Braddock Bay Wetland and Barrier Beach Restoration
Costing an estimated $9 million, this habitat restoration project is funded through the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI). It will be accomplished through a partnership of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), with EPA's Great Lakes National Program Office (GLNPO) coordinating.
This project is restoring and protecting the approximate 340 acres of emergent and submergent marsh areas currently in the Braddock Bay area of the Rochester Embayment Area of Concern (AOC).
Braddock Bay Barrier Beach
Beginning in 2016, restoration started with the re-creation of a historic barrier beach which protects the Bay from the onslaught of Lake Ontario wind, waves, and winter damage or erosion.
In order to restore Braddock Bay’s historic barrier beach, USACE constructed:
- A 1,695-foot long continuous rubblemound breakwater spine;
- A 2.55-acre headland beach;
- Two 150-foot long headland rubblemound breakwaters; and
- Two 180-foot long rubblemound terminal groins.
This barrier beach will improve Braddock Bay by:
- Reducing the rate of erosion of the interior wetlands;
- Reducing the volume of sand and other sediments of various particle sizes, that are deposited within the bay (and consequently removed from the littoral system); and
- Return areas of Braddock Bay to its previously existing low-energy system, allowing for expansion of existing submerged and emergent wetland habitat.
Recreational communities such as boaters and fishers are also expected to benefit greatly from the barrier beach and the improvements to the wetland areas. The once esteemed recreational area has suffered from blockages in the navigation channel and losses of wetland habitats due to the erosion of the former barrier beach that had served as protection from Lake Ontario’s occasional choppy waters.
Channels and Potholes
This project also enhances the current diversity of the 180 acres of emergent wetland by increasing open water areas within its interior through the creation of channels and potholes. These channels and potholes , along with the additional 2 acres of wetland creation in 2017, will provide a pathway for fish to enter the marsh and provide for fringe sedge-grass meadows, ultimately increasing the diversity of wetland habitats present.
Through channeling and potholing, spawning and habitat areas for fish and wildlife are recreated. They have made huge strides in improving the overall quality of these natural areas. Approximately 8.89-acres of channels and potholes were dredged and excavated to recreate the historic diversity of the wetlands. All material excavated to construct the channels and potholes was reused on site and graded to create a more diverse topography which will promote floral and faunal richness.
Approximately 5-acres of the existing emergent marsh will be chemically and mechanically treated to reduce cattail and other invasive species in this area, and support restoration of sedge meadow marsh in these areas.