History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Yonkers Turned a Buried River Into Downtown Context
The Saw Mill River daylighting gives downtown Yonkers a concrete clue: an old industrial waterway is now part of civic space again.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Downtown Yonkers makes more sense when you know the Saw Mill River story.
The EPA described the river as a 23-mile waterway that had been buried under city pavement and studied for restoration after years of pollution and flooding concerns. Groundwork Hudson Valley’s project history explains the local result: water returned above ground in downtown Yonkers after about 90 years underground. That turns Larkin Plaza and nearby blocks into more than a train-station district.
It is a small map lesson in how Yonkers has tried to reconnect older industrial infrastructure, public space, and river ecology.
The Saw Mill River gives downtown a visible before-and-after story. A buried, polluted, flood-prone waterway became part of public space again, which changes how Larkin Plaza and nearby blocks read.
The river also softens the downtown story a little. Trains, towers, old industry, and civic space can feel hard-edged on their own; open water adds motion, habitat, and a reminder of what was underfoot.
For Yonkers, that is a strong civic-waterway detail. The city brought an old river back into the open and let downtown show some of its industrial and ecological past.