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Old May 19th, 2003, 05:51 PM
Kris Kris is offline
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Default The Gowanus Canal

May 19, 2003

What Rots Beneath

By DIANE CARDWELL

Ah, the Gowanus, that fetid Brooklyn canal synonymous with contamination and death. Sewage, industrial waste — perhaps even human remains — still molder at its murky bottom. On occasion, its famously noxious, sulfurous aroma wafts over its banks. But now, as if to collect that batty neighbor living in a clutter of cats and old string, the men (and one woman) in white suits have finally arrived.

For the past few weeks, a team of scientists and technicians from the Army Corps of Engineers has been putting on protective coveralls and setting out along the waterway that snakes from Butler Street out to Gowanus Bay. Equipped with sample jars, hollow-stem augurs and drills, they have been delving far into the repellent depths to catalog, in minute detail, just what is festering in all that muck. It is not pretty work, but it is far from thankless.

"You can't begin to come up with any kind of engineering plan until you understand the situation that you have," said Col. John B. O'Dowd, a brawny, affable man who is the New York District commander of the Army Corps of Engineers. "Once you can sit back and look at the picture of what you have, then you can begin to look at what you can do to improve it."

To help draw that picture, the corps and the City Department of Environmental Protection are splitting the $5 million cost of the Gowanus Canal and Bay Ecosystem Restoration study. The project, whose final report should be available by January 2005, is intended to offer potential solutions to the environmental problems and to determine what future activities the canal and its surrounding area could sustain.

So the corps team, which includes a biologist and a geologist, has been out there, working to test the water quality, identify plant and animal life, and collect samples of what lies beneath. Their work should be completed soon, but the results are months away. Still, some hopeful signs have surfaced in the polluted canal. On a recent morning, for example, the team came across several snails, glass eels and some juvenile shrimp. "That's important for us because it lets us know that all the different life cycles are represented," said Pamela Lynch, the biologist.

People have been working for years to bring the noxious waterway back from the brink. Built in the late 19th century as a commercial thruway, the canal was soon fouled by sewage. In 1911, the city opened a flushing tunnel that moved in cleaner water from the Buttermilk Channel, but the tunnel broke down in the 1960's and was left unrepaired for more than three decades. That, combined with industrial waste from nearby plants, turned the canal into a stagnant, putrid nose-sore.

But largely through the work of local environmental and development groups, the Gowanus, long a reputed dumping ground for corpses, has been coming back. The flushing tunnel was reactivated in 1999. Oysters — bivalves that can filter tremendous amounts of water each day — have been introduced into the canal and are surviving. Jellyfish, bluefish, cormorants, ducks and egrets have appeared in and around the yellow-green waters. Harbor seals have even been sighted. The many different notions of what the canal should become — a little Venice, a recreation area, a peaceful wetland habitat — no longer seem firmly rooted in fantasy.

The Gowanus is now so vibrant that it can even support its own avant garde art project. Red Dive, a group of artists who create multimedia performance installations, is planning a performance tour called Peripheral City: Rediscovering the Gowanus Canal. In the show, which is to run over two weekends beginning Saturday, the audience will walk through a tunnel and then board a boat to ride along the canal. At various points, there will be a soundtrack of voices, culled from recordings of residents talking about the canal. Those will be interspersed with performances along the banks.

"I saw the canal as this container for so many forces and needs and drives," said Maureen Brennan, artistic director of Red Dive. "Here's this place that embodies a history of fear and all the bad things about human waste and pollution and decay, and now it's this container for hope and renewal and reclaiming."

Still, the Gowanus is far from ready for toe-dipping. "You fall in that water," Colonel O'Dowd joked with Webster Shipley, a project geologist, one afternoon, "the least of your worries is drowning."

The canal still receives loads of sewage when heavy rains overwhelm the sewer system, as well as runoff from its industrial neighbors like an oil depot and a gravel yard. Indeed, what has ended up in the sediment will also help determine its final resting place. Depending on the contaminants present, said Thomas J. Shea, the project manager for the corps, any sediment dredged out of the canal could potentially be mixed with neutralizing agents and then used to top off a landfill or make building materials.

So the work of collecting and classifying the feculence continues. With a rig set up on a barge, the team drives a contraption called a split-spoon into the canal bottom, which sucks up the muck into a hollow metal tube that can be split open once it is back on board. The scientists use a meter to detect any volatile gases that might be in the sample. Sometimes, depending on the consistency of the sediment, the core samples are difficult to obtain.

"Upstream we had been hitting an oozy black mud, so we had some problems taking a sample," Mr. Shipley said just before the driller, Albert McNamara, and his assistant, John Letke, began digging the team's ninth hole of the day.

Mr. Shipley, who has been filling his van with jars of muck from various spots in the canal, said that he already had some idea of what is lurking in the water, including creosote, a wood preservative probably used on retaining walls that line the canal, and viruses from all the sewage. The other day, the team pulled up small piles of gravel, black mud and several round disks they had drilled from a stack of three-quarter-inch plywood.

There is nasty stuff at the bottom of the canal, they say. "Man's been playing around with the Gowanus Canal for 100-something years," Colonel O'Dowd said. "So who knows what you're going to find?"


Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company
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Old May 19th, 2003, 06:28 PM
Gulcrapek Gulcrapek is offline
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Default The Gowanus Canal

They should start with not building suburban style Lowe's and Home Depots next to it.
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Old May 19th, 2003, 09:44 PM
TLOZ Link5 TLOZ Link5 is offline
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Default The Gowanus Canal

Quote:
Quote: from Gulcrapek on 5:28 pm on May 19, 2003
They should start with not building suburban style Lowe's and Home Depots next to it.
Dear God, NO! *Say it isn't so and that the Americanization will eventually stop!!!!!!!
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Old May 20th, 2003, 11:02 AM
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Default The Gowanus Canal

http://www.southbrooklyn.net/gowanus

http://www.gowanus.org
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Old May 21st, 2003, 08:54 AM
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Default The Gowanus Canal

When I was a kid in Carroll Gardens, a standard admonition from mom was, "And you boys stay away from that canal." Of course we always went there, hopefully to spot the mythical water rat, purported to be as big as a dog.

Carroll St Bridge *http://www.forgotten-ny.com/STREET%2...e/carroll.html

Part of the Battle of Long Island was fought here. 256 Maryland malitia men were buried near 3rd Ave and 8th St. A plaque to mark the spot was destroyed about 100 years ago when 3rd Ave was widened.
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Old May 26th, 2003, 12:05 AM
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The view of the Gowanus Canal and Hamilton Avenue Bridge from the Ninth Street Bridge.





The view of the Gowanus Canal and Ninth Street Bridge from the Hamilton Avenue Bridge.





Gowanus Canal above Ninth Street Bridge and Williamsburgh Savings Bank.





Gowanus Canal above Third Street Bridge.





The view of the Gowanus Canal from the Gowanus Bay.

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Old May 27th, 2003, 10:33 PM
Kris Kris is offline
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How close are residences and businesses to the canal?
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Old May 27th, 2003, 11:24 PM
Gulcrapek Gulcrapek is offline
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Default The Gowanus Canal

It depends where along the canal. The aforementioned Home Depot and Lowe's are almost on the water. Most of the rest of the immediate shoreline is industrial.
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Old May 27th, 2003, 11:52 PM
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Default The Gowanus Canal



Southern part is mostly industrial or abandoned, except on the Red Hook side. There's a Home Depot and other big box at the I278 sign.

Northern section. Bond St and Nevins along canal are mostly small industrial, as are side streets toward canal. Side streets running outward are all residential, brownstone and brick row houses. Smith St and Court St are retail.

The church steeple in the photo is St Agnes, on Sackett St, between Hoyt and Bond.

City Housing on Baltic St, northwest of canal (large blocks)
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Old May 28th, 2003, 09:15 AM
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Thanks a lot.
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Old June 15th, 2003, 12:39 AM
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Taking a canoe tour of the Gowanus Canal.

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Old June 15th, 2003, 09:33 AM
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Slightly incongruous, but probably foretelling things to come.
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Old June 16th, 2003, 11:15 AM
billyblancoNYC billyblancoNYC is offline
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This could be NY's venice - esplanade, shops, apartments, etc. *It would be great. *I'm not saying trash businesses, but if it's mostly derelict, it should be done. *Also, there should be a design comp to design the entire area - using only modern, glass-based architecture. *Make it a symbol of redevelopment, of taking back our waterways, and of cutting edge architecture and design. *

They have been talking about fixing it up like this, any news?
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Old June 16th, 2003, 05:22 PM
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The first thing that has to happen is the canal cleanup.
A friend of mine (I call him Steve the Tick Man) works for the Army Corp of Engineers. The Gowanus Bay up to about the Hamilton Ave bridge is a federally regulated waterway. The Corp and NY DEP started an ecological restoration feasibility study last year, due to be completed in 2005. In addition to how to remove contaminated material, most of the bulkheads need to be repaired.

It will take a while.
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Old June 16th, 2003, 09:30 PM
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Default The Gowanus Canal

Zippy the Chimp, Steve the Tick Man... What else?
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