The Department of Sanitation is developing a new solid waste management plan for managing the solid waste generated by New York City in a more environmentally sound and cost-effective way. This request for information will enable the city to better understand what new and emerging technologies are available for use and what is most appropriate.
This volume reports on the capacity required by DSNY for DSNY-managed Waste at each of the Converted MTSs, the quantity of capacity potentially available for
private carters delivering commercial waste, and the results of the environmental review evaluating whether that capacity can be used without causing potentially
unmitigatible adverse environmental impacts.
This chapter describes the sites and operations for which the results of environmental reviews are presented in Chapters 4 through 11. Each site description contains
a Site Location figure that identifies the approximate boundaries of the site and shows the surrounding neighborhood and a Facility Footprint figure that provides an
aerial view of the existing site with a footprint of the facility superimposed on the site.
Commercial Waste Management Study. Converted Marine Transfer Stations. Vol. III : Appendix A: Chapter 3 - Overview of Study Methodologies for Site- Specific Analyses.
These are the results of the environmental analyses of the Greenpoint Converted MTS, which include Land Use, Zoning and Public Policy, Socioeconomic Conditions,
Community Facilities, Open Space and Praklands, Cultural Resources, Urban Design and Visual Quality, Neighborhood Character, Traffic and Transportation, Air Quality,
Odor, Noise, Infrastructure and Energy, Natural Resources, Water Quality, Waterfront Revitalization Program, Hazardous Materials.
These are the results of the environmental analyses of the Hamilton Avenue Converted MTS, which include Land Use, Zoning and Public Policy, Socioeconomic Conditions,
Community Facilities, Open Space and Praklands, Cultural Resources, Urban Design and Visual Quality, Neighborhood Character, Traffic and Transportation,
Air Quality, Odor, Noise, Infrastructure and Energy, Natural Resources, Water Quality, Waterfront Revitalization Program, and Hazardous Materials.
These are the results of the environmental analyses of the West 135th Street Converted MTS, which include Land Use, Zoning and Public Policy, Socioeconomic Conditions,
Community Facilities, Open Space and Praklands, Cultural Resources, Urban Design and Visual Quality, Neighborhood Character, Traffic and Transportation, Air Quality,
Odor, Noise, Infrastructure and Energy, Natural Resources, Water Quality, Waterfront Revitalization Program, and Hazardous Materials.
The objective of the Study Area Evaluations is to identify potential areas of overlapping effects from multiple Transfer Stations in the Study Areas for air quality,
odor, noise, neighborhood character, public health and water quality from Transfer Stations located within each Study Area. Also, to identify traffic, off-site air quality and off-site
noise at key intersections along major corridors leading to and from Study Areas and the potential public health effects from the analyses conducted.