Hunter’s Point South Waterfront Park opens its gates in New York

Over four years in the making, Hunter's Point South Waterfront Park is now welcoming visitors in Long Island City, marking the first chapter of rejuvenation for the riverside neighbourhood in Queens, New York. The park, which occupies a site that was previously marsh wetland and a drained landfill, is part of a larger, ambitious master plan to transform the area into a modern ecological community that includes the largest affordable housing effort in New York City since the 1970s.
The waterfront park is a dynamic, multi-faceted destination that is set to bring a hoard of new visitors to the area. Designed by Thomas Balsley Associates and Weiss/Manfredi - two New York-based urban design specialists who have left their stamp on other public landscape projects around the city - Hunter's Point comprises a sprawling oval-shaped green to accommodate all types of recreational uses: an urban beach that's ready for picnickers and volleyball; a rail garden that features native fauna planted over disused freight rails; and a soaring, eye-catching pavilion that connects urban-dwelling areas to the East River waterfront and an elevated wooden pier.
Apart from its exciting design and location, what really sets Hunter's Point South Waterfront Park apart is the undercurrent of sustainability that runs through its every aspect. Aside from turning a 20-acre abandoned, post-industrial waterfront into prime real estate, the park boasts a new urban plan that includes bioswales that filter stormwater from Center Boulevard, bikeways, and upland smart streets with banquette seating to allow comfortable enjoyment of the skyline views.
Concrete bulk-heads have been replaced with new wetlands and green pathways that lead to a 30-foot high overlook that's suspended over the water's edge. The pavilion itself, which is made from folded plates to collect storm water, will also be installed with 64 photovoltaic panels that generates 37,000 kWh per year. It will start off powering 50% of the park, with the vision of adding more panels to eventually power the park entirely. Even the dog run consists of a water rill and stacked timber seating.
With the development of 5,000 permanently affordable residential units and a school both to come, the park is a perfect starting point for uniting the area's industrial past and its multi-cultural future.
The main pavilion was concieved to support the park's recreational uses, while acting as a landmark for orientation. Photography: Albert Večerka/Esto
The waterfront park is a dynamic, multi-faceted destination that is set to bring a hoard of new visitors to the area. Photography: Albert Večerka/Esto
It aims to be 'a new model of urban ecology and a laboratory for innovative sustainable design'. Photography: Albert Večerka/Esto
Sitting next a residential development and what will soon be a school, the park will provide much needed green public space for the local communities. Photography: Albert Večerka/Esto
The park's streets and pathways are designed to frame its elements and the New York City views beyond the river. Photography: Albert Večerka/Esto
ADDRESS
Hunter's Point South Waterfront Park
52-10 Center Blvd.
Long Island City
New York 11101
USA
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Pei-Ru Keh is a former US Editor at Wallpaper*. Born and raised in Singapore, she has been a New Yorker since 2013. Pei-Ru held various titles at Wallpaper* between 2007 and 2023. She reports on design, tech, art, architecture, fashion, beauty and lifestyle happenings in the United States, both in print and digitally. Pei-Ru took a key role in championing diversity and representation within Wallpaper's content pillars, actively seeking out stories that reflect a wide range of perspectives. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two children, and is currently learning how to drive.
-
Vacheron Constantin maps the zodiac on a watch dial
Craftsmanship and technical expertise combine in Vacheron Constantin's Métiers d’Art series, Tribute to the Celestial
-
Delve into the visual world of a lost airline in this impressive chronicle of a corporate identity
'Red Square' is the story of Mary de Saulles and the 1960s BEA corporate identity, a comprehensive airline re-brand that still feels fresh today
-
'A small piece of architecture': BassamFellows reissue Philip Johnson and Richard Kelly's floor light
Philip Johnson and Richard Kelly's floor light was originally designed for the architect's Glass House and available from BassamFellows this Autumn
-
This Michigan lakeside house is an exercise is sculptural minimalism
Explore a Michigan lakeside house, designed by Disbrow Iannuzzi and featuring sculptural timber interiors and a contemporary minimalist feel
-
Welcome to How House, a revived Rudolph Schindler gem in Los Angeles
The latest owner of How House, an early Rudolph Schindler gem, is taking a contemporary approach to conserving its heritage
-
Nearly a century after it was completed, Bruce Goff’s revolutionary Adah Robinson House astonishes once again
The flamboyant building in Tulsa, Oklahoma is beginning its latest chapter as a charitable event space, known as The Oath Studio. See the restoration
-
How an icon of Japanese Metabolist architecture took on a life of its own – even after its destruction
When Kishō Kurokawa designed the modular Nakagin Capsule Tower more than 50 years ago, he imagined it boarding ships and travelling the world. Now it has, thanks to a new show at MoMA
-
Florencia Rodriguez on the importance of curiosity, criticism and cultural freedom
Florencia Rodriguez, architect, writer and artistic director of this year’s Chicago Architecture Biennial, comments on the state of the States
-
A 432 Park Avenue apartment is an art-filled family home among the clouds
At 432 Park Avenue, inside and outside compete for starring roles; welcome to a skyscraping, art-filled apartment in Midtown Manhattan
-
Discover this sleek-but-warm sanctuary in the heart of the Wyoming wilds
This glorious wood-and-stone residence never misses a chance to show off the stirring landscape it calls home
-
Inside a Montana house, putting the American West's landscape at its heart
A holiday house in the Montana mountains, designed by Walker Warner Architects and Gachot Studios, scales new heights to create a fresh perspective on communing with the natural landscape