 2017 a b Kadinsky 2016 p 101 a b Alden Robert August 11 1965 A Legacy of Fair Unwanted Relics Exhibitors Are Required to Raze Pavilions but 13 Have Gone Bankrupt The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2017 Vast Queens Park Rising on Fair Site The New York Times December 6 1936 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 4 2017 Flushing Meadows Corona Park Highlights Willow Lake Trail NYC Parks New York City Department of Parks amp Recreation June 26 1939 Retrieved January 15 2020 Colangelo Lisa L May 1 2013 Nature lovers can now venture into Willow Lake Preserve in Flushing Meadows Corona Park and explore it on their own nydailynews com Retrieved January 15 2020 Kern Jedrychowska Ewa June 3 2013 Reopened Trail Gives Forest Hills Residents Access to Willow Lake Preserve DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on January 15 2020 Retrieved January 15 2020 a b c d e f Strategic Framework Plan p 52 a b Stage 1A Assessment p 2 Mankiewicz amp Mankiewicz 2002 p 31 Mankiewicz amp Mankiewicz 2002 p 32 Feller Michael December 1988 Kissena Park The Wild Side A Guide to its Natural Areas PDF New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Natural Resources Group pp 2 4 Retrieved June 2 2018 Stage 1A Assessment p 7 Flushing Meadows Corona Park History New York City Department of Parks and Recreation a b Jackson Kenneth T ed 1995 The Encyclopedia of New York City New Haven Yale University Press p 462 ISBN 0300055366 Stage 1A Assessment p 5 Natural Resources Group Natural Area Mapping and Inventory of Spring Creek 1988 Survey PDF New York City Parks Department p 2 Retrieved November 18 2015 a b Stage 1A Assessment p 8 Stage 1A Assessment pp 9 10 New House for Wahnetah Club The New York Times March 8 1914 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 15 2020 Antos J D 2010 Flushing Then amp Now Arcadia Pub p 49 ISBN 978 0 7385 7257 4 Retrieved January 15 2020 Wahnetah Boat Club Brooklyn Daily Eagle September 16 1900 p 8 Retrieved January 15 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Nereus Boat Club Disbands Brooklyn Daily Eagle May 28 1899 p 10 Retrieved January 15 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Famous Boat Club on Flushing Creek Brooklyn Daily Eagle November 12 1905 p 28 Retrieved January 15 2020 via Brooklyn Public Library newspapers com nbsp Wahnetah B C Veterans Organize The New York Times September 23 1917 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 15 2020 a b c Steinberg 2015 p 211 a b c Stage 1A Assessment p 11 a b c d e PANYNJ Airport Transit Environmental Impact Statement 1994 p 1 10 Stage 1A Assessment p 18 Paragraphs of Interest PDF Newtown Register Fultonhistory com September 28 1911 p 4 Retrieved March 27 2017 The announcement made this week that the contractors who have filled in the Flushing meadows intend to develop the water front United States Congress 1925 Sixty eighth Congress Sess II Ch 467 1925 PDF U S Government Printing Office p 1186 Retrieved January 5 2020 Annual Report of the State Engineer and Surveyor on the Canals of the State of New York The Engineer 1914 pp 443 444 Retrieved January 9 2020 Stage 1A Assessment p 13 Stage 1A Assessment p 14 Steinberg 2015 p 213 Stage 1A Assessment pp 14 15 Asks New City Parks to Cost 20 000 000 Metropolitan Conference Urges Prompt Purchases Chiefly in Queens and Richmon The New York Times February 26 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 19 2015 Great World Fair for City in 1939 on Site In Queens City to Lend New Park The New York Times September 23 1935 Retrieved January 29 2012 Work at Fair Site Begins Without Ceremony 700 Job Seekers on Hand 500 to Be Hired The New York Times June 16 1936 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 27 2017 Mankiewicz amp Mankiewicz 2002 p 9 Monaghan Frank ed 1939 Official guide book of the New York World s Fair 1939 Exposition Publications pp 116 117 OCLC 575567 a b Oats David March 21 1975 End Sought To Pollution Action Takes On The River Queens Tribune Fowle Farnsworth January 11 1971 100 Seek Cleanup of Flushing River The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Bird David March 6 1971 Agency Aides Shown Evidence Of Pollution in Flushing River The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Rabin Bernard October 16 1972 Kretchmer Gets an Appeal to Clean Up Flushing River New York Daily News p 295 Retrieved January 9 2020 via newspapers com nbsp Fried Joseph P April 5 1987 Split Over Flushing Bay Cleanup Plan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Fried Joseph P June 17 1990 City Plan for a Huge Sewage Tank In a Park Divides Queens Groups The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Abbott Jillian September 6 2007 Flushing Creek CSO Project To Be Ready By End Of Year Queens Chronicle Retrieved January 9 2020 Mayor Bloomberg Opens New Al Oerter Recreation Center in Flushing Corona The official website of the City of New York March 7 2009 Archived from the original on October 24 2020 Retrieved January 9 2020 Lauinger John May 20 2008 Flushing River wetlands project may be soaked nydailynews com Retrieved January 9 2020 Maier Allison July 23 2012 Olympic orphans Flushing Meadows lakes stagnate in wake of Games loss The New York World Retrieved January 9 2020 Dunlap David W October 31 1993 Neighborhood Report Flushing Downtown Expansion Plan Westward Ho The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Walsh Kevin March 18 2012 Flushing Zipper Factory Forgotten New York Retrieved January 9 2020 Bernstein Fred A September 1 2011 A New Start for an Ambitious Queens Condo Complex The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 9 2020 Monteverdi Suzanne June 29 2018 Proposal to attract developers to downtown Flushing waterfront wins state approval QNS com Retrieved January 9 2020 Woodward Danielle July 5 2018 Plans To Redevelop Flushing Waterfront Get State Approval Flushing Murray Hill NY Patch Retrieved January 9 2020 Schuster Karla May 2 2007 All signs Point to makeover AM New York Tribune New York Newspaper Holdings LLC p 4 Bagli Charles V February 5 2018 Rising from the Ashes Willets Point Redevelopment Will Go Forward City Says The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 8 2018 Rhoades Liz June 26 2014 Cleaning up creek remains a problem Queens Chronicle Retrieved January 9 2020 Sources edit Flushing Meadows Corona Park Historic Preservation Studio Columbia Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation May 3 2015 Retrieved March 31 2017 Kadinsky Sergey 2016 Hidden Waters of New York City A History and Guide to 101 Forgotten Lakes Ponds Creeks and Streams in the Five Boroughs New York NY Countryman Press ISBN 978 1 58157 566 8 La Guardia International Airport and John F Kennedy International Airport Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Airport Access Program Automated Guideway Transit System NY NJ Environmental Impact Statement Port Authority of New York and New Jersey United States Department of Transportation Federal Aviation Administration New York State Department of Transportation June 1994 Mankiewicz Paul S Mankiewicz Julie A June 2002 Ecological Engineering and Restoration Study Flushing Meadows Lakes and Watershed PDF The Gaia Institute Retrieved April 3 2017 Quennell Rothschild amp Partners Smith Miller Hawkinson Architects Flushing Meadows Corona Park Strategic Framework Plan New York City Department of Parks and Recreation For links to specific pages see a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint postscript link Vision amp Goals PDF Part 2 New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 36 48 Retrieved November 12 2017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Appendix The History of Flushing Meadows Corona Park PDF New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 49 72 Retrieved November 12 2017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Stage 1a Archaeological Assessment Shea Stadium Redevelopment Flushing Meadows Corona Park PDF nyc gov Historical Perspectives Inc October 2001 Retrieved November 12 2017 Steinberg Ted July 21 2015 Gotham Unbound The Ecological History of Greater New York Simon and Schuster pp 209 225 ISBN 978 1 4767 4128 4 Appendix E 3 Alternative Development Flushing Creek Package Draft Integrated Feasibility Report amp Environmental Assessment PDF United States Army Corps of Engineers February 2017 Wood Andrew F 2004 New York s 1939 1940 World s Fair Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 3585 2 Retrieved April 26 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flushing River Exploring Flushing River at the Wayback Machine archived December 6 2013 Across the Mighty Flushing River Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flushing River amp oldid 1183141556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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