CHS 2030: Nurturing Our Urban Creeks

Joshua Robinson recently sat down with our friend Belvin Olasov, co-director of the Charleston Climate Coalition, to talk about possibilities for an aspirational, eco-futurist vision for the Lowcountry. The conversation and the article it inspired in Surge Magazine centered on Gadsden Creek, and how community efforts to preserve and reviatlize the historic tidal creek could serve as a blueprint for Charleston’s emerging relationship to water.

1954, Gadsden Creek being filled with municipal waste. Photo credit: Post & Courier

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Troubled waters: South Carolina's oldest stormwater ponds exist in regulatory 'no-man's land'

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Laurel Green Park closed for stream restoration project