Teaneck Creek Conservancy | |
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Type | Eco-Art Park (Bergen County, New Jersey) |
Location | Teaneck |
Area | 46 acres |
Created | 2006 |
The Teaneck Creek Conservancy is an 46-acre (0.19 km2) eco-art park located in Teaneck in Bergen County, New Jersey. It is part of the Bergen County Park system independently managed by the member-supported, non-profit organization, the Teaneck Creek Conservancy. The park contains 1.4 miles of groomed trails and exhibits both permanent and ephemeral eco-art throughout the year.[1][2][3] The conservancy operates art and environmental programs for the local community.
The namesake of the Conservancy is the Teaneck Creek, which flows through the park and into the Overpeck Creek.
The Teaneck Conservancy was founded in 2001 by the Puffin Foundation together with local environmentalists, artists and educators to save a parcel of land from development. Through cooperation of community leaders and the Bergen County Parks Department, the Teaneck Creek Park was opened to the public in 2006 containing 1.3 miles of groomed trails, an Outdoor Classroom, and ecological art exhibits. Since then the Conservancy has continued to grow in community membership, sponsors, educational programs for the public and is known as a premier ecological art park in the region.
The Conservancy commissions and hosts ephemeral and permanent eco-art exhibitions throughout the year.
Of the tons of concrete debris dumped on the park site during the construction of Interstate 95 and I-80, five monolithic concrete drainage pipes marred the natural landscape. They were too large and heavy to remove without considerable destruction to the park and remained as a graffiti covered reminder of the history of environmental degradation.
In 2008, the Teaneck Creek Conservancy commissioned Brooklyn muralist Eduardo Aleander Rabel to lead a group of volunteers including students from the Thomas Jefferson Middle School and AIE NJ State Council on the Arts Grant artist John Kaiser to create murals inside and without all five pipes. The murals of each pipe represent a different era in American history beginning with the Native Americans and ending with the 21st century.