Archive for the ‘kosciuszko bridge’ Category
The Big K
– photos by Mitch Waxman
Shots of and around the Kosciuszko Bridge over Newtown Creek.
Thrice Damned?
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Several emails arrived today inquiring into why, in yesterday’s posting, the Kosciuszko Bridge is referred to as “thrice damned”. We’ll get into that shortly, but first- a certain anomaly of the information age needs to be mentioned…
from nytimes.com
The association, which handles many of the city’s largest projects, pored through an annual report that the New York State Department of Transportation released earlier this year to develop its list. Researchers looked at the city’s bridges and freeways that were given “red flags” — for everything from weak columns to uneven pavement — to compile the list, which included only those operated by the state.
The association announced the following rankings:
-
- Kosciuszko Bridge
- Gowanus Expressway
- Bronx River Parkway over the Amtrak tracks
- Cross Bronx Expressway viaduct over the Amtrak tracks and the Sheridan Expressway
- Bronx Terminal viaduct carrying the Major Deegan Expressway by Yankee Stadium
- Major Deegan Expressway over Sedgwick Avenue and the Metro-North Railroad tracks
- Bruckner Expressway Service road, northbound
- Bruckner Boulevard viaduct1
- 50th Street over the Belt Parkway
- Major Deegan Expressway ramp to 153rd Street/Cromwell Avenue, southbound
– photo by Mitch Waxman
In 1939, during the Great Depression, arguably the most powerful man in New York City was Robert Moses. Moses had a project he was keen on, the Brooklyn Queens Connecting Highway.
The Meeker Avenue Bridge opened on August 23rd, 1939 (renamed in 1940 as The Kosciuszko Bridge) – some 24,855 days ago- and it was the first link in a chain that eventually metastasized into the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. It was promised to allow easy egress to the World’s Fair, and was a showpiece project for the Great Builder.
Yet, it seems not to have any fanfare associated with it according to online sources…
Q- Who designed it? How long was it under construction? Thinking about the chain of supply, where did the steel come from and how did it get here? Where are the City records? Surely this project was reported on, why doesn’t the NY Times or Brooklyn Daily Eagle have multiple stories in archives about it and attendant scandals?
A- Certain terms, called “tags” or “keywords” attached to every web page allow search engines to classify the content of any given web page. A sort of echo effect forms around these tags, a scalar which wipes out all other interpretations of search terms. The Kosciuszko Bridge is caught up in one of these echo effects, which has caused all other results to be crowded out. The echo surrounding “The Kosciuszko Bridge” search term at the Big G is formed by three or four modern sources and swirls about the replacement of it. This is kind of disturbing…
Andrew Carnegie’s American Bridge Company was the contractor, incidentally.
from nytimes.com
The Kosciuszko Bridge in Brooklyn received 20 yellow flags for corrosion and decay of steel beams and small cracks in beams and welds. The bridge also received eight safety flags for problems that included exposed electrical wires and loose concrete.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
This is mentioned, as it has raised certain misgivings in me about the future of verity and truth. If something like The Kosciuszko Bridge can lose its past and be defined only by its destruction, just how malleable has the historical record become in the age of the Big G? Can a skillful manipulation of Wikipedia or some other major “site of authority” change the past?
Just wondering…
Now- the “thrice damned” part
Damned Once- The Kosciuszko Bridge catches radio frequency emissions from several nearby commercial radio broadcast antennas. A lot of it.
Whatever knows fear burns at The Kosciuszko Bridge’s touch.
Damned Twice- The Kosciuszko Bridge is at extreme risk in the eventuality of a seismic event. The Brooklyn pier actually sits on the Creek bed, some 6 meters below grade, but the Queens side is anchored on piles driven into the mud. The hard soil around Queens Plaza will merely shake, but the land surrounding the Newtown Creek will liquify.
Damned Thrice- The Kosciuszko Bridge once had pedestrian walkways, but they were removed in 1961. Can you imagine what kind of photos would be possible on a pedestrian walkway 124 feet over the Newtown Creek?
from brooklynpaper.com
But the department has bigger fish to fry than the aesthetics — drivers just want the city to get it done. The current bridge is constantly in gridlock, with some 160,000 daily drivers pushing forward — very slowly — at on- and off-ramps, making two impromptu lanes. The new bridge is supposed to cure all these problems.
Luckily, project manager Robert Adams has said that the $1 billion needed to finish construction — which ballooned from $700 million last year due to a longer build-out time — is already lined up through federal funding, and that the tentative completion date is in 2017.
perilous disposition
Notes:
- Don’t miss the Hunter’s Point Avenue Bridge Centennial this weekend, on December 11th, a free event. For more on the HPA Bridge Centennial, click here.
- Also, please consider purchasing a copy of the first Newtown Pentacle book: “Newtown Creek for the Vulgarly Curious” – a fully annotated 68 page, full-color journey from the mouth of Newtown Creek at the East River all the way back to the heart of darkness at English Kills, with photos and text by Mitch Waxman.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Thrice damned, the Kosciuszko Bridge is scheduled for demolition and replacement, and with it shall go the last of Blissville (or Berlin, or West Maspeth, or Laurel Hill- depends on who you ask to describe this “angle” between neighborhoods).
Recent obligation called on me to enter the historic quarter of Ridgewood, and I embarked on the long walk from Astoria with the intention of “checking in” on the area. Unfortunately, seasonal variance in environmental temperature and atmospheric conditions are taking their usual toll on my delicate physical constitution.
from wikipedia
The Kosciuszko Bridge is a truss bridge that spans Newtown Creek between the New York City boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, connecting Greenpoint, Brooklyn and Maspeth, Queens. It is a part of Interstate 278, which is also locally known as the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The bridge opened in 1939, replacing the Penny Bridge from Meeker Avenue in Brooklyn to Review Avenue and Laurel Hill Boulevard, and is the only bridge over Newtown Creek that is not a drawbridge. It was named in honor of Tadeusz Kościuszko, a Polish volunteer who was a General in the American Revolutionary War. Two of the bridge towers are surmounted with eagles, one is the Polish eagle, and the other the American eagle.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
Numbing begins for me at higher temperatures than most, and even the high 40’s and low 50’s call for woolen hats and gloves, and insulation about the torso is absolutely critical. This ridiculous assortment of threadbare garments forces me to move in a stiff and corpse like fashion, and stepping onto a bathroom scale reveals that my full winter gear (with camera) adds some 30 pounds to my weight. Like one of “Marius’s mules” however, your humble narrator nevertheless endures in his self enforced march across the concrete landscape of the Newtown Pentacle. The awful thing, however, was not the suffering of one sickly and somewhat insane narrator- it was what I could not have seen on 54th avenue.
Also, we’ve been to 43rd street before, in the “Maspeth? Laurel Hill? Where am I?” posting of 9/3/2009.
from forumnewsgroup.blogspot.com
…To accomplish this, the new bridge will be built next to the existing structure, and all six lanes of traffic will be shifted onto what will eventually be the eastbound structure. The existing bridge will be demolished, and a new structure for westbound traffic will then be built in its place.
The current bridge carries three lanes of traffic in each direction. The final product will include five lanes into Queens and four into Brooklyn, along with a pathway for bicyclists and pedestrians that promises to provide a “terrific view of the Manhattan skyline,” according to Adams. The new bridge will also feature standard-width lanes, shoulders for disabled vehicles and better sight lines for drivers, according to Adams. “This will have significant improvements on the merging problems that exist today,” he said.
The state is continuing to negotiate with property owners within the 1.1 mile construction zone to acquire easements and land needed for the project. That is expected to be completed by 2013. The state is also working with the city Parks Department on a new greenspace that is planned for beneath the approach to the bridge on the Queens side, but Parks was unable to provide details about that.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
The so called sidewalks which underlie the approaches to the Kosciuszko Bridge (thrice damned) are pedestrian in name only, and the evidence of gathered diesel dust and undisturbed deposits of windblown graveyard soil suggests that no other boots save my own have traversed the space in any recent memory. This is a place for the automobile, the truck, and those who cross it by foot must be sagacious and alert.
While passing from Laurel Hill Blvd. to 54th avenue via one of these underpass viaducts, something impossible was suggested rather than observed as scratching about in these deposits. It could not have been what peripheral observation suggests, and it is far more likely that I am suffering from some early phase of macular degeneration or an undiagnosed neurological condition than that which I believed I saw could be material and real.
For now, I’m keeping my observation to myself, lest some guardian of the public good who might be reading this recommend me to the psychological hospitals at Wards Island for both my own protection and that of the community at large.
Suffice to say, what I think I saw cannot exist in any world governed by wholesome laws of physics and or familiar biology, but it is probably best to avoid the drainage pipes which carry storm runoff from the Kosciuszko Bridge’s BQE down to the streets of this angle between neighborhoods- just in case.
from nysdot.gov
In the early to mid 19th century, virtually the only development along the channels of the Newtown Creek drainage were crossings for roads and turnpikes that linked nearby villages and led to East River ferries. A highway between Bushwick and Newtown was in place by 1670,including a wooden bridge that was most likely the first road crossing of the creek, at approximately the location of present Meeker Avenue. This crossing was replaced circa 1812-14 by the Penny Bridge, a toll bridge on the Newtown and Bushwick Turnpike Road. The first crossing of English Kills along the present Metropolitan Avenue opened circa 1814-16 as part ofthe Williamsburg and Jamaica Turnpike. These remained the only bridges into the 1840s when nearby urban development stimulated more road construction across the marshy drainage. Mid-19th century bridges included the Maspeth Avenue Plank Road to Newtown (1846), and the Greenpoint and Flushing Plank Road linking the Greenpoint ferry to the new Calvary Cemeteryvia present Greenpoint Avenue (1853-54).
The 1848 establishment of the large Catholic cemetery (Calvary Cemetery), on an old estate north of the Penny Bridge, reflected the absenceof any competing land use demands along most of the waterway. Water transport remained a better means of moving goods and people between the local villages and nearby urban areas;steamboats served the cemetery until around 1870. Local road development in the late 1860s included the first Vernon Avenue Bridge over Newtown Creek (removed and replaced by the Pulaski Bridge), and a bridge over Dutch Kills on present Borden Avenue. In part to secure public funding for street improvements in Hunter’s Point, Henry Anable sought to incorporate the area in 1870 as part of Long Island City, which also absorbed the villages of Astoria, Ravenswood, and Dutch Kills
– photo by Mitch Waxman
The easements sought for the footprint of the new bridge in Queens will obliterate the last of the residences here. Consultations with knowledgeable sources, including the research staff at Newtown Creek Alliance and Forgotten-NY as well as a coterie of online sources for ancient maps and lost railroad sidings, suggest that the area modernity refers to as “Blissville” or “Laurel Hill” or “West Maspeth” was referred to in earlier times as “Berlin” or “Berlin Hill” or “Berlinville”.
The inestimable Kevin Walsh of Forgotten-NY, ever generous with his encyclopedic grasp of the history of the Megalopolis, actually supplied links to jpegs of century old maps which describe this place for consideration by the curious and inform the modern viewer as to the atavist nomenclature of the very streets themselves.
Luckily, 2 of these maps may be found online and are publicly available for inspection, here and here.
also from nysdot.gov
In October 1936, the Commissioner of Plants and Structures for the City of New York proposed a high level fixed span that would provide 125 feet above MHW between bulkheads. This bridge today is known as the Kosciuszko Bridge and replaced the Meeker Avenue Bridge. The marine community for sometime in the 1930’s had sought to have the Meeker Avenue Bridge replaced and supported the proposed 125’ vertical clearance for the new bridge.
At that time, the companies and organizations included: Queensboro Corporation, New England Navigation, Brooklyn Union Gas Company, Mystic Steamship Company, Tide Water Oil Company, Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, New York Towboat Exchange, Inc., the Port Authority of New York/New Jersey, and Card Towing Line.
However, two Corporations, Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corporation and Cross, Austin & Ireland Lumber Company with docks above the bridge objected to any clearance less than 135 feet above MHW and requested that a vertical clearance of 150 feet be required.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
If my reading of these maps is correct (they often aren’t, so decide for yourself), then these doomed houses are the last residential survivors of Washington Avenue (43rd street) between Waters Ave. (54th rd.) and Columbia Ave. (55th ave.). Sources also inform that that the remarkable declination of this area is not part of “Laurel Hill” – the geological feature which Calvary Cemetery is carven into – but is instead “Berlin Hill”. Other… documentation… provided to me remains confidential, but confirms the olden names of these lanes.
- Our friends at forgotten-ny have, of course, been in this spot before- check out the FNY page on Blissville/Laurel Hill for an overview of the entire area and a scholarly erudition which sets the gold standard for the entire genre of urban exploration.
from nysdot.gov
On page 17 of this slideshow presentation from the NYS DOT, one might observe the footprint expected for the Queens side of the Kosciuszcko Bridge project. The technical term for the properties affected, incidentally, is easement– which the State will be acquiring using its voluminous power of eminent domain.
– photo by Mitch Waxman
All that remains here now is industry, and a somewhat relict rail line. When the construction on the new Kosciuszko Bridge (thrice damned) begins, the long and cold winter nights in Berlinville will belong only to those who lie within venerable Calvary, and to that which could not have been reaching out from a drainage pipe beneath the Kosciuszko Bridge (thrice damned) and grasping at a startled pigeon, and whatever festering things there may be which lurk in that nearby stagnation of innocence called the Newtown Creek.
Such things, and places, do not exist- after all.
from wikipedia
In forensics, skeletonization refers to the complete decomposition of the non-bony tissues of a corpse, leading to a bare skeleton. In a temperate climate, it usually requires three weeks to several years for a body to completely decompose into a skeleton, depending on factors such as temperature, presence of insects, and submergence in a substrate such as water. In the tropics, skeletonization can occur in weeks, while in the Andes Mountains or tundra, skeletonization will never occur if subzero temperatures persist. Natural embalming processes in peat bogs or salt deserts can delay the process indefinitely, sometimes resulting in natural mummies
The rate of skeletonization and the present condition of the corpse can be used to determine the time of death.
After skeletonization has occurred, if scavenging animals do not destroy the bones, the skeleton of mid to large size mammals such as humans takes about twenty years to be completely dissolved by acids in the soil leaving no trace of the organism. In neutral pH soil or sand, the skeleton will persist for at least several thousand years before it finally disintegrates. Infrequently, however, the skeleton can undergo fossilization, leaving an impression of the bone that can persist for millions of years.













