South Brooklyn Marine Terminal

Sorters for recycling

The South Brooklyn Marine Terminal (SMBT) is an intermodal shipping, warehousing, and manufacturing complex on in the Port of New York and New Jersey. It is located the Upper New York Bay in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn[1][2] adjacent to Industry City, which lies directly to the south. A recycling and waster transfer facility managed by Sims Metal Management is the major tenant. An auto processing terminal is proposed.

Early ferry service

Connector from waterfront to 38th Street Yard and the South Brooklyn Railway.

The New York and South Brooklyn Ferry operated a ferry from the Battery Maritime Building (formerly known as Municipal Ferry Pier) to the South Brooklyn 39th Street Ferry Terminal, where rail transfer (to the South Brooklyn Railway) was possible until 1935.[3]

Rail service

2nd Avenue Yard is located on the marine terminal

Adjacent to the Bush Terminal it is served by car float and transloading activities of New York New Jersey Rail via the 65th Street Yard[2][4][5] which also connects to the Bay Ridge Branch, operated by the New York Connecting Railroad. Rail infrastructure improvements along 1st Avenue completed in 2012 connected the yard to SBMT. Other investments in infrastructure included a new break-bulk rail spur along the 39th Street shed, two new rail sidings for auto rack transloading, and a new rail connection to the SIMS facility at the 29th Street Pier. SBMT is also connected along the South Brooklyn Railway (ROW) to 36th–38th Street Yard. In 2012, the interchange with New York New Jersey Rail, LLC at Second Avenue was refurbished and a new ramp was installed at the 38th Street Yard at Fourth Avenue to allow receipt of new R156 locomotives and other subway rolling stock that are delivered on flat cars.[6]

Waste management

Sims Metal Management subsidiary Sims Municipal Recycling (SMR) managed construction of a new 11-acre recycling center at SBMT from 2010 to 2013.[7][8] SMR worked with geotechnical engineers to develop structural fill blends using “mole rock” from NYC tunneling projects mixed with recycled glass aggregate (RGA). More than 5,000 tons of RGA were blended with 20,000 tons of mole rock and used to elevate sections of the site by 4 feet, thereby protecting buildings and equipment against sea level rise and storm surges.[9][10]

Wind Turbine

In January 2015, SIMS inaugurated the city's only commercial-scale wind turbine at the recycling center. Built by Northern Power Systems at the cost of about $750,000, the 160 ft (49 m) tall turbine has the capacity to produce 100 kilowatts, or 4% of the center's power needs.[11][12]

Auto processing

Auto processing, the customization of imported automobiles, is done at the terminal at a scaled-down assembly plant where much of the work is done by hand using simple tools. Quality control inspections are done, repairs are made, and accessories – such as floor mats, GPS systems, satellite radios, alloy wheels and roof racks – are installed.[13] The facility at SBMT was operated by the Axis Group.[14][15] which filed bankruptcy in 2012. Plans by the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) to redevelop and expand the auto processing have been bogged down since 2014.[16][17][18]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to South Brooklyn Marine Terminal.

References

  1. https://www.dot.ny.gov/recovery/sponsors/tiger/repository/NYCEDC%20SBMT%20Application.pdf
  2. 1 2 "South Brooklyn Marine Terminal". NYCEDC.
  3. "39th St. Ferry". Brooklyn Visual Heritage Project. Retrieved 2015-01-20.
  4. "NYNJR". nynjr.com.
  5. "Floating Railroad Continues a Proud Tradition". The Seafarers International Union, Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and Inland Waters District/NMU, AFL-CIO. November 2006. Retrieved 5 Dec 2008.
  6. "South Brooklyn Railway". trainweb.com.
  7. MICHAEL KIMMELMAN. "A Grace Note for a Gritty Business: Sims Municipal Recycling Facility, Designed by Selldorf". The New York Times.
  8. "NYC Breaks Ground on $80 Million Recycling Center in Brooklyn". inhabitat.com.
  9. "Sunset Park Material Recovery Facility - Curbside Recycling - New York City Curbside Recycling - Sims Metal Management - Sims Municipal Recycling". simsmunicipal.com.
  10. "Sims Municipal Recycling Facility". NYCEDC.
  11. Giambusso, David (January 15, 2015). "Recycling firm unveils city's first commercial wind turbine". CapitalNeYork. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  12. Schlossbergian, Tatiana (January 15, 2015). "In Brooklyn, Fertile Ground for a Wind Turbine". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  13. Belson, Ken (September 23, 2011). "Far From the Factory, Adding Final Touches". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-12-23.
  14. "Photo Gallery - PORTNYC South Brooklyn Marine Terminal". portnyc-sbmt.com.
  15. "NYCEDC Signs Lease With Axis Group For 74-Acre Brooklyn Site". NYCEDC.
  16. Samar Khurshid. "Garodnick, Menchaca Set Council Hearing to Review Sunset Park Development Project". Gotham Gazette: The Place for New York Policy and Politics.
  17. Andrew J. Hawkins (7 January 2015). "Blaming councilman, city ditches $115M project". Crain's New York Business.
  18. "City Pulls Redevelopment Project for South Brooklyn Marine Terminal". DNAinfo New York.

Coordinates: 40°39′30″N 74°00′40″W / 40.65833°N 74.01111°W / 40.65833; -74.01111

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.