Bronx-Whitestone Bridge

Bronx-Whitestone Bridge

Infobox_Bridge
bridge_name= Bronx-Whitestone Bridge


caption= View from Queens
official_name= The Bronx-Whitestone Bridge
also_known_as= Whitestone Bridge
carries= 6 lanes of I-678
crosses= East River
locale= New York City (Whitestone, QueensThrogs Neck, The Bronx)
maint= Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority
id=
design= Suspension bridge
mainspan= 701.04 meters (2,300 ft)
length= 1,149.10 meters (3,770 ft)
width=
clearance= 14 feet 6 inches (4.4 m)
below=
|traffic= 114,600 [cite web | url=https://www.nysdot.gov/portal/page/portal/divisions/engineering/technical-services/hds-respository/appendixctdr.pdf | accessdate=2007-05-05 | title=2005 NYSDOT Traffic Data Report: AADT Values for Select Toll Facilities]
open= April 29, 1939
closed=
toll= $5.00 as of March 15, 2008 (both directions per car in cash); discount available with E-ZPass
map_cue=
map_

map_text=
map_width=
coordinates=coord|40|48|03|N|73|49|50|W|region:US_type:landmark|display=inline,title|name=Bronx-Whitestone Bridge
lat=40.800913
long=-73.829048
The Bronx-Whitestone Bridge, colloquially referred to as the Whitestone Bridge or simply the Whitestone, is a suspension bridge that crosses the East River and connects the boroughs of Queens and The Bronx via Interstate 678. The bridge was designed by Othmar Ammann and opened to traffic with four lanes on April 29, 1939. [http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F60716FA3A5A167A93C2AA178FD85F4D8385F9 "WHITESTONE SPAN OPENED BY MAYOR; New Bronx-Long Island Link Hailed as Symbol of City's Never-Ending Progress"] , "The New York Times", April 30, 1939. Accessed November 4, 2007.]

History

The idea for a crossing between The Bronx and Whitestone, Queens had come as early as 1905. At the time, residents around the proposed area of the bridge protested construction in fear of losing the then-rural character of the area.

In 1929, however, the Regional Plan Association had proposed another bridge from the Bronx to northern Queens to allow motorists from upstate New York and New England to reach Queens and Long Island without traveling through the traffic-ridden communities of western Queens. On February 25, 1930, Robert Moses proposed a Ferry Point Park-Whitestone Bridge as a part of his Belt Parkway system around Brooklyn and Queens.

As the 1930s progressed, Moses found his bridge more and more necessary: to link to the 1939 New York World's Fair and to LaGuardia Airport (then known as North Beach Airport). In addition, the Whitestone Bridge was to provide congestion relief to the Triborough Bridge.

The New York Legislature approved Moses' plan in April 1937. Moses had raised controversy when he quickly decided to demolish seventeen homes in the Queens community of Malba. Moses argued such measures were necessary to complete the bridge on schedule.

The RPA had also said that the Whitestone Bridge should have rail connections, or at least be able to accommodate them in the future, but had no allies on the project, to Moses' relief.

Designer Othmar Ammann had several plans for the bridge that would keep construction on its tight schedule. The two convert|377|ft|m|sing=on towers were constructed in a short 18 days and were the first to have no diagonal cross bracing. Unlike other suspension bridges, the Whitestone Bridge did not have a stiffening truss system. Instead, convert|11|ft|m|sing=on I-beam girders gave the bridge an art deco streamlined appearance.

The Bronx-Whitestone Bridge opened on April 29, 1939, in festivities led by then-Mayor of New York City Fiorello H. La Guardia. The bridge featured pedestrian walkways as well as four lanes of vehicular traffic, which carried 17,000 vehicles during the year 1940. The toll was 25 cents. The convert|2300|ft|m|sing=on center span was the fourth longest in the world at the opening.

Ammann's plan to use I-beam girders proved to be a poor one after the collapse of the original Tacoma Narrows Bridge in Washington (known as "Galloping Gertie" for the effect wind had on the structure). The Narrows Bridge employed an convert|8|ft|m|sing=on deep girder system, much like the Whitestone Bridge. Eight stay cables (two per tower per side) were installed for added stability in 1940. Starting in 1943, the pedestrian walkways were removed and the four lanes of roadway traffic was widened to six in a project to install convert|14|ft|m|sing=on high trusses on either side of the deck to weigh down the bridge in an effort to reduce oscillation. These trusses detracted from the former streamlined looking span. In a project started in 2005, the Metropolitan Transit Authority restored the classic lines of the bridge by uninstalling the convert|14|ft|m|sing=on high trusses on either side that had been used to stiffen the bridge. A different approach was used that simply nipped the aerodynamic problem in the bud by installing "lightweight fiberglass aerodynamic fairing, triangular in shape along both sides of the bridge that slices the wind as it passes over the bridge." [ [http://www.mta.info/mta/news/newsroom/bt-031024-bw.htm A New Look for a Classic Bridge] , MTA Newsroom, Bridges & Tunnels. Accessed November 2, 2007.] The removal of the trusses and other changes to the decking cut the bridge's weight by 6,000 tons, some 25% of the mass suspended by the cables. [Chan, Sewell. [http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/18/nyregion/18bridge.html?scp=1&sq=bronx-whitestone%20fiberglass%20fairings&st=cse "A Bridge Too Fat"] , "The New York Times", February 18, 2005. Accessed July 28, 2008]

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority planned to spend $286 million in bridge renovations, which started in August 2001. These renovations, which are still in progress, include removing the cable stays installed in the 1940s, removing the convert|14|ft|m|sing=on trusses (which proved to be too heavy for the bridge's suspension cables, which were not designed to hold such weight), adding hydraulic dampers to stabilize the bridge deck, and installing variable message signs. Replacing the deck of the bridge and assisting in lightening the deck by 6,000 tons are projected to be done by 2008. [ [http://www.mta.info/mta/budget/pdf/capitalprogram0509.pdf Preliminary Capital Program for 2005–2009] , Metropolitan Transportation Authority (New York), dated July 29, 2004.] The bridge remains in service during overhaul, but a reduced number of lanes lead to traffic backups and signs suggesting use of the Throgs Neck Bridge. Trucks over 40 tons have been prohibited from using the span since 2005.

Originally built to connect the Hutchinson River Parkway in the Bronx to the Whitestone Parkway in Queens, it was redesignated Interstate 678 in the late 1950s. The approaches to the bridge were soon after converted to Interstate Highway standards. The Whitestone Parkway became the Whitestone Expressway, and part of the Hutchinson was converted to an expressway. They now share the I-678 designation with the bridge itself.

The sidewalks that had been included when originally constructed were removed from the bridge to allow for two more vehicular lanes. The project's real goal was to reinforce the bridge with trusses after the Tacoma Narrows Bridge disaster. Both the Whitestone and Thousand Islands Bridges used the same general design as the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. The vehicular traffic expansion was used as a guise to add these trusses.

After the removal of the sidewalks, bicyclists were able to use QBx1 buses of the Queens Surface Corporation, which could carry bicycles on the front-mounted bike racks. However, since the Metropolitan Transportation Authority absorbed the bus routes formerly operated by Queens Surface, the bike racks have been eliminated. [ [http://www.transalt.org/bridges/whitston.html Bronx-Whitestone Bridge (I-678) Bicycling information] at Transportation Alternatives] Bicyclists are now forced to detour to the Triborough Bridge or possibly try hitchhiking across, which is illegal [ Section 4-04(e)(2) of the [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dot/html/permits/traffic_rules.html New York City Traffic Rules] ] and considered very dangerous in New York City. Whether a bike way or walkway will be constructed on the bridge in the future is still uncertain.

From March 13, 2005, the crossing charge for a two-axle passenger vehicle is $4.50 charged in each direction, with a $.50 discount for E-ZPass users. The crossing charge for a motorcycle is $2.00 charged in each direction, with a $0.25 discount for E-ZPass users.

Tolls were increased to $5.00 each way as of March 16, 2008.

The Bronx-Whitestone Bridge is owned by the New York City and operated by the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority, an affiliate agency of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

Major repairs

As of June 2004, the Whitestone Bridge has had major repairs. New lighting systems (including the beacons of the bridge and bulbs), and repainting the two towers and the deck of the bridge.

Road Connections

The Bronx-Whitestone Bridge assists I-678 in crossing the East River. From the Queens side, the Whitestone Expressway carries I-678 to the bridgehead. The Cross Island Parkway meets up with the Whitestone Expressway 1/2 mile before the bridge.

On the Bronx side, the bridge leads directly into the Bruckner Interchange, which serves as the northern terminus of I-678, which is where the Cross Bronx Expressway (I-95), Bruckner Expressway (I-278 & I-95), Hutchinson River Parkway, and the Cross Bronx Expressway extension (I-295) meet. The segment of I-678 between the bridge and the Bruckner Interchange is a depressed freeway.

The bridge in popular culture

Although the neighborhood of Whitestone is located in Queens, several businesses on the Bronx side of the bridge include "Whitestone" in their names, owing to the bridge's often-shortened name.

References

External links

* [http://www.mta.info/bandt/html/bronxw.htm Metropolitan Transportation Authority site]
* [http://www.nycroads.com/crossings/bronx-whitestone/ NYCRoads.com Bronx-Whitestone Bridge]
*

Crossings navbox
structure = Crossings
place = East River
bridge = Bronx-Whitestone Bridge
bridge signs =
upstream = Throgs Neck Bridge
upstream signs =
downstream = Rikers Island Bridge
downstream signs =


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