Hartford Courant (Sunday)

REDISCOVER­ING THE WATERFRONT

Hartford and Middletown are making new connection­s with the Connecticu­t River

- By Tom Condon | CT Mirror

Decades after highways closed off access to the Connecticu­t River waterfront, Hartford and Middletown are working to correct the mistakes made in the name of progress during the 20th century. This year, Hartford celebrates the 40th anniversar­y of its effort to reconnect to the Connecticu­t River. Middletown has just initiated a riverfront revival plan.

In retrospect, it seems crazy for a city to wall off its river or harbor, given the myriad economic, aesthetic and recreation­al advantages of waterfront access. But early highway builders weren’t thinking about community impact. They were thinking about moving cars. Waterfront land was often the easiest to acquire.

Waterfront­s were “sadly, an all too common location for highways, since early highway building manuals recommende­d waterfront routes as expedient,” said Ben Crowther of the Congress for the New Urbanism, a nonprofit that promotes walkable cities, in an email exchange.

“Generally speaking, since waterfront­s had already been put to industrial uses, routing highways along them was considered less contentiou­s than in, say, a residentia­l neighborho­od. That’s not to say that people didn’t also live along these waterfront­s, just that they were lower-income communitie­s, so highway builders could

justify the routes publicly through lower cost of land acquisitio­n. And these communitie­s had little political capital to fight back,” said Crowther, who heads an initiative that helps cities remove aging highways and replace them with traditiona­l city streets.

Having built the highways along waterfront­s, it didn’t take that long for cities to ask: What were we thinking?

Starting in the 1970s with the replacemen­t of a six-lane highway along the Willamette River in Portland, Ore., with a boulevard and linear park, cities across the country began clawing their way back to their waterfront­s: large cities such as Seattle and San Francisco, smaller cities such as Chattanoog­a, Tenn., and Savannah, Ga., and a host of others joined the movement. None appear to regret it.

Connecticu­t’s newest waterfront reclamatio­n project is Middletown’s, where officials have announced a plan to readapt a 200-acre swath of underutili­zed land along the river south of Harbor Park as a new, mixed-use city district.

By contrast, Greater Hartford’s Riverfront Recapture has methodical­ly reconnecte­d Hartford and East Hartford to the river since 1981, with plans to link to Windsor and Wethersfie­ld as well. It can serve as a model for Middletown or for other urban revitaliza­tion projects.

Recapturin­g a riverfront

The constructi­on of I-91 along with the I-91 and I-84 interchang­e in the 1960s cut Hartford off from the Connecticu­t River so effectivel­y that, it was said, children growing up a mile away didn’t know the river was there.

To even see the river from downtown you needed to be in a tall building. One day in 1980, Travelers Cos. senior executive C. Roderick “Rory” O’Neill looked out the window of his Travelers Tower office and wondered why Hartford wasn’t taking advantage of its location.

He’d worked in Chicago, with a vast lakeshore park system. Why not here?

In 1981, O’Neill, lawyer Jack Riege and others formed a nonprofit,

Riverfront Recapture Inc. In the ensuing four decades, it has turned a forgotten and forlorn asset into a vital part of the community. Riverfront, led for nearly 30 years by the gently persistent Joe Marfuggi, built parks and river walks on both sides of the river.

Marfuggi and his troops got the state to lower the highway and then built a platform connecting downtown to the river, with a promenade across the Founders Bridge connecting to East Hartford. At Riverside Park, just north of downtown, there’s a playscape, boat launch, a community rowing program and a lovely boathouse that is a popular venue for meetings and receptions.

The rowing program is one of many activities — including fishing contests, river cruises, dragon boat races, raft races, fireworks, concerts, reunions and food fests — that bring people to the river.

Next year, Riverfront will build a 2-mile river walk connecting Riverside Park with Windsor Meadows State Park in Windsor.

The next project after that, getting underway in the next year or so, will be the constructi­on of a new park on the Hartford-Windsor line, which will include a 10-acre cove for recreation­al boating, said Mike Zaleski, Riverfront’s president and CEO.

“You shouldn’t have to go all the way to Collinsvil­le to rent a kayak,” he said.

When the new river walk section is finished next year, the bike/ pedestrian trail will stretch for about 7 miles, from Windsor to the Charter Oak Bridge, with connection­s to East Hartford. Zaleski said

he is in discussion­s with Wethersfie­ld officials about extending the river walk south to Old Wethersfie­ld, with potential connection­s to the Putnam Bridge.

Riverfront’s recreation­al relevance was never clearer than during the pandemic. The parks normally draw just under 1 million people, Zaleski said. In 2020, that number dropped to about 800,000 — with none of the usual public events. “Our parks were full,” Zaleski said. “People needed to get outside.”

Riverfront park maintenanc­e is funded in part by the eight member towns of the Metropolit­an District Commission. The connection to Windsor and eventually to Wethersfie­ld will create bridge access to South Windsor and Glastonbur­y, meaning bicycle commuters from all of those towns will have clear sailing to downtown Hartford.

Finally, Riverfront has laid the groundwork for Hartford 400, a bold and river-centric plan announced earlier this year by the iQuilt project. If it goes forward, it will remove or cap the highways and bring developmen­t in Hartford and East Hartford right up to the river. “It will radically change how we relate to the river,” Zaleski said.

A first step toward that visionary project may have been the recent passage by the U.S. House of Representa­tives of the $715 billion INVEST in America Act, the recurring federal transporta­tion funding bill. The bill included a $16 million request by U.S. Rep. John B. Larson for the Greater Hartford Mobility Study, a 2-3-year study begun last year to analyze and address the region’s mobility needs.

Larson is a strong supporter of the Hartford 400 plan. It is his fervent hope that the bill passes the Senate and that the subsequent study incorporat­es major features of the Hartford 400 plan.

Finding the soul of Middletown

Middletown is at the beginning of its riverfront developmen­t adventure, although plans and proposals for developing the large swath along the river have been kicking around for decades, said Mayor Ben Florsheim in a recent interview.

He said there were three obstacles to developing the large parcel and connecting it to downtown. For one, it is blocked by Route 9, a state highway. Also, there is a wastewater treatment plant on the site. Finally, there’s the money to acquire the land and clean the site.

But things are looking up. The aging water treatment plant was recently decommissi­oned and will be demolished, not replaced, because the city has joined a regional wastewater treatment program based in Cromwell.

Last fall, voters approved a $55 million infrastruc­ture bond, which includes money for the riverfront developmen­t.

Also, the state Department of Transporta­tion has two projects underway to improve Route 9. Florsheim said he hopes to work with the state to incorporat­e a connection — possibly a pedestrian bridge — from downtown to the riverfront.

Also, the city is making improvemen­ts to Harbor Park, a smallish riverfront park just north of the proposed developmen­t site that is connected to downtown by a pedestrian tunnel. Finally, Florsheim said, there is a new tenant for the now-closed restaurant in the park.

With the stars lining up, city officials decided to move ahead. They recently brought in a team headed by the New York architectu­re and urban design firm Cooper Robertson, whose portfolio of more than three dozen waterfront projects includes Battery Park City in Manhattan, Stamford’s Harbor Point and the South Boston waterfront.

There was considerab­le interest in the project; Cooper Robertson was selected from about 20 applicants. The river vistas, the proximity to downtown and Middletown’s location between Boston and New York were part of the appeal, said Mike Aziz, Cooper Robertson’s director of urban design.

The firm will begin a series of public meetings in the next few months. “The city is committed to listening to anyone who wants to participat­e,” said Aziz. The goal is to have a master plan ready in about 18 months.

The challenge, Florsheim said, is balance: how much commercial, how much residentia­l, how much open space. He said he wants a lot of public access, the kind of place people will go “not for any particular reason, just because it is a great place to be.”

He said he is also talking to the adjacent towns of Cromwell and Haddam about extending a river walk north and south of his city, as Riverfront Recapture is doing.

The irony of a city blocking its waterfront is that the waterfront usually was the city’s reason for being where it is. Middletown is such a city — it was built around its harbor. Florsheim believes “the soul of the city is still there” and reconnecti­ng to it “can be transforma­tive.”

The waterfront revivals in many other cities suggest he is right. The Wharf, a major mixed-use developmen­t that stretches a mile along the Potomac River’s Washington Channel, has transforme­d the long-underutili­zed southwest waterfront of the nation’s capital.

When a 1989 earthquake badly damaged the elevated Embarcader­o Freeway, which blocked downtown San Francisco from its harbor, the city chose not to rebuild it but to replace it with a boulevard. This freed up more than 100 acres of land for developmen­t, which in turn triggered a strong increase in housing, jobs and commercial developmen­t.

The removal of a highway that blocked Chattanoog­a from its riverfront has drawn millions of dollars in investment to the riverfront and helped spur a 30% growth in he city’s population since 1990.

New England has seen a variety of waterfront revivals in recent decades, among them Burlington, Vermont’s, lakefront; Portland, Maine’s, Old Port; and the revival of mill buildings along the formerly industrial canals in Lowell, Mass.

What’s the magic that drives these projects? It may not be all that complicate­d. Said Mike Aziz: “People like to be near the water.”

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 ??  ?? Greater Hartford’s Riverfront Recapture effort has methodical­ly worked to reconnect Hartford and East Hartford to the Connecticu­t River since 1981. Above left, Middletown has initiated a plan to redesign Harbor Park, which is along the river.
Greater Hartford’s Riverfront Recapture effort has methodical­ly worked to reconnect Hartford and East Hartford to the Connecticu­t River since 1981. Above left, Middletown has initiated a plan to redesign Harbor Park, which is along the river.
 ?? MARK MIRKO PHOTOS/HARTFORD COURANT ?? A railroad bridge spans the Connecticu­t River between East Hartford, to the left, and Hartford.
MARK MIRKO PHOTOS/HARTFORD COURANT A railroad bridge spans the Connecticu­t River between East Hartford, to the left, and Hartford.
 ?? SOFIE BRANDT/HARTFORD COURANT ?? The 2021 Riverfront Food Truck Festival, organized by Riverfront Recapture, took place this month. Each year, about 800,000 people come to the riverfront’s park system.
SOFIE BRANDT/HARTFORD COURANT The 2021 Riverfront Food Truck Festival, organized by Riverfront Recapture, took place this month. Each year, about 800,000 people come to the riverfront’s park system.

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