Posts Tagged 'wma 09 (lower raritan south river and lawrence)'

Dvoor Farm

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Posted in agricultural production, franklin parker small grants program, land preservation project, projects funded by conservation resources, supplemental environmental project

In 1999, The Hunterdon Land Trust (HLT) acquired title to the Dvoor Farm, a 40 acre historic farmstead in Raritan Township.

The Dvoor Farm is a perfect illustration of the evolution of New Jersey’s agricultural community throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. The property, with its wealth of agricultural accessory buildings, is architecturally significant and provides a critical connection in a greenway of preserved land along the Mine Brook in Raritan Township. In the long term, the HLT hopes to make the farm a self-sustaining public resource by restoring and reusing the buildings and property for public use, while generating income to support the restoration and maintenance of the buildings and ensuring responsible stewardship of the land.

Specifically, this historic landmark can be used as a public education center and demonstration farm based on the community supported agriculture model, to promote sustainable agriculture and natural resource protection. The HLT is working with the Northeast Organic Farming Association of NJ to develop  plans for sustainable farming of the land, and for public access to Dvoor Farms’ offerings. The farm lies within a grenbelt of preserved land along the Mine Brook. Long term plans include linking the farm to other community resources through walking trails, which will provide the public more opportunities to visit the farm. Public educational workshops are also envisioned.

To make the Dvoor Farm Project a success, the Hunterdon Land Trust has identified the following goals:

  • Maintain the buildings in serviceable condition and prevent further deterioration;
  • Create a master plan for future use of the farm as a public resource;
  • Maximize public access to the farm;
  • Establish stakeholder and volunteer groups to assist in restoration, maintenance, and planning efforts.

Ecosystem Services Provided:

Agricultural Production: Local food systems- community supported agriculture, farmer’s market, organic agriculture, sustainable farming, nutrition education

Total Project Cost: $225,000

CRI has provided funding for the Dvoor project through its Franklin Parker Small Grants program: $4,000 in 2007, and $4,000 in 2008.

Status: The Hunterdon Land Trust acquired the Dvoor Farm in 1999. They are seeking funds to restore and maintain the historic farm buildings, and turn the farm into a public education center and demonstration farm. The condition of the buildings has been evaluated, and immediate and long-term repairs and mainteance issues have been identified.

If you would like further information about this project, please contact Conservation Resources.

Raritan Riverfront Restoration and Park

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Posted in biological diversity, completed projects, ecological restoration project, NRD settlement candidate project, projects funded by conservation resources, recreation & aethestics, riparian mitigation candidate project, water protection, filtration, & control, wetlands mitigation project

Edison Wetlands Association (EWA) conceived the ambitious Raritan River Walkway and waterfront Brownfields-to-Greenfields (B2G) project in 2002.  The visionary project broke ground in August 2009, and its first phase was complete by year-end.  By transforming the garbage and toxic waste of Edison Landfill and Kin-Buc Landfill Superfund Site into gardens and rich wildlife habitat, the Raritan River Walkway is creating a national B2G model for redeveloping industrial sites into safe public greenfields with riverfront access and recreation.  EWA announced the walkway’s completion with a press conference onsite in late 2009 with Assemblymen Peter Barnes and Patrick Diegnan, then-Mayor Jun Choi, and Conservation Resources president Michael Catania.  The trail formally opened to the public in 2010.

EWA advocated successfully for the Township of Edison and the Middlesex County Freeholders to post for a $508,725 bond and reimbursement, and their advocacy led the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) to allocate Natural Resource Damages (NRD) funds to this project.  The NRD funding itself came from the Hatco site settlement in Woodbridge, where EWA worked with NJDEP to force a $13.2 million cleanup of PCB lagoons.  The state funding was managed by CRI, which worked with NJDEP, EWA and the Township to forge an agreement for the project to begin.  The first phase offers a scenic 1,500-foot trail with the first extended public access to Edison’s seven-mile riverfront in Township history. The trail includes kiosks, native wildflowers and butterfly gardens, a footbridge spanning a tidal wetlands inlet along Mill Brook, and a public gazebo.

CRI was able to facilitate a $593,000 regulatory contribution to this emerging greenway and restoration project along the Raritan River.

Ecosystem Services Provided:

Water Protection, Filtration & Control: Water quantity- wetland restoration

Biological Diversity: Habitat- restoring native vegetation, protecting aquatic habitat

Recreation & Aesthetics: Public access- hiking trails, access to waterfront; Environmental education- informational displays

Total Project Cost: $870,848

Status:  The trail formally opened to the public with a tree-planting ceremony and walkway tour with Edison Mayor Antonia Ricigliano and other elected officials in honor of the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day in April 2010. The first phase now offers the families of Edison and surrounding areas a public gazebo, swallow nest boxes, native fruit-bearing trees and a butterfly garden, a footbridge over tidal wetlands along the mouth of Mill Creek, and a scenic 1,500-foot trail with the first extended public access to Edison’s seven-mile riverfront in Township history.

If you would like further information about this project, please contact Conservation Resources.

 
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