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Re: A Colossal Bridge Will Rise Across the Hudson
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2013/10/15 19:58 Last Login : 2015/12/30 14:17 From Paulus Hook
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The Tappan Zee Bridge far pre-dates the old WTC. It was opened in 1955, while the WTC wasn't even started until 1966. You're right that it was built there to avoid Port Authority control, but that was not out of anti-PA sentiment but because the state wanted the money for itself and wanted to make sure the New York State Thruway had no competition.
Posted on: 2014/1/21 16:42
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Re: A Colossal Bridge Will Rise Across the Hudson
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Why you may ask would NY go to all that effort? It was because it knew the bridge would be a cash cow and the PA was notorious for keeping all it's revenue in house, despite having a huge surplus and the local mass transit being in desperate need of funds. It's no coincidence the Tappan Zee and WTC originated at roughly the same time. The WTC was the PA's way of keeping it's cash out of the hands of NY & NJ, it's supposed masters.
Posted on: 2014/1/21 4:09
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Re: A Colossal Bridge Will Rise Across the Hudson
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In no way am I a defender of anything the Port Authority does, but NY State wanted all that toll revenue for themselves. And as I recall some in NY wanted the PA to get involved with the new bridge to pay for it this go around.
Posted on: 2014/1/21 3:00
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Re: A Colossal Bridge Will Rise Across the Hudson
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Home away from home
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A footnote as to why the bridge is located bizarrely there at the widest point to begin with. It was to keep it out of the greedy mitts of the Port Authority, whose charter gave it dominion over Hudson crossings within a 25 mile radius from the Statue of Liberty.
PA=Vampire squid.
Posted on: 2014/1/21 1:49
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A Colossal Bridge Will Rise Across the Hudson
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2006/11/27 12:04 Last Login : 2016/7/1 9:09 From Southern JC
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The replacement for the Tappan Zee
Bridge will carry eight lanes of traffic between Rockland and Westchester Counties. By JOSEPH BERGER January 19, 2014 David Capobianco was a toddler in 1964 when the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge slowly soared over his neighborhood of Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, and tethered it to Staten Island. As he grew up, the improbable notion of assembling something so big and of such gossamer design propelled him to become a civil engineer. Now after years of public argument and indecision, the first new colossal steel bridge in the New York area since the Verrazano is finally beginning to rise over one of the most spacious stretches of the Hudson River, a replacement for the decaying Tappan Zee, the longest bridge in the state, and Mr. Capobianco, 51, is its project manager. ?All other projects I?ve worked on are dwarfed by this ? the size of the equipment involved, the enormity of what we?re doing, the number of people involved,? he said. From a small boat on the gunmetal waters of the Hudson, weaving among an archipelago of stout barges and giraffe-like cranes, the scale of the work in progress is impressive. The eight-lane bridge ? actually two parallel spans ?that will stretch across a 3.1-mile breadth of the river between Tarrytown in Westchester County and South Nyack in Rockland County will by some measures be the widest in the world. More: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/20/nyr ... se-across-the-hudson.html
Posted on: 2014/1/21 0:16
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