On Grist.org: "Sewer Discretion is Advised"
I've just published
a new film review on the environmental news site grist.org about two new documentaries that profile the new watersheds. Here's an excerpt:
Most urban streams and creeks are hidden from sight — in huge sewer
tunnels under streets and expressways, in concrete ditches behind
razor-wire fences, and sometimes even in pipes under the manicured lawns
and gardens of city parks.
These are hardly the kinds of places you’d see on the cover of an
L.L. Bean catalog — although you might find a few L.L. Bean catalogs in
these concrete creeks.
But a growing network of urban explorers, who sometimes call
themselves “drainers,” are sneaking into the storm sewers and aqueducts
to rediscover these long-hidden waterways. They’re finding lush forest
groves among the concrete ditches and waterfalls and grand vaulted
grottoes in underground sewers. Their photography and field notes
remind residents that the rivers and streams that nursed their cities’
early growth still survive below the pavement, and are still worthy of
appreciation — maybe even restoration.
Now, not one, but two new documentary films follow this small
subculture of urban river enthusiasts, and celebrate the outsized impact
of their civilly disobedient urban river expeditions.
Read the rest at grist.org.
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