its called the worlds largest
landfill, and it may well be. It certainly is big, serving
the nations largest city for over fifty years, until
shutting down this year. Fresh Kills is many things. It
is a new kind of landscape, one that is alive with movement
-volatile off-gassing, leachate leakage, differential settlement.
An undulating, dripping, vented bio-reactor of artificial
organic decay, covered by a thin lid of soil.
It is a physical metaphor
for the individual and collective desire to see ones
waste go away, and how there is no away after
all (just ask the residents of Staten Island, or those of
Sierra Blanca, Texas, the most distant point to receive
New Yorks sewage sludge, for that matter). Fresh Kills
looms above New Jersey as the tallest of the many landfill
hills that line the meadowlands like drumlins from a new
geomorphological force - man.
It is a veritable vault
of consumer culture information, with stratigraphic dating
to the day, provided by the newspapers that dont decay
as quickly as people thought (according to the research
of garbologists like Bill Rathje, of the ground breaking
contemporary archeological team known as the Garbage Project).
And, as is now well known
to America, Fresh Kills has acquired a new layer of meaning.
The remains from the World Trade Center are now being interred
there.
But, life goes on, and
so must Fresh Kills redevelopment. An international
design competition for redevelopment proposals for the closed
landfill site is down to six finalists, all multidisciplinary
teams composed of landscape architects, artists, and engineers
(among them a team that includes the CLUI).
Yes, Fresh Kills Dump is
many things, and of all things, it is a vital resource,
a prominent reminder of the other side of life.
The six proposals for the
Fresh Kills landfill redevelopment will be on display at
the Staten Island Institute of Arts and Sciences for much
of December (located at 75 Stuyvesant Place, Staten Island.
Call 718-727-1135 for more information). A public presentation
by the various teams will be held at the nearby Richmond
County Clerks office, on December 13th (for more information
call Doug Brooks at 718-556-7240).