The Hudson River Park Trust presented its latest plans for the estuarium — the building that will study and educate about the Hudson River estuary — to Community Board 1’s Waterfront Committee last week, and this is largely updated with new renderings since my last post on this in June 2024. The building, which is planned for the upland space between Pier 25 and 26, is not yet funded — the Trust has about $20 million committed for what is estimated to be a $35 million project. But they continue to move forward with design plans to 1) attract more funding and 2) get a firmer sense of cost.
The estuary — our section of the river — is a habitat of national value in terms of the wildlife; it is a unique urban natural environment with surprising creatures moving through it.
The design is a collaboration between Tribeca architects Sage & Coombe and the aquarium designers EHDD out of California. Local landscape architect Signe Nielsen of MNLA will do the landscape work around the building. The 7000-square-foot, one-story building will include:
The building facade material will be slats of acetylated wood that will allow light to come through but also provide shade; the mechanicals on the roof will be shrouded in channel glass. There will be a planted green roof facing the river and the highway.
The actual working parts of the building will be intended to be scrappy and MacGyver-like — as the current WetLab at Pier 40 is now, but about double the size. The tanks will be filled with Hudson River water pumped into a flow-through water system from the piers for both seasonal and year-round tanks for species. And of course the building is designed to withstand a major flood.
The Hudson River Park Trust will move its River Project and WetLab programs into the building when built; those both serve thousands of school children every year from all over the city. It will also be a place where parkgoers can stop by regularly to check out the exhibits and the creatures.
The design team will take the process through a refined cost estimate but step short of construction drawings until the budget is met. Here’s hoping.
Spending $35 million, and I saw on a different site the real number is $45 million, on a 6000 square foot building is insane!!