Albany Waterway Canal

Creating Opportunity with a Transformational Waterway System

Imagine a “Venice of the Northeastern U.S.”

The Albany Waterway.

The Albany Waterway is a transformative, collaborative canal project that reestablishes and re-envisions Albany’s rich historic, social and economic connections to the Hudson River and the Erie Canal.

Water and commerce flowed into Albany from its ports and canals for over 400 years, in ways that made New York the most prosperous state in the nation. By together imagining the myriad opportunities that emerge from this new and renewed access to the Albany waterfront — recreation, arts and culture, sustainable development and more – Albany will regain the vibrancy, energy and stature that its citizens and businesses deserve.

Annual update from your friends at the Albany Waterway!

                                                                                                                        September 9, 2022 

Friends of the Albany Waterway!

We provide this Call to Action to bring you up to date on our concept of creating an economically transformative Waterway  to revitalize downtown Albany and benefit the Capital Region. Unlike other proposals it would bring the river to Albany instead of bringing Albany to the river. It would enter from the Hudson River just north of the USS Slater, travel along Broadway and empty back into the river through the original lock 1 of the historic Erie Canal located near the Central Warehouse. To make this a reality we need your help, particularly now as we advocate for full inclusion of this vibrant concept in a soon to occur state feasibility study. This assistance will be in the form of contributions to retain communication, engineering and environmental experts,  attendance at public events, and engaging individuals and groups to join the Friends of the Albany Waterway.

Thank You!

First, thank you for your joining our Friends group! We value your interest, encouragement and support. This very exciting development will transform the Capital Region as a destination while at the same time benefitting our local residents and businesses. We began our journey last year by applying to be a tax exempt not for profit corporation, that status is pending. We have presented to the Albany Council of Neighborhood Associations available on you tube, created a website, www.albanywaterway.org, produced a multi-page brochure and appeared before audiences explaining our concept and receiving positive  feedback. We also have a Facebook page, Albany Waterway Canal Project. We know that our concept will produce significant economic and positive social impact as we have studied cities where a waterway has been created.

There is Significant Funding To Study our Proposal

Notably, Assembly Member Pat Fahy secured funding in the current state budget for a feasibility study. This will include the economic, engineering and environmental aspects of all proposals to generate important and necessary changes to access our most important natural asset, the Hudson River. It is imperative that this study fully vet our concept of a Waterway. Importantly  this Waterway would not interfere with existing buildings, rail tracks and other improvements.

The Waterway is Feasible – It Can be Done

In July we had an international design firm come to Albany to present to a large audience of policy makers from the federal, state and local governments. The conclusion was that our concept was very feasible as the issues requiring solutions had been successfully addressed in many other places. Interestingly, the creation of the Waterway would bring many environmental benefits, including solutions to Albany’s chronic issues with flooding that occur due to the many sources of water flowing from our hills to the river, immersing some buildings with flooding each Spring.
This presentation was eye opening and encouraged a belief that this concept would not only be feasible but bring tremendous social and economic benefits to the community as well as deal with the climate change issues impacting our region with the rising Hudson River


Public Support is Building

The New York State Canal Corporation has been most encouraging as it has studied the tremendous benefits generated to communities along the Erie and other state canals. This includes the Canalside in Buffalo which has transformed that city.  We expect to participate in preparations to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal. Governor Hochul will host the worldwide canals and waterways conference in Buffalo in 2025. A review of our website will demonstrate the positive public reaction by our public officials.

What is the Albany Waterway Inc. doing this year?

We will be present for the New York State Canals and waterways conference in October of this year. We also expect to host a presentation for you and other community members in the Fall in order to educate you of the possibilities our concept will yield and to seek public input as we move forward. We know that nothing can be accomplished without community involvement, influence and support.  We also expect to host public gatherings with representatives from cities where water has transformed their communities by generating a positive vibe, safety and economic development.
An immediate goal is to build partnerships with community groups, environmental advocates and others who recognize the transformative positive impact our concept presents.

What is our ask of you?

 Your help is essential to make certain that our transformative concept is fully included in the feasibility study. We ask two things from you. To support our advocacy, we need funding to create awareness, education and support of our concept. Checks in amounts up to $100, payable to the Albany Waterway can be sent to PO box 2142, Albany NY, 12220. We also ask you to recruit more individuals and groups to our Friends of the Albany Waterway group which is now over a third of the way toward our goal of 1,000. This can be done through our website www.albanywaterway.org or by contacting me directly.
We look forward to seeing you as Partners and Friends as this concept becomes reality.

One of our guiding principles was expressed by Daniel Burnham, a noted architect and city planner in the late 19th century. He stated:

Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir the blood and probably themselves will not be realized.

Make big plans; aim high and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever- growing insistency.
Much Thanks!
BJ Costello
Chair

The Albany Waterway, Inc.
Bcostello@hinmanstraub.com

A Call to Action



Albany Waterway Breakfast Presentation Reaction

By Paul Grondahl

A recent Albany Waterway project presentation drew rave reviews from attendees and strong support from elected officials among an audience of 50 engineers, civic leaders, local officials and members of the state Assembly and state Senate representing the Capital Region.

Here is a sampling of their enthusiastic responses following a July 20 breakfast meeting at the Fort Orange Club, sponsored by Albany Waterway Inc. The program featured Powerpoint presentations by Waterway board member and noted artist Len Tantillo and Susannah Drake, a principal of the global design firm Sasaki, renowned for major canal projects in Brooklyn, Chicago and beyond.

Albany Mayor Kathy Sheehan: “I am excited about the potential for the Albany Waterway project particularly in terms of climate change resiliency and flood mitigation given the trend of unprecedented rain events and rising Hudson River levels. We need to start now to build a resilient future for downtown Albany and other neighborhoods in the city prone to flooding. We need to study this project further with those needs in mind.”

Assemblyman John McDonald, D-Cohoes: “I consider this an exciting project. It is a Capital Region economic development opportunity that is bigger than just Albany. I think it needs to be viewed from a regional perspective. When the capital city wins, everyone in the region wins. It’s interesting that everything old is new again. We used to have a vibrant riverfront in Albany and a bustling Erie Canal and this could help bring that back.”

Senator Neil Breslin, D-Albany: “If we all work together, collaboratively, the Albany Waterway is a distinct possibility. The city of Chicago is a great example. Every time I visit it reminds me of Venice. We can create that atmosphere with a canal in downtown Albany.”

Brian Stratton, Director of the New York State Canal Corporation: “I love the Albany Waterway concept. I’m so proud of the two new major canal projects we helped facilitate, Buffalo’s Canalside and Schenectady’s Mohawk Harbor. Both of those were roughly $500 million projects. I joked with Mayor Sheehan that she could be the queen of New York’s canals with a project that would exceed the cost of those two most recent canal projects. There is very strong interest in this project, which could be phased in. I was very pleased that New York’s Secretary of State Robert Rodriguez attended the presentation, along with representatives from Governor Kathy Hochul’s office.”

Sarah Reginelli, President of Capitalize Albany Corporation: “It’s exciting to see the community talking about bringing the city back to the Hudson River and the river back to the city. I like the discussion about climate change resiliency. I am excited to work with the state Department of Transportation on an in-depth engineering study to see how we can re-imagine the waterfront in Albany.”

Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy, D-Albany: “The Albany Waterway adds to the inspiration of transforming the Albany waterfront. I spent three years to obtain the $5 million grant to study our options. I’m excited about the next steps in assessing the three major plans and going forward with a feasibility study led by the state Department of Transportation.”

Sasaki senior associate landscape architect Josh Price, who grew up in Columbia County: “This is an opportunity to shape a narrative around a waterway that embraces history and the complexities of climate change. This is Albany’s opportunity to make a transformative landscape happen. We believe the Albany Waterway canal project can help propel the city to realize its potential.”

Sasaki principal Susannah Drake: “Our team toured the Albany Waterway project site and this is feasible. This project is aligned with what we do and could be an incredible project for the city. I could see it being done in phases. We fully intend to review the RFP and submit a proposal that will include mobilizing a Sasaki team and bringing in project partners.”

 

One (potentially wonderful) alternative to replacing I-787

A plan from the 1990s for a canal through downtown Albany is worth another look. - Churchill

Learn More

 
 

Albany’s Waterway’s ‘upstate Venice’ gains momentum

The Albany Skyway now under construction represents a first act of the downtown revitalization effort to reconnect the city to its long-neglected historical spine, the Hudson. -Grondahl

Learn More