FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE05-07
March
14, 2005
Contact:
Ian Michaels
(718) 595-6600
Gowanus
Canal Flushing Tunnel to Be Shut for Semi-Annual Maintenance
Period
Commissioner Emily Lloyd of the New York City Department of Environmental
Protection (DEP) announced today that the Gowanus Canal Flushing
Tunnel will be closed temporarily beginning March 15 for its semi-annual
maintenance period. The shutdown will take anywhere from two to
ten days, depending on an inspection of pumping equipment in the
tunnel.
“The Gowanus Flushing Tunnel has helped to bring better
water quality to this important area of Brooklyn ,” said
Lloyd. “It has also caused a reduction of odors and has even
helped bring life back to the Canal. The DEP is committed to maintaining
the Tunnel, and as part of the maintenance program the Tunnel is
shut down briefly twice a year for inspection and to repair moving
parts in the pumping device.”
The Gowanus Flushing Tunnel was built in 1911 to bring fresh
water to the Canal. It contained a propeller that circulated water
from New York Harbor , and functioned until the mid-1960s, when
service was suspended due to mechanical failure. Efforts to improve
the area's sewage collection and treatment through the construction
of the Red Hook Wastewater Treatment plant, which began operating
in 1987, did little to solve the canal's odor and pollution problems.
In 1994, DEP undertook a project to reactivate the flushing tunnel,
and by 1999 it was re-activated with new pumps, motors and fans
allowing aerated water from Buttermilk Channel in the East River
to be pumped into the head end of the Gowanus.
Today, the Gowanus Flushing Tunnel operates 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week,
bringing fresh oxygenated water into the Canal. DEP monitors the
quality of the water in the Canal to ensure it complies with New
York State water quality standards.