New York neighbors turn pandemic streets into permanent green sanctuary

A 1.3-mile stretch of Jackson Heights was once just traffic and noise — now it's a thriving public park reimagined by the community that needed it most.

Claire Elise Thompson reports for Grist.


In short:

  • During the pandemic, 34th Avenue in Queens was closed to cars, quickly transforming into a beloved gathering place called Paseo Park in a neighborhood long starved of green space.
  • Community groups like Alliance for Paseo Park led the charge for a permanent redesign, collecting feedback from neighbors — including schoolkids — and securing $90 million in city funds.
  • The resulting plan prioritizes climate resilience, safety, and shared use while balancing local concerns, such as access for emergency vehicles and tension over parking.

Key quote:

“We’re showing the community, we’re showing the city, we’re showing the state, we’re showing the world that it can be done.”

— Luz Maria Mercado, board chair, Alliance for Paseo Park

Why this matters:

Paseo Park is proof that communities can reclaim urban space for clean air, play, and connection — and that pandemic innovations can seed lasting change. What used to be a mile and a quarter of traffic became a lifeline: open air for schoolkids, space for elders to stroll, a running track, and a commons for a community craving connection. In an era of rising temperatures and loneliness, Paseo Park could be a participatory model for other communities to adapt to bolster public health and wellbeing.

Read more: The Ohio River community of Newport bands together to slow runoff and add greenspace

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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