Explore the BASF project for Red Hook, Brooklyn, NY

Co-creating solutions for urban neighborhoods in coastal cities

Rekindled Hopes for Red Hook

The Red Hook Innovation District is a $400 million project that would renovate 12 acres in the heart of Red Hook into multi-use structures that would preserve the neighborhood's traditional red-brick industrial look while adding public plazas and park space.
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Establish a Network of Green Corridors ›

Green corridors are an opportunity to transform and reinvigorate neighborhoods like Red Hook by enhancing circulation, absorbing or channeling runoff from rainstorms, and enabling the growth of vegetation.
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Create a Coastal Park ›

The goal of the Red Hook Coastal Park would be to provide a softer edge that offers views and recreation as well as protection.
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Inspire With a Model Block ›

The design and implementation of a model block could encapsulate shared goals for living in a sustainable, equitable, and resilient community and serve as a template for development in Red Hook and beyond.
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The Purpose

BASF organized Creator Space™ New York City in 2015, with a focus on finding solutions that would improve the quality of life in the New York neighborhood of Red Hook as a case study relevant to coastal cities globally. The event pulled together a wide variety of stakeholders with extraordinary passions for this cause—Red Hook residents, local businesses, artists, scientists, engineers, and more—and engaged them in a multi-day co-creative exercise. It enabled collaborations with experts on urban living and city planning. The goal of those rich discussions was not merely to brainstorm but to develop a plan for implementing the best of the ideas.
What emerged from these deliberations was an understanding that the quality of urban life ultimately depends on successful engagement with three broad challenges:

HABITAT

CITIZENSHIP

RESILIENCE

Habitat

Development of buildings, spaces, and infrastructures that support a desirable way of life.

Three types of environments come together to shape what we call the urban habitat: natural, built, and social environments.
  • THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT:
    includes climate, temperature, sunlight, winds, air quality, topography, and flood zones
  • THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT:
    includes land use, historical building development, building stock, public spaces, civic infrastructure, open space, and mobility
  • THE SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT:
    includes population, racial distribution, household income, occupation, property value, and housing density
The future urban habitat is ideally a space where the natural and built environments come together to create a sense of place and community, while optimizing resources, ultimately resulting in low impact.

CITIZENSHIP

RESILIENCE

HABITAT

CITIZENSHIP

RESILIENCE

Citizenship

Fostering spirits of community involvement, activism, and capability that go beyond simple consumerism.

In contemporary developed societies, a consumer can act according to his or her private tastes without any responsibility for public justification. Citizens, on the other hand, have an obligation to search for a higher, common good. As citizens, individuals must accept limits to their autonomy, and take into account the impact of their own preferences and choices on others. They have rights and responsibilities to the body politic. In the public sphere of democratic self-governance, decision-making requires participation, discussion, and compromise. A citizen has an obligation to articulate his or her individual position and to reconcile it with the general one.

HABITAT

RESILIENCE

HABITAT

CITIZENSHIP

RESILIENCE

Resilience

The capacity to survive and efficiently recover from disruptive, potentially catastrophic events.

Resilience is a measure of a system’s capacity to absorb shocks and perturbations that might otherwise result in its breakdown. An original objective of the Internet, for example, was to create a network that would be resilient to disruption in case of attack because it was secure by design. Many of the basic infrastructural systems of developed societies are vulnerable to disruption. They may need to be redesigned to raise their local, self-reliant capacities to grow food, provide water and sanitation, generate energy, transport, repair, build, and finance. The objectives of resilient rebuilding are to integrate the dynamics of construction into the design of more adaptable and responsive structures, to transform a relatively disinvested urban neighborhood into a multicultural landscape that provides cultural, ecological, and production functions. The goal of resilience is not simply survival, but growth in the face of disruption.

HABITAT

CITIZENSHIP

Correct!

The top four cities in the world at risk for the greatest overall cost of flood damage are:

  1. Guangzhou, China
  2. Miami, United States
  3. New York, United States
  4. New Orleans, United States

The top four cities alone account for 43% of the forecast total global losses.

View Source

Incorrect. Miami is the top city in the United States.

The top four cities in the world at risk for the greatest overall cost of flood damage are:

  1. Guangzhou, China
  2. Miami, United States
  3. New York, United States
  4. New Orleans, United States

The top four cities alone account for 43% of the forecast total global losses.

View Source

Red Hook and BASF Across the Centuries

1600

1700

1800

1900

2000

>late

1600s

BROOKLYN ›

By 1684 all Native Americans were “sold” to European settlers.

1636 -

1776

RED HOOK ›

Red Hook is settled by Dutch immigrants, who created tidal mill ponds in low lying areas.

1700

1800

1900

2000

1600

1600

1700

1800

1900

2000

1776 -

1783

BROOKLYN ›

British occupation of NY metro area.

1800

1900

2000

1600

1700

1600

1700

1800

1900

2000

1840s

RED HOOK ›

Entrepreneurs build ports along the coast.

1865

BASF ›

The founding of BASF.

1873

BASF ›

BASF opens first sales office in North America.

1900

2000

1600

1700

1800

1600

1700

1800

1900

2000

1900 -

1950s

BROOKLYN ›

Mass urbanization of the East River Shore.

1913

BASF ›

First use of Haber-Bosch process on industrial scale to produce synthetic ammonia.

1920s

RED HOOK ›

Red Hook is the busiest freight port in the world.

1930s

RED HOOK ›

During the Great Depression, shantytowns, known as “Hoovervilles,” are set up in the Red Hook neighborhood due to the large number of unemployed.

1936 -

1964

BROOKLYN ›

Brooklyn Queens Expressway is planned and completed at a cost of $137 million.

1934 -

1968

BROOKLYN ›

Robert Moses completes 13 expressways in New York City and Brooklyn.

2000

1600

1700

1800

1900

1600

1700

1800

1900

2000

2012

BASF ›

BASF opens new LEED double platinum HQ in Florham Park, NJ.

DID YOU KNOW?

When the Federal Emergency Management Agency proposed new, expanded 100-year flood zones in 2014, the number of New York City buildings falling within them jumped from about 24,000 (by a 2010 estimate) to more than 84,000. The assessed value of properties in the zones increased from $58.6 billion to $129.1 billion.
Most predictions say the warming of the planet will continue and will probably accelerate. Oceans will likely continue to rise as well, but predicting the amount is an inexact science. A recent study says we can expect the oceans to rise between 2.5 and 6.5 feet (0.8 and 2 meters) by 2100, enough to swamp many of the cities along the U.S. east coast. More dire estimates, including a complete meltdown of the Greenland ice sheet, push sea level rise to 23 feet (7meters), enough to submerge London.
Six of the top 10 most expensive natural disasters in our nation were caused by coastal storms. In 2015, there were 10 weather and climate disaster events with losses exceeding $1 billion each across the United States. 
Although the coastal areas of the United States comprise only one-fifth of the land area of the contiguous 48 states, they account for more than half of the nation’s population and housing supply. In 1990, over 133 million Americans lived in the 673 counties along the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the Gulf of Mexico and the Great Lakes. Since 1960, population in these areas increased by 41 percent.

Ideas for Reshaping Red Hook

These ideas represent an approach to solving problems of resiliency and sustainability that coastal cities around the world can adapt to their own needs.

Establish a Network of Green Corridors ›

Green corridors are an opportunity to transform and reinvigorate neighborhoods like Red Hook by enhancing circulation, absorbing or channeling runoff from rainstorms, and enabling the growth of vegetation.
Read More

Create a Coastal Park ›

The goal of the Red Hook Coastal Park would be to provide a softer edge that offers views and recreation as well as protection.
Read More

Inspire With a Model Block ›

The design and implementation of a model block could encapsulate shared goals for living in a sustainable, equitable, and resilient community and serve as a template for development in Red Hook and beyond.
Read More

SPREAD THE WORD

Share this project to make others aware of the proposed solutions for coastal cities like Red Hook.

#CreatorSpaceNYC