The creator of the High Line admitted the design is no good for neighbors who have long griped about the constant parade of tourists marching just feet from their homes, a new report reveals.

Designers cared more about the look of the elevated park than how it would affect the folks who live just feet from it, said co-founder Robert Hammond.

“Instead of asking what the design should look like, I wish we’d asked, ‘What can we do for you?’,” Hammond told City Lab. “Because people have bigger problems than design.”

He admitted the screw-up, saying he would do it differently if he could turn back time.

“We were from the community. We wanted to do it for the neighborhood. Ultimately, we failed,” he said.

The tourist attraction has drawn millions of visitors since it opened in 2009.

But neighbors have complained about everything from loud crowds to obnoxious tourists snapping photos of their back yards, saying it destroys the neighborhood it cuts through.

Hammond is now executive director of Friends of the High Line, which has launched programs to address some of the park’s shortcomings.