This text was produced for ProPublica’s Native Reporting Community in partnership with the New York Amsterdam Information. Join Dispatches to get their tales in your inbox each week.
After a decade of planning, New York Metropolis broke floor in September on a $218 million plan to forestall flooding within the portside Brooklyn neighborhood of Purple Hook, regardless that specialists say it would present insufficient safety from storms. The venture additionally will present much less safety than different metropolis flood prevention initiatives, together with a brand new $3.5 billion upscale improvement on the sting of the neighborhood.
Greater than a decade in the past, Superstorm Sandy killed 44 individuals and triggered $19 billion in injury throughout New York Metropolis, swamping houses and destroying companies in Purple Hook. Town responded by pumping billions of {dollars} into neighborhood flood safety initiatives. Many of the cash went to guard decrease Manhattan from highly effective 100-year storms — outlined as storms which have a 1-in-4 probability of occurring in some unspecified time in the future through the typical 30-year dwelling mortgage.
In Purple Hook, although, the place roughly two-thirds of residents are Black and Hispanic and earn beneath town’s median earnings, town is as an alternative constructing to guard in opposition to a 10-year storm. The deliberate building is anticipated to lift streets and sidewalks, and erect obstacles and floodwalls to an elevation of as much as 10 toes above sea degree.
“It’s at finest momentary. At worst, it offers a false sense of safety,” mentioned John Shapiro, a Pratt Institute professor whose analysis focuses on the affect of local weather change on city planning.
Shapiro and different specialists say that because the local weather warms, floods and storms are putting extra continuously and with higher depth. This leaves coastal communities with an advanced selection: Retreat from the coast, or construct safety in opposition to the subsequent violent storm.
Purple Hook sits on a peninsula jutting into New York Harbor, which makes it weak to flooding. The neighborhood was a marsh earlier than town started filling it in by the 1870s. In 1939, town added the primary part of the Purple Hook Homes for dock staff. The 32 buildings of the Purple Hook Homes make up one of many metropolis’s largest public housing developments and dominate the neighborhood’s skyline.

The neighborhood additionally has Brooklyn’s final working port, together with an Amazon warehouse and an Ikea retailer. Artists’ studios at the moment are tucked into previous port buildings and classy shops line the cobblestone streets. Lately, the world has gentrified.
Quincy Phillips was dwelling in a third-floor residence within the Purple Hook Homes when Sandy hit. He watched because the water swamped the primary ground of the constructing.
“It didn’t attain previous the second ground, thank God,” he mentioned. “We needed to roll our pants as much as even stroll previous to get exterior.”

The storm despatched a 6-foot wave of water by means of the neighborhood, destroying houses, ripping steel doorways from warehouses, dropping boats onto the streets, and carrying vehicles out into the harbor. Phillips’s household, like a number of thousand others in Purple Hook, lived for 2 weeks with out energy and needed to depend on federal help till his fridge got here again on.
The 12 months after Sandy worn out the houses of Phillips and his neighbors in Purple Hook, the administration of then-Mayor Mike Bloomberg decided that Purple Hook was at excessive danger of future flooding. A 2013 metropolis report really helpful a flood safety system for the neighborhood, utilizing a mix of infrastructure resembling floodwalls and floodgates.
Town mentioned the venture, now often called the Purple Hook Coastal Resiliency Mission, would value $200 million, however on the time, was capable of safe solely a $50 million grant from the Federal Emergency Administration Company (FEMA). The administration of subsequent Mayor Invoice de Blasio tapped town’s capital funds for one more $50 million. Because of this, town instructed consultants to solely think about initiatives that it might afford on the smaller funds, in accordance with a feasibility examine. This might be a much less formidable 10-year storm plan.

No accounting for sea-level rise
To foretell how continuously storms will happen sooner or later and the way excessive floodwaters are more likely to attain, scientists and engineers use historic tidal knowledge. The fashions venture that in Purple Hook, a 100-year storm at present sea degree would produce surging waves that will attain an elevation of not less than 11 toes — a foot increased than the present plan would defend in opposition to.
That doesn’t account for sea-level rise. Local weather specialists serving on a metropolis local weather change panel have projected that by mid-century, sea ranges will rise a number of toes within the worst case situation. Counting that further water top, town’s personal examine discovered that Purple Hook would want to erect obstacles between 15 and 18 toes. Neighborhood storm safety initiatives in different elements of town are being constructed to an elevation of not less than 16 toes.
Elevation of Metropolis Flood Safety Initiatives
East Aspect Coastal Resiliency: 16.5 toes above sea degree
Brooklyn Bridge-Montgomery Coastal Resilience: 16.5 toes (plus 1.5 toes with deployable obstacles)
South Battery Park Metropolis Resiliency: As much as 19.8 toes
North/West Battery Park Resiliency: As much as 20 toes
Purple Hook Coastal Resiliency: 10 toes
The federal flood insurance coverage program, which supplies backed flood insurance coverage to owners who stay in high-risk flood zones, encourages communities to undertake a 100-year flood plan, mentioned Philip Orton, an engineering professor on the Stevens Institute of Know-how who researches flood safety. Such a plan, he mentioned, lowers the price of flood insurance coverage for residents. “It’s uncommon that communities is not going to do it,” he mentioned. All different coastal storm safety initiatives in New York Metropolis meet a 100-year customary.
Tips from the Biden and Obama administrations inspired federally funded initiatives to construct to an elevation of not less than 2 toes over 100-year storm projections. The Trump administration revoked these throughout every of his phrases.

Final 12 months, town and FEMA elevated funding for the Purple Hook venture by about $100 million. In accordance with town’s Division of Design and Building (the company answerable for the venture), the added funds lined a decade of inflation and paid for upgrades to park and inexperienced areas within the space.
The funds additionally elevated the elevation of the venture from the unique top of 8 toes to 10, taking into consideration higher adjustments to sea ranges, however didn’t convey it as much as the degrees which are being pursued in different elements of town.
The Division of Design and Building mentioned an even bigger venture would disrupt ports, cruises, and different waterfront companies whereas taking away park area. When requested why Purple Hook was receiving a decrease degree of safety than different communities, a division spokesperson mentioned its low-lying topography and privately owned waterfront made getting access to construct and preserve a safety system tough. The present venture is enough, the spokesperson added, as a result of Sandy is the one storm to strike town since 1927 that will have overtopped the flood barrier.
Michael Oppenheimer, a professor at Princeton College who served on town’s local weather change panel that got here up with the sea-level rise projections, mentioned town is misusing the historic report to justify its failure to guard in opposition to future storms.
“That’s a fairly poor excuse,” he mentioned, including that storms and floods like these skilled in Sandy will happen extra continuously as sea ranges rise.

Bernice Rosenzweig, a professor at Sarah Lawrence Faculty who research city flooding and serves on the New York Metropolis Panel on Local weather Change, mentioned the venture is insufficient to guard Purple Hook from even as we speak’s massive storms.
“The partitions aren’t designed for main floods, not even our modern main floods — neglect about main floods that may occur on the finish of the twenty first century,” she mentioned.
Unequal safety
Alexa Avilés, the Metropolis Council member representing Purple Hook, mentioned infrastructure planning is especially irritating there. Together with group activists and residents, she argues that the system town and the federal authorities use to determine how a lot cash to spend on flood protections is biased in opposition to poor communities.
“It by no means looks like we’re prioritized, and we’re continuously combating with town once more for each a fundamental degree of service after which to get these main initiatives carried out and coordinated correctly,” she mentioned.
To win federal grants, candidates conduct a cost-benefit evaluation that has to indicate flood initiatives save more cash within the occasion of a storm than they value to construct, mentioned Kristin Smith, an economics researcher at Headwaters Economics, a nonprofit that research flood danger.
That may be tough for poor communities, she mentioned.
“The benefit-cost evaluation could be a barrier to qualifying for federal funding when it’s a lower-income neighborhood and the price of the venture is so excessive that you simply simply don’t have the advantages to justify it,” she mentioned.
Purple Hook residents, advocates, and leaders say the flood barrier system proposed for the $3.5 billion housing improvement within the neighborhood reveals how rich residents within the metropolis obtain higher safety. The event, known as the Brooklyn Marine Terminal, would construct 6,000 largely market-rate models on the northwest facet of Purple Hook, in accordance with planning paperwork. A metropolis process pressure authorized the event in September, together with a plan to refurbish and improve the port. It guarantees a flood barrier system that will defend from 100-year storms.
The Financial Improvement Corp., a city-run nonprofit group, owns the land and plans to pay for the flood safety and different infrastructure with funding from federal grants, town’s capital funds, and the state, plus some from builders.
The Brooklyn Marine Terminal plan nonetheless must cross an environmental evaluation and the state’s approval course of, however will bypass town’s extra in depth course of. In accordance with the planning paperwork, it might take till 2038 to complete the venture.
The plan would defend the brand new improvement website with a 21-foot coastal floodwall, which might begin on the northern finish of Purple Hook and prolong about 1 mile north.
City planners who performed an evaluation of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal for the Metropolis Membership of New York Waterfront Committee, an advocacy group selling flood safety for waterfronts, say it’s a mistake to guard the brand new improvement whereas the south coast of Purple Hook receives a decrease degree of safety. That may place the brand new improvement in danger, as a result of a storm surge might overtop these obstacles and flood the world from the landward facet of the event.
The group mentioned the plan serves gentrification and developer pursuits fairly than the bigger Purple Hook group. “Most Purple Hook residents stay in public housing and lack the earnings needed for housing mobility in NYC,” the evaluation mentioned. In distinction, a lot of the residents within the new improvement are anticipated to be very prosperous, primarily based on projected rents, it mentioned.
A spokesperson for the Financial Improvement Corp. mentioned town would examine the way to combine the 2 initiatives, however that there aren’t any plans to additional defend the peninsula.



















