News
But the Queensboro Bridge gets special attention because it is both the entrance to Manhattan and, at around 15 miles in, the place where runners begin to really feel the burn.
The Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge has been toll-free since it first opened to traffic back in 1909, but some drivers are now being charged because of congestion pricing, whether they know it or not.
City officials and community leaders gathered Tuesday morning to celebrate the groundbreaking of the Baseline, a ...
If you’ve ever walked or biked over the Queensboro Bridge, which thousands of New Yorkers do every day, then you know it can be a pretty unpleasant, borderline dangerous experience.
[UPDATE BELOW] In December the Bloomberg administration announced plans to rename the Queensboro Bridge after former mayor Ed Koch. Koch was for it, Vallone wasn't, and today the City Council will ...
The city's new congestion pricing plan seems to have turned the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge from a historically toll-free span into a trap that hammers unsuspecting drivers with the $9 charge.
In 2010, the city decided to rename the bridge in honor of former mayor Ed Koch, officially naming it the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge. A poll taken soon afterward showed that over 70% of Queens’s ...
Pedestrians face a particularly treacherous trek along the 59th Street bridge — because they’re forced to share a narrow, two-lane strip with bikes, e-bikes and e-scooters.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results