By FRANK CARINI/ecoRI News
staff
Rising sea levels and increased flooding are problems for communities and historic districts along the southern New England coast, which has some thinking of turning Boston into a city of canals, much like Amsterdam and Venice. (Urban Land Institute) |
History-rich
and waterlogged southern New England needs to develop a plan on how to
adequately protect the region’s many cultural resources and historic buildings
from a rising tide of sea and flood waters.
The
May 2014 UCS report that
lists Boston among the 30 most at-risk historic areas across the country notes
that the city is one of several along the East Coast experiencing more frequent
and severe coastal flooding and more intense storm surges.
“You
can almost trace the history of the United States through these sites,” said
Adam Markham, director of climate impacts at UCS and the report’s co-author.
“The imminent risks to these sites and the artifacts they contain threaten to
pull apart the quilt that tells the story of the nation’s heritage and
history.”
Ten of
the 20 highest tides in Boston during the past hundred years have occurred in
the past decade, according to the report. Since 1921, when such record keeping
began, the city has experienced waves 3.5 feet taller than normal 20 times, and
half of those instances have occurred in the past 10 years.
In
fact, high tides along the East Coast are getting, well, higher, largely
because sea levels are increasing. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) scientists have said these
increases are the result of shifts in climate — the seas, on average, are 8
inches higher than a century ago. The result is the growing occurrence of
flooding in coastal communities.
Had
Sandy, the October 2012 superstorm that wreaked havoc on New York and New
Jersey and damaged historic buildings and landscapes up and down the
Mid-Atlantic coast, hit Boston about five hours earlier, at high tide, the
damage to some of the city’s historic sites would have been severe.
The
Blackstone Block of Colonial streets, for one, would have flooded, according to
the Boston
Harbor Association. An association report claims that nearly 7 percent of the
city would have been flooded, with floodwaters reaching City Hall, had Sandy
arrived earlier.
The
additional destruction under this scenario would have significantly damaged
Boston’s economy. Some 12 million tourists visit the city annually, generating
about $8 billion for the local economy. Many visit to walk the Freedom Trail,
browse Faneuil Hall, a U.S. National Historic Landmark, and dine in some of the
country’s oldest restaurants.
In
fact, the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development ranks
Boston the eighth-highest metropolitan area worldwide in expected economic
losses, estimated at $237 million annually, on average, between now and
2050, because of coastal flooding.
Boston,
however, is hardly the only seaside southern New England community with a fine
collection of historic attractions. Rising tides also threaten historical
properties in Fall River, New Bedford, Providence, Wickford Village in North
Kingstown, R.I., and Groton, Conn., among other places.
Cultural
resources — i.e., libraries, archives, historical societies, museums, city/town
halls and historic farms— are an important part of southern New England’s
unique heritage. Their significance also includes the literary works, rare
collections, manuscripts, historical archives, municipal records and artifacts
they hold.
The
Massachusetts seaside towns of Duxbury, Marshfield and Scituate are rich in New
England history, and they’re also prone to flooding because of rising tides and
heavier storm surges. In fact, the three South Shore communities in the past 35
years are collectively responsible for nearly $80 million in FEMA Flood
Insurance claims — nearly a quarter of the state’s total, according to a recent study.
From
1978 to 2013, the three towns received a total of $78.3 million in
flood-related claims, as compared to the total of $337.8 million for all of
Massachusetts.
These
communities are particularly vulnerable to sea-level rise because of their
extensive floodplains and estuaries that reach into inland areas. In addition,
their densely populated shorelines are fronted by narrow and fragile coastal
and barrier beaches that are exposed to high-energy surf from Massachusetts and
Cape Cod bays.
They
have all experienced extensive damage over the years from storm-related
flooding, which is predicted to worsen in the years ahead.
The Brown Street
Bridge and much of historic Wickford Village in North Kingstown, R.I., was
inundated during Superstorm Sandy’s visit in 2012. (Coastal Resources Center at
URI)
Vulnerable
harbor village
The threat of rising seas, worsening storm surges and more frequent downpours arguably concerns Wickford more than any other historic district in southern New England.
This
small village on the west side of Narragansett Bay features one of the largest
collections of 18th-century dwellings in the Northeast. Most of the village's
historic homes and buildings — the majority privately owned — remain largely
intact upon their original foundations.
But
rising waters are beginning to routinely lap against many of these old
structures. A mid-August tidal surge, for instance, flooded a parking lot
across the way from Gardner’s Wharf Seafood, turning the popular local business
into a harbor island.
Grover
Fugate, executive director of Rhode Island’s Coastal Resources Management
Council (CRMC), has warned that some projections show sea levels rising as much
as 6 feet in the next 100 years. If that happens, he says much of Wickford
Village would be lost.
A
6-foot rise would flood about 150 parcels of land in Wickford, as much as 5
percent of the town, according to a Rhode Island Sea Grant analysis. The value
of the land that would be lost is some $80 million.
Wickford’s
municipal parking lot already floods regularly at moon tides. During Sandy, the
iconic village lost power, basements were flooded and septic systems
overwhelmed. Street flooding turned some properties nearest Wickford Harbor
into small islands.
With
this historic village — regarded by many as the town’s heart and soul — so
vulnerable to flooding, Rhode Island selected North Kingstown for a pilot
project in a statewide effort to develop climate-change adaptation measures.
One of the project’s first tasks was to map areas of North Kingstown vulnerable
to sea-level rise and flooding and then identify priority at-risk
infrastructure, buildings and assets in those areas.
It
likely would take a massive engineering project to properly protect this
harborside village. This prospect begs the same question municipal officials,
historical societies and homeowners across southern New England are grappling
with: “How do we protect our properties and these districts from climate change
without sacrificing their cultural integrity?”
“How
do we balance preserving the historical integrity of these homes and also get
them out of the way?” Teresa Crean, a community planner and coastal management
extension specialist with the Coastal Resources Center and Rhode Island Sea
Grant, said during a “resiliency walk” she led along Wickford Harbor in
October. “There’s little guidance currently that addresses how to deal with
historic districts when it comes to climate change.”
Many southern
New England communities, such as Wickford Village, and the historic properties
within them face a threat from rising waters. (Frank Carini/ecoRI News)
Complex
problem
The complexities of coastal adaptation combined with little guidance from the federal government makes the problem of protecting historic districts from climate change all the more difficult.
To
slow the rate of change and give archaeologists, historic preservationists and
land managers more time to protect historic sites, carbon emissions must be
reduced, according to last year’s UCS report. But even if we manage to reduce
our carbon emissions, much of the change is already locked in, according to
accepted science.
In
Boston, where many properties are close to sea level and many areas were
originally wetlands filled for development, the Harbor Association has
suggested, among other things, that the city consider making room for the
encroaching waters with canals and/or lagoons.
A
117-page study released
in July 2013 entitled “Building Resilience in Boston: Best Practices for
Climate Change Adaptation and Resilience for Existing Buildings” offers
experts’ recommendations for property owners in preparing for emergencies
related to climate change.
Many
of the techniques that are available to protect properties and/or districts are
costly and/or don’t mesh with historic-district rules. Elevating a home, for
example, can cost upwards of $150,000, according to Crean. She noted that in
The Point neighborhood of Newport, R.I., which has one of the highest concentrations
of Colonial homes in the United States, some homeowners have elevated their
property to get out of the flood zone.
“But
then there’s the ongoing discussion on consistency and what historic district
commissions will allow,” Crean said.
Across
southern New England such discussions have already become heated. Like most
issues related to climate change, it’s difficult for some to even admit there’s
a problem. Add historic district to the equation, and the issue becomes even
more complicated.
Two
years ago, Newport banned wind turbines from most of the city. Local officials
were particularly concerned about property owners erecting small turbines
anywhere in the city’s historic neighborhoods.
That
same City Council concern, however, didn’t transfer to the power lines that
connect the old homes in these neighborhoods to utility poles, or to
satellite-TV dishes.
Just
like the debate, often heated, that surrounds what is allowed in these historic
neighborhoods, the conversation about how to protect them from climate change
will likely be even more contentious.
Among
the issues that will likely be hotly debated will be septic systems. To see how
divisive the issue of cesspool phaseout and connection to municipal sewer can
be, look no further than Warwick, R.I.
Much
of the public opposition there comes from homeowners who are concerned about
cost. Others have said, incorrectly, that if a cesspool — which is nothing more
than a perforated steel bucket buried in a shallow pit or a covered pit lined
with unmortared brick or stone — is properly maintained it will last forever.
Some opponents against having to connect to the city’s sewer system have called
the idea a tax; others have called it extortion.
Similar
opposition has been heard in other communities in the region, such as
Portsmouth, R.I.
In
North Kingstown, however, most of the town is scheduled to be sewered by 2017,
but Wickford will not be, and property owners there will be required to upgrade
failing septic systems, which are typically expensive projects.
“At
what point do you allow properties to be occupied when you can’t flush a
toilet?” Crean asked. “It’s another tough question we’re struggling with, to
honor property rights and investments made and to protect public safety and
health.”
There
are homes in historic districts in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, such as
Wickford, and Connecticut that can’t flush their toilets now after heavy rains,
for fear of popping the caps off their inundated cesspools or septic tanks.
In
fact, climate-change impacts will likely increase groundwater elevations in
southern New England’s coastal areas, which could potentially impact
underground infrastructure, such as septic tanks and cesspools, commonly found
in historic districts.
Protecting
the region’s historic properties from the rising waters of climate change will
take planning, funding, compromise and sacrifice. It will be considerably more
difficult than simply enacting a plastic shopping bag ban, and we’ve seen how
punishing that endeavor has become.
Impacts
to historical/cultural resources from climate change range from coastal erosion
and storm damage to the effects of increased flooding, melting permafrost and
more rapid deterioration because of changing rain and temperature patterns,
according to the National Park Service.
To
properly protect the country’s inventory of these resources, the federal agency
has noted:
- Cultural resources can’t be managed in isolation; natural resources and the surrounding landscape must be taken into account.
- A national inventory and prioritization of vulnerable sites is needed to assess the uniqueness of these sites.
- A time frame for adaptation strategies needs to established.
- A resource in poor condition due to deferred maintenance or insufficient funding has a different kind of vulnerability.
- There is no natural hierarchy or sequence for the criteria; they should be assessed as more of a matrix that will vary site to site.
To
incorporate many of the possible solutions will likely require zoning changes
and embracing best technologies. For instance, would municipal zoning and/or
historic-district guidelines allow for the use of composting toilets? Would
home owners be interested in installing them?
Also,
utilities in most historic homes are in the basement and vulnerable to
flooding. Where can they be moved to better withstand increased flooding that
climate change is expected to cause?
Can
solar panels and wind turbines be tastefully incorporated onto historic
buildings? Will green roofs be allowed in historic districts?
“Zoning
needs to catch up with new technologies and best practices,” Crean said. “But a
lot of agencies aren’t even on the same page.”
As
Crean noted during the October tour of Wickford Village, one thing is for sure,
“The longer we wait to address this problem, the more expensive the solutions
become.”
Both
financially and culturally.