At a Cape Cod Landmark, a Strategic Retreat From the Ocean

JEK

Senior Insider
At a Cape Cod Landmark, a Strategic Retreat From the Ocean

By JESS BIDGOODJULY 6, 2016




Photo
07provincetown3-master768.jpg


Linda and Tony Cannata of Mashpee, Mass., on Herring Cove Beach near a collapsed section of parking lot last week. CreditM. Scott Brauer for The New York Times PROVINCETOWN, Mass. — It is a simple pleasure in a classic summertime locale: Pull a car between the stripes on the parking lot here, a ribbon of asphalt parallel to the water atop a sloped wall in the sand, and look right out over the beach, where one can see Cape Cod Bay meeting the Atlantic Ocean.
Here amid the unearthly dunes, Herring Cove Beach — and especially its north parking lot — draws locals from just down the road and travelers from hundreds of miles away, who might arrive in camper vans studded with American flags. Some come for a quick swim, others to watch the sublime sunsets, famous in New England because the beach faces west, not east.
But there is a problem, evident in the chunks of asphalt lying on the sand and the deep fissures in the lot, parts of which are so damaged that they are off limits to parking: The beach is eroding, and parts of this beloved spot, built in front of the dunes, not behind them, are slowly crumbling into the ocean.



“It’s a nightmare,” said Mary-Jo Avellar, 70, the town moderator and a pastry chef, who was sitting on the sand with a crossword puzzle on a recent sunny afternoon, gesturing to several feet of exposed revetment between the flat surface of the parking lot and the sand below. “This beach used to be pretty flat. It’s been scoured out.”
The result here at the Cape Cod National Seashore raises a practical dilemma in a setting meant to be a place to escape: how to react to rising seas and eroding coastlines as climate change looms for coastal communities across the nation. The decision here was to demolish the parking lot and construct a new one 125 feet behind it, allowing for a restored shoreline in front of it.
“We’re retreating,” said George E. Price Jr., the superintendent of the Cape Cod National Seashore, which is run by the National Park Service. Other facilities at the beach have already been rebuilt farther back from the water.
Photo
07provincetown1-master675.jpg


Herring Cove, a tourist hot spot, is also vulnerable to erosion, as are coastal beaches across the country.CreditM. Scott Brauer for The New York Times In many parts of the country, like New York, New Jersey and New Orleans, property-damaging storms, tidal surges and floods have been met with the urge to shore up and rebuild. Experts say the project at Herring Cove is a fairly rare example of the opposite approach, called “managed retreat,” which involves moving away from the coastline. Mr. Price and many who use the beach here do not want to fight coastal change; they simply want to adapt to it.
“It reflects a sound planning approach that is regrettably uncommon so far,” said Michael B. Gerrard, a professor at Columbia Law School and the director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law there.
“As sea-level rise advances,” Mr. Gerrard added, the concept of managed retreat is “going to become increasingly important in large parts of the country.”
Photo
07provincetown2-master675.jpg


A beach towel being weighed down with a piece of asphalt that had chipped off the parking lot.CreditM. Scott Brauer for The New York Times Managed retreat comes in many forms, in addition to the physical movement of infrastructure: buyback programs, in which a government purchases vulnerable properties from private owners, or bans on new construction or hard armoring of the coast in areas susceptible to flooding or storm damage. But it is a wrenching decision, especially when private property is involved, and is politically difficult to carry out, or even to suggest. That makes the project at Herring Cove, and others on Cape Cod and around the country, all the more unusual.
“I think that could well serve as a model for what could happen elsewhere,” Mr. Gerrard said. “However, it’s easier in this circumstance, where privately owned property is not endangered or diminished in value. It becomes much more difficult when private property is at risk.”
The majority of the nation’s coasts are retreating, said Rob Thieler, a coastal geologist for the United States Geological Survey who is based in Woods Hole, Mass., and Cape Cod is home to vexing areas of erosion like Herring Cove. It is difficult, Mr. Thieler said, to know whether individual problems with coastal erosion result from sea-level rise due to climate change, natural environmental fluctuations or a series of damaging storms over the last few years, but this much is known:
“Given the forecast of future sea level rise over the next century and beyond, every problem that we have along the coast right now will only increase,” Mr. Thieler said. “That, I think, ties back to why managed retreat, in places where you can employ it, is a good option.”
Photo
provincetown-map-1467773168696-blog427.png


Some New England towns have used state grant money to support resilience plans, like the relocation of a parking lot and retaining wall on Squibnocket Beach, in Chilmark on Martha’s Vineyard. And, one day last week, a new parking lot, farther away from the water, was drying at Breakwater Beach, in Brewster, farther south on the Cape, part of a retreat project that had drawn passionate objections from neighbors who did not want to see it take away from an open park space near the water.
“Change is very difficult, especially when it’s your favorite place in the world,” said Chris Miller, the director of the town’s department of natural resources.
At the moment, the Herring Cove parking lot is in a kind of limbo. The Park Service is in the midst of a $300,000 repair that will allow the lot to operate at about half capacity until officials get $3 million to move the lot back, which they hope to do in 2018.
For Don Robitaille, 84, a retired soda machine repairman who had driven his camper here from Maine for the contentment of sitting on a beach chair with a book of puzzles and an open view of the ocean, it was still a perfect getaway.
Some beachgoers worried the eventual relocation of the lot would change the experience of being there. But others in town, like Ms. Avellar, are merely frustrated that the big move is not happening sooner, and that tourists have flocked here only to find a mess.
“This is Provincetown’s most important beach,” Ms. Avellar said. “People just want to have them build something that’s going to last for a while.”
 
Yes we read that they have to move the parking lot back and add more beach! The same has happened where we are in the summer in northern Michigan- we gave up 40% of our lawn and added tons of sugar sand as the lake levels are way up, especially lake Michigan which is connected to our Lake - Charlevoix!
 
I was on a committee that told them 25 years ago asphalt did NOT belong in such a pristine natural setting snd that winter westerlies would destroy it eventually.........they laughed....
And now we laugh because they look like a bunch of dumasses continually rebuilding this road only to watch it get destroyed in the winter...now three winters in a row......get a bulldozer, rip that disgusting asphalt up, haul it out of there,and leave the beach as nature intended it to be...and if you can't drive your car out there that's too freakin bad...park it elsewhere and walk to the spot on the beach you want to be .....
 
Top