Why The I-278 Brooklyn-Queens Expressway in NEW YORK is FALLING APART And They Can't Fix It

preview_player
Показать описание
The BQE in New York City is a major thoroughfare that is falling apart. New York is struggling to find a solution to fix it but time is running out. On this video we look at the issues with the roadway and why it's so difficult to fix.

10 Rules of Driving in New York City:

Why the Cross Bronx Expressway is So Congested:

Brooklyn Queens Expressway Drive:

I-278 Westbound Across New York City:

Equipment Used:

Sources and additional info:
Curbed NY Article:

The Stoop Design

BQE Crumbling:

BQE Information:

Other Potential BQE Designs:

Time Stamps:
Intro: 0:00
What is the BQE and Why it's so Congested: 1:45
What Fixes have been Proposed: 6:49
Thoughts and Predictions: 11:23
Conclusion: 13:09
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

As someone who grew up in New York, people often have to be forced to do something here so unfortunately the collapse scenario appears to be what will be necessary to trigger the city to rebuild it.

teddynielsen
Автор

I'm almost 50, and lived next to the BQE/I-278 all through my childhood. Crews have been repairing this road my entire life. I have never not seen it under construction or repair.

MIYDNA
Автор

As someone that grew up in Queens, this video hits the nail on the head. Just steer clear of the BQE if you can!!

JordanDinRI
Автор

A few years ago during the peak of rush hour on a Friday evening, a contractor's assistant decided to perform an experiment and get out of the van and walk along the side of the expressway from downtown Brooklyn to the Kosciuszko bridge, a nearly 3 mile distance. The assistant not only walked there faster, but had to wait nearly 45 minutes for the van to catch up to them! There are viable solutions to this repair but politics will continue to intervene until there is no choice but to undergo it. Perhaps it will see a solution beforehand.

L.M.Dilegame
Автор

I used to drive the BQE in the 1970s. I was taking night classes, and during the bad old 1970s, riding the subway that late at night was scary. I got to meet some "interesting" people on the subway, but I was always glad to get home in one piece. Yes, even at 11 pm, the BQE was a bottleneck.

stevenlitvintchouk
Автор

BQE used to be terrible at the old Kosciuszko bridge crossing between Brooklyn and Queens before it got replaced by 2 newer cable stayed bridge. Traffic still backs up at the bridge so I guess the old bridge wasn't as big a bottleneck as it was made to be. The cantilevered section at Brooklyn Heights is a whole another animal. I ended up spending an hour stuck there one time after the lane reduction.

Jabid
Автор

It forever blows my mind how many sections of highways (anywhere, not just the ones shown in this video) don’t have a shoulder/breakdown lane. I can’t think of a worse situation to break down in than that type of area.

BearcatLeisure
Автор

The reduction from 3 lanes to 2 a couple of years ago has had a permanent effect of making that section of the BQE permanently slow. Before that, it was possible to sometimes zip through the BQE during off hours. Now that is never possible.

And since there is no good alternative for trucks, this will have to be addressed somehow. I'd hate to wait for a collapse because it may take longer than people expect and the quality of life has seriously degraded.

I used to visit the Bronx from lower Brooklyn each weekend, and the alternative would be to pay a toll and use the Battery Tunnel to go into Manhattan and take the FDR drive into the Bronx. But for many people that's a burdensome extra expense.

By subway, that trip takes close to 2 hours, so if I couldn't drive, I wouldn't have gone. On the best of days that trip would take about 45 minutes with light traffic, and those days are gone.

mdelriobklyn
Автор

As a Philly suburbanite, my favorite alternative route to I-95/278 through NYC is taking US 202 up to I 287 in Somerville NJ. There’s a lot of relatively speedy bypasses in that corridor even if it’s not traffic light free, and on a bad day for NYC it can even bee the faster option. It’s admittedly not practical for every trip since I 287 mostly bypasses the city, but when it’s practical it’s a lot more pleasant to drive than the turnpike. Besides, New Hope—Lambertville is a lovely detour through two very beautiful towns.

KrashFries
Автор

Fascinating. One of the unspoken problems is that NYC is far older than most other cities with big expressway systems, and it's just not feasible to retrofit a multi-lane system into our 350-year-old city.

Houston's population in 1950 was 600K; LA in 1950 was 2M. Both cities had vast undeveloped spaces, unlike NYC, so it was much easier to build expressway systems there.

Aporter
Автор

Finally a video that talks about the crappy BQE in NYC. All these years there was nothing on the media about the BQE, absolutely none. Thank you for this video. Entrance to the "wall" towards Manhattan is the hell. Multiple lanes and entrances merge into two lanes. No solution no nothing.

AM
Автор

Thanks to the history of Moses vs locals, NYC has all its messed up highways. About this one section, I have also heard of a plan for a tunnel under the neighborhood to replace the decks.

geardo
Автор

The BQE has a special place in my memory. My father decided to let me drive on the BQE as an introduction to expressway driving. It was a white knuckle ride but I survived.

OscarGarcia-skpx
Автор

As a child I remember my father driving on BQE and seeing it under construction and now as a adult almost in My 40s that highway is still a disaster...I always avoided the BQE like a plague 😂 your explanation and analysis is dead on

DaKidMel
Автор

The BQE has always been a mess. The section underneath the promenade literally bounces with the traffic.

edramirez
Автор

8:49 People need to stop saying that critical interstate infrastructure should be replaced with bike and walking friendly boulevards that always have sunshine and rainbows. Because the real world doesn't work like that.

And like you said if it wasn't critical to the economy of the city, like the Embarcadero Freeway or the West Side Highway, it wouldn't be a problem. However, ideas like this and a similar one when it comes to discussing the traffic of I-35 in Austin, it's just a terrible idea through and through. We. Need. Roads.

AB_Official
Автор

The thing people have to remember about NYC is that it's big, dense, geographically diverse, and really really old. Getting *anything* done is hard. Not to mention it also gets punishing winters. I'm not surprised that they've struggled to find a solution to their highway problems. If you ask me, a good place to start would be requiring all thru traffic going from the Mid Atlantic to New England and vice versa to use I-287.

calvinsmith
Автор

The view of Manhattan from the old Kosciusko Bridge was always inspiring.

AgathaLOutahere
Автор

As a kid, my parents crossed the GWB on trips to Westchester County so I wanted an alternate and just looking at a map I was dumb enough to think that I-278 may be a good option. At least that moment makes me glad that I have clinched it.

Markkos
Автор

When driving under the Brooklyn Bridge access road it was always just two lanes. So it was three lanes like a normal road but then reduced to two as if a tractor trailer was broken down in one. The Atlantic Ave, exit is five miles from the Long Island Expressway, I would allow at least 45 minutes to make that trip, it often took an hour. I would get up at 4:30 to beat the traffic, leave a sleepy neighborhood in Carroll Gardens and jump onto the BQE. It was like being dropped into the middle of the pack at the Indianapolis 500. All kinds of trucks cars tractor trailers booming down the road as if they were escaping a nuclear bomb. The BQE is New York City, people are in hurry.

prant