A center for climate solutions
In April 2023, following a two-year competitive process led by the Trust for Governors Island and the City of New York, The New York Climate Exchange was selected as the anchor research and educational institution for the Center for Climate Solutions, a bold initiative for developing and implementing solutions to the global climate crisis in New York and around the world.The New York Climate Exchange (“The Exchange”) is a new nonprofit designed to accelerate climate solutions. In partnership with anchor institution Stony Brook University, The Exchange will build a climate campus on Governors Island. SOM, MNLA, Buro Happold, and Langan Engineering are designing this living laboratory for sustainable research that will manifest the mission of The Exchange in its architecture, landscape, and infrastructure.
With an expected opening for fall 2029, The Exchange will convene leaders from a variety of academic institutions, industry partners, and nonprofits to collaborate on climate research and deliver actionable solutions for restoring the health of the planet.
Creating a public-facing campus
The Exchange is developing a state-of-the-art climate campus on Governors Island that will bring climate scientists, educators, entrepreneurs, and changemakers under one roof—sparking the collaborations and breakthrough ideas we need to build a sustainable future.The project will add 4.5 acres of new outdoor public space, create 230,000 square feet of new buildings, and repurpose another 170,000 square feet of the island’s historic architecture. The new buildings will weave sinuous mass timber pavilions, topped with photovoltaic arrays, through the island’s rolling landscape. Visitors reaching the island by ferry will arrive directly to this part of the campus, where the buildings will cascade down from eight to four stories to match the scale of Liggett Hall, a centerpiece of the island’s history. A portion of this former military barracks, a McKim, Mead & White-designed masonry building, will be incorporated into The Exchange.
Together, the old and new buildings will provide research labs, classrooms, exhibits, greenhouses, dormitories, community spaces, and areas designed to foster the exchange of ideas. New York City grew around its harbor, and The Exchange will reclaim this maritime history in a new way. The waterfront will become part of the curriculum as a restored ecosystem, and, with the new buildings, will put science and research on display—enabling New Yorkers and visitors from around the world to learn about the climate solutions being developed here.
Embodying The Exchange’s sustainable mission
The Exchange will accelerate progress toward a sustainable future, and its design is part of that story. The use of mass timber for the new architecture, together with the adaptive reuse of existing buildings, will significantly reduce embodied carbon. The first level of each new building is situated above the floodplain to protect against sea level rise for the next century. The site will become one of the first in the country to achieve True Zero Waste certification, meet 100 percent of its non-potable water demand with rainwater and treated wastewater, and run entirely on electricity generated on-site—even creating surplus energy that will flow back into the power grid. Together, these strategies will help The Exchange reach a milestone in sustainable design: it is the first campus in New York City with multiple buildings and landscape designed to meet the Living Building Challenge.