The wilderness of the United States has long been a symbolic struggle battle field among classicalists, classicists support progress and industry, romantic admire the respect and appreciation for nature. The romantic intent seems to be due to the best interests of the environment, but in reality both of these ideas are for human benefit. These seemingly opposite views arise from the same motivation that humans need to control the environment. In the end they will work together to create the Adirondack Park tourism industry.
For most people, Adirondack has an "eternal" quality; the eternal aura comes from the natural spirit of the mountains and the flowing water. In Adirondacks, the word "forever" is more than most people understand. Adirondack park was founded in 1892 and by the year 1894 the state land within its territory was declared "forever wild" under Article 14 of the New York State Constitution. The park has a total of 6 million acres of land, half of which are privately owned. 80% of land use decisions in 3 million acres of private park in the park are within the jurisdiction of local governments. In this important area of public policy, the land use dispute in the park is a remarkable example of the tension between the state and the local government.
Adirondack Park in New York is rebuilding our world: it is both wild and living space. Governments around the world are trying to reproduce the wild space model of sustainable living. In Adirondacks, about 2 million acres of wilderness and a group of healthy wildlife coexist with the human community. Protection of legally protected private property and "forever wild" state estate is also found in 100 small towns and tourist attractions. In the public and private area, there are 6 million acres of land, about half of which are public property.
Unlike other parks on the planet, Adirondack is an objective glory, ancient mountains, protected wilderness. You may not notice this, but Adirondack Park is protected by state law, it is sanctuary of "eternal wild" which is largely owned by "people of New York" because it was almost destroyed in the 19th century Grab yourself in. They are our mountain, they are the place we swim in the summer, skiing in winter, we need to keep protecting them enthusiastically