Green Design Could Prevent Ida-Style Flooding in 40K Queens

Just three acres in Central Queens are designed to handle stormwater runoff, but to more effectively prevent flooding, the area would need about 120 acres of green infrastructure, the report found.

debris piled up outside of flooded homes in Queens

Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office

Flood damage in Woodside, Queens, following Hurricane Ida in 2021.

Nearly a year after Hurricane Ida floodwaters killed 11 New Yorkers inside basement apartments, the Regional Plan Association (RPA) is calling on the city to pursue a number of steps to reduce rainfall risk—like turning parking spots into absorbent garden plots to capture runoff.

The planning nonprofit’s report, “Preventing Another Ida,” honed in on the Central Queens neighborhoods of Jackson Heights, Woodside, Elmhurst, Corona and Rego Park, where there are more than 40,000 buildings with basement units, many of them rented out to immigrant New Yorkers.

Of the 11 New York City residents who drowned in basement apartments during Ida, 10 lived Queens, including three in Woodside, one in Elmhurst and another in Corona. Across the five boroughs, unregulated basement units provide a vital—though usually illegal—source of housing, with more than 100,000 New Yorkers living in unauthorized underground homes, according to city estimates.

RPA Senior Planner Marcel Negret, one of the authors of the report, led a tour of the Corona area and pointed out the problems that lead to extreme stormwater runoff as well as possible solutions to reduce flooding.

“We picked this geography given the concentration of fatalities and the flood loss that occurred during Ida,” Negret said. He showed reporters a curbside garden designed to absorb rainwater, a vacant lot where he urged the city to develop green infrastructure and Corona Golf Playground, where a subsurface detention system—designed to temporarily store stormwater runoff underground—is in the design phase. At Corona Plaza, Negret highlighted what he called a missed opportunity to improve stormwater management across the large swath of pavement.

The RPA report recommends lining local roadways with green infrastructure, like absorbent rain gardens and permeable pavement. Just three acres in Central Queens are designed to handle stormwater runoff, but to more effectively prevent flooding, the area would need about 120 acres of green infrastructure, the report found.

“We need to start viewing extreme weather events not only as climate change issues, but also as public health crises that most severely impact low-income communities,” said RPA President and CEO Tom Wright in a statement.