The 'Fresh Kills Landfill' on the
New York City borough of
Staten Island in the
United States, was formerly the largest
landfill in the world, at 2200
acres (890 hectares),
Fresh Kills Park Project Introduction and was New York City's principal landfill in the second half of the 20th century. The name "Fresh Kills" refers to its location along the banks of the
Fresh Kills estuary in western Staten Island.
History
Opened in 1948, it became one of the largest refuse heaps in human history. The site is 12 square km (4.6 square miles) in area; and when operational twenty barges, each carrying 650 tons of rubbish, were shipped in every day.
[1] Had Fresh Kills stayed open as long as originally planned it would have grown to be the highest point on the
East Coast of the United States.
It could be regarded as being the largest man-made structure on Earth,
with the site's volume eventually exceeding the
Great Wall of China.
In fact in 2001 its peak was 25 meters taller than the
Statue of Liberty.
Under local pressure and with support of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the landfill site was closed on
March 22,
2001. However, after the
September 11, 2001 attacks on the
World Trade Center, the landfill was temporarily reopened in order to receive and process much of the debris from the destruction. The debris was later removed into various locations, including museums and steel mills.
Fresh Kills Park Project
Starting in 2003, the site was planned to be transformed into reclaimed wetlands, recreational facilities and landscaped public parkland, the largest expansion of the New York City parks since the development of the chain of parks in the
Bronx during the 1890s. In January, 2005, Staten Island
Borough president James Molinaro announced plans to open three roads leading out of the former landfill to regular traffic, as part of an effort to ease the road congestion for which Staten Island had become notorious in recent years. Construction on the actual park is expected to start after the completion of environmental and last use reviews at the end of 2007. The three-phased development of the park, which will include a September 11th memorial, is expected to last 30 years. The
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) will be ready for public review in Spring 2008.
Fresh Kills Park will be three times the size of
Central Park. It will consist of a variety of public spaces and facilities for a multitude of activity types. The site is large enough to support many sports and programs including,
nature trails, mountain biking, community events, outdoor dining, sports fields and canoeing.
[2]
Staten Island Transfer Station
Staten Island Transfer Station is located on the site of the former Fresh Kills landfill. The transfer station - an integral part of New York City's Solid Waste Management Plan - is expected to process an average of 900 tons per day of Staten Island generated residential and municipal waste. The waste is compacted inside the 79,000 square foot facility into sealed 12 foot high by 20 foot long
intermodal shipping containers, which are then loaded, four containers each car, onto
flatbed rail cars to be hauled by rail to an Allied Waste
landfill in
South Carolina. The eight mile
Staten Island Railway freight service which connects the facility to the national rail freight network, was reactivated in April 2007, after it had been closed in 1991.
[3]
References
1.
QI: The Book of General Ignorance, , John, Lloyd, Faber and Faber, ,
2.
Fresh Kills Park, New York City
3.
External links
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Satellite imagery from Google Maps