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Central Westchester Parkway

The Central Westchester Parkway is a 1.01-mile (1.63 km), four-lane parkway in Westchester County, New York, in the United States. It runs from exit 7 of the Cross-Westchester Expressway (Interstate 287 or I-287) to the Taconic State Parkway via New York State Route 22 (NY 22). The road has two intermediate exits and is maintained by Westchester County as County Route 150.

Central Westchester Parkway

Central Westchester Parkway highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by Westchester County
Length1.01 mi[1][2][3] (1.63 km)
ExistedAugust 13, 1932[4]–present
HistoryClosed June 3, 1957–September 2, 1960[5][6]
Major junctions
South end I-287 / Bloomingdale Road in White Plains
North end NY 22 in North Castle
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountyWestchester
Highway system

The Central Westchester Parkway was first conceived in the 1920s, from a plan by Westchester County to construct a west–east parkway from Elmsford to White Plains. Never constructed to its full length, the parkway was opened on August 13, 1932 from Westchester Avenue to the city of White Plains. The parkway however became part of a new project to connect the New York State Thruway and the New England Thruway, which would entail using the southern piece of the Central Westchester Parkway. The road was closed in 1957 and was not reopened until 1960, when a rebuilt section of the Central Westchester was built as a bypass of White Plains and the Cross-Westchester Expressway opened to traffic.

Route description

The Central Westchester Parkway begins at an interchange (exit 7) with access to and from the eastbound direction of I-287 (the Cross Westchester Expressway) in White Plains. The parkway, four lanes wide, parallels the Cross Westchester for a short distance, crossing under Grant Avenue before reaching exit 7A, a small right-in/right-out interchange with Orchard Street, which is connected to Beech Street. After crossing under Orchard Street, the Central Westchester Parkway turns northward through the center of White Plains, bypassing the downtown area and paralleling NY 22 A couple blocks north of Holland Avenue, the Central Westchester Expressway reaches a junction with NY 22 (North Broadway), where the right-of-way for the parkway merges into the northbound lanes. This junction marks the northern terminus of the Central Westchester Parkway, which continues north towards the Taconic State Parkway as NY 22.[7]

History

Construction and opening

The Central Westchester Parkway dates to a proposal for three new west–east parkways designed by the Westchester County Park Commission (established in 1922), which included the Cross County Parkway and the unbuilt O'Dell Parkway. This parkway would connect the village of Elmsford at the Saw Mill River Parkway and the city of White Plains at Westchester Avenue.[8] The parkway would eventually be extended to the Hutchinson River Parkway near Silver Lake Park in White Plains.[9] Construction began in 1930 of the new parkway with an initial section on the eastern edge of White Plains.[8]

The parkway, slated to open around August 1, 1932 would have, contrary to most parkways through Westchester County, truck traffic. Residents of White Plains felt they approved the money for the new parkway to have the same no-truck restriction that the rest of the parkway system would have. Residents began a petition in July 1932 to be sent to the Westchester County Park Commission to continue the ban onto the Central Westchester.[10] This first section of the Central Westchester Parkway opened on August 13, 1932, with a celebration headlined by a ribbon cutting with White Plains mayor Chauncey Griffin. The parkway segment cost $1 million (1932 USD) to construct and the ribbon was placed at the location of George Washington's first defensive line in 1776 during the Battle of White Plains.[4]

Meanwhile, the parkway was not completely finished. By 1935, Westchester County had budgeted more money to extend the parkway to Tarrytown Road in Elmsford, Money from the county totaling $5 million (equivalent to $78.7 million in 2021[11]) would go to extend the parkway.[12] However, this extra segment of the parkway was never constructed.[5]

Conversion to limited-access expressway

In the early 1950s, plans developed of a new 12-mile (19 km) expressway connecting the new New York State Thruway and the New England Thruway. Approved by then-Governor of New York Thomas Dewey in April 1952, the new parkway would parallel the Central Westchester Parkway to help ease traffic congestion through the area. Local groups were opposed to the project, because of the number of houses being lost in the new project, calling the project "a skunk in the parlor". After approval of the new project by the New York State Legislature, local groups took the argument directly to the advisers of Governor Dewey, who had stated that the route of new expressway would be chosen carefully.[13]

After several alignments were proposed, the final alignment was chosen by state engineers on May 11, 1954, with modifications of the parkway between Lake Street and Westchester Avenue. The rest of the parkway would not be used by the new expressway. This new expressway, costing the State of New York $40 million (equivalent to $325 million in 2021[11]), would use a piece of the Central Westchester Parkway through White Plains, Construction of the new expressway was slated to be completed in 1957, with money coming from the United States Government.[14]

After several disputes over alignment delayed the project, the state of New York announced the opening of bids on the first segment of the brand new Cross Westchester Expressway on November 23, 1956, which would start on December 20. This first section, 4.26 miles (6.86 km) would connect from Hillside Avenue and Tarrytown Road in the town of Greenburgh to Westchester Avenue at the city line of White Plains and the town of Harrison. The expressway would also boast 10.52 miles (16.93 km) of access roads along with the six mainline lanes and a center median. The first section would also have 22 bridges be constructed, including a 1,293 feet (394 m) long viaduct over Bronx River Parkway, the namesake Bronx River and the New York Central Railroad's Harlem Division. In total this section would cost $13.576 million (equivalent to $105 million in 2021[11]) according to engineers.[15]

On May 4, 1957, it was announced the Central Westchester Parkway would be closed to traffic for two years, which would shut down the only bypass of White Plains for truck traffic, and if everything were to go correctly, the state would shut it down in a few days.[16] However, the parkway was not shut down until June 3 as the parkway was prepared for absorption by the new highway.[5] The part of the parkway not used for the new expressway though saw car traffic for a time in November 1958 as the county wanted to use the parkway to test fencing and barriers that were approved for the Hutchinson River Parkway. Cars would be sent crashing into barriers to see the effectiveness of the new barriers.[17]

Meanwhile, in October 1959, the state of New York announced that the Cross Westchester Expressway would be finished possibly eight months earlier than expected, with a slated completion date of December 1, 1960, although the contract for the Elmsford section would allow it to go until April 1961.[18] However, in May 1960, the nine-mile-long (14 km) stretch of the Cross Westchester Expressway was announced to open between the Greenburgh–White Plains line and the New England Thruway in Rye in July. Traffic at that time would be directed onto Tarrytown Road into downtown Elmsford.[19]

In September 1960, the remaining one-mile-long (1.6 km) alignment of the Central Westchester Parkway was reconstructed to connect between NY 22 in North Castle and the new Cross Westchester Expressway, creating a two-mile (3.2 km) bypass of downtown White Plains. The new bypass also included pieces of Westchester Avenue, which were rebuilt and opened to help get commuters from North Castle to Port Chester, paralleling the new expressway.[6] On December 21, 1960, it was announced that the final piece of the Cross Westchester Expressway would open officially by Governor Nelson Rockefeller on December 27, completing the new alignment.[20] The expressway opened on December 27, gaining the designation of Interstate 287, with Governor Rockefeller, Lieutenant Governor Malcolm Wilson and other state officials, who held the ceremony at the interchange with NY 22.[21]

Exit list

The entire route is in Westchester County.

Locationmi
[1][2][3]
kmExitDestinationsNotes
White Plains0.000.00 
 
I-287 east – New England
Exit 7 on I-287
0.380.61Clinton StreetSouthbound exit and entrance
0.38–
0.55
0.61–
0.89
7A  Orchard Street to I-287 west – Tappan Zee BridgeI-287 not signed northbound; exit number not signed southbound
North Castle1.011.63  
 
NY 22 to Taconic State Parkway
At-grade intersection
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Westchester County Roads in White Plains". Westchester County, New York. Retrieved August 20, 2007.
  2. ^ a b "Westchester County Roads in North Castle". Westchester County, New York. Retrieved August 20, 2007.
  3. ^ a b Calculated using Microsoft Streets and Trips. Mileage retrieved August 20, 2007.
  4. ^ a b "Parkway Unit Is Opened". The New York Times. August 14, 1932. p. 16.
  5. ^ a b c "Westchester Parkway Closed". The New York Times. June 4, 1957. p. 36.
  6. ^ a b "Westchester Ends Old Bottleneck". The New York Times. September 3, 1960. p. 19.
  7. ^ Microsoft; Nokia (June 21, 2013). "overview map of the Central Westchester Parkway" (Map). Bing Maps. Microsoft. Retrieved June 21, 2013.
  8. ^ a b "County Plans New Parkways". The New York Times. May 11, 1930. p. 144.
  9. ^ "Visions Parkway Development". The New York Times. December 27, 1931. p. 108.
  10. ^ "Seeks Parkway Truck Ban". The New York Times. July 25, 1932. p. 12.
  11. ^ a b c Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved January 1, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series.
  12. ^ Crider, John H. (January 13, 1935). "Westchester Parkways Extended". The New York Times. p. XX10.
  13. ^ "Dewey Authorizes Westchester Road". The New York Times. April 5, 1952. p. 13.
  14. ^ Ingraham, Joseph C. (May 12, 1954). "Controversial Westchester Route Linking Thruways Set". The New York Times. p. 1.
  15. ^ "Westchester Set For Two Big Jobs". The New York Times. November 24, 1956. p. 21.
  16. ^ "Details Will Dot Westchester Map". The New York Times. May 5, 1957. p. 49.
  17. ^ Folsom, Merrill (November 4, 1958). "Westchester Planning Crashes To Find Safest Barrier for Road". The New York Times. p. 29.
  18. ^ "Link on The Thruway 8 Months Early". The New York Times. October 13, 1959. p. 41.
  19. ^ Folsom, Merrill (May 6, 1960). "9 Miles of Westchester Highway To Open Soon, Ending Car Snarl". The New York Times. p. 33.
  20. ^ "Thruway Link to Open". The New York Times. December 22, 1960. p. 47.
  21. ^ Folsom, Merrill (December 28, 1960). "Westchester Link to the Thruway Open". The New York Times. p. 46.

External links

KML is from Wikidata

central, westchester, parkway, mile, four, lane, parkway, westchester, county, york, united, states, runs, from, exit, cross, westchester, expressway, interstate, taconic, state, parkway, york, state, route, road, intermediate, exits, maintained, westchester, . The Central Westchester Parkway is a 1 01 mile 1 63 km four lane parkway in Westchester County New York in the United States It runs from exit 7 of the Cross Westchester Expressway Interstate 287 or I 287 to the Taconic State Parkway via New York State Route 22 NY 22 The road has two intermediate exits and is maintained by Westchester County as County Route 150 Central Westchester ParkwayCentral Westchester Parkway highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by Westchester CountyLength1 01 mi 1 2 3 1 63 km ExistedAugust 13 1932 4 presentHistoryClosed June 3 1957 September 2 1960 5 6 Major junctionsSouth endI 287 Bloomingdale Road in White PlainsNorth endNY 22 in North CastleLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountyWestchesterHighway systemCounty routes in New YorkCounty Routes in Westchester CountyThe Central Westchester Parkway was first conceived in the 1920s from a plan by Westchester County to construct a west east parkway from Elmsford to White Plains Never constructed to its full length the parkway was opened on August 13 1932 from Westchester Avenue to the city of White Plains The parkway however became part of a new project to connect the New York State Thruway and the New England Thruway which would entail using the southern piece of the Central Westchester Parkway The road was closed in 1957 and was not reopened until 1960 when a rebuilt section of the Central Westchester was built as a bypass of White Plains and the Cross Westchester Expressway opened to traffic Contents 1 Route description 2 History 2 1 Construction and opening 2 2 Conversion to limited access expressway 3 Exit list 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoute description EditThe Central Westchester Parkway begins at an interchange exit 7 with access to and from the eastbound direction of I 287 the Cross Westchester Expressway in White Plains The parkway four lanes wide parallels the Cross Westchester for a short distance crossing under Grant Avenue before reaching exit 7A a small right in right out interchange with Orchard Street which is connected to Beech Street After crossing under Orchard Street the Central Westchester Parkway turns northward through the center of White Plains bypassing the downtown area and paralleling NY 22 A couple blocks north of Holland Avenue the Central Westchester Expressway reaches a junction with NY 22 North Broadway where the right of way for the parkway merges into the northbound lanes This junction marks the northern terminus of the Central Westchester Parkway which continues north towards the Taconic State Parkway as NY 22 7 History EditConstruction and opening Edit The Central Westchester Parkway dates to a proposal for three new west east parkways designed by the Westchester County Park Commission established in 1922 which included the Cross County Parkway and the unbuilt O Dell Parkway This parkway would connect the village of Elmsford at the Saw Mill River Parkway and the city of White Plains at Westchester Avenue 8 The parkway would eventually be extended to the Hutchinson River Parkway near Silver Lake Park in White Plains 9 Construction began in 1930 of the new parkway with an initial section on the eastern edge of White Plains 8 The parkway slated to open around August 1 1932 would have contrary to most parkways through Westchester County truck traffic Residents of White Plains felt they approved the money for the new parkway to have the same no truck restriction that the rest of the parkway system would have Residents began a petition in July 1932 to be sent to the Westchester County Park Commission to continue the ban onto the Central Westchester 10 This first section of the Central Westchester Parkway opened on August 13 1932 with a celebration headlined by a ribbon cutting with White Plains mayor Chauncey Griffin The parkway segment cost 1 million 1932 USD to construct and the ribbon was placed at the location of George Washington s first defensive line in 1776 during the Battle of White Plains 4 Meanwhile the parkway was not completely finished By 1935 Westchester County had budgeted more money to extend the parkway to Tarrytown Road in Elmsford Money from the county totaling 5 million equivalent to 78 7 million in 2021 11 would go to extend the parkway 12 However this extra segment of the parkway was never constructed 5 Conversion to limited access expressway Edit See also Interstate 287 History In the early 1950s plans developed of a new 12 mile 19 km expressway connecting the new New York State Thruway and the New England Thruway Approved by then Governor of New York Thomas Dewey in April 1952 the new parkway would parallel the Central Westchester Parkway to help ease traffic congestion through the area Local groups were opposed to the project because of the number of houses being lost in the new project calling the project a skunk in the parlor After approval of the new project by the New York State Legislature local groups took the argument directly to the advisers of Governor Dewey who had stated that the route of new expressway would be chosen carefully 13 After several alignments were proposed the final alignment was chosen by state engineers on May 11 1954 with modifications of the parkway between Lake Street and Westchester Avenue The rest of the parkway would not be used by the new expressway This new expressway costing the State of New York 40 million equivalent to 325 million in 2021 11 would use a piece of the Central Westchester Parkway through White Plains Construction of the new expressway was slated to be completed in 1957 with money coming from the United States Government 14 After several disputes over alignment delayed the project the state of New York announced the opening of bids on the first segment of the brand new Cross Westchester Expressway on November 23 1956 which would start on December 20 This first section 4 26 miles 6 86 km would connect from Hillside Avenue and Tarrytown Road in the town of Greenburgh to Westchester Avenue at the city line of White Plains and the town of Harrison The expressway would also boast 10 52 miles 16 93 km of access roads along with the six mainline lanes and a center median The first section would also have 22 bridges be constructed including a 1 293 feet 394 m long viaduct over Bronx River Parkway the namesake Bronx River and the New York Central Railroad s Harlem Division In total this section would cost 13 576 million equivalent to 105 million in 2021 11 according to engineers 15 On May 4 1957 it was announced the Central Westchester Parkway would be closed to traffic for two years which would shut down the only bypass of White Plains for truck traffic and if everything were to go correctly the state would shut it down in a few days 16 However the parkway was not shut down until June 3 as the parkway was prepared for absorption by the new highway 5 The part of the parkway not used for the new expressway though saw car traffic for a time in November 1958 as the county wanted to use the parkway to test fencing and barriers that were approved for the Hutchinson River Parkway Cars would be sent crashing into barriers to see the effectiveness of the new barriers 17 Meanwhile in October 1959 the state of New York announced that the Cross Westchester Expressway would be finished possibly eight months earlier than expected with a slated completion date of December 1 1960 although the contract for the Elmsford section would allow it to go until April 1961 18 However in May 1960 the nine mile long 14 km stretch of the Cross Westchester Expressway was announced to open between the Greenburgh White Plains line and the New England Thruway in Rye in July Traffic at that time would be directed onto Tarrytown Road into downtown Elmsford 19 In September 1960 the remaining one mile long 1 6 km alignment of the Central Westchester Parkway was reconstructed to connect between NY 22 in North Castle and the new Cross Westchester Expressway creating a two mile 3 2 km bypass of downtown White Plains The new bypass also included pieces of Westchester Avenue which were rebuilt and opened to help get commuters from North Castle to Port Chester paralleling the new expressway 6 On December 21 1960 it was announced that the final piece of the Cross Westchester Expressway would open officially by Governor Nelson Rockefeller on December 27 completing the new alignment 20 The expressway opened on December 27 gaining the designation of Interstate 287 with Governor Rockefeller Lieutenant Governor Malcolm Wilson and other state officials who held the ceremony at the interchange with NY 22 21 Exit list EditThe entire route is in Westchester County Locationmi 1 2 3 kmExitDestinationsNotesWhite Plains0 000 00 I 287 east New EnglandExit 7 on I 2870 380 61 Clinton StreetSouthbound exit and entrance0 38 0 550 61 0 897A Orchard Street to I 287 west Tappan Zee BridgeI 287 not signed northbound exit number not signed southboundNorth Castle1 011 63 NY 22 to Taconic State ParkwayAt grade intersection1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Incomplete accessSee also Edit U S Roads portal New York state portalReferences Edit a b Westchester County Roads in White Plains Westchester County New York Retrieved August 20 2007 a b Westchester County Roads in North Castle Westchester County New York Retrieved August 20 2007 a b Calculated using Microsoft Streets and Trips Mileage retrieved August 20 2007 a b Parkway Unit Is Opened The New York Times August 14 1932 p 16 a b c Westchester Parkway Closed The New York Times June 4 1957 p 36 a b Westchester Ends Old Bottleneck The New York Times September 3 1960 p 19 Microsoft Nokia June 21 2013 overview map of the Central Westchester Parkway Map Bing Maps Microsoft Retrieved June 21 2013 a b County Plans New Parkways The New York Times May 11 1930 p 144 Visions Parkway Development The New York Times December 27 1931 p 108 Seeks Parkway Truck Ban The New York Times July 25 1932 p 12 a b c Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved January 1 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series Crider John H January 13 1935 Westchester Parkways Extended The New York Times p XX10 Dewey Authorizes Westchester Road The New York Times April 5 1952 p 13 Ingraham Joseph C May 12 1954 Controversial Westchester Route Linking Thruways Set The New York Times p 1 Westchester Set For Two Big Jobs The New York Times November 24 1956 p 21 Details Will Dot Westchester Map The New York Times May 5 1957 p 49 Folsom Merrill November 4 1958 Westchester Planning Crashes To Find Safest Barrier for Road The New York Times p 29 Link on The Thruway 8 Months Early The New York Times October 13 1959 p 41 Folsom Merrill May 6 1960 9 Miles of Westchester Highway To Open Soon Ending Car Snarl The New York Times p 33 Thruway Link to Open The New York Times December 22 1960 p 47 Folsom Merrill December 28 1960 Westchester Link to the Thruway Open The New York Times p 46 External links EditKML file edit help Template Attached KML Central Westchester ParkwayKML is from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Central Westchester Parkway amp oldid 968296139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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