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A Community Plan for the ‘Highway to Nowhere’

A Community Plan for the ‘Highway to Nowhere’

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North of Westchester Avenue, where the Sheridan now runs on grade, the Community Plan would create 1,200 new homes with retail and community space below. Open space would enable residents of Longwood and West Farms to easily reach the Bronx River and the new and redeveloped parkland of the Bronx River Greenway.

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Sheridan ramp traffic menaces pedestrians and subway riders and interrupts the Westchester Avenue commercial strip

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Removing the Sheridan would allow development of a retail and community hub at the intersection of Whitlock and Westchester Avenues, linking the Number 6 train stop with the station designed by Cass Gilbert for the New York and New Haven Railroad.

For 10 years, South Bronx residents have been fighting to get the state to tear down an old expressway so that a greener and more sustainable mixed-use neighborhood can take its place. The community’s vision fits nicely with the goals of the city’s long-term sustainability plan, PlaNYC2030. But will the city embrace this precocious community-based effort?

The Highway to Nowhere

South Bronx residents have fought for a decade to cast off the shadow of Robert Moses’ Sheridan expressway — a 1.25-mile, little-used stretch of highway locally known as “the highway to nowhere.” In its place they aim to build more than 1,000 sustainable and affordable apartments, greenways, parks, resident services and progressive businesses that will offer living-wage, long-term jobs to Bronx residents in the city’s burgeoning “green industry” to Bronx residents.

One of Moses’ few projects that never reached full fruition, the Sheridan Expressway carries an average of 37,000 cars a day (to compare, on any given day, approximately five times as many cars traverse the nearby Cross Bronx Expressway). Construction on the Sheridan began in 1958, and Moses named the road for his good friend, the Bronx commissioner of public works, Arthur V. Sheridan, who died in a car accident in 1952.

Determined to provide yet another option for drivers traveling between New York City and New England, Moses originally envisioned the Sheridan to continue four miles north from the Cross Bronx Expressway through the New York Botanical Gardens and the Bronx Zoo, to the New England Thruway. In one of the first of several defeats that eventually ended Moses’ reign, advocates for the gardens and the zoo blocked his plan. This was good news for the city, but the South Bronx was left with the redundant stub of an expressway that connects the Cross Bronx to the Bruckner — a purpose already served by parallel stretches of the Major Deegan Expressway and the Bronx River Parkways.

Stunted or not, South Bronx residents say that the road does its share of damage. Not only does it cut them off from access to the Bronx River, but the Sheridan also separates Bronx Community Districts 2, 3 and 9 from one another. Home mostly to African American and Latino families with significantly lower than average household incomes, these districts also suffer from some of the highest asthma rates in the entire state.

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Mayor Switches On Cleaner Bronx Power Plant

Mayor Switches On Cleaner Bronx Power Plant

Mayor Michael Bloomberg flipped the switch on a Bronx power plant located in Co-Op City Thursday, which is expected to cut its emissions by 40 percent.

The formerly inefficient power plant underwent a $65 million renovation, and will save residents up to $25 million a year.

“The kind of reduction will make a real difference here in the Bronx, where some children are hospitalized for asthma at four times the national rate. And this will go a long way towards giving New York City the cleanest air of any major city, another important goal of [long-term environmental project] PlaNYC,” said Bloomberg.

The new plant will also generate extra power that can be sold to utility companies.

SOURCE: NY1.com

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All-Out Effort For A Greener Bronx

All-Out Effort For A Greener Bronx

All around the borough, Bronxites were thinking green and doing their part Tuesday for Earth Day.

In the South Bronx, more than 200 volunteers celebrated by planting trees, shrubs and perennials in five community areas.

The event was in support of PlaNYC’s goal of planting one million trees throughout the five boroughs by 2017, and officially kicked off the Timberland Company’s plan to “green” 300 communities worldwide.

The effort will help “create the first truly sustainable 21st century city - what we call a greener, greater New York,” said Liam Kavanagh of the city Department of Parks & Recreation.

At Middle School 391 in Tremont, the celebration will last all week long.

Together with the Bronx Overall Development Council, more than 30 students, parents and school officials showed up at the school at 2225 Webster Ave. to blanket the concrete rooftop with 20 pine trees and plants.

“We are the first in the community to do this,” said Middle School 391 teacher Vic Madho. “It’s very avant-garde.”

The school’s Eco-Green team will take care of the garden, and the project will be incorporated into science lessons.

Later this week, with the help of the nonprofit PHIPPS, students will paint the school foyer and redecorate selected bathrooms in the building. Read more..

 

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Mayor & MTA Announce New Express Bus Routes .. IF…

Mayor & MTA Announce New Express Bus Routes .. IF…

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Metropolitan Transportation Authority Executive Director and CEO, Elliot G. Sander today announced what could be a new express bus route from the Throggs Neck Section of the Bronx to Lower Manhattan, if - and only if - the congestion pricing plan is approved by the State Legislature and the City Council.

One of the new proposed routes, the BXM-19, would run from Throggs Neck down to Battery Place, serving as an extension to the existing BXM-9 which currently terminates at Fifth Avenue and 23rd Street. Currently, passengers of the BXM-9 who work in Lower Manhattan must transfer to a different bus or subway to continue below 23rd Street.

The BMX-19 would provide Bronx residents with a one-seat ride to Lower Manhattan. Taking place at a bus stop at the intersection of Layton and Vincent Avenues, the Mayor noted that he can not yet cut the ribbon on a service that would benefit thousands of Bronx residents because funding does not exist without congestion pricing.

The new express route, along with 44 other new and enhanced routes and over 300 new buses, would be funded under the Urban Partnership Agreement, which would award $354.5 million in federal funds to the City if the Mayor’s congestion pricing plan is adopted.

The Mayor was also joined by Department of Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, Assemblyman Michael Benedetto, City Councilman James Vacca, Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion, Gene Russianoff, Senior Attorney for the NYPIRG Straphangers Campaign and local resident Audrey Izzard.

“Legislators in every community must keep in mind the benefits congestion pricing will bring and what we give up if they fail to act,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “We face a real need for mass transit improvements, and congestion pricing offers the rare opportunity to fund them.

Without that funding, the MTA will not be able to make these projects happen.

The new BXM-19 bus route is one of hundreds of improvements that depend on the federal funding we will be given if we enact a congestion pricing plan.”

“If we’re serious about encouraging people to use public transportation, we must increase travel options for underserved areas,” said MTA Executive Director and CEO Sander. “This route, for example, would speed Bronx residents from Throggs Neck to jobs in Manhattan.”

“Congestion Pricing is critical to the future of New York City,” said Commissioner Sadik-Khan. “That is why we are traveling to many neighborhoods around the city to demonstrate just what kind of mass transit improvements, like new express bus routes, they could expect to see with this new source of funding.”

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Greener Ways As Path For Bronx Under Mayor’s Plan

amd_benepe.jpg Adrian Benepe

Greener Ways As Path For Bronx Under Mayor’s Plan

We are currently in the largest period of park expansion since Robert Moses and the WPA projects of the 1930s.

With a capital budget of $2.9 billion over the next 10 years, we are building innovative parks and facilities across the city on an unprecedented scale. From the concrete plants and brownfields that once lined the Bronx waterfront to the Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island, we are transforming the city with waterfront parks, kayak launches, bike trails, athletic fields, playgrounds and natural areas.

Thanks to the support of Mayor Bloomberg and the City Council, we will care for parks with a robust operating budget of almost $380 million, up from $180 million in 2000.

In the Bronx, new and renovated parks are transforming communities and improving the quality of life. Just in the last five years, more than $158 million has been invested in Bronx park improvements, including new waterfront parks, greenways and recreational facilities.

Over the next five years, Parks will invest more than $600 million to develop park projects in the Bronx, including completing long-unfinished Soundview Park and restoring the High Bridge to create the Bronx’s next great regional parks as part of Mayor Bloomberg’s PlaNYC, a sweeping road map to the sustainable growth of New York City.

Some $220 million comes from the construction of the Croton Water Filtration Plant and is being spent on improvements to over 70 Bronx parks, with 13 complete, 19 in construction and 43 projects currently in design.

Ongoing projects include Seton Falls Park, Mount Hope Playground, Manida Ballfield, Clark Playground, Devoe Park and Aqueduct Lands Playground, and we expect to begin construction on all the remaining park projects before the fall of 2009.

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