Northeast
New York, New Jersey and New England have almost forty great national park sites, ranging from the spectacular coastal parks of Acadia, Cape Cod and Fire Island to the rich historical sites depicting the birth and growth of our nation. NPCA’s work in the Northeast encompasses a growing number of these sites throughout the region.
Envisioning Gateway
"Envisioning Gateway," an international public design competition for Gateway National Recreation Area, called for ideas to transform Gateway and began a real dialogue about its future as an iconic national park. View the designs that will transform this site into a world class park. People's choice winners to be announced shortly.
NPCA's Northeast Regional Office has been working to build support for the national park sites in and immediately around New York City, which face significant under-funding in the National Park System and hold tremendous potential for restoration. The national parks of New York City total more than 27,000 acres of parkland available for recreation as well as numerous historical and cultural sites. Prominent parks include the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island, Governors Island, Grant's Tomb, and Gateway National Recreation Area.
The largest national park in the New York region and NPCA's current Northeast regional focus is Gateway. Gateway encompasses the majority of the remaining natural areas surrounding the Hudson River estuary, including beachfront, salt marsh, maritime shrub, and coastal grasslands. The park also lies in a major botanical transition zone where northern and southern forest species converge, and at the juncture of the Atlantic Flyway, serving as a major stop-over point for all eastern avian migrants.
Yellowstone to Yukon
NPCA helped sponsor an exhibition of spectacular photographs at the American Museum of Natural History that chronicled the migration of wildlife along routes between Yellowstone and Yukon. The Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative (Y2Y) works to preserve these ancient wildlife corridors. The accompanying brochure, Routes for Wildlife, describes the Y2Y initiative and proposes a similar initiative for east coast barrier islands.
Download the brochure (PDF 4 MB).