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On a sweltering June afternoon outside the Cooper Park Houses in Brooklyn, a small group peer through binoculars at a flock of pigeons in a nearby tree. Tour leader Yamina Nater-Otero hands out field guides in English and Spanish and explains that pigeons鈥 distinct markings make them ideal for practicing bird identification skills. But you don鈥檛 need to be able to identify birds to enjoy birding, Nater-Otero assures the group.
The gathering is open to the general public, just like hundreds of other outings the runs throughout the city every year. In this case, though, there鈥檚 a very specific target audience: people who live in affordable housing, a group that includes more than 500,000 residents, or 1 in 17 New Yorkers. The pilot program鈥檚 leaders aim to introduce birding鈥攁nd its physical, mental, and emotional benefits鈥攖o a broader swath of city residents and cultivate environmental stewards along the way.
The program came about in 2023 as a partnership with the Public Housing Community Fund, a nonprofit that supports programming for NYCHA residents. Alex Zablocki, the organization鈥檚 executive director, knew that NYCHA complexes are remarkably rich in green space and include roughly 1,000 acres of urban forest. Having collaborated with the NYC Bird Alliance previously, he wanted to connect the group鈥檚 avian experts with public-housing tenants to help them learn about the birds right outside their doors.
Since then, the two groups, with support from several other local organizations, have held outings at 16 campuses, often followed by a walk to a nearby park or waterfront. 鈥淲e鈥檙e bringing it to where people are, right where they live,鈥 Zablocki says.
Still, making participants feel welcomed into birding takes time and effort, says Saman Mahmood, director of advocacy and engagement for NYC Bird Alliance. Only four people attended the Cooper Park Houses walk in June, the first one on that campus. Around 75 people in total have joined the outings so far. Birding and other nature-based activities to a white and affluent crowd. Around 95 percent of NYCHA residents are people of color, and most deal with significant financial hardship.
Each community is different, so to make the events as inviting as possible, the organizers rely on residents鈥 input to optimize the program鈥檚 timing and format. Their ideas have led to a walk offered in Mandarin and Cantonese on one campus and a bird 鈥渟it鈥 on another that鈥檚 home to elderly tenants.
Along with a sense of community, birding offers a host of benefits, including exercise. At the Hudson Guild-Fulton Community Center, which primarily serves Manhattan鈥檚 Fulton and Eliott Houses, program leader Jenn Rosas has found that bird walks offer a more accessible way to move than joining one of the fitness classes offered there. Participants have also said the experience helped them take note of the city鈥檚 nature and feel peaceful, Rosas says. She鈥檚 found that, once introduced to a park they hadn鈥檛 felt comfortable visiting on their own, residents are more likely to return in the future.
NYCHA in Nature鈥檚 leaders hope to someday involve more of the city鈥檚 335 public-housing campuses, with the goal of training residents to lead walks in their own communities, but for now they鈥檙e focusing on building the existing campus programs. As far as Zablocki knows, the program is the first of its kind, and its leaders hope that it can serve as a model for other cities.
Unlike some efforts aimed at connecting underresourced communities with nature, such as initiatives to improve public transit to more distant parks or to city playgrounds, these walks take place in convenient green spaces that already exist鈥攔esidents just need to learn they鈥檙e there. 鈥淭here has been a historical tendency to think of nature as Yosemite, the redwoods, the Tetons,鈥 says Melanie Robinson, a program manager at the . But in fact, 鈥渘ature use looks different to everyone, and each version of it is valid.鈥
Even 鈥渙rdinary鈥 encounters with nature can be life-changing, Mahmood says. 鈥淪omebody saw a Blue Jay and was, like, completely blown away,鈥 she remembers. On another walk, four kids spotted a Yellow-crowned Night Heron and ran to share the news with their grandparents. The hope is that such moments can translate into advocacy on behalf of the city鈥檚 environment. 鈥淵ou can only protect what you love,鈥 says Mahmood. 鈥淎nd when New Yorkers love something, they鈥檒l go to the end of the world for it.鈥
This story originally ran in the Fall 2025 issue as 鈥淭he Birds Next Door.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .