Hudson Phloem | Shoreline Xylem

Item

Title
Hudson Phloem | Shoreline Xylem
Description
This thesis zooms in microscopically to expose the moral distancing between the construction and material metamorphosis of concrete shorelines. As Calvert Vaux’s prevailing Riverside Park in New York City extended the Hudson River Valley southward, this thesis extends Hudson water ecologies inward and upward.
Concrete constantly undergoes processes that consume sulfates and carbon, which leach out into surrounding soils and attached larvae. Pinpointing areas of increased compound leaching, a series of capillary gardens carve into the concrete of Riverside Park to create an emerging network of cracks and abrupt ecotones at the West Side’s doorstep.
The garden network splinters the abiotic to help healthier biotic shoreline communities reemerge from beneath, creating a precedent for future shorelines to consider the microscopic before seeking concrete as an ecological solution. Furthermore, the design dismantles the distinction between park as the pleasurable picturesque, and park as an instrument that enhances emotional adaptability to rising seas.
Creator
Wu, Jenna Mang Hoi
Subject
concrete
environmental sociology
microscopic
New York City
shoreline park
silica leaching
Landscape architecture
Ecology
Design
Contributor
Reed, Christopher
Waldheim, Charles
Bellalta, Maria
Malterre-Barthes, Charlotte
Masoud, Fadi
Sutton, Parker
Young, Jason
Date
2022-05-19T03:57:32Z
2022
2022-05-18
2022-05
2022-05-19T03:57:32Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Wu, Jenna Mang Hoi. 2022. Hudson Phloem | Shoreline Xylem. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
29211771
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37371648
Language
en