The Outdoors · New York City
Read Staten Island Through the Bluebelt
The Staten Island Bluebelt helps explain why wetlands, streams, and stormwater corridors are part of the borough's everyday landscape.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Staten Island’s Bluebelt is civic infrastructure that still looks like landscape. NYC DEP describes bluebelts as drainage systems that preserve and enhance streams, ponds, and wetlands so they can convey, store, and filter stormwater runoff. The Staten Island system drains 15 watersheds at the southern end of the island plus the Richmond Creek watershed, with natural drainage corridors connected to conventional storm sewers.
That means a wetland edge, wooded swale, or pond may be doing public work, not sitting idle. The borough’s low-lying green spaces can be part of the flood-control fabric, especially where natural drainage and storm sewers meet.
For a walk or property question, DEP Bluebelt signs are worth noticing. Avoid dumping or yard waste, and treat the wetland edges as working public space. NYC311 gives the resident-facing route for Bluebelt questions, which keeps the system from feeling like hidden infrastructure.
The Bluebelt gives Staten Island a different kind of local story: streams, ponds, wetlands, stormwater, and neighborhood edges all doing a job in plain sight. It is one of the borough’s quiet clues that city infrastructure can look green, low, and alive.