City of Water explained

City of Water
Distributor:Municipal Art Society
Runtime:33 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

City of Water is a documentary about the future of the New York City waterfront by the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance and the Municipal Art Society.

Production

The film was two years in the making.[1] and explores the aspirations of public officials, environmentalists, community activists, and working water-front advocates for a diverse, vibrant waterfront at a time when the shoreline is changing faster than ever before. The documentary contains interviews with the following people: NYC Deputy Mayor Daniel L. Doctoroff, "green" economic consultant Majora Carter, author Phillip Lopate, US Representative Nydia Velázquez, CUNY Professor William Kornblum, Director of the Mayor's Office of Long-term Planning and Sustainability Rohit Aggarwala, environmentalist Cathy Drew, historian Richard Melnick, founder of the Long Island City Community Boathouse Erik Baard, and others. Velazquez and Carter "present compelling cases for getting communities involved in reclaiming the waterfront, so that luxury condos — or sheer neglect in the case of the Bronx — do not limit their access" while Baard "points out the folly of placing guard rails all along the water’s edge, thus limiting open water access to boaters"[2]

Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance President Roland Lewis has described how the documentary "encapsulates the fulcrum issues that face the waterfront right now. Our generation has been presented with a unique opportunity to change the waterfront. The decisions that are facing us right now will affect our grandchildren."[3]

Release

The film premiered on the Brooklyn waterfront on June 21, 2007[4] and has since been screened at the National Arts Club, Socrates Sculpture Park, Empire-Fulton Ferry State Park and Water Taxi Beach in Queens, where it "played to an enthralled crowd of residents interested in the river."[3] The film was also screened at the Center for Architecture, New York County Lawyers' Association and other venues in 2007, and at the Downtown Alliance and Gotham Center in 2008. The film was broadcast on Channel Thirteen WNET in April and will be screened at the Brooklyn Arts Council International Film Festival in May.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Waterfront visions, seen frame by frame . 2007-09-30 . Amy Zimmer . 2007-06-14 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20071012033441/http://ny.metro.us/metro/local/article/Waterfront_visions_seen_frame_by_frame/8989.html . 2007-10-12 . dead .
  2. Web site: Water, water everywhere . 2007-09-30 . Nicole Davis . 2007-11-02 . Downtown Express . https://web.archive.org/web/20090715224254/http://www.downtownexpress.com/de_234/waterwater.html . 2009-07-15 . dead .
  3. Web site: New Film Details Possibilities For the New York Waterfront . 2007-09-30 . Jeffrey Harmatz . 2007-08-30 . Queens Ledger .
  4. Web site: Daylong Boat Trip Focuses On East River and Its Future . 2007-09-30 . Evan Barton . 2007-06-26 . Brooklyn Eagle.