Why is a
column that usually writes about Connecticut’s transportation problems suddenly
interested in The Tappan Zee Bridge?
Because the pending rebuilding of this bridge across the Hudson River
will have a major impact on our lives, our economy and travel patterns.
The mighty
Hudson River is what separates New England from the rest of the country. Sure, you can cross over or under the water by
car on any number of bridges and tunnels in New York City, but north of the
George Washington Bridge there are few options.
And for freight trains, there are none, short of going all the way to
Albany.
When it was
originally envisioned in 1950, the new trans-Hudson bridge was going to be
built by The Port Authority between Dobbs Ferry and Piermont NY. Instead the Thruway chose the wider, but
shallower section a few miles north between Nyack and Tarrytown. Opening in 1955, the
bridge was soon followed by the Cross-Westchester Expressway (now I-287) in
1960, forever linking access to Connecticut from the west. (A planned extension of I-287 over Long
Island Sound as the Oyster Bay – Rye Bridge never came to pass.)
The Tappan Zee,
like our old Metro-North railcars, has been repaired, patched and kept going
long beyond its 50-year life expectancy.
Maintenance
costs over the past four years have cost $389 million. The old, seven lane bridge
is literally falling apart and was highlighted on a recent History Channel
documentary about our nation’s crumbling infrastructure as a disaster waiting
to happen. Think collapse.
Even the
White House recognizes the urgency of replacing the bridge, putting The Tappan
Zee on a list of 14 projects to receive expedited federal approval. And while NY state has opted for a design /
build replacement… where the winning bidder designs and builds the new
structure, rather than working from a state-created blueprint… the $5.2 billion
project may get underway this summer.
The real
question is, what kind of vehicles will use the new bridge?
While most of
the traffic (170,000 crossings per day recently, ten times the original
traffic in 1955) is private cars, the bridge is also a crucial truck
crossing, especially for cargo bound for Connecticut. There are also commuter buses from Rockland
County connecting to Metro-North.
Many say the
new Tappan Zee should also carry trains, or at the very least offer dedicated
BRT (bus rapid transit) lanes, but
neither is in the current plans. This is
a huge mistake.
An east-west
rapid transit corridor, rail or bus, running from Rockland County across the new
bridge, then down the median of the Cross-Westchester Expressway (I-287) and
connecting with I-95 and the New Haven line of Metro-North / Amtrak, would be a
game changer. So much of our mass transit
runs on a hub and spoke system, into and out of New York City, while we lack an
east-west connection. To miss the once-in-a-century
opportunity to accommodate mass transit on a new Tappan Zee Bridge would be a
tremendous loss.
But as with the
much discussed MTA plan to run Metro-North into Penn Station, the future of the
Tappan Zee (and with it, Connecticut’s link to the west) lies in Albany, not
Hartford. New York will again decide our
fate with no input from those of us in Connecticut.
Much has been
made of late about what to do with the old bridge after the new one opens. The latest plan is to leave the bridge open
as a pedestrian
and cyclist walk-way, much like the repurposed Highline on Manhattan’s west side. Demolition would cost $150 million, they say,
so why not turn the old bridge into a cement park?
It’s a shame
that so much discussion has focused on this petty, parochial side issue when
the real question about building the new structure to handle more than cars and
trucks seems pushed aside.
For more on recent public hearings on the bridge rebuild, click here.
For more on recent public hearings on the bridge rebuild, click here.
1 comment:
I wholeheartedly agree. Once that we have to build a new bridge, leaving what could even be the backbone of a high speed train line behind seems ridiculous. Regrettably these are the times we are living.
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