Hudson River Park’s Gansevoort Peninsula transforms a former sanitation site into Manhattan’s first public beach and features the first salt marsh on the Manhattan side of the Hudson River, creating a resilient shoreline that invites New Yorkers to engage with the Hudson River.
Shaped by community input, the park thoughtfully balances active and passive spaces for relaxation and recreation, while drawing people to its varied edges. Key features include a multi-use sports field, urban beach, salt marsh, boardwalks, topographic lawn, picnic area, concession stand, restrooms, dog park, gardens, and outdoor gym, all while maximizing waterfront access and views.
A defining characteristic of the project is how the design embraces each side of the peninsula and offers new ways to engage with the river, elongating the transition from land to water and contributing to a healthier and more resilient shoreline.
The southern edge is home to Manhattan’s first public beach, with a rocky seating ledge, tidal pools, and a new access point for small boaters. Other amenities include shade trees, beach furniture, and a mist feature for cooling. David Hammons’ Day’s End sculpture, frames the beach, echoing New York’s industrial past and Gordon Matta-Clark’s 1975 artwork that cut openings into the Pier 52 shed that once occupied the site. River boulders, concrete blocks, and rip rap protect the beach from changing tides and rough waters. The upland beach transitions to a series of dunes with a boardwalk and Pine Grove, inspired by New York’s Barrier Islands showcasing native species like Pitch Pine, Spicebush, Little Bluestem, Cardinal Flower, and New England Aster to increase biodiversity, add seasonal interest, and withstand wind and salt spray.
The northern edge features a salt marsh, the first of its kind on the Manhattan side of the Hudson River. The salt marsh, along with submerged aquatic habitats that include reef balls and gabions seeded with 20 million juvenile oysters, provides valuable habitat, improves resiliency and serves as an educational touchpoint to learn about the environmental benefits of intertidal ecosystems. The salt marsh has also become a popular destination for birds, and local naturalists have identified at least one bird species here that has never been seen before in the Park—the marsh wren. A series of balconies and get-downs allow visitors and student groups to get closer to the water and support the Park’s estuary education programs. Additionally, the salt marsh has notably served as a precedent for future resilience projects throughout New York City by pioneering new permitting pathways.
The 13th Avenue Promenade on the western edge celebrates the one-block stretch that remains of 13th Avenue, a historical feature unique to this site with lounge seating and a picnic grove.
A popular multi-use “U13” ballfield, highly desired by the community, is located in the center of the Peninsula, attracting various age groups and people from all over the city. The field is complemented by bleacher seating on its edges for different sports seasons and an elegant gateway building with public restrooms, a concession stand, and park maintenance facilities.
Gansevoort Peninsula’s design gives it a new purpose, transforming a former inaccessible sanitation operations site into Hudson River Park’s largest green space, reflecting the neighborhood and its needs, celebrating its history, and imagining a new future for the river and estuary.