Belt Parkway
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Belt Parkway |
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Reference Route 907B, C, and D. | |||||
Length: | 25.3 mi[1] (41 km) | ||||
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Formed: | 1941 | ||||
West end: | I-278 | ||||
Major junctions: |
I-678 NY-878 I-278 |
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East end: | Southern State Cross Island |
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The Belt Parkway, also known as the Belt System or Circumferential Parkway, is a series of New York City limited-access highways that form a complete circle around the Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens.
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[edit] History
The Belt Parkway was proposed by builder and highway advocate Robert Moses in 1930 to provide modern highway access to Manhattan and to connect to, and use similar design principles to, parkways already constructed on Long Island and Westchester County, New York. Construction began in 1934. The full loop was completed when the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway (also known as the BQE) finished in 1960.
[edit] The Belt System
Though some signage bears the name "Belt Parkway," the original plan never called for a highway of that name, rather a system of different named parkways called the "Belt System." The Belt System is made up of a series of interconnecting highways, none of which are actually the single Belt Parkway. Originally there were:
- part of the Grand Central Parkway (GCP) running west from the Triborough Bridge to a point east of LaGuardia Airport, where the GCP veers south and east, then the
- Whitestone Expressway (originally Whitestone Parkway) from the junction of the GCP northeast to the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge, then becoming the
- Cross Island Parkway from the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge east and then south near the border of Nassau County, New York to a connection with the Southern State Parkway then south on the
- Laurelton Parkway, a short connector that then turns west as the
- Southern Parkway (distinct from the Long Island Southern State Parkway mentioned above) in the median of Conduit Boulevard, turning south at Cross Bay Boulevard to become
- Shore Parkway, the part most people think of when they mention "Belt Parkway," skipping across former islands in Jamaica Bay, turning west partly over the former bed of Coney Island Creek then making a large arc to the north to connect to the last original segment, the
- Gowanus Expressway to its end at the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel to Manhattan.
[edit] Picturesque landscapes along the Shore Parkway
All of these original parkways except the Gowanus were built on strips of green and treed rights-of-way in a more pleasant surrounding than most highways of their time. The Gowanus Parkway was built as an elevated structure over Third and Hamilton Avenues in order to avoid the active docks and industrial areas in that part of Brooklyn.
Today, the Cross Island, Laurelton, Southern and Shore Parkways are collectively known as the "Belt System"[1]. The four components of the Belt System are unsigned New York State Reference Routes 907A, 907B, 907D, and 907C (respectively). Excluding the Cross Island Parkway, the other three segments are now known collectively as the official "Belt Parkway". It is designated an east-west route, and its exit numbering system begins as the Shore Parkway, where it exits off the Gowanus Expressway at the east end of the Verrazano Narrows Bridge and continues eastward. At Exit 25A (Southern State Parkway), the Belt Parkway becomes the Cross Island Parkway (which is designated north-south), where the numbering scheme continues until that parkway's northern terminus.
[edit] Conversion and completion
New York parkways are closed to commercial traffic, which means any vehicle with a non-passenger registration, including all commercial trucking of any size. Originally even station wagons, which had "suburban" registrations, were excluded but they are now allowed, along with passenger-registered SUVs and vans.
The system was not completed as a parkway, and some portions of the original system were converted to expressways, which allows commercial traffic to use them, even interstate heavy trucking. These expressway portions are:
- Gowanus Expressway, replacing Gowanus Parkway as a connector between Manhattan and the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge to Staten Island and New Jersey (It is now signed as part of Interstate 278);
- Whitestone Expressway, which converted Whitestone Parkway into a truck route to connect the Van Wyck Expressway to the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge (It is now signed as part of Interstate 678); and
- Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, built as an expressway to connect the Gowanus Parkway/Expressway to the Triborough Bridge and Grand Central Parkway to complete the system (It is now signed as part of Interstate 278).
[edit] Exit list
Number | Municipality | Destinations | Notes | |
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Now | Old | |||
Brooklyn | Begins at Exit 23 off I-278 Gowanus Expressway | |||
1 | 65 Street 67 Street |
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2 | 4th Avenue Fort Hamilton Parkway |
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3 | I-278 Verrazano-Narrows Bridge Staten Island |
Westbound exit only | ||
4 | Bay 8 Street 14th Avenue |
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5 | Bay Parkway | |||
6 | Cropsey Avenue Coney Island |
Eastbound exit only | ||
6N | Cropsey Avenue North Stillwell Avenue |
Westbound exit only | ||
6S | Cropsey Avenue South Coney Island |
Westbound exit only | ||
7 | Ocean Parkway | Eastbound exit only | ||
7A | 7S | Shell Road | Eastbound exit only | |
7B | 7N | Ocean Parkway | ||
8 | Coney Island Avenue | |||
9 | Knapp Street Sheepshead Bay |
Westbound exit only | ||
9A | Knapp Street Sheepshead Bay |
Eastbound exit only | ||
9B | Knapp Street | Eastbound exit only | ||
11N | Flatbush Avenue North Marine Park |
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11S | Flatbush Avenue South Marine Parkway-Gil Hodges Memorial Bridge Rockaways |
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12 | Jamaica Bay Riding Academy | Eastbound exit only. This exit is unofficially given the exit number 12. | ||
13 | Rockaway Parkway | |||
14 | Pennsylvania Avenue | |||
15 | Erskine Street Gateway Center Mall |
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17 | Queens | Cross Bay Boulevard | Eastbound exit only | |
17N | Cross Bay Boulevard North Cohancy Street Woodhaven |
Westbound exit only | ||
17S | Cross Bay Boulevard South Rockaways |
Westbound exit only | ||
17W | NY-27/North Conduit Avenue | Westbound exit only | ||
18 | Lefferts Boulevard Aqueduct Racetrack |
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19 | NY-878/Nassau Expressway, Interstate 678/Van Wyck Expressway, Lefferts Boulevard, JFK Expressway, JFK International Airport. |
Eastbound exit only | ||
20 | 150th Street Rockaway Boulevard (Eastbound) JFK Expressway to JFK International Airport (Westbound) |
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21A | Rockaway Boulevard | Westbound exit only | ||
21B | Farmers Boulevard Guy R. Brewer Boulevard |
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22 | Springfield Boulevard | |||
23 | NY-27/Sunrise Highway | Eastbound exit only | ||
23A | NY-27/North Conduit Avenue | Westbound exit only | ||
24A | Francis Lewis Boulevard
Merrick Boulevard (eastbound) |
Eastbound exit only | ||
24B | 130th Avenue (Eastbound) Merrick Boulevard (Westbound) |
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25A | Southern State Parkway
Eastern Long Island |
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End of Belt Parkway and Start of Cross Island Parkway |
New York City parkways | |
Manhattan | FDR East River Drive - Harlem River Drive - Henry Hudson |
The Bronx | Bronx River - Henry Hudson - Hutchinson River - Mosholu - Pelham |
Brooklyn-Queens | Belt Parkway system: Cross Island - Laurelton - Shore - Southern Others: Grand Central - Jackie Robinson (Interborough) Former: Gowanus - Whitestone - Long Island Motor Parkway |
Staten Island | Korean War Veterans (Richmond) Former: Willowbrook Proposed: Wolfe's Pond |
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Belt Parkway Historic Overview at Steve Anderson's nycroads.com