The project by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates was awarded the Rosa Barba International Landscape Prize at this year’s Landscape Architecture Biennale. Read all about the project and the prize here.
Michael Van Valkenburgh’s Brooklyn Bridge Park in New York has won the Rosa Barba International Landscape Prize 2021.
It beat a total of ten other projects from all over the world. Brooklyn Bridge Park, which extends over 85 hectares along the East River in Brooklyn, New York, won the Rosa Barba International Landscape Prize 2021 at the 11th International Landscape Architecture Biennial in Barcelona at the beginning of October. The project was developed over twenty years by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates (MVVA), a New York-based landscape architecture firm, and, according to the prize jury, “transformed an industrial site of abandoned warehouses, obsolete piers and decaying bulkheads into a vibrant public space”. Brooklyn Bridge Park had around five million visitors a year before the coronavirus pandemic.
The landscape architects from MVVA were part of a multidisciplinary team back in 1998. At the time, they wrote a preliminary status report on the 1.3-mile stretch in Brooklyn’s harbor area. Five years later, the Brooklyn Bridge Park Development Corporation hired MVVA as lead consultants to develop a master plan and ultimately selected them to design the park. The idea for the park ultimately came from the residents of Brooklyn themselves. The very residents who lived in the New York borough that had the fewest green and park spaces.
At the time, local residents had no access to the abandoned industrial site on the harbor and thus to the water. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ), the owner of the site at the time, originally planned to convert the disused shipping terminal into a profitable project with commercial, retail and residential uses. Only after decades of persuasion did dedicated groups succeed in convincing policy makers that public access to the waterfront was necessary, especially in a neighborhood that lacked parking.
MVVA’s planning and design team retained the existing structure. The park thus consists of a narrow strip of waterfront on the one hand and is divided into a total of eleven sections on the other. Six piers protrude into the East River. The redesigned shoreline strips are made of natural materials, such as salt marsh. This helps the park to withstand strong waves. The design of Brooklyn Bridge Park ultimately results in a system of new and old connections between the city and the river. The result is a vibrant urbanity that creates space for a variety of activities. With the opening of the individual sections of the park over the last ten years, the park has developed together with New Yorkers. As a result, the park has also become part of their everyday lives.
The video shows Brooklyn Bridge Park by Michael Van Valkenburg Associates.
Brooklyn Bridge Park – a real people’s park
All of this convinced the international jury of the 11th Landscape Architecture Biennale at the beginning of October 2021: “One of the many strengths that sets this project apart from other competition projects is its ability to bring people together and foster a sense of an inclusive community in the midst of a designed natural environment. As a result, rich and well-programmed activities will transform the abandoned warehouses, obsolete piers and decaying bulkheads into a vibrant public space that is visited by more than five million people a year and is considered a true people’s park.” The top-class international jury included Esteban Leon (Head of UN-Habitat’s City Resilience Global Program) and the renowned landscape architects and teachers Cristina Castelbranco, Kongjian Yu, James Hayter and Julie Bargmann.
The Rosa Barba International Landscape Prize is endowed with 15,000 dollars. Any landscape architecture project from the last five years can win the prize. Afterwards, the selected projects will also be published in a book catalog of the Biennale. In addition, the projects will be part of an exhibition and thus included in the Biennale’s online archive. Collegi d’Arquitectes de Catalunya (COAC) and the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC) organized the 11th International Landscape Architecture Biennial in Barcelona. The Barcelona Metropolitan Area, Barcelona City Council and Barcelona Provincial Council (Diputació de Barcelona), Fundación Banco Sabadell, ISUF Congress, IFLA, IFLA Europe and the New European Bauhaus supported the organization.
Also interesting: The metropolis of New York City is world-famous for its many attractions. Here we introduceyou to the artificial Little Island and here you can find out all about Central Park.












