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LIC To Get $40M In Street And Infrastructure Upgrades

HuntersPointRoadway1

Feb. 1, 2016 By Christian Murray

The Long Island City/Hunters Point area is about to get a $40 million infrastructure and roadway upgrade through funding allocated by Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Most of the roadways in the Hunters Point area have not been reconstructed since the beginning of the 20th Century, according to Department of Transportation Commissioner Polly Trottenberg. With Long Island City’s explosion of residential and commercial growth, plus the City’s emphasis on traffic safety stemming from Vision Zero, this area was identified as due for a makeover.

“As buildings are going up, obviously the infrastructure is straining,” Trottenberg said Monday at the project announcement.

The reconstruction will focus on an area bound by 44th Drive to the north, Borden Avenue to the south, 5th Street to the west and roughly Jackson Avenue to the east.

The project will involve repairing roads, curbs and sidewalks; adding greenery and public space; upgrading the storm water drainage and sewer systems; adding traffic calming features such as medians; and ensuring the streets are safer for motorists, HPRedesignpedestrians and cyclists.

“The improvements we are announcing today will help keep Long Island City safe, update its aging infrastructure and maintain its status as one of New York City’s jewels,” Trottenberg said.

Last year, New York City reported the lowest number of traffic fatalities on record and much of this was attributed to Vision Zero, according to Trottenberg.

The DOT would not say what Hunters Point streets it will work on first but did say that the intersections of Vernon Boulevard/Jackson Avenue, 23rd Street/Jackson Avenue, 21st Street/Jackson Ave, 44th Drive/Vernon Boulevard were priorities.

The project will be coordinated by the DOT, Department of Design and Construction and Department of Environmental Protection.

Last month, the Mayor announced that he would boost Vision Zero funding by $115 million in 2016 for traffic safety improvements throughout the city, including nearly $30 million for Long Island City’s improvements – the most of any neighborhood.

The DOT Capital Budget also had $8.8 million leftover that will go towards this project, for a total of nearly $40 million.

The DOT anticipates that the Hunters Point preliminary design will be completed by the summer. The agency has not yet defined when construction will start and how long it would take to complete.

The design process began in December when Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer, the DOT and the DDC held a community workshop in Long Island City to discuss what such a project would involve and to solicit feedback.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

8 Comments

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MRLIC

No I don’t have stats but I do see people risking life and limb climbing over these ugly concrete barriers. I do see many cars as I said turning into the pedestrian part which is also dangerous to pedestrians. Some cars try to make the light before it changes so you must look and the bushes are in the way. We should be able to turn both ways out of those blocks mentioned. Why not replace them with barriers a person an stand on the middle?

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MRLIC

I hope they take out the ugly median on Jackson Ave. near the Citicorp Building. You can’t make left turns coming from the parking garage next to the Court House or on Pearson St. next block over. In the summer the growth of the plants you can’t see the cars coming when you are crossing. I see cars making turns through the pedestrian walkways so they don’t haave to travel another block or two to turn. I also see people jump on these mounds of concrete and dirt in the middle of the block to cross, which is very dangerous. Truck have a hard turn on these blocks because it makes the turns very sharp.

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Harris

They improve the look and safety of the street. There is no point where plants block your view of if cars are coming (as long as you’re not jaywalking). Do you have stats that accidents or injuries increased?

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anon

why are the comments closed on a lot of other posts?
id love to hear the thoughts about yet another nail salon on vernon.

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Why didn't

Anyone take the aging infrastructure into consideration while handing out building permits like candy on Halloween?

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Anonymous visitor

I know these are highly complex equations, but try to bear with me:

More people => more tax dollars => more spending on improving infrastructure.

Less people => no tax dollars => no spending on improving infrastructure.

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Another one

Should they have waited until everyone moved in before they upgraded the area’s electric grid and plumbing? More people means more infrastructure which if you have a brain in your head you build before they arrive. Otherwise they all wind up sitting in their own excrement in the dark.

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