Final rendering of Hoboken’s Southwest Resiliency Park includes shaded plaza, rain gardens

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The final rendering of Hoboken’s Southwest Resiliency Park includes a shaded plaza, rain gardens, six pickleball courts, a playground, and full basketball court.

Rendering courtesy of the City of Hoboken.

By John Heinis/Hudson County View

“I’m proud that the final design of our expanded Southwest Resiliency Park reflects months of public feedback, and provides a number of much needed active amenities for our community,” Mayor Ravi Bhalla said in a statement.

“This is yet the latest, major initiative that will also help Hoboken adapt to climate change and more frequent rainstorms, with innovative flood mitigation strategies. I look forward to celebrating the beginning of construction with all of Hoboken next year!”

The expansion doubles the size of the existing one-acre Southwest Resiliency Park at 58 Jackson St.

Four concept designs were presented to the public earlier this year, with the final amenities reflecting feedback through community engagement sessions and an online public survey.

“This latest step in realizing the vision of what is the Southwest Park serves as a lesson in perseverance,” added Councilman at-Large Jim Doyle, chair of the Environmental Services Subcommittee.

“It served as the inspiration for then-budding activist Dawn Zimmer to get involved in her community, and all these many years later it will both add to our open space and to our critical inventory of resilience measures to help us combat the effects of climate change.”

The expanded Southwest Resiliency Park will more than double the stormwater detention capacity in the existing park, withholding a total of 460,000 gallons of stormwater to mitigate area flooding during heavy rain events through above and below-ground infrastructure.

The city acquired the 1-acre addition to the park from Academy Bus in April of 2021 through an amicable acquisition utilizing funding from the Hudson County’s Open Space Trust Fund, Green Acres, and Hoboken’s Open Space Trust Fund, at no impact to the municipal budget.

“I have long advocated for active recreational space in southwest Hoboken and I am proud to have worked with the administration and my council colleagues to get one step closer to making this a reality,” explained 4th Ward Councilman Ruben Ramos.

“I want to thank the Mayor for inviting me to be part of the negotiations to acquire this property from Academy. Through the public design process, we believe we have a park that serves dual needs in providing recreation and flood mitigation in Southwest Hoboken.”

The Hoboken City Council will vote on the final concept design at their meeting at City Hall, located at 94 Washington St., Monday, October 3rd, at 7 p.m. The meeting will also stream live on the city’s Facebook and YouTube pages.

Pending council approval, the project team will create engineering plans and apply for state permitting before the city goes out to bid for the park’s construction, with construction tentatively scheduled to begin by the end of 2023.


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