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The Boardman River Plan: A Comprehensive Vision for the Future of Traverse City's River

Traverse City, Michigan
Project Description

Traverse City’s development as an economic hub for northern Michigan was largely centered around the
Boardman River. Historically, the river has served as an artery for the transportation of people, timber
and other goods. The relative ease of movement through this area prompted steady settlement and
development during the 19th and 20th centuries. Without the Boardman River, Traverse City would be a
very different place.
Despite its role in defining the trajectory of much of Traverse City’s past, the Boardman River’s place within
the fabric of Traverse City today is not well defined. Through much of the city’s downtown core the river is
heavily engineered and lined with parking lots, other paved areas, forgotten spaces behind buildings and
informal camps. Along with a diminished community recognition of the Boardman as a valuable resource,
the river faces a variety of environmental challenges, including stormwater flows carrying sediment
and other pollutants, bank erosion, the degradation of aquatic habitat and the introduction of invasive
species.
Although the city has recognized that the time has come to reintegrate the river into the city, there is a need
for a comprehensive plan articulating how to accomplish this. Such a plan needs to approach the river’s
urban corridor as a coherent whole, creating a highly legible and connected riverfront that is well integrated
into the city. A plan must respond to the changing aesthetic and character of the river banks as it flows
through different neighborhoods, as well as current conditions and proposed future developments.
The Boardman River Plan does just this.
The Boardman River Plan strives to expose the river as a defining characteristic of the City of Traverse City,
incorporating ecological and social recommendations for elevating it to its rightful place of prominence
within the community and the city’s physical makeup and improving habitat, water quality, and bank
stability.
To accomplish this, the Plan begins at the full city scale to address widespread issues and provide general
recommendations appropriate throughout the river’s course. The Plan then zeros in on key areas, offering
site-specific recommendations aimed at realizing opportunities and tackling problems discovered
during an in-depth process of site analysis. Through these steps, the Boardman River Plan provides a
conceptual framework that defines the river as an integral part of the city and supports individual riverfront
development projects as part of an ambitious vision for the future of the Boardman River in Traverse City.

Year
2013
Project Status
Past Project
Client Organization
City of Traverse City, Michigan
Students Involved

Dennis, Catherine
Fargo, Aaron
Fercho, Adam
Strasser, Christina

Advisor(s)
Hill, Chet
Final Report
http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/97433

I'M READY TO APPLYI WANT TO LEARN MORE

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University of Michigan
School for Environment and Sustainability
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Ann Arbor, MI 48109
(734) 764-6453
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