Land­scap­ing Sheep Return for Fifth Year on Gov­er­nors Island

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Not just amazing work ethic and impeccable food taste – but photogenic too? Photo by Julienne Schaer.

Post by Amy Wang, Com­mu­ni­ca­tion & Pub­lic Affairs Intern at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. 

If you vis­it Ham­mock Grove this sum­mer on Gov­er­nors Island, you might stum­ble upon a flock of sheep munch­ing away on weeds and shrubs. The icon­ic crew — Evening, Chad, Phillip Aries, Bowie, and Jupiter — first arrived in 2021, board­ing the fer­ry with sheep insur­ance and a big appetite. But 2025 will be their fifth and final sum­mer on the Island.

Loy­al Gov­er­nors Island fol­low­ers have been heart­bro­ken over the news. The shear audac­i­ty!” How could we fire them?” But the truth is: the sheep have done their job too well, and they’re near­ing the end of their intern­ship — or internsheep, if you will.

The sheep hail from Friends of Tivoli Lake Pre­serve and Farm in Albany and were brought in to tar­get inva­sive plants like phrag­mites, bindweed, and mug­wort — aggres­sive species that com­pete with native plants for space, nutri­ents, and mois­ture. By repeat­ed­ly graz­ing areas con­tain­ing these plants, the sheep weak­en the inva­sives’ rhi­zome sys­tems and pre­vent the seeds from spreading.

But sheep aren’t the only ani­mals that parks and open space can enlist for hor­ti­cul­tur­al help. Goats were briefly con­sid­ered for the job, but sheep ulti­mate­ly won out due to their more refined culi­nary palate. While goats will eat vir­tu­al­ly any plant life they can get their hooves on — native or not — sheep pre­fer soft inva­sives like mug­wort and phrag­mites. Besides, the sheep seem to take their role seri­ous­ly: Baaad mug­wort. Baaad bindweed. Baaad phrag­mite. Chomp. All gone. 

Each sheep has their own sto­ry — and per­son­al­i­ty. Evening is the con­fi­dent leader of the group, with her son Chad at her side. Bowie and Jupiter are fra­ter­nal twins: Bowie is lit­er­al­ly the black sheep” of the flock, while Jupiter is known for her lov­able ditzi­ness. And they always look out for one anoth­er. Just recent­ly, when Bowie slight­ly injured his hoof, the oth­er four stood by pro­tec­tive­ly, gaz­ing at him with qui­et con­cern, as the vet­eri­nar­i­an checked up on him. 

The sheep have also grown close to the hor­ti­cul­ture team, espe­cial­ly the gar­den­er Melis­sa Per­rin, their human best friend and de fac­to shep­herd. Per­rin knows each sheep by their dis­tinct facial mark­ings and tail lengths, and she’s learned exact­ly what they want after a long day’s work: An arm­ful of hay for all five of them,” she laughs — plus a treat of molasses-cov­ered pellets.

As Gov­er­nors Island cel­e­brates its 20th year open to the pub­lic, the sheep are also cel­e­brat­ing their own mile­stone: grad­u­a­tion. They’ve become beloved ambas­sadors of the Island’s inno­v­a­tive eco­log­i­cal hor­ti­cul­ture prac­tices. In just five sum­mers, they’ve earned a loy­al fan base — and even have their own merch! Stop by the Wel­come Cen­ter at Sois­sons Land­ing Fri­day to Sun­day to pick up your very own sheep plushie.

The shear love for the flock is clear. Vis­i­tors ask about their future: Where will they be going???” Will they be retir­ing to a sanc­tu­ary after this?” They deserve to live peace­ful­ly” they say. After their fifth and like­ly final sea­son, the sheep will return home to the Friends of Tivoli Lake Pre­serve and Farm in Albany, where they’ll con­tin­ue to live out their lives in peace, munch­ing away on upstate inva­sive species. 

Hap­py grad­u­a­tion to the sheep of Gov­er­nors Island! Your baaaril­liant lega­cy lives on in every cleared path, thriv­ing tree, and grate­ful visitor.

Scal­able and Sus­tain­able Solu­tions of the Future: Cli­mate Solu­tions Show­case Recap

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Annie Lee, Director of Business Development, presenting Arbon and its humidity-swing technology. Photo by Sean Jamar.

Guest post by Pao Delos Reyes, Grad­u­ate Intern, Cli­mate Pro­grams at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. All pho­tos by Sean Jamar.

On Thurs­day, June 12, 2025, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island held the sec­ond annu­al Cli­mate Solu­tions Show­case, a spe­cial pre­view day of the new cohort of com­pa­nies pilot­ing impact­ful cli­mate solu­tions on Gov­er­nors Island this sum­mer as part of the Trust’s Cli­mate Pilot­ing Pro­gram. With the goal of accel­er­ating urban cli­mate solu­tions, the Cli­mate Pilot­ing Pro­gram sup­ports the research, devel­op­ment, and demon­stra­tion of equi­table cli­mate solu­tions that can be scaled and applied globally.

In this piv­otal moment for our city and our world, we need ambi­tious solu­tions,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Gov­er­nors Island sits at the heart of New York Har­bor and is home to a thriv­ing ecosys­tem of inno­va­tors who are lead­ing the charge toward a green­er future on every aspect of our built envi­ron­ment — from build­ings and ener­gy to mobil­i­ty, logis­tics, waste man­age­ment, water sys­tems, urban agri­cul­ture, and adap­tive infra­struc­ture. We are proud to sup­port these com­pa­nies and encour­age vis­i­tors and all New York­ers to vis­it them on the Island this summer.” 

Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Pitch Hour

The show­case start­ed with a Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Pitch Hour mod­er­at­ed by Alex Brady, Chief Real Estate Offi­cer at the Trust, where nine com­pa­nies pre­sent­ed their solu­tions fol­lowed by live feed­back from a pan­el of experts. These experts includ­ed Cas­sia Attard, Ven­tures Ana­lyst at Closed Loop Part­ners, Eric Davis, Sec­tion Man­ag­er, Research & Devel­op­ment at Con Edi­son, Ker­ry Con­sta­bile, Direc­tor, Decar­boniza­tion Strat­e­gy at Ama­zon, and Shaina Horowitz, Direc­tor of Pro­gram Inno­va­tion and Accel­er­a­tion at the New York Cli­mate Exchange.

Car­bon­CLAIR start­ed off the pitch­es high­light­ing their portable air fil­tra­tion sys­tem that cap­tures both par­tic­u­late mat­ter (PM2.5) and car­bon emis­sions using renew­able ener­gy sources. The com­pa­ny is ded­i­cat­ed to improv­ing urban air qual­i­ty by cap­tur­ing pol­lu­tants and CO2 in out­door envi­ron­ments, while pro­duc­ing a byprod­uct with com­mon indus­tri­al appli­ca­tions. On Gov­er­nors Island, Car­bon­CLAIR will be pilot­ing their off-grid device at a con­struc­tion site. 

The Cli­mate Solu­tions Show­case was a great moment for Car­bon­CLAIR to share our vision and con­nect with lead­ers who are equal­ly pas­sion­ate about clean con­struc­tion and cli­mate inno­va­tion,” remarked Co-founder Fares Al-Lahabi. Hear­ing from the pan­el and audi­ence gave us valu­able per­spec­tive on how our tech­nol­o­gy fits into broad­er cli­mate adap­ta­tion strate­gies, and it opened up con­ver­sa­tions we’re excit­ed to keep build­ing on.”

Mira Intel show­cased their infra­struc­ture resilience solu­tion. Pre­sent­ing at the event was a mile­stone for Mira Intel,” beamed Co-founder and CEO Danielle Nichol­son. The show­case was our first oppor­tu­ni­ty to pub­licly show what we have been work­ing on qui­et­ly for the past year. Gov­er­nors Island was the per­fect location.”

With drone-based struc­tur­al assess­ments and pro­pri­etary analy­sis soft­ware, Mira Intel can pro­vide ear­ly dam­age detec­tion and increased asset lifes­pan, redefin­ing the way we mon­i­tor and main­tain crit­i­cal infra­struc­ture. Insights from guests com­ing from regions out­side of the North­east rein­forced our con­fi­dence that our plat­form can be trans­for­ma­tive in a diverse range of regions, each with unique infra­struc­ture vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties and needs,” Nichol­son added.

Up next was Birdsview, a Nor­we­­gian-based com­pa­ny pilot­ing their ground-pen­e­­trat­ing radar (GPR) struc­tur­al assess­ment tech­nol­o­gy. A rapid and user-friend­ly con­crete inspec­tion tech­nol­o­gy, Birdsview’s solu­tion pro­vides pre­cise and action­able rein­force­ment insights to reduce costs and short­en project time­lines. Co-founder and CEO Olav Sko­gen shared that the com­pa­ny was born out of the urgent need to pre­serve, adapt, and opti­mize the aging built envi­ron­ment. With their pilot on Gov­er­nors Island, the com­pa­ny is look­ing for­ward to scal­ing beyond Scandinavia.

The event was a great oppor­tu­ni­ty to con­nect with the oth­er star­tups and meet pas­sion­ate peo­ple who share a com­mit­ment for this work, affirmed Sko­gen. Learn­ing more about the dif­fer­ent star­tups, the chal­lenges and oppor­tu­ni­ties ahead of us was inspiring.”

Fourth to pitch was CO Adap­tive, a design-build firm based in the Brook­lyn Navy Yard that spe­cial­izes in high per­for­mance retro­fits of exist­ing build­ings. With a focus on mate­r­i­al repair and cir­cu­lar­i­ty that is root­ed in reduc­ing embod­ied car­bon, CO Adap­tive is devel­op­ing Dis­as­sem­ble, a pre­fab­ri­cat­ed mod­u­lar wall sys­tem made from sal­vaged wood that can be used to retro­fit spaces to pas­sive house stan­dards more quick­ly, eco­nom­i­cal­ly, and sus­tain­ably. Their pilot on Gov­er­nors Island rep­re­sents their first off­site tem­po­rary instal­la­tion in New York, which will help them work towards their goal to com­mis­sion their first per­ma­nent instal­la­tion in a pas­sive house retrofit. 

We were hon­ored to be includ­ed in this group of cli­mate inno­va­tion lead­ers, and we left the event inspired by the impor­tant work hap­pen­ing all around our city and beyond,” remarked Andrew Brown, Archi­tec­ture Direc­tor. The atten­dees rep­re­sent­ed a cross sec­tion of the many busi­ness­es, agen­cies, orga­ni­za­tions and indi­vid­u­als who are com­mit­ted to address­ing cli­mate change today. The dis­cus­sions with pan­elists and peers helped our team bet­ter define our tar­get mar­ket, artic­u­late our scal­ing strate­gies, and gauge mar­ket inter­est. We are grate­ful to The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island for bring­ing this com­mu­ni­ty together.”

Cast Car­bon fol­lowed CO Adap­tive. Inte­grat­ed with region­al farm and forestry residues, Cast Car­bon is a biochar-enriched, archi­tec­tur­al wall tile that is not only nature-pos­i­tive and com­postable, but also beau­ti­ful to look at. The prod­uct was devel­oped by Phy­to­stone, a woman-owned stu­dio that pro­duces advanced nat­ur­al build­ing materials. 

Co-founder Emi­ly Majew­s­ki intro­duced the com­pa­ny and its vision to regen­er­ate nature, improve soils, and beau­ti­fy the lives of occu­pants, and with Cast Car­bon, they aim to help reduce the effect of ren­o­vat­ing build­ing inte­ri­ors. These ren­o­va­tions hap­pen twen­ty to forty times over the lifes­pan of a build­ing, caus­ing 350% more car­bon emis­sions than that of the building’s exte­ri­or, and adding more waste to our landfills.

It was great to meet a real cross sec­tion of NYC stake­hold­ers from financ­ing inno­va­tion to pol­i­cy and ear­ly customers…all in the same place!” Majew­s­ki said about the show­case. See­ing such a com­pre­hen­sive array of solu­tions from inte­ri­ors to the water­front to data col­lec­tion behind nat­ur­al cap­i­tal and infra­struc­ture health real­ly shows that it’s going to take a vil­lage for the inno­va­tion ecosys­tem to impact this great city, and we loved see­ing that in action.”

Sixth in the pitch line up was Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Man­u­fac­tur­ing, pre­sent­ed by direc­tor and co-founder Bar­ent Roth. Aim­ing to tran­si­tion cities and res­i­dents from a lin­ear econ­o­my to a cir­cu­lar one, Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Man­u­fac­tur­ing uses scal­able, portable, solar-pow­ered micro­fac­to­ries to trans­form sin­gle-use plas­tic into durable well-designed products.

With their Micro­Fac­to­ry on Gov­er­nors Island, the com­pa­ny uses plas­tic waste from New York City, solar pow­er, and local labor to man­u­fac­ture prod­ucts for the Island and beyond, fur­ther reduc­ing emis­sions and waste by dis­trib­ut­ing these prod­ucts local­ly. At the show­case, Roth pre­sent­ed life-size pro­to­types of the Cir­cu­lar Chair, which will be pilot­ed on Gov­er­nors Island lat­er this year. The chair has two dif­fer­ent seat­ing heights or can be used as a table when flipped on its side. 

Next in the line­up was Plan­taer. Pre­sent­ed by Founder & CEO Manuel Ben­itez Ruiz, Plan­taer has cre­at­ed a build­ing mate­ri­al that sup­ports veg­e­ta­tive growth and is devel­op­ing non­struc­tur­al prod­ucts, includ­ing pavers, tiles, pan­els, and coat­ings, that can be used for com­mer­cial and res­i­den­tial roofs, build­ing facades, and infra­struc­ture. This bio­com­pat­i­ble mate­r­i­al not only low­ers embod­ied car­bon and increas­es dura­bil­i­ty, but also improves ener­gy effi­cien­cy, air qual­i­ty, heat mit­i­ga­tion, and stormwa­ter management.

Eighth to pitch was Arbon, a Direct Air Cap­ture (DAC) com­pa­ny that will pilot their humid­i­ty-swing tech­nol­o­gy on the Island. Pre­sent­ed by Annie Lee, Direc­tor of Busi­ness Devel­op­ment, Arbon uses an ener­­gy-effi­­cient, durable, and afford­able device that cap­tures and stores CO2 from ambi­ent air, dras­ti­cal­ly low­er­ing the costs and car­bon foot­print. With cap­ture sources rang­ing from ambi­ent air to mines, pow­er plants, and oil refiner­ies, Lee shared that ear­ly tests of their tech­nol­o­gy show promis­ing results. At scale, their device is pro­ject­ed to reach car­bon cap­ture price points as low as $100 per ton CO2 from ambi­ent air and $35 per ton CO2 from a pow­er plant, all while hav­ing four to six times less ener­gy usage com­pared to sim­i­lar technologies. 

The show­case event for Arbon marked the first step to real-world deploy­ment,” expressed Lee. We’re excit­ed about our upcom­ing year-long pilot on Gov­er­nors Island, which will pro­vide cru­cial per­for­mance data and demon­strate our work­ing sys­tem to investors and the pub­lic. Hear­ing from last year’s suc­cess­ful pilots was par­tic­u­lar­ly inspir­ing and gave us con­fi­dence in the poten­tial of this opportunity.”

The final com­pa­ny to pitch was Rego, which has devel­oped an AI-pow­ered zero waste data plat­form for sus­tain­abil­i­ty teams. Pitched by co-founder and CEO Josh Mas­tro­mat­to, Rego aims to help com­pa­nies reduce waste, cut costs, and exceed their sus­tain­abil­i­ty goals. Their plat­form, which can be inte­grat­ed into a company’s work­flows, can pro­vide real-time waste results and loca­tion-spe­cif­ic insights using only sim­ple images. As a ten­ant on the island, Rego plans to turn their pilot into a pub­lic case study. 

The event was a great oppor­tu­ni­ty to show­case to the pub­lic how the Gov­er­nors Island pilot can help advance and de-risk new com­pa­nies and tech­nolo­gies, such as Rego,” Mas­tro­mat­to com­ment­ed. This means that Rego can more con­fi­dent­ly approach new oppor­tu­ni­ties with oth­er cities, munic­i­pal­i­ties, and enter­prise orga­ni­za­tions. The insights from the pan­el, audi­ence, and guests were incred­i­ble. They all want to sup­port our mis­sion to make zero waste afford­able and acces­si­ble for any city, any­where in the world. I feel more con­fi­dent than ever in Rego’s future after con­nect­ing with the attendees.”

Pan­el Dis­cus­sion: Water­fronts of the Future

The sec­ond pan­el fea­tured com­pa­nies and non­prof­its that have pilot­ed water­front solu­tions on the East Riv­er from Gov­er­nors Island to the South Bronx, in New­town Creek, and in oth­er loca­tions. Mod­er­at­ed by Lau­ren Wang, Direc­tor of Cli­mate Pro­grams at the Trust, the pan­el includ­ed Bri­an Wil­son, CEO at Duro UAS, Lau­ren Kesner O’Brien, Pol­i­cy and Part­ner­ships Man­ag­er at Empire Clean Cities, Shan­jana Mah­mud, Co-Founder of Sea­weed City, and Greg Humphries, Head of Busi­ness Oper­a­tions at Vycarb.

We are thrilled to host this dia­logue on water­fronts of the future in New York City, where we have 520 miles of water­front,” said Lau­ren. While you may hear peo­ple talk about ocean car­bon, blue high­ways, urban aqua­cul­ture, and long-term mon­i­tor­ing, thanks to the lead­er­ship of these pan­elists, these activ­i­ties has been tak­ing place right here on Gov­er­nors Island over the past two years through their pilots.”

Pan­elists spoke to the pow­er of data for inform­ing and dri­ving cli­mate action. With data, you can make so many informed deci­sions,” said Wil­son, includ­ing with the company’s Inter­net of Things (IoT) water qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing devices. Thanks to our pilot on Gov­er­nors Island, Duro UAS can prove that dur­ing storms, rivers aren’t clean enough to go swim­ming in, but when there are no storms, some rivers are clean enough for the pub­lic to enjoy swim­ming in.” 

Their lon­gi­tu­di­nal data was help­ful for Sea­weed City, a non­prof­it that grows sea­weed to extract excess nutri­ents and pol­lu­tants from the water and bring every­day New York­ers on the water. Mah­mud shared how com­par­ing results from their aqua­cul­ture farms on Gov­er­nors Island and New­town Creek gen­er­at­ed insights into how water qual­i­ty and con­di­tions in dif­fer­ent urban water­bod­ies affect sea­weed farm­ing. Sea­weed City made their first sug­ar kelp har­vest in April 2024 and are cul­ti­vat­ing gracilar­ia and sea let­tuce for plant­i­ng this summer. 

Vycarb, a Brook­lyn-based start­up rev­o­lu­tion­iz­ing the car­bon cap­ture and stor­age indus­try, also val­ues real-time data. A lot of sim­i­lar solu­tions to remov­ing CO2 are miss­ing the accu­rate mea­sure­ment com­po­nent,” Humphries argued. If you’re adding mate­r­i­al to the ocean – you should know exact­ly what you’re doing to the water. With accu­rate data, we can build com­mu­ni­ty trust in what we’re doing.”

With its first of its kind in-water CO2 mea­sure­ment and removal solu­tion, Vycarb enables the safe, respon­si­ble long-term cap­ture of cli­­mate-war­m­ing CO2 with­out dis­rupt­ing the local ecosys­tem. Their sys­tem helps to reverse ocean acid­i­fi­ca­tion while gen­er­at­ing data-backed car­bon cred­its. Vycarb first pilot­ed on Gov­er­nors Island in 2023, scaled up to a sec­ond NYC pilot at the Brook­lyn Navy Yard in 2024, and are now seek­ing indus­try part­ners on a nation­al and glob­al scale.

For Empire Clean Cities, com­mu­ni­ty also dri­ves their mis­sion. The non­prof­it aims to demon­strate how last-mile deliv­ery com­pa­nies can adopt a safe, reli­able, cost effec­tive, and sus­tain­able logis­tics solu­tion for seafood, bev­er­ages, and oth­er car­go in high­ly con­gest­ed urban areas. Few­er trucks on the street will reduce air pol­lu­tion and improve traf­fic safe­ty for res­i­dents in the South Bronx and oth­er neigh­bor­hoods where last-mile ware­hous­es are concentrated. 

By replac­ing trucks with elec­tric car­go bikes, paired with mid­dle-mile mar­itime solu­tions to South Street Sea­port and Gov­er­nors Island, we’re reduc­ing traf­fic and con­ges­tion,” assured O’Brien. We’re low­er­ing car­bon emis­sions, avoid­ing air pol­lu­tants, and improv­ing safe­ty, effec­tive­ly cre­at­ing more liv­able, equi­table communities.”

Where does all this lead by 2050? Pan­elists spoke to their vision for a city with safe streets, clean air, and a vibrant water­front where New York­ers, sea­weed, and wildlife can swim and thrive, thanks to the suc­cess of the cli­mate solu­tions that start­ed at a small scale today.

A grow­ing move­ment around cli­mate tech and sustainability

Over­all, the Cli­mate Solu­tions Show­case high­light­ed the grow­ing move­ment around cli­mate tech and sus­tain­abil­i­ty. As a liv­ing lab­o­ra­to­ry in New York Har­bor, Gov­er­nors Island sup­ports inno­va­tion and col­lab­o­ra­tion among com­pa­nies and orga­ni­za­tions that are mak­ing sig­nif­i­cant con­tri­bu­tions towards city-lev­el cli­mate mit­i­ga­tion and adap­ta­tion goals. Fol­low along for more updates on our cli­mate pilot­ing activ­i­ties as we progress through the sum­mer and the rest of the year. 

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island’s cli­mate pro­grams are made pos­si­ble with the gen­er­ous sup­port of Ama­zon, Con Edi­son, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, and the New York Com­mu­ni­ty Trust.

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Announces 20th Sum­mer Sea­son Open to the Public

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The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island today unveiled its sum­mer sea­son cal­en­dar with a host of events and expe­ri­ences in hon­or of the Island’s 20th year open to the pub­lic. The pro­gram­ming announced today high­lights the extra­or­di­nary range of events, cul­tur­al offer­ings, and recre­ation­al oppor­tu­ni­ties that have made Gov­er­nors Island a beloved des­ti­na­tion since first open­ing to the pub­lic in the sum­mer of 2005. This mile­stone sea­son cel­e­brates two decades of trans­for­ma­tion — from a for­mer mil­i­tary base into a thriv­ing pub­lic oasis — with a line­up that includes immer­sive pub­lic art instal­la­tions, open-air con­certs and food fes­ti­vals, unpar­al­leled recre­ation­al and edu­ca­tion­al oppor­tu­ni­ties, world-class sport­ing events, and more. 

Gov­er­nors Island is an extra­or­di­nary exam­ple of what is pos­si­ble when we invest in acces­si­ble, equi­table pub­lic spaces that serve all New York­ers,” said Deputy May­or for Hous­ing, Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment, and Work­force Adol­fo Car­rión Jr. From cli­mate inno­va­tion and arts pro­gram­ming to small busi­ness oppor­tu­ni­ties and recre­ation, Gov­er­nors Island embod­ies the very best of New York City’s cre­ativ­i­ty and resilience. The Adams admin­is­tra­tion is proud to cel­e­brate twen­ty years of pub­lic access to this won­der­ful place – and is excit­ed for the upcom­ing sum­mer sea­son ahead.”

Over the past two decades, Gov­er­nors Island has grown from a hid­den gem into a vibrant pub­lic resource that reflects the spir­it and diver­si­ty of New York City,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. As we cel­e­brate 20 years of pub­lic access, we are thrilled to hon­or the Island’s remark­able evo­lu­tion while con­tin­u­ing to offer the high-qual­i­ty and acces­si­ble events, pro­grams, recre­ation­al oppor­tu­ni­ties, open space, and arts and cul­tur­al expe­ri­ences that make Gov­er­nors Island a tru­ly sin­gu­lar des­ti­na­tion. We hope to see you on the fer­ry this summer!”

Gov­er­nors Island first opened to the pub­lic in June 2005 for the first time in two cen­turies, wel­com­ing 8,000 vis­i­tors across four sum­mer week­ends. The pub­lic sea­son expand­ed to four months the fol­low­ing year and five months in 2008. The Island wel­comed its inau­gur­al year-round ten­ants, the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School and Low­er Man­hat­tan Cul­tur­al Coun­cil, in 2010. The same year, the Gov­er­nors Island Park and Pub­lic Space Mas­ter Plan was released, pro­vid­ing a roadmap for improve­ments to ameni­ties and land­scapes as well as a new park on the Island’s south­ern end. The first 30 acres of the South Island Park opened to the pub­lic in 2014, and the park’s cul­mi­nat­ing fea­ture — The Hills — opened to the pub­lic in 2016

In 2020, the Trust and the New York City Mayor’s Office announced a vision to cre­ate the Cen­ter for Cli­mate Solu­tions, a com­mu­ni­ty to accel­er­ate cli­mate solu­tions for cities on Gov­er­nors Island. In April 2023, fol­low­ing a two-year com­pet­i­tive process led by the Trust and the City of New York, The New York Cli­mate Exchange was select­ed as the anchor research and edu­ca­tion­al insti­tu­tion for this ini­tia­tive. After open­ing to the pub­lic year-round in 2021, Gov­er­nors Island cel­e­brat­ed a major mile­stone in 2024, wel­com­ing more than 970,000 indi­vid­u­als — the largest num­ber of annu­al vis­i­tors in the Island’s history. 

OPEN SPACE, AMENI­TIES, AND ATTRACTIONS

As Gov­er­nors Island cel­e­brates 20 years of being open to the pub­lic, it con­tin­ues to serve as a vital resource for all New York­ers. The Island is open dai­ly, offer­ing vis­i­tors access to 120 acres of expan­sive open space just min­utes from Low­er Man­hat­tan and Brook­lyn. The Island’s 43-acre, award-win­ning park — rec­og­nized for its inno­v­a­tive, cli­mate-resilient design — fea­tures rolling lawns, vibrant land­scapes, and ample space for pic­nick­ing and out­door recre­ation. Ham­mock Grove’s rec­og­niz­able red ham­mocks com­ple­ment sev­er­al expand­ed path­ways nes­tled among a young urban for­est, and The Hills offer urban hik­ing paths along­side unpar­al­leled views of Low­er Man­hat­tan and New York Harbor

Bike rentals from Blaz­ing Sad­dles are avail­able dai­ly for vis­i­tors to explore the Island’s sev­en miles of car-free bike paths, with Free Bike Morn­ings every week­day between 10am-12pm and free bike lessons on select sum­mer week­ends. The Island is also home to three CitiBike docks, locat­ed at each fer­ry land­ing and at Pic­nic Point. 

Gov­er­nors Island Nation­al Mon­u­ment, includ­ing Fort Jay and Cas­tle Williams, will open Fri­day-Sun­day and all Fed­er­al Hol­i­days from 10am-5pm start­ing Memo­r­i­al Day Week­end for both ranger-led and self-guid­ed tours. The Urban Farm — home to GrowNYC’s teach­ing gar­den and Earth Mat­ter NY’s Com­post Learn­ing Cen­ter and Soil Start Farm — is open week­ends from 12 – 4pm; play:groundNYC’s Adven­ture Play­ground, a unique kids-only space imag­i­na­tion and explo­ration, is open every week­end from 12 – 4pm. 

Low­er Man­hat­tan Cul­tur­al Coun­cil (LMCC)’s Arts Cen­ter at Gov­er­nors Island will hold pub­lic pro­grams and open stu­dios through­out the sum­mer along­side their annu­al Riv­er to Riv­er Fes­ti­val; the Insti­tute for Pub­lic Archi­tec­ture (IPA) will hold open library hours and exhi­bi­tions every week­end; Col­lec­tive Retreats is open through Novem­ber for overnight stays in their glamp­ing-style accom­mo­da­tions along with din­ner and drinks at their Sun­set Ter­race cock­tail bar and Three Peaks Lodge water­front restau­rant; and QC Spa New York is open dai­ly with two heat­ed out­door pools along­side saunas, steam rooms, relax­ation treat­ments, mas­sages, a full-ser­vice bistro, sen­so­ry saunas, a salt room, and more. 

Vis­i­tors will also be able to wit­ness inno­v­a­tive cli­mate solu­tions in action on Gov­er­nors Island this sum­mer — a record-break­ing 17 dif­fer­ent cli­mate pilot­ing projects will be vis­i­ble through­out the Island. Pilot projects will host live demon­stra­tions and work­shops sev­er­al week­ends dur­ing the sum­mer months, with com­mu­ni­ty demon­stra­tion days to be announced. The New York Cli­mate Exchange will also offer tours and info ses­sions, with dates to be announced. 

The Trust will offer wheel­chair-acces­si­ble tram ser­vice, free and avail­able to all guests. These elec­tric acces­si­bil­i­ty vehi­cles will depart from Sois­sons Land­ing and Yan­kee Pier Fri­day through Sun­day from Memo­r­i­al Day to Labor Day, stop­ping at sev­er­al key loca­tions through­out the Island. 

EVENTS

Gov­er­nors Island remains one of New York City’s most unique loca­tions for events of all kinds. See a selec­tion of upcom­ing ear­ly sum­mer events below, with more to be announced through­out the season:

  • Gov­er­nors Island Nature Insect Walk – May 30
  • Low­er Man­hat­tan Cul­tur­al Council’s Riv­er to Riv­er Fes­ti­val – May 31-Octo­ber 26
  • Mubadala New York Sail Grand Prix – June 7 – 8
  • NYC Laven­der Fes­ti­val – June 7 – 8
  • Jazz Age Lawn Par­ty – June 14 – 15, August 9 – 10
  • Porch Stomp folk music fes­ti­val – June 21
  • FAD Mar­ket Gov­er­nors Island pop-ups – June 21 – 22, July 19 – 20, August 16 – 17
  • The Great Nosh NYC Pic­nic Fes­ti­val – June 22
  • NYCRUNS Fire­crack­er 5K & 10K – July 5
  • NYC Poet­ry Fes­ti­val – July 12 – 13
  • Sun­dae Ser­mon Music Fes­ti­val: A Best of the Boros Pre­view – July 19

FOOD VEN­DORS

Gov­er­nors Island is a grow­ing culi­nary des­ti­na­tion with a diverse mix of cuisines avail­able to vis­i­tors dai­ly. New offer­ings this year include food at Threes Brew­ing as well as Pizze­ria Fan­tas­ti­ca — a reimag­ined con­cept in Colonels Row from the Piz­za Yard team.

Return­ing ven­dors include Island Oys­ter, Joe Cof­fee Com­pa­ny, Lit­tle Eva’s, Taco Vista, Fauzia’s Heav­en­ly Delights, Threes Brew­ing, Sea Bis­cuit, Car­reau Club, Tokyo Drum­stick, La Newyork­i­na, Mak­i­na Café, On Tea Road, and more. The Food­ie Spot — a part­ner­ship with the New York City Hous­ing Author­i­ty (NYCHA)’s Office of Res­i­dent Eco­nom­ic Empow­er­ment and Sus­tain­abil­i­ty — will return to Liggett Ter­race for the fifth year in a row, spot­light­ing small busi­ness­es owned by grad­u­ates of NYCHA’s Food Busi­ness Path­ways pro­gram. Misi­pas­ta x Gov­er­nors Island, an inti­mate out­door sum­mer din­ner series pow­ered by Resy fea­tur­ing food from chef and restau­ran­teur Mis­sy Rob­bins, returns for the fifth sum­mer in a row June 10-August 29

Open Dai­ly

  • Island Oys­ter – Mon­day-Fri­day, 11am-8pm; Sat­ur­day-Sun­day, 10am-8pm (week­end hours until 10pm begin­ning Memo­r­i­al Day Weekend)
  • Joe Cof­fee Com­pa­ny in the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing fer­ry ter­mi­nal – Dai­ly, 7am-2pm (open until 4pm begin­ning Memo­r­i­al Day Weekend)
  • Joe Cof­fee Com­pa­ny at Liggett Ter­race – Week­ends, 10am-5pm (open dai­ly begin­ning Memo­r­i­al Day Weekend)
  • Lit­tle Eva’s – Week­days, 11am-5pm; week­ends, 11am-6pm
  • Mak­i­na Café – Week­days, 9am-3pm; week­ends, 10am‑4:30pm
  • Pizze­ria Fan­tas­ti­ca (for­mer­ly Piz­za Yard) – Dai­ly, 10:30am-5pm
  • Taco Vista – Dai­ly, 12 – 4pm
  • Three Peaks Lodge at Col­lec­tive Retreats – Dai­ly for Hap­py Hour, din­ner, and bar service

Open Week­ends and Select Weekdays

  • Brigs Sweet Shop – Week­ends, 10am-4pm
  • Car­reau Club – Week­ends, 12 – 6pm
  • Fauzia’s Heav­en­ly Delights – Week­ends, 11am-6pm
  • The Food­ie Spot – Fri­day-Sun­day, 11am-5pm
  • La Newyork­i­na – Week­ends, 12 – 7 pm
  • On Tea Road – Week­ends, 12 – 5pm
  • Sea Bis­cuit – Week­ends, 12 – 7pm
  • Threes Brew­ing – Week­ends, 11am-6pm 
  • Tokyo Drum­stick – Week­ends, 11am-6pm (open Wednes­day-Sun­day begin­ning July 2)

GOV­ER­NORS ISLAND ARTS

Through pub­lic art works, the annu­al Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence pro­gram, and pub­lic events and pro­gram­ming, Gov­er­nors Island Arts — the arts and cul­tur­al pro­gram pre­sent­ed by the Trust — cre­ates trans­for­ma­tive encoun­ters with art for all New York­ers, invit­ing artists and researchers to engage with the Island’s lay­ered his­to­ries, envi­ron­ments, and archi­tec­ture. Vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org/arts to view the program’s pre­vi­ous­ly announced sea­son of cul­tur­al offer­ings includ­ing group show Rest/​Play, the New York pre­mière of Tou­ki Delphine’s Fire­bird, and more. 

VIS­I­TOR INFORMATION

Gov­er­nors Island’s sum­mer hours will return begin­ning May 23, 2025. From Memo­r­i­al Day through Labor Day, the Island will remain open until 10pm Sun­day-Thurs­day and 11pm Fri­day-Sat­ur­day, with the South Island Park — includ­ing areas like The Hills, Ham­mock Grove, and Pic­nic Point — remain­ing open until dusk. From Labor Day through Memo­r­i­al Day, the Island is open dai­ly from 7am to 6pm. 

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island-oper­at­ed fer­ries run dai­ly between the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing at 10 South Street in Low­er Man­hat­tan and Sois­sons Land­ing on the Island. Trust-oper­at­ed fer­ries also serve two Brook­lyn loca­tions dur­ing the sum­mer months — Pier Six in Brook­lyn Bridge Park and Atlantic Basin in Red Hook. These routes run direct­ly to Yan­kee Pier on Gov­er­nors Island from each loca­tion every Sat­ur­day, Sun­day, and hol­i­day Mon­day from May 23 through Sep­tem­ber 14, 2025. For sched­ules and tick­et­ing infor­ma­tion, vis­it the Gov­er­nors Island website.

Vis­i­tors are encour­aged to reserve fer­ry tick­ets in advance of their trip through the Gov­er­nors Island web­site. Round-trip fer­ry tick­ets cost $5 for adults. Fer­ries oper­at­ed by the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island are always free for chil­dren 12 and under, old­er adults 65 and up, res­i­dents of NYCHA, IDNYC hold­ers, cur­rent and for­mer mil­i­tary ser­vice mem­bers, and Gov­er­nors Island mem­bers. Fer­ries before 11am on Sat­ur­days and Sun­days are free for all. There is no sur­charge for bicy­cles or strollers on Trust-oper­at­ed fer­ries at any time.

The Trust also offers free fer­ry fares for non­prof­it and com­mu­ni­ty-based orga­ni­za­tions, youth camps, and senior cen­ters. To inquire about group vis­its, orga­ni­za­tions may email groupvisits@​govisland.​org.

NYC Fer­ry ser­vice to Gov­er­nors Island on the South Brook­lyn route oper­ates on week­days and non-sum­mer week­ends. On sum­mer week­ends dur­ing the high­est rid­er­ship sea­son, NYC Fer­ry will con­tin­ue to oper­ate its ded­i­cat­ed sea­son­al shut­tle from Pier 11/​Wall Street in Low­er Man­hat­tan. NYC Fer­ry rid­ers may take any route to Pier 11 and trans­fer to the shut­tle for free, or NYC Fer­ry rid­ers may trans­fer for free at either Atlantic Ave/​Pier 6 or Red Hook/​Atlantic Basin to Trust-oper­at­ed Brook­lyn fer­ries. For tick­et­ing infor­ma­tion and full sched­ules for NYC Fer­ry, vis­it the NYC Fer­ry web­site, www.ferry.nyc.

The Gov­er­nors Island 2025 sea­son is gen­er­ous­ly sup­port­ed by The Black­stone Char­i­ta­ble Foun­da­tion, Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies, Trin­i­ty Church NYC, and STIHL Inc.

For the past two decades, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island has played a vital role in trans­form­ing this pub­lic resource into a vibrant and acces­si­ble recre­ation­al and edu­ca­tion­al space,” said Con­gress­man Dan Gold­man. By devel­op­ing Gov­er­nors Island into a ver­sa­tile des­ti­na­tion serv­ing a wide range of pur­pos­es, the Trust has cre­at­ed oppor­tu­ni­ties for recre­ation, cul­ture, and con­nec­tion for all New York­ers. I look for­ward to join­ing them this sum­mer for their excit­ing line­up of events.”

Gov­er­nors Island is tru­ly one of our city’s hid­den gems, and it is hard to believe that this is the 20th sea­son that it will be open to the pub­lic,” said U.S. Rep. Jer­ry Nadler. I am hon­ored that I worked on reac­quir­ing the Island from the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment, and that New York­ers today have this won­der­ful park in the cen­ter of the har­bor to play, explore and relax in. It is tru­ly an incred­i­ble one-of-a-kind New York attraction.”

For two decades, Gov­er­nors Island has been the per­fect warm-weath­er escape for New York­ers and tourists – there’s more than 120 acres of open space, recre­ation­al activ­i­ties, arts and cul­ture, fam­i­ly pro­gram­ming, and local his­to­ry,” said Man­hat­tan Bor­ough Pres­i­dent Mark Levine. With a five-minute fer­ry ride, you can escape the con­crete jun­gle for a day. I encour­age every­one to take advan­tage of this unique get­away and bask in all that Gov­er­nors Island has to offer.”

As we mark 20 years of Gov­er­nors Island being open to the pub­lic, I’m proud to cel­e­brate all that this space has become — a hub for recre­ation, edu­ca­tion, cli­mate inno­va­tion, and cul­tur­al vibran­cy,” said Coun­cilmem­ber Christo­pher Marte. For Low­er Man­hat­tan res­i­dents and New York­ers across the city, the Island has trans­formed into an acces­si­ble refuge from the pace of city life, while also serv­ing as a site for for­ward-think­ing cli­mate and sus­tain­abil­i­ty work. I look for­ward to see­ing even more fam­i­lies, stu­dents, and work­ers take the fer­ry this sum­mer to enjoy every­thing this unique space has to offer.”

The secret is out: in the two decades since it first opened to the pub­lic, Gov­er­nors Island has become one of New York’s great pub­lic spaces, and a place filled with art, edu­ca­tion, sci­ence and recre­ation­al oppor­tu­ni­ties,” said State Sen­a­tor Andrew Gounardes. It’s a tru­ly spe­cial place and a much-need­ed oasis in our city where New York­ers can learn, explore and sim­ply enjoy the out­doors. I’m look­ing for­ward to spend­ing time there with my own fam­i­ly this summer.”

As a father and a life­long New York­er, I’ve always seen Gov­er­nors Island as a place where fam­i­lies, stu­dents, and neigh­bors from every bor­ough can come togeth­er to enjoy the best our city has to offer,” said Assem­bly­man Charles D. Fall. Whether it’s through open space, cul­tur­al events, or cli­mate edu­ca­tion, the Island con­tin­ues to inspire and con­nect us. I’m proud to cel­e­brate 20 years of this incred­i­ble pub­lic trea­sure — and I look for­ward to many more sum­mers of shared memories.”

I’m thrilled that Gov­er­nors Island has reached the 20-year mile­stone! It is with­out a doubt one of the most spec­tac­u­lar­ly beau­ti­ful spots in New York City,” said Coun­cilmem­ber Lin­coln Restler. I hope Brook­lynites take advan­tage of the easy fer­ry access and enjoy extend­ed evening hours and won­der­ful sum­mer pro­gram­ming on Gov­er­nors Island!”

For more than twen­ty years, Gov­er­nors Island has been a hid­den gem in our back­yard — wel­com­ing Low­er Man­hat­tan res­i­dents and vis­i­tors alike, and shin­ing as an unpar­al­leled oasis of green space, cul­ture and com­mu­ni­ty!” said Man­hat­tan Com­mu­ni­ty Board 1 Chair, Tam­my Meltzer. We are so proud to cel­e­brate the 20th sum­mer sea­son with the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, show­cas­ing the bucol­ic park­land and nature, deli­cious fes­ti­vals, inspir­ing art, unfor­get­table con­certs, and inno­v­a­tive cli­mate lead­er­ship. From pic­nick­ing with friends and fir­ing up the bar­be­cue at Pic­nic Point to drift­ing away in Ham­mock Grove, explor­ing the Urban Farm’s gar­dens, or dis­cov­er­ing new works at the LMCC Arts Cen­ter and Artists in Res­i­dence stu­dios — there is so much to do and see, it tru­ly is the place to enjoy all sum­mer long. I urge all to not miss the boat (or the free, wheel­chair-acces­si­ble tram ser­vice) as we can’t wait to see fam­i­lies, neigh­bors, and vis­i­tors enjoy­ing the beau­ti­ful gar­dens, lawns, and all that our urban oasis offers while sad­dling up for bike rides and soak­ing in the spir­it of adven­ture on this extra­or­di­nary island!”

I’m pleased to wel­come vis­i­tors back to Gov­er­nors Island this sum­mer sea­son,” said Nation­al Park Ser­vice Man­hat­tan Sites Super­in­ten­dent Shirley McK­in­ney. We will con­tin­ue to allow self-guid­ed pub­lic tours of the his­toric forts. Park Rangers will be on site to answer ques­tions and pro­vide infor­ma­tion to our guests.”

Gov­er­nors Island Arts Announces 2025 Season

...

"Firebird," Bart Grietens

Gov­er­nors Island Arts today announced a dynam­ic sea­son of pub­lic art­works and per­for­mances as part of the 2025 sea­son start­ing May 17. The sea­son is anchored by Rest/​Play, a new group exhi­bi­tion that explores the inter­sec­tion of art, design, and pub­lic space, along­side the con­tin­u­a­tion of the INTER­VEN­TIONS per­for­mance series, which will fea­ture the US pre­mière of Lau­ra Cemin and Bian­ca Hisse’s How the Land Lies and the New York City pre­mière of Tou­ki Delphine’s Fire­bird. This spring also marks the return of the sea­son­al Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence pro­gram, with 24 NYC-based arts non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tions invig­o­rat­ing the Island’s his­toric hous­es with sea­son­al instal­la­tions, artist res­i­den­cies, work­shops, and oth­er pub­lic pro­grams. The sea­son will kick off with a spe­cial cel­e­bra­tion, free and open to the pub­lic, on Sat­ur­day, May 172025

As we ush­er in Gov­er­nors Island’s twen­ti­eth year open to the pub­lic, we are proud to present a pro­gram that will con­tin­ue to bring artists, New York­ers, and vis­i­tors from around the world togeth­er to engage with bold pub­lic art and immer­sive open space in a set­ting unlike any oth­er,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor, Gov­er­nors Island Arts, and Vice Pres­i­dent at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. The exhi­bi­tions, per­for­mances, and pro­grams announced today high­light diverse artis­tic expres­sions, invite moments of deep reflec­tion, and — per­haps most impor­tant­ly — cel­e­brate the myr­i­ad ways we spend our time in this unique place.”

Group Exhi­bi­tion: Rest/​Play

May 17-Novem­ber 22025

Fea­tured artists: Nina Chanel Abney; Lenka Clay­ton & Phillip Andrew Lewis; Arlene Shechet; Hank Willis Thomas; more to be announced.

Rest/​Play invites vis­i­tors to expe­ri­ence Gov­er­nors Island like nev­er before — bal­anc­ing moments of relax­ation with bursts of cre­ativ­i­ty and joy. The exhi­bi­tion is a cel­e­bra­tion of how we spend our time in this unique space, whether it’s unwind­ing or immers­ing our­selves in dynam­ic art. Rest trans­forms the Island with artist-designed seat­ing that merges cre­ativ­i­ty with func­tion. These inno­v­a­tive works not only pro­vide a place to sit and refresh, but also offer a chance to pause, reflect, and recon­nect with the sur­round­ing nature. Play brings ener­gy and col­or to the island, with bold, inter­ac­tive art­works that spark joy and inspire deep reflec­tion. The vibrant use of form and hue cre­ates a sen­so­ry expe­ri­ence that refresh­es both body and mind.

Rest/​Play is curat­ed by Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor of Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Vice Pres­i­dent at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island.

INTER­VEN­TIONS Per­for­mance Series

Through this site-respon­sive, mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary annu­al per­for­mance series, Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents local, nation­al, and inter­na­tion­al artists and invites audi­ences to expe­ri­ence work made and adapt­ed for out­door spaces. 

How the Land Lies (US Pre­mière)

Lau­ra Cemin and Bian­ca Hisse 

May 17, 2:15 & 7:30PM

May 183PM

Music by Vera Vice

Light­ing design by Sofia Ivarsson

Cos­tume design by Kairi Mahdla

Co-pro­duced by Kias­ma The­ater, and Sõltumatu Tantsu Lava

Fea­tur­ing five local dancers, How the Land Lies, direct­ed and chore­o­graphed by Lau­ra Cemin and Bian­ca Hisse, is a per­for­mance piece incor­po­rat­ing move­ment and scrolling LED signs. Usu­al­ly encoun­tered in pub­lic spaces as low-key adver­tise­ments, the LEDs become ves­sels to con­vey how lan­guage influ­ences mobil­i­ty. While the scrolling text flash­es tourism slo­gans and visa ques­tion­naires, the dancers — all of whom car­ry expe­ri­ences of migra­tion — inter­act with the signs through move­ment. Mean­ings unfold and bor­ders slow­ly blur: who can stay and who must leave? Who is seen and who remains hid­den? What is allowed and what is forbidden?

Fire­bird (NYC Pre­mière)

Tou­ki Delphine 

Octo­ber 37PM

Octo­ber 47PM

Con­cept, music and visu­als by Bo Koek, John van Oost­rum, Rik Elst­geest, and Chris Doyle

Con­cept and design by John van Oost­rum, The­un Mosk

Sound design by Toon Boland

Ams­ter­dam-based artist col­lec­tive Tou­ki Delphine’s Fire­bird, pre­vi­ous­ly pre­sent­ed at Mass MoCA, fea­tures an orches­tra of light made from more than 600 recy­cled car tail­lights that illu­mi­nate the dance of the fire­bird. A thor­ough­ly hyp­not­ic expe­ri­ence, this rule-break­ing con­cert pro­gram and extra-ter­res­tri­al instal­la­tion con­nects sound and light to cre­ate a sym­pho­ny of light re-envi­sion­ing Igor Stravinsky’s 1919 Fire­bird Suite as an homage. On Gov­er­nors Island, the work will illu­mi­nate the Parade Ground, an expan­sive field with the Low­er Man­hat­tan sky­line act­ing as backdrop. 

Pre­vi­ous per­for­mances pre­sent­ed as part of this series include works by Modesto Flako” Jimenez, Indige­nous Enter­prise, Dance Hegin­both­am, Rena Anakwe, Inua Ellams, and Lenio Kak­lea. INTER­VEN­TIONS is curat­ed by Juan Pablo Siles, Asso­ciate Cura­tor and Pro­duc­er at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Tick­ets to all per­for­mances will be avail­able online at www​.gov​is​land​.org.

Pub­lic Art 

There are cur­rent­ly sev­en tem­po­rary and long-term pub­lic art­works, pre­sent­ed through Gov­er­nors Island Arts, on dis­play year-round through­out Gov­er­nors Island’s park and his­toric land­scapes: Sheila Berger’s BIRD MMXXI­II, Sam Van Aken’s The Open Orchard, Duke Riley’s Not for Nut­ten, Mark Dion’s The Field Sta­tion of the Melan­choly Marine Biol­o­gist, Shantell Martin’s Church, Rachel Whiteread’s Cab­in, and Mark Handforth’s Yan­kee Hang­er.

Enjoy more ways to con­nect with pub­lic art via the Gov­er­nors Island guide avail­able on Bloomberg Con­nects, the free arts and cul­ture app. Deep dive into the Island’s art­works with an inter­ac­tive map, a self-guid­ed walk­ing tour, audio com­men­tary by cura­tors, and much more. 

Orga­ni­za­tions in Residence

Each year, two dozen arts and cul­tur­al non­prof­its uti­lize space inside the his­toric hous­es of Nolan Park and Colonels Row to present a robust cal­en­dar of free pub­lic pro­grams, host artist res­i­den­cies, and engage vis­i­tors in spe­cial activ­i­ties for all ages — includ­ing the return of month­ly THIRD Sat­ur­days, with spe­cial per­for­mances and more. Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence are open week­ends from 11am-5pm, May 17-Novem­ber 22025

  • Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House Man­hat­tan
  • AnkhLave Arts Alliance Man­hat­tan
  • Art­Crawl Harlem Man­hat­tan
  • BronxArt­Space The Bronx
  • Bronx Coun­cil on the Arts The Bronx
  • Bil­lion Oys­ter Project Man­hat­tan
  • I am caribBE­ING Brook­lyn
  • Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um Man­hat­tan
  • Dancers Unlim­it­ed Brook­lyn*
  • DuYe Moves Brook­lyn
  • Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons Man­hat­tan
  • Filmshop Man­hat­tan
  • For­est for Trees Col­lec­tive Brook­lyn*
  • Har­vest­works Man­hat­tan
  • KODA Brook­lyn
  • The Muse­um of Con­tem­po­rary African Dias­po­ran Arts (MoCA­DA) Brook­lyn
  • New York Latin Amer­i­can Art Tri­en­ni­al Man­hat­tan
  • Res­i­den­cy Unlim­it­ed (RU) Brook­lyn
  • The Super­Geo­graph­ics Brook­lyn*
  • Swale Brook­lyn
  • Tai­wanese Amer­i­can Arts Coun­cil Queens
  • West Harlem Art Fund Man­hat­tan

*First time pro­gram participants.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents its pro­gram with sup­port from Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies, Cha­ri­na Endow­ment Fund, Star­dust Fund, Sur­go Foun­da­tion US, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, the New York State Coun­cil on the Arts (NYSCA) with the sup­port of the Office of the Gov­er­nor and the New York State Leg­is­la­ture, Car­rie Den­ning Jack­son and Dan Jack­son, the Rip­ple Foun­da­tion, the Howard Gilman Foun­da­tion, and the Jerome L. Greene Foundation.

Announc­ing the 2025 Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge Winners

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Clockwise from top left: Arbon, Birdsview, CarbonCLAIR, CO Adaptive, Rego, Plantaer, Phytostone, and Mira Intel

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island announced today the win­ners of the annu­al Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge. The sec­ond annu­al call for pro­pos­als focused on the theme of Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my, seek­ing projects and tech­nolo­gies that reduce the cli­mate impact of the urban waste stream and extend resource recov­ery to busi­ness­es and neigh­bor­hoods. Win­ners will receive a site on Gov­er­nors Island to demon­strate their projects, grant awards of $10,000, and access to a com­mon pool of addi­tion­al funds to sup­port pilot implementation. 

The selec­tion of the sec­ond annu­al Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge win­ners exem­pli­fies New York City’s posi­tion as a glob­al hub for cli­mate inno­va­tion and lever­ages the unique assets at Gov­er­nors Island to incu­bate cli­mate solu­tions,” said First Deputy May­or Maria Tor­res-Springer. Con­grat­u­la­tions to the win­ners of the chal­lenge, who will undoubt­ed­ly demon­strate impact­ful tech­nolo­gies to sup­port a more cir­cu­lar economy.”

Gov­er­nors Island has become a mean­ing­ful test­bed for inno­v­a­tive solu­tions that will cre­ate more resilient and sus­tain­able cities,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. These chal­lenge win­ners are ded­i­cat­ed to build­ing a bet­ter future and to grow­ing their busi­ness­es here in New York City. We look for­ward to all they will learn and accom­plish dur­ing their time on the Island and can­not wait to wel­come all New York­ers to come out and engage with these projects this summer.” 

Invest­ment in inno­v­a­tive tech­nol­o­gy — and the indi­vid­u­als devel­op­ing it — is an invest­ment in our col­lec­tive future,” said Lau­ren Wang, Direc­tor of Cli­mate Pro­grams at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Shift­ing to a cir­cu­lar econ­o­my that reuses, refur­bish­es, and recov­ers is key to achiev­ing an equi­table, net-zero city. We look for­ward to sup­port­ing these com­pa­nies on their jour­neys while shin­ing a light on how solu­tions move from con­cept to scal­able product.” 

Projects select­ed fol­low­ing from this year’s Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Chal­lenge are:

  • Arbon, a Direct Air Cap­ture (DAC) com­pa­ny that will pilot their humid­i­ty-swing tech­nol­o­gy to cap­ture and store CO2 (car­bon diox­ide) from ambi­ent air using an ener­gy-effi­cient, durable, and afford­able process, while also gen­er­at­ing car­bon cred­its and enabling down­stream appli­ca­tions of cap­tured CO2. Founder: Xiaoyang Shi
  • Birdsview, a Nor­we­gian-based com­pa­ny that will pilot their ground-pen­e­trat­ing radar (GPR) struc­tur­al assess­ment tech­nol­o­gy, which uses pro­pri­etary analy­sis soft­ware to assess the inter­nal con­di­tion of build­ings and reduces waste by opti­miz­ing the preser­va­tion of exist­ing struc­tures. Founders: Olav Sko­gen and Simen Husøy
  • Car­bon­CLAIR, a New York-based com­pa­ny ded­i­cat­ed to improv­ing urban air qual­i­ty by cap­tur­ing pol­lu­tants and CO2 in out­door envi­ron­ments, while pro­duc­ing a byprod­uct with com­mon indus­tri­al appli­ca­tions. They will pilot their off-grid mobile air qual­i­ty unit at a con­struc­tion and demo­li­tion site. Founders: Fares Al-Iahabi and Nazare­na Soria Hadad
  • CO Adap­tive, a Brook­lyn-based com­pa­ny that will pilot their mod­u­lar wall sys­tem, made of reclaimed lum­ber, to retro­fit exist­ing build­ings to pas­sive house lev­el stan­dards of air­tight­ness and ener­gy effi­cien­cy. Founders: Ruth Man­dl and Bob­by Johnston
  • Mira Intel, a New York-based com­pa­ny that will pilot their drone-based struc­tur­al assess­ments and pro­pri­etary analy­sis soft­ware to enhance build­ing and infra­struc­ture resilience through enhanced mon­i­tor­ing capabilities. Founder: Danielle Nicholson
  • Phy­to­stone LLC, a woman-owned stu­dio mak­ing advanced nat­ur­al build­ing mate­ri­als. They will pilot Cast Car­bon, a biochar-enriched archi­tec­tur­al wall tile that is biodegrad­able, effi­cient­ly stores car­bon from sal­vaged pine pal­lets through a low-car­bon man­u­fac­tur­ing process and is mold-proof and fire­proof. Founder: Emi­ly Majewski
  • Plan­taer, a Brook­lyn-based com­pa­ny ded­i­cat­ed to trans­form­ing urban envi­ron­ments through archi­tec­tur­al solu­tions that inte­grate veg­e­ta­tion direct­ly into build­ing mate­ri­als. They will pilot their liv­ing con­crete façade tech­nol­o­gy, a low car­bon, engi­neered con­crete that improves air qual­i­ty and mit­i­gates extreme heat. Founder: Manuel Ben­itez Ruiz
  • Rego, the dig­i­tal util­i­ty meter for waste man­age­ment, which pro­vides pho­to and AI-based waste audits to track and ana­lyze waste streams in cities and increas­es diver­sion from land­fills. Founder: Josh Mastromatto

Of the select­ed pilots, 75 per­cent are local­ly based, 50 per­cent are minor­i­ty-led, and 50 per­cent are women-led. Pilots will be installed on Gov­er­nors Island over the com­ing months for peri­ods span­ning six to 18 months, with pub­lic Demo Days to be held through­out the year. 

Since its launch in 2023, the Trust’s Cli­mate Solu­tions Pilot­ing Pro­gram has sup­port­ed 14 dif­fer­ent projects with diverse rep­re­sen­ta­tion across busi­ness and non­prof­it sec­tors. Through this ini­tia­tive, the Trust makes the Island avail­able as a site for star­tups, small busi­ness­es, entre­pre­neurs, and non­prof­its to test ear­ly-stage cli­mate prod­ucts and ser­vices; col­lect data in a real-world envi­ron­ment; and direct­ly engage with fun­ders, investors, cus­tomers, and the Island’s near­ly one mil­lion annu­al vis­i­tors. In addi­tion to a themed annu­al chal­lenge, the pro­gram also includes a year-round gen­er­al appli­ca­tion seek­ing self-fund­ed pilot­ing pro­pos­als across all cli­mate sec­tors. For more infor­ma­tion and for a full list of cur­rent and past projects, click here.

As a close part­ner of Gov­er­nors Island, we at The New York Cli­mate Exchange are excit­ed to see the ground­break­ing projects select­ed for this year’s Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge come to life,” said Shaina Horowitz, Direc­tor of Pro­gram­ming Inno­va­tion and Accel­er­a­tion at The Exchange. Sup­port­ing cre­ative solu­tions and test­ing tech­nolo­gies that reduce urban waste and pro­mote a cir­cu­lar econ­o­my is crit­i­cal to our green eco­nom­ic trans­for­ma­tion, and Gov­er­nors Island can be a mod­el for New York City and beyond.”

We con­grat­u­late the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island on the sec­ond annu­al cohort of pilot­ing projects and look for­ward to see­ing the pos­i­tive impact they will have on the com­mu­ni­ty. The busi­ness­es announced today are on the cut­ting edge of inno­v­a­tive approach­es to move towards a more cir­cu­lar econ­o­my, and we’re proud to sup­port their work through the Trust’s Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge,” said Sal­ly Fouts, Glob­al Leader, The Cli­mate Pledge at Amazon.

We’re proud to sup­port The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island’s sec­ond annu­al Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge,” said Tim Caw­ley, the chair­man and CEO of Con Edison. This ini­tia­tive aligns with our com­mit­ment to fos­ter­ing sus­tain­able prac­tices and advanc­ing solu­tions that reduce waste and build a clean­er future. Gov­er­nors Island serves as a cru­cial test­ing ground for the win­ners to show­case their trans­for­ma­tive solu­tions for New York’s homes, busi­ness­es, and neigh­bor­hoods. We look for­ward to the progress and insights these projects will yield and we invite all New York­ers to vis­it Gov­er­nors Island to learn and expe­ri­ence first­hand the inge­nu­ity that will shape a more sus­tain­able future.”

The Trust’s cli­mate pro­grams are made pos­si­ble with the gen­er­ous sup­port of Ama­zon, Con Edi­son, Deutsche Bank, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, LISC, and the New York Com­mu­ni­ty Trust.

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island is a core mem­ber of the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive (HCC), a joint ini­tia­tive with New York City Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion and Brook­lyn Navy Yard Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion to grow the city’s cli­mate ecosys­tem through pilot­ing pro­grams, leas­es, work­force devel­op­ment invest­ments, and reg­u­la­to­ry wayfind­ing. Today’s announce­ment under­scores the collaborative’s com­mit­ment to dou­ble the num­ber of pilot­ing projects across these three sites. 

Gov­er­nors Island is at the fore­front of research­ing and demon­strat­ing urban cli­mate solu­tions, offer­ing a unique water­front envi­ron­ment; an award-win­ning park engi­neered for cli­mate change; near­ly one mil­lion annu­al vis­i­tors; oppor­tu­ni­ties for research and pilot­ing; pub­lic art­works engag­ing with cli­mate issues; and a grow­ing com­mu­ni­ty of edu­ca­tion­al, non­prof­it, and com­mer­cial ten­ants focused on cli­mate — includ­ing Bil­lion Oys­ter Project, the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School, the soon-to-open But­ter­milk Labs, and more. In 2020, the Trust and the New York City Mayor’s Office announced a vision to cre­ate the Cen­ter for Cli­mate Solu­tions, a com­mu­ni­ty on Gov­er­nors Island to accel­er­ate cli­mate solu­tions for cities. In April 2023, The New York Cli­mate Exchange, led by Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty and a con­sor­tium of part­ners, was select­ed as the initiative’s anchor insti­tu­tion fol­low­ing a two-year com­pet­i­tive process. The Exchange will devel­op a $700-mil­lion cam­pus on the Island focused on advanc­ing cli­mate solu­tions and prepar­ing New York­ers for green jobs.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts Announces Final­ists for 2025 Ice Sculp­ture Show

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2024 finalist Zeelie Brown, photo by Julienne Schaer

Today, Gov­er­nors Island Arts announced final­ists set to com­pete in the fourth annu­al Gov­er­nors Island Ice Sculp­ture Show, set to take place on Sat­ur­day, Feb­ru­ary 8, 2025, from 12 to 3p.m. This unique annu­al event pro­vides New York­ers and vis­i­tors from around the world with the sin­gu­lar oppor­tu­ni­ty to expe­ri­ence live ice carv­ing along­side the open space, and cul­tur­al, edu­ca­tion­al, and his­toric resources and attrac­tions that Gov­er­nors Island offers year-round. 

We are so excit­ed for these artists to carve their cre­ations to life, and for Island vis­i­tors to wit­ness this event in Colonels Row for the fourth year in a row,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor, Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Vice Pres­i­dent at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. With our col­lec­tion of pub­lic art­works and per­for­mances and pro­gram­ming, the Island is one of New York’s most inter­est­ing des­ti­na­tions for arts and cul­tur­al expe­ri­ence in all seasons.”

2025 Ice Sculp­ture Show Finalists:

  • Ana Añu (@soopspoon) Bear Wit­ness,” Añu’s ecopo­et­ic sculp­ture that reflects the impor­tance of ani­mism in cli­mate sto­ry­telling, will call for audi­ence mem­bers to wit­ness the qui­et voic­es of the elemental. 
  • Eli­jah Chavez (@lijahchavez.art) Lo que pasará, pasará” will depict an anatom­i­cal human heart while serv­ing as a com­mu­ni­ty alter inspired by the Mex­i­can cus­toms of the Day of the Dead. 
  • Jake DeMar­ti­ni (@the­jakeweight) – A nod to 19th-cen­tu­ry mar­itime his­to­ry, DeMartini’s Moor­ing Bol­lard” hon­ors the tit­u­lar object’s min­i­mal design and engi­neer­ing along­side Gov­er­nors Island’s nau­ti­cal history. 
  • Shawn Hill (@ublincd) – Select­ed in hon­or of Hill’s child­hood cre­ativ­i­ty, Tuft­ed Tit­mouse” will depict this species of bird that is com­mon­ly seen on Gov­er­nors Island. 
  • Aharon Levy – Levy’s Gov­er­nors Island: New York Oasis” will explore the ten­sion between nature and urban envi­ron­ments, depict­ing a tree encased in ice and offer­ing a reflec­tion on imper­ma­nence, cli­mate change, and nature’s resilience. 
  • Agusti­na Markez (@agusti­na­markezs­tu­dio) – Markez will explore the star as a sym­bol both in the con­text of nature and pop cul­ture through Inter­twined Stars,” which inves­ti­gates iden­ti­ty and dis­place­ment in rela­tion to Amer­i­can culture. 
  • Josef Pin­lac (@istill­heart­newyork) – Pin­lac will cel­e­brate pol­li­na­tors in Ice ice bay-bee,” incor­po­rat­ing hon­ey­comb designs and hon­or­ing the Island’s bee population. 
  • Sonya Sobies­ki (@crookedsquare) –Sobieski’s Look­ing Out” will depict an over­sized pair of binoc­u­lars with birds com­mon­ly seen on Gov­er­nors Island etched into the lens­es, ask­ing the view­er, can we look out for nature?”. 
  • Kate­ri­na Sokolovskaya (@katerina.sokolovskaya.art) – In Nature+,” Sokolovskaya will explore how peo­ple coex­ist with their sur­round­ings, show­ing how bod­ies influ­ence one anoth­er and inter­act with the environment. 
  • Mai Sone (@mai__sone) – In hon­or of the Island’s acorn-like shape, Sone will sculpt A squir­rel eat­ing Gov­er­nors Island.”

The ten final­ists were cho­sen fol­low­ing an open call seek­ing designs inspired by the theme Gov­er­nors Island + nature.” Final­ists will be paired with a pro­fes­sion­al ice carv­er from Okamo­to Stu­dio dur­ing the free pub­lic event on Gov­er­nors Island on Sat­ur­day, Feb­ru­ary 8, 2025. Vis­i­tors are invit­ed to wit­ness this real-time ice carv­ing from 12 to 2 p.m. and enjoy an awards cer­e­mo­ny and ice sculp­ture instal­la­tion from 2 to 3p.m. — includ­ing the audi­ence-vot­ed People’s Choice” award. The event will include ice carv­ing work­shops from Okamo­to Stu­dio, crafts from Red Hook Art Project, live music from dis­co-infused Afro­fu­tur­ist funk duo The Illus­tri­ous Blacks, and a spe­cial per­for­mance by NYC-based all-women, trans, and non-bina­ry drum­line Fogo Azul. Mak­i­na Café will be open in Colonels Row along­side addi­tion­al food trucks Nao Caribbean Fla­vors, The Orig­i­nal Soup­man, and Deploy Cof­fee, curat­ed by Four Wheel Feasts.

Dur­ing the win­ter months, Gov­er­nors Island is open to the pub­lic dai­ly from 7a.m. to 6p.m. Trust for Gov­er­nors Island-oper­at­ed fer­ries run dai­ly between the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing at 10 South Street in Low­er Man­hat­tan and Sois­sons Land­ing on the Island. Round-trip fer­ry tick­ets cost $5 for adults. Gov­er­nors Island fer­ries are always free for chil­dren 12 and under, old­er adults ages 65 and up, res­i­dents of NYCHA, IDNYC hold­ers, cur­rent and for­mer mil­i­tary ser­vice mem­bers, and Gov­er­nors Island mem­bers. Fer­ries before 11a.m. on Sat­ur­days and Sun­days are free for all. There is no sur­charge for bicy­cles or strollers at any time. For sched­ules and tick­ets, vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org/​ferry.

NYC Fer­ry, the city’s pub­lic fer­ry ser­vice, also serves Gov­er­nors Island dai­ly on the South Brook­lyn Route dur­ing the win­ter months, with stops in Low­er Man­hat­tan and along the Brook­lyn water­front. Sched­ules and more infor­ma­tion avail­able on their web­site at www.ferry.nyc.

Gov­er­nors Island’s award-win­ning park is open to the pub­lic every day, along with recre­ation activ­i­ties like bike rentals, Ham­mock Grove, The Hills, Pic­nic Point, and more. Gov­er­nors Island Arts pub­lic art works, includ­ing pieces by Duke Riley, Sam Van Aken, Rachel Whiteread, Mark Dion, Sheila Berg­er, Shantell Mar­tin, and Mark Hand­forth are also cur­rent­ly on view through­out the Island. This win­ter also marks the return of Win­ter Dog Days, where dogs are allowed on Gov­er­nors Island dai­ly from Decem­ber to April. Dogs must be leashed while on Gov­er­nors Island except for in the Win­ter Dog Park, locat­ed in Colonels Row and open through March. 

Gov­er­nors Island 2024 Year in Review

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Julienne Schaer

As we reflect on an incred­i­ble year and look ahead towards 2025, which will mark 20 years of pub­lic access, we are grate­ful for the com­mu­ni­ty of New York­ers that hop on the fer­ry each day to work, learn, eat, play, relax, research, and cre­ate on Gov­er­nors Island.

We are pleased to share our 2024 Year in Review, detail­ing a year of his­toric accom­plish­ments — includ­ing wel­com­ing the most vis­i­tors in the Island’s his­to­ry, expand­ing our role as a leader in accel­er­at­ing cli­mate solu­tions, and delight­ing vis­i­tors with sin­gu­lar cul­tur­al expe­ri­ences. Read on for high­lights, and click here to read the full report.

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A monarch butterfly in the new Milkweed Demonstration Garden in Liggett Terrace. Photo by Sarma Ozols

UNPAR­AL­LELED OPEN SPACE & RECREATION

With 120 acres of open space, includ­ing a 43-acre cli­mate-resilient park, 12 acres of ath­let­ic fields, 7 miles of car-free bike paths, and unique nat­ur­al areas, Gov­er­nors Island is a remark­able out­door resource in all sea­sons. This year, we cel­e­brat­ed the Year of Milk­weed and the pow­er of native plants, con­tin­ued to cre­ate a more resilient and thriv­ing open space, host­ed near­ly 95 events, and wel­comed near­ly 970,000 indi­vid­u­als from New York City and around the world. Read more →

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"Whale Bells" (Jenny Kendler and Andrew Bearnot) as seen in "Other of Pearl." Photo by Timothy Schenck

TRANS­FOR­MA­TIVE ARTS & CULTURE

2024 marked a remark­able year of growth for Gov­er­nors Island Arts. We wel­comed Lau­ren Haynes as Head Cura­tor, Gov­er­nors Island Arts, and Vice Pres­i­dent, pre­sent­ed Jen­ny Kendler’s ground­break­ing Oth­er of Pearl with NRDC (Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil), held a series of site-respon­sive per­for­mances high­light­ing acclaimed artists from around the world, and host­ed a cohort of 21 sea­son­al Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence in Nolan Park and Colonels Row. Read more →

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2024 piloting partner RETI Center builds one of their floating BlueBlock Gardens at Yankee Pier. Photo by Sean Jamar

ACCEL­ER­AT­ING CLI­MATE SOLUTIONS

Gov­er­nors Island is cre­at­ing a com­mu­ni­ty to accel­er­ate cli­mate solu­tions for cities and their pop­u­la­tions. This year, we show­cased inno­v­a­tive cli­mate tech through our pilot­ing pro­gram, restored the inte­ri­or of Build­ing 309 to serve as a com­mu­ni­ty con­ven­ing resource for cli­mate orga­ni­za­tions, and fos­tered a col­lab­o­ra­tive com­mu­ni­ty of ten­ants and part­ners work­ing in cli­mate. Read more →

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"Hope is a discipline" at LMCC's Arts Center, curated by Meghana Karnik, Eugene Hannah Park, Marina Christodoulidou, and Billy Fowo. Photo by Roshni Khatri

FOS­TER­INGTHRIV­ING YEAR-ROUND COMMUNITY

Gov­er­nors Island is home to a grow­ing group of edu­ca­tion­al, non­prof­it, and com­mer­cial ten­ants. In 2024, many ten­ants cel­e­brat­ed mile­stones – includ­ing the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School, which broke ground on a his­toric expan­sion; Low­er Man­hat­tan Cul­tur­al Coun­cil, which cel­e­brat­ed its 50th anniver­sary year; and QC NY, which opened a brand-new 15,000-square-foot restau­rant in the new­ly restored Build­ing 111. Read more →

The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive Hosts NYC Cli­mate Tech­nol­o­gy Showcase

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NYCEDC President & CEO Andrew Kimball, Trust for Governors Island President and CEO Clare Newman, and Lindsay Greene, President and CEO, Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation.

On Mon­day, Novem­ber 18, 2024, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island (TGI), New York City Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion (NYCEDC), and Brook­lyn Navy Yard Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion (BNY­DC) held a Cli­mate Tech­nol­o­gy Show­case. Togeth­er, the three mis­sion-aligned pub­lic enti­ties with sites along the New York Har­bor, and con­nect­ed by NYC Fer­ry, are com­mit­ted to mak­ing New York City the glob­al cap­i­tal of cli­mate inno­va­tion through pilot­ing pro­grams, leas­es, work­force devel­op­ment invest­ments, and reg­u­la­to­ry wayfind­ing. The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive (HCC) is pledg­ing to dou­ble the num­ber of pilots con­duct­ed across the col­lab­o­ra­tive and struc­ture the pro­gram so that com­pa­nies ben­e­fit from both cam­pus-spe­cif­ic expe­ri­ences and col­lab­o­ra­tive-wide net­works, and fund­ing opportunities.

The NYC Cli­mate Tech­nol­o­gy Show­case high­lights the col­lec­tive impact of pilot­ing across the HCC while also pro­vid­ing addi­tion­al oppor­tu­ni­ties for par­tic­i­pat­ing com­pa­nies to grow and scale their busi­ness­es in New York City and increase expo­sure to prospec­tive cus­tomers, both gov­ern­men­tal and in the pri­vate sec­tor. Over 40 star­tups par­tic­i­pat­ed, and the event fea­tured demon­stra­tions of inno­v­a­tive cli­mate tech­nol­o­gy from six dif­fer­ent companies.

New York City’s ded­i­ca­tion to grow­ing the green econ­o­my is stronger than ever and the role of cities as engines of inno­va­tion has nev­er been more impor­tant than in the urgent work to com­bat cli­mate change,” said First Deputy May­or Maria Tor­res-Springer. The city’s com­mit­ment and cre­ativ­i­ty are exem­pli­fied by the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive, a part­ner­ship between the Brook­lyn Navy Yard Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion, Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, and the New York City Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion that deploys city-con­trolled cam­pus­es in the defin­ing fight of our time and helps build a vibrant cli­mate tech ecosys­tem in the city of New York.”

Today’s show­case, high­light­ing more than 40 part­ners from across the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive, demon­strates what’s pos­si­ble when inno­va­tors are giv­en the space and resources need­ed to grow,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Through the city’s ecosys­tem of pilot­ing sites, includ­ing Gov­er­nors Island, we’ve been able to accel­er­ate real-world test­ing, help­ing to pro­pel these com­pa­nies into their next stages of devel­op­ment and giv­ing New York­ers a front-row seat to the tools to fight cli­mate change.”

The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive is a unique col­lab­o­ra­tion of three mas­sive for­mer mil­i­tary bases that are being trans­formed to fight cli­mate change, the glob­al threat of our time,” said NYCEDC Pres­i­dent & CEO Andrew Kim­ball. Today’s show­case high­lights some of the amaz­ing entre­pre­neurs and tech­nol­o­gy already being pilot­ed at our three sites to unlock eco­nom­ic growth, cre­ate jobs, and pave the way for a green­er, more resilient future.”

Since the launch of the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive ear­li­er this year, we’ve made tremen­dous progress towards our com­mit­ment of mak­ing New York City the epi­cen­ter of cli­mate tech R&D, and pro­duc­tion,” said Lind­say Greene, Pres­i­dent and CEO, Brook­lyn Navy Yard Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion. From fur­ther­ing EV solu­tions in urban envi­ron­ments to test­ing marine-based car­bon cap­ture in one of the busiest har­bors in the world, we’ve suc­cess­ful­ly lever­aged our water­front assets to iden­ti­fy and advance the solu­tions we will need to com­bat cli­mate change. We look for­ward to dou­bling down on this crit­i­cal work next year.”

The HCC will be an engine of eco­nom­ic oppor­tu­ni­ty for New York­ers that inte­grates edu­ca­tion, train­ing and career place­ment for 2100 New York­ers and will help posi­tion the city’s diverse tal­ent for green col­lar jobs that are crit­i­cal to grow­ing the green econ­o­my,” said Abby Jo Sigal, Exec­u­tive Direc­tor of the NYC Mayor’s Office of Tal­ent and Work­force Devel­op­ment. The city’s green econ­o­my will cre­ate 400,000 jobs, includ­ing 12,000 appren­tice­ships by 2040, and the crit­i­cal role that the HCC will play in con­nect­ing local tal­ent to these oppor­tu­ni­ties will make our econ­o­my more inclu­sive, resilient, and green.”

New York City is where the world’s bright­est minds come to test and exe­cute their best ideas on the biggest stage,” said New York City Chief Tech­nol­o­gy Offi­cer Matthew Fras­er. Today’s event demon­strates this admin­is­tra­tion’s com­mit­ment to col­lab­o­rate across sec­tors, indus­tries, and bor­ders to build a glob­al hub for urban inno­va­tion. Our efforts to stream­line and accel­er­ate the pilot­ing process for emerg­ing tech­nolo­gies, through ini­tia­tives such as the NYC Smart City Test­bed Pro­gram, allow us to bet­ter eval­u­ate and poten­tial­ly scale solu­tions to our most press­ing chal­lenges — a win for tech com­pa­nies, city gov­ern­ment, and, most impor­tant­ly, 8.3 mil­lion New York­ers. I thank the mem­bers of the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive for their part­ner­ship in this impor­tant work.”

The Adams Admin­is­tra­tion has com­mit­ted to mak­ing New York City a glob­al hub of urban inno­va­tion – one of the 40 ini­tia­tives laid out in the New” New York Action Plan. Fol­low­ing this com­mit­ment, the NYCEDC part­nered with the Cor­nell Tech’s Jacobs Urban Tech Hub to release Pilot:New York City as a road map to accel­er­ate urban inno­va­tion in New York City. The for­ma­tion of the HCC builds on May­or Adams’ efforts to devel­op a Har­bor of the Future,” a mul­ti­fac­eted ini­tia­tive, and the Green Econ­o­my Action Plan” — both announced by May­or Adams in his 2024 State of the City address to reimag­ine New York City’s water­front and fuel 21st-cen­tu­ry growth and innovation.

As the core of New York City’s bur­geon­ing cli­mate inno­va­tion ecosys­tem, the HCC will invest over $725 mil­lion to advance New York’s green econ­o­my in NYCEDC’s Sun­set Park Dis­trict, the Brook­lyn Navy Yard, and on Gov­er­nors Island. The invest­ments sup­port cli­mate inno­va­tors through pilot­ing, ten­ant­i­ng, reg­u­la­to­ry coor­di­na­tion, work­force devel­op­ment, knowledge/​data shar­ing, fundrais­ing, and facil­i­tat­ing access to City agen­cies. The HCC, launched from the Adams’ Admin­is­tra­tion Green Econ­o­my Action Plan, unlocks six mil­lion square feet of space, will sup­port the cre­ation of 5,000 jobs, edu­cate and train 2,100 stu­dents, and gen­er­ate $55 bil­lion of eco­nom­ic impact.

Through­out the last year, the HCC has gath­ered crit­i­cal insights into the col­lec­tive impact of pilot­ing across our dif­fer­ent cam­pus­es. Between 2023 – 2024, 19 green econ­o­my founders and cli­mate tech com­pa­nies com­plet­ed or had an active pilot at one or more of the HCC pilot sites, includ­ing TGI’s Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge, NYCEDC’s Pilots at BAT pro­gram, and BNY­D­C’s Yard Labs.

Insights from the last year show that cli­mate tech­nolo­gies come from all over the world with com­pa­nies cut­ting across a range of green econ­o­my indus­tries, includ­ing resilience infra­struc­ture, build­ings, trans­porta­tion, and ener­gy. Com­pa­nies come to New York City to pilot at var­i­ous devel­op­ment stages but tend to be in the deploy­ment stage. Through pilot­ing their tech­nolo­gies along the East Riv­er water­front, the indus­tri­al envi­ron­ment of all three HCC sites, com­pa­nies have been able to:

  • Col­lect data that helps com­pa­nies iter­ate and improve their product;
  • Demon­strate com­mer­cial viability;
  • Raise expo­sure of their cli­mate tech­nolo­gies to both the investors and the public;
  • Gain entry into the New York City mar­ket and tai­lor ser­vices to New York;
  • Secure indus­try cer­ti­fi­ca­tions, dur­ing the pilot phase or plan to get their cer­ti­fi­ca­tion upon com­plet­ing their pilot;
  • Expand their foot­print in New York City, includ­ing mak­ing new con­nec­tions with city agen­cies, expand­ing to new office, lab or fac­to­ry space, and cre­at­ing new investor con­nec­tions; and
  • Onboard­ed new interns, trainees, full or part time staff, cre­at­ing an aver­age of four new jobs per pilot project.

This pilot serves as a proof-of-con­cept demon­stra­tion and has accel­er­at­ed our growth in NYC, LA, and Detroit. This project has helped us gen­er­ate rev­enue, col­lect real-world data, part­ner with more than 20 cus­tomers to help move their goods, and raise $100k in grant fund­ing to bring our 100% elec­tric freight mobil­i­ty solu­tions to oth­er cities across the US,” said Emis­sion­less Founder Max Yer­gan.

Both pilots have accel­er­at­ed our prod­uct devel­op­ment to val­i­date how our sys­tem can be installed in build­ings and how it can be iter­at­ed to meet real-world con­straints. Fol­low­ing our pilot at Gov­er­nors Island, we received mul­ti­ple inquiries from cus­tomers inter­est­ed in com­mer­cial­ly test­ing our sys­tem at their facil­i­ties. These pilot oppor­tu­ni­ties like­ly brought down our go-to-mar­ket time­line from 24 months to at least six months,” said LÆRO Design Stu­dio Founder & CEO Noe­mi Flo­rea.

Matcha’s pilot at the Brook­lyn Army Ter­mi­nal was an accel­er­ant to our entry into New York. The pilot helped Matcha demon­strate the reli­a­bil­i­ty of its EV charg­ing soft­ware, gain approval from NYSER­DA, and gen­er­ate press,” said Matcha Co-founder and CEO Chris Klue­sen­er.

Beyond real sav­ings data cap­tured, the pilot helped us fig­ure out ways to improve our soft­ware in a real pro­duc­tion envi­ron­ment. For exam­ple, when the pilot site had a black­out event dur­ing a pow­er surge in the grid, 7 of 25 of our smart plugs could not recon­nect to Wi-Fi. We have since devel­oped a more robust IoT pro­to­col to over­come this sit­u­a­tion. With these issues iden­ti­fied and resolved at a small scale, we then gain the con­fi­dence and abil­i­ty to install at a larg­er scale (>50 out­lets per account). This is why the pilot is very impor­tant to us — to val­i­date our con­cept with real data and find loop­holes in our prod­uct to improve,” said Revert Tech­nolo­gies Co-founder and CEO Ryan Li.

This pilot with DOT and NYCEDC has giv­en us the oppor­tu­ni­ty to refine our prod­uct and ser­vice offer­ing for NYC’s deliv­ery work­ers, ensur­ing that it is built with their spe­cif­ic needs in mind. DOT and NYCEDC cleared the way for us to be able to build safe charg­ing infra­struc­ture for NYC’s streets, and we look for­ward to con­tin­u­ing to work togeth­er,” said Swobbee US Man­ag­ing Direc­tor Stephan von Wolff.

Our pilot at TGI has been instru­men­tal in our com­pa­ny’s suc­cess, gen­er­at­ing crit­i­cal data to iter­ate and improve our prod­uct inter­nal­ly, while show­ing exter­nal­ly that our prod­uct works and what its ben­e­fits are to secure new cus­tomers, investors, com­mu­ni­ty part­ners, and tal­ent. Our new pilot at BNY has allowed us to scale up our car­bon diox­ide removal and stor­age process sev­er­al orders of mag­ni­tude, with us now deliv­er­ing on the off­sets we’ve sold, and demon­strat­ing that our process is safe and effec­tive at a mean­ing­ful scale,” said Vycarb Founder & CEO Gar­rett Boudinot.

The May­or Adams Administration’s Har­bor of the Future ini­tia­tive includes emerg­ing inno­va­tion cen­ters at the Hunts Point Pro­duce Mar­ket, Gov­er­nors Island, the Brook­lyn Navy Yard, the Sci­ence Park and Research Cam­pus in Kips Bay, and the North Shore of Stat­en Island. Most recent­ly, May­or Adams announced that the city will invest $100 mil­lion to cre­ate the Cli­mate Inno­va­tion Hub” at the Brook­lyn Army Ter­mi­nal as a part of the city’s Green Econ­o­my Action Plan that will posi­tion New York­ers to ben­e­fit from near­ly 400,000 green-col­lar” jobs by 2040. This new hub will serve as a home for clean tech inno­va­tion, man­u­fac­tur­ing and sup­port green tech­nol­o­gy star­tups — includ­ing sup­port­ing the Pilots at BAT program.

About The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive
As out­lined in the Green Econ­o­my Action Plan, released by May­or Eric Adams in Feb­ru­ary of 2024, the plan’s vision is to estab­lish New York City as the glob­al cap­i­tal of cli­mate inno­va­tion through pilot­ing pro­grams, leas­es for office and lab space, work­force devel­op­ment invest­ments, and reg­u­la­to­ry wayfind­ing. At the heart of New York City’s bur­geon­ing cli­mate inno­va­tion ecosys­tem, The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive will invest over $725 mil­lion to advance New York’s green econ­o­my in NYCEDC’s Sun­set Park dis­trict, the Brook­lyn Navy Yard, and on Gov­er­nors Island. By unlock­ing six mil­lion square feet of space, the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive will sup­port the cre­ation of 5,000 per­ma­nent jobs, edu­cate and train 2,100 stu­dents, and gen­er­ate $55 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic impact.

Adams Admin­is­tra­tion Breaks Ground on New York Har­bor School Expan­sion on Gov­er­nors Island

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L to R: Harbor School Principal Michael Hojnacki, Trust for Governors Island President and CEO Clare Newman, New York City School Construction Authority (SCA) President and CEO Nina Kubota, Council Member Christopher Marte, and Executive Director Of Mayor's Office Of Climate And Environmental Justice Elijah Hutchinson at the groundbreaking.

New York City May­or Eric Adams, New York City School Con­struc­tion Author­i­ty (SCA) Pres­i­dent and CEO Nina Kub­o­ta, New York City Pub­lic Schools Chan­cel­lor Melis­sa Aviles-Ramos, and Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Pres­i­dent and CEO Clare New­man broke ground on a major expan­sion of the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School on Gov­er­nors Island on Novem­ber 7, 2024. The expan­sion will allow the school to bet­ter pre­pare young New York­ers for good-pay­ing green jobs by dou­bling the school’s cam­pus from two to four build­ings and adding new class­rooms, a com­pe­ti­tion-sized pool and gym­na­si­um, and lab­o­ra­to­ries designed to sup­port the school’s dis­tinc­tive mar­itime and envi­ron­men­tal cur­ricu­lum. The announce­ment builds on May­or Adams’ efforts to devel­op a Har­bor of the Future” – a mul­ti­fac­eted ini­tia­tive announced by May­or Adams in his State of the City this year to reimag­ine New York City’s water­front to fuel 21st-cen­tu­ry growth and innovation.

We’re laser-focused on prepar­ing young New York­ers for good-pay­ing jobs of the future, and this his­toric expan­sion of the Har­bor School will allow us to do just that,” said May­or Adams. The addi­tion­al class­room and train­ing space will help us ensure that our kids ben­e­fit from the 400,000 green jobs our city will host by 2040. Har­bor School grad­u­ates will work on the wind tur­bines that will pow­er 500,000 homes in our city, invent green tech­nolo­gies that we can’t even imag­ine yet, and more.”

From the New York Cli­mate Exchange to the expan­sion of the Har­bor School, Gov­er­nors Island is proof of New York City’s lead­er­ship in cli­mate tech­nol­o­gy and edu­ca­tion,” said First Deputy May­or Maria Tor­res-Springer. The Har­bor School’s new facil­i­ties – and Gov­er­nors Island more broad­ly – con­tin­ue to show­case how edu­ca­tion, research, and indus­tri­al devel­op­ment func­tion togeth­er to bring good jobs to the five bor­oughs for the expand­ing cli­mate tech industry.”

We say kids are inter­net natives’ – smarter and bet­ter versed than the rest of us on the way mod­ern tech­nol­o­gy works,” said Deputy May­or for Oper­a­tions Meera Joshi. Well, they’re going to be cli­mate change natives’ too – bet­ter pre­pared than any gen­er­a­tion pri­or to take on the real­i­ties and chal­lenges of cli­mate change with the urgency it requires. That is in part thanks to inno­v­a­tive part­ner­ships like the Har­bor School, which will soon accom­mo­date more kids to learn in nature’s class­room. Thanks to the School Con­struc­tion Author­i­ty, the Trust For Gov­er­nors Island, and all our part­ners for mak­ing a high-qual­i­ty edu­ca­tion cen­ter­ing this vital life skill a reality.”

The expan­sion of the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School rep­re­sents a bold step for­ward in our mis­sion to pro­vide stu­dents with unique, hands-on edu­ca­tion­al expe­ri­ences that pre­pare them for suc­cess­ful futures,” said New York City Pub­lic Schools Chan­cel­lor Melis­sa Aviles-Ramos. By dou­bling the cam­pus size and enhanc­ing the school’s facil­i­ties, we are not only enrich­ing the aca­d­e­m­ic jour­ney but also fos­ter­ing the next gen­er­a­tion of envi­ron­men­tal lead­ers and mar­itime experts right here in New York City.”

We’re proud to improve and build on the orig­i­nal vision for the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School and look for­ward to see­ing how the expand­ed cam­pus will empow­er these excep­tion­al stu­dents to learn and expand their envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship,” said SCA Pres­i­dent and CEO Kub­o­ta. Thanks to a strong col­lab­o­ra­tion between the SCA, New York City Pub­lic Schools, and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, this expan­sion will enable the school to serve even more stu­dents while becom­ing a valu­able resource for the broad­er community.”

The Har­bor School is one of the gems of New York City, pro­vid­ing top notch edu­ca­tion and prepar­ing our next gen­er­a­tion of New York­ers in impor­tant indus­tries like mar­itime and the green econ­o­my,” said New York City Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion Pres­i­dent and CEO Andrew Kim­ball. This expand­ed cam­pus will build on the ongo­ing suc­cess of the Har­bor School, and we look for­ward to these young peo­ple join­ing the work­force that will pow­er our Har­bor of the Future’ and careers across the five boroughs.”

Today marks a tru­ly excit­ing moment in New York City’s growth as a leader in cli­mate solu­tions – over the past 14 years, thou­sands of young New York­ers have had trans­for­ma­tion­al edu­ca­tion­al expe­ri­ences on Gov­er­nors Island, using the Har­bor as a liv­ing class­room and receiv­ing high-qual­i­ty career train­ing in mar­itime and envi­ron­men­tal fields,” said Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Pres­i­dent and CEO Clare New­man. We are proud to col­lab­o­rate with our part­ners at the School Con­struc­tion Author­i­ty and New York City Pub­lic Schools to devel­op these new, state-of-the-art facil­i­ties, which will serve to expand oppor­tu­ni­ties for stu­dents and empow­er the envi­ron­men­tal lead­ers of tomorrow.”

The Har­bor School pro­vides a col­lege prepara­to­ry edu­ca­tion built upon New York City’s mar­itime expe­ri­ence with a focus on envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship. With its part­ners – includ­ing the Bil­lion Oys­ter Project – the school devel­ops authen­tic activ­i­ties for its stu­dents on, around, and relat­ed to the water that cre­ates a sense of respon­si­bil­i­ty to New York Har­bor and devel­op a new gen­er­a­tion of mar­itime advo­cates, enthu­si­asts, work­ers, and deci­sion-mak­ers. The expan­sion includes the con­struc­tion of a new, state-of-the-art facil­i­ty that will fea­ture a pool, gym­na­si­um, and addi­tion­al lab space ded­i­cat­ed to career-tech­ni­cal train­ing and research. The SCA will also ren­o­vate Build­ing 555 – a des­ig­nat­ed land­mark struc­ture built in 1938 – to cre­ate 32,000 square feet of addi­tion­al class­room space. Togeth­er, these projects will expand the school’s facil­i­ties from two to four build­ings and add 445 new seats, sup­port­ed by fund­ing from the New York City Coun­cil and the Man­hat­tan Bor­ough Pres­i­den­t’s Office.

Today’s announce­ment builds on the Adams admin­is­tra­tion’s ongo­ing efforts to devel­op New York Har­bor as the heart of the city’s green econ­o­my. In April 2023, May­or Adams and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island unveiled the New York Cli­mate Exchange, a trans­for­ma­tive vision for a first-in-the-nation cli­mate research, edu­ca­tion, and jobs hub on Gov­er­nors Island that will cre­ate thou­sands of per­ma­nent jobs and $1 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic impact for the city. A cross-sec­tor con­sor­tium led by Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty, the Exchange will cre­ate a state-of-the-art, $700-mil­lion, 400,000-square-foot cam­pus ded­i­cat­ed to research­ing and devel­op­ing inno­v­a­tive cli­mate solu­tions that will be scaled across New York City and the world and that will equip New York­ers to hold the green jobs of the future. Open­ing in 2028, the New York Cli­mate Exchange will be ded­i­cat­ed to edu­ca­tion­al pro­gram­ming, research, cli­mate tech incu­ba­tion, and pol­i­cy work aimed at advanc­ing cli­mate action in New York City and else­where around the world.

Addi­tion­al­ly, in Feb­ru­ary 2024, May­or Adams announced an up to $100 mil­lion invest­ment in the Cli­mate Inno­va­tion Hub at Brook­lyn Army Ter­mi­nal, part of the admin­is­tra­tion’s Green Econ­o­my Action Plan designed to help New York City host near­ly 400,000 green jobs by 2040. This new space will accel­er­ate com­mer­cial­iza­tion path­ways for cli­mate tech star­tups and oth­er green econ­o­my busi­ness­es. It will serve 150 star­tups over 10 years – gen­er­at­ing $2.6 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic impact and cre­at­ing 600 jobs – while pro­vid­ing local work­force train­ing and job place­ment, par­tic­u­lar­ly for the local Sun­set Park community.

Fur­ther­more, in June 2024, May­or Adams broke ground on what will be the nation’s largest ded­i­cat­ed off­shore wind port at the South Brook­lyn Marine Ter­mi­nal in Sun­set Park, Brook­lyn. The project will accel­er­ate the clean ener­gy tran­si­tion, make New York City syn­ony­mous with off­shore wind, advance progress toward the state’s Cli­mate Lead­er­ship and Com­mu­ni­ty Pro­tec­tion Act goal to devel­op 9,000 megawatts of off­shore wind by 2035, and cre­ate a new indus­try with thou­sands of green-col­lar’ jobs on site and in the sup­ply chain. 

The Har­bor School is a resource as unique and spe­cial as Gov­er­nors Island itself,” said New York State Sen­a­tor Andrew Gounardes. This new expan­sion gives stu­dents even more oppor­tu­ni­ties to learn, play sports, and study our city’s nat­ur­al ecosys­tems in a one-of-kind envi­ron­ment. I’m glad to see oppor­tu­ni­ties for young peo­ple grow on Gov­er­nors Island, and I’m grate­ful to May­or Adams and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island for mak­ing this possible.”

We are com­mit­ted to open­ing all career paths for our chil­dren, and our his­toric expan­sion of the New York Har­bor School will give us a new arse­nal of tools to pre­pare them for good-pay­ing mar­itime careers,” said New York State Assem­bly­mem­ber Jenifer Rajku­mar. New class space, lab­o­ra­to­ries, and oth­er facil­i­ties will allow stu­dents to immerse them­selves in this unique and excit­ing field. The expan­sion is part of our Har­bor of the Future’ plan, which will trans­form our water­front into a mod­ern hub of eco­nom­ic growth and inno­va­tion, gen­er­at­ing $95 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty. We are chart­ing a course to sus­tain­able, inno­v­a­tive water­ways address­ing the needs of New Yorkers.”

Announc­ing the 2025 Cli­mate Solu­tions Challenge

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The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island offers unique oppor­tu­ni­ties for inno­va­tors to test ear­ly-stage cli­mate prod­ucts and ser­vices in a real-world envi­ron­ment. Select­ed pilot­ing projects uti­lize Gov­er­nors Island’s built, social, and nat­ur­al envi­ron­ments – includ­ing a 2.2‑mile water­front, 43-acre cli­mate resilient park, 7 miles of car-free streets, and 50+ his­toric build­ings – to accel­er­ate cli­mate inno­va­tion, eco­nom­ic oppor­tu­ni­ty, and social impact in diverse urban communities.

2025 Chal­lenge Theme: Cir­cu­lar Economy

Prob­lem:

New York­ers pro­duce near­ly 4 mil­lion tons of res­i­den­tial waste and anoth­er 4 mil­lion tons of com­mer­cial waste every year. More than half of New York City’s sol­id waste con­sists of con­struc­tion and demo­li­tion mate­ri­als. Today, NYC diverts about 20 per­cent of sol­id waste from land­fills and has com­mit­ted to send zero waste to land­fills by 2030. This waste stream dri­ves green­house gas emis­sions across its life cycle, from the extrac­tion of raw mate­ri­als to its trans­porta­tion and dis­pos­al. Waste trans­fer sta­tions in many cities are in locat­ed in envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice com­mu­ni­ties, con­tribut­ing to long­stand­ing air pol­lu­tion. Shift­ing to a cir­cu­lar econ­o­my that reuses, refur­bish­es, and recov­ers all kinds of mate­ri­als, reduces waste truck­ing, and min­i­mizes land­fill waste and embod­ied car­bon is key to achiev­ing an equi­table, net-zero city.

Chal­lenge:

How can cir­cu­lar econ­o­my prod­ucts and solu­tions dri­ve down the cli­mate impact of the urban waste stream and extend resource recov­ery to our busi­ness­es and neighborhoods?

Inno­va­tion Tracks:
  • Low-car­bon and cir­cu­lar con­struc­tion prod­ucts, includ­ing healthy materials.
  • Prod­ucts using resources that are recov­ered from the urban waste stream.
  • Prod­ucts and ser­vices that reduce con­struc­tion and demo­li­tion waste by extend­ing the use­ful life of exist­ing sys­tems and mak­ing more effi­cient use of new materials.
  • Mea­sure­ment tools and ser­vices that accel­er­ate diver­sion from land­fill and reduce sol­id waste.

To learn more and apply by the Decem­ber 5, 2024, dead­line, vis­it gov​is​land​.org/​c​h​a​l​lenge.

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