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George Washington Bridge

The George Washington Bridge is a double-decked suspension bridge spanning the Hudson River, connecting Fort Lee, New Jersey, with Manhattan in New York City. The bridge is named after George Washington, the first president of the United States. The George Washington Bridge is the world's busiest motor vehicle bridge,[5][6][7] carrying over 103 million vehicles in 2016.[a] It is owned by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, a bi-state government agency that operates infrastructure in the Port of New York and New Jersey. The George Washington Bridge is also informally known as the GW Bridge, the GWB, the GW, or the George,[8] and was known as the Fort Lee Bridge or Hudson River Bridge during construction. The George Washington Bridge measures 4,760 feet (1,450 m) long and has a main span of 3,500 feet (1,100 m). It was the longest main bridge span in the world from its 1931 opening until the Golden Gate Bridge opened in 1937.

George Washington Bridge
The bridge seen from New Jersey in July 2010
Coordinates40°51′06″N 73°57′10″W / 40.8517°N 73.9527°W / 40.8517; -73.9527 (George Washington Bridge)
Carries
  • 14 lanes (8 upper deck, 6 lower deck) of I-95 (entire span) / US 1-9 (entire span) / US 46 (New Jersey side)
  • Upper deck sidewalk (south side): pedestrians and cyclists
CrossesHudson River
LocaleFort Lee, New Jersey, and New York City (Washington Heights, Manhattan), New York, United States
Other name(s)
  • GWB
  • GW
  • GW Bridge
  • The George
  • G-Dub
Named forU.S. President George Washington
Maintained byPort Authority of New York and New Jersey
Characteristics
DesignDouble-decked suspension bridge
MaterialSteel
Total length4,760 ft (1,450 m)[1]
Width119 ft (36 m)[1]
Height604 ft (184 m)[1]
Longest span3,500 ft (1,067 m)[2]
Clearance above14 ft (4.3 m) (upper level), 13.5 ft (4.1 m) (lower level)[3]
Clearance below212 ft (65 m) at mid-span[1]
History
DesignerOthmar Ammann (chief engineer)
Edward W. Stearns (assistant chief engineer)
Allston Dana (design engineer)
Cass Gilbert (architect)
Montgomery Case (construction engineer)
Construction startSeptember 21, 1927; 95 years ago (1927-09-21) (bridge construction)
June 2, 1959; 63 years ago (1959-06-02) (lower level)
OpenedOctober 25, 1931; 91 years ago (1931-10-25) (upper level)
August 29, 1962; 60 years ago (1962-08-29) (lower level)
Statistics
Daily traffic289,827 (2016)[4]
Toll(Eastbound only) As of January 8, 2023:
  • Cars $17.00 (Tolls-by-Mail)
  • $14.75 for Peak (E-ZPass)
  • $12.75 for Off-peak (E-ZPass)
  • (Peak hours: Weekdays: 6–10 a.m., 4–8 p.m.; Sat. & Sun.: 11 a.m. – 9 p.m.)
Location

The George Washington Bridge is an important travel corridor within the New York metropolitan area. It has an upper level that carries four lanes in each direction and a lower level with three lanes in each direction, for a total of 14 lanes of travel. The speed limit on the bridge is 45 mph (72 km/h). The bridge's upper level also carries pedestrian and bicycle traffic. Interstate 95 (I-95) and U.S. Route 1/9 (US 1/9, composed of US 1 and US 9) cross the river via the bridge. U.S. Route 46 (US 46), which lies entirely within New Jersey, terminates halfway across the bridge at the state border with New York. At its eastern terminus in New York City, the bridge continues onto the Trans-Manhattan Expressway (part of I-95, connecting to the Cross Bronx Expressway).

The idea of a bridge across the Hudson River was first proposed in 1906, but it was not until 1925 that the state legislatures of New York and New Jersey voted to allow for the planning and construction of such a bridge. Construction on the George Washington Bridge started in September 1927; the bridge was ceremonially dedicated on October 24, 1931, and opened to traffic the next day. The opening of the George Washington Bridge contributed to the development of Bergen County, New Jersey, in which Fort Lee is located. The upper deck was widened from six to eight lanes in 1946. The six-lane lower deck was constructed beneath the existing span from 1958 to 1962 because of increasing traffic flow.

Description

 
The bridge, looking south at sunset from the New York side of the Hudson River

The George Washington Bridge was designed by chief civil engineer Othmar Ammann,[9][10][11] design engineer Allston Dana,[12][10] and assistant chief engineer Edward W. Stearns,[13][10] with Cass Gilbert as consulting architect.[14][15] It connects Fort Lee in Bergen County, New Jersey, with Washington Heights in Manhattan, New York.[16][17] The bridge's construction required 113,000 short tons (101,000 long tons; 103,000 t) of fabricated steel; 28,000 short tons (25,000 long tons; 25,000 t) of wire, stretching 106,000 miles (171,000 km); and 20,000 short tons (18,000 long tons; 18,000 t) of masonry.[18][11]

Decks

The bridge carries 14 lanes of traffic, seven in each direction.[16][17] As such, the George Washington Bridge contains more vehicular lanes than any other suspension bridge, and is the world's busiest vehicular bridge.[5][19][6][7] The fourteen lanes of the bridge are split unevenly across two levels: the upper level contains eight lanes while the lower level contains six lanes.[16][17] The upper level opened on October 25, 1931,[20] and is 90 feet (27 m) wide.[1] The upper level originally had six lanes, though two more lanes were added in 1946.[21] Although the lower level was part of the original plans for the bridge, it did not open until August 29, 1962.[17] The upper level has a vertical clearance of 14 feet (4.3 m), and all trucks and other oversize vehicles must use the upper level. Trucks are banned from the lower level, which has a clearance of 13.6 feet (4.1 m). All lanes on both levels are 8 feet 6 inches (2.59 m) wide.[3][22] Vehicles carrying hazardous materials (HAZMATs) are prohibited on the lower level due to its enclosed nature. HAZMAT-carrying vehicles may use the upper level, provided that they conform to strict guidelines as outlined in the Port Authority's "Red Book".[3][23]

There are two sidewalks on the upper span of the bridge, one on each side. However, cyclists and pedestrians can usually only utilize the southern sidewalk, since the northern sidewalk is normally closed.[24] The northern sidewalk was temporarily reopened in 2017 while a temporary suicide prevention fence was installed on the southern sidewalk, in preparation for the installation of permanent fences on both sidewalks.[25][26]

The George Washington Bridge measures 4,760 feet (1,450 m) long and has a main span of 3,500 feet (1,100 m).[1][18] Accounting for the height of the lower deck, the bridge stretches 212 feet (65 m) above mean high water at its center,[1] and 195 feet (59 m) above mean high water under the New York anchorage.[27] The bridge's main span was the longest main bridge span in the world at the time of its opening in 1931, and was nearly double the 1,850 feet (560 m) of the previous record holder, the Ambassador Bridge in Detroit.[28][29] It held this title until the opening of the Golden Gate Bridge in 1937.[2] The completion of the George Washington Bridge proved that longer suspension bridges were both physically and economically feasible. Prior to the bridge's construction, engineers had believed that a suspension span's length was a large indicator of a suspension bridge's economic feasibility.[30]

The George Washington Bridge's total width is 119 feet (36 m).[1] When the upper deck was built, it was only 12 feet (3.7 m) thick without any stiffening trusses on the sides, resulting in a deck weighing 1,100 pounds per square foot (5,400 kg/m2) and a length-to-thickness ratio of about 350 to 1.[31][32] At the time of the George Washington Bridge's opening, most long suspension spans had stiffening trusses on their sides, and spans generally had a length-to-thickness ratio of 60 to 1, which translated to a weight of 13,000 to 14,000 pounds per square foot (63,000 to 68,000 kg/m2) and a thickness equivalent to an 11-story building.[33][30][34] During the planning process, Ammann designed the deck around the "deflection theory", an as-yet-unconfirmed assumption that longer suspension decks did not need to be as stiff in proportion to its length, because the weight of the longer deck itself would provide a counterweight against the deck's movement. This had been tested by Leon Moisseiff when he designed the Manhattan Bridge in 1909, though it was less than half the length of the George Washington Bridge.[34] Stiffening trusses were ultimately excluded from the George Washington Bridge's design to save money; instead, a system of plate girders was installed on the underside of the upper deck. This provided the stiffening that was necessary for the bridge deck, and it was replicated on the lower deck during its construction. The plate-girders underneath each deck, combined with an open-truss design on the bridge's side that connected the decks with each other, resulted in an even stiffer span that was able to resist torsional forces.[33]

Cables

 
Detail of main cables in New Jersey anchorage

The George Washington Bridge is supported by a total of 105,986 wires. There are four main cables, which suspend the upper deck and are held up by the suspension towers. Each main cable contained 61 strands, with each strand made of 434 individual wires, for a total of 26,474 wires per main cable. The cables were then covered by a sheath of weather-resistant steel.[35][36][37] The bridge uses a wire-cable design of suspension, wherein the vertical suspender wires are attached directly to the main cables and the deck directly.[38][39][40] The main cables each measure 3 feet (0.91 m) in diameter.[11]

Each side of the bridge contains an anchorage for the main cables. The anchorage on the New York side is a concrete structure, while the anchorage on the New Jersey side is bored directly into the cliff of the Palisades.[41][42] Originally, the ends of the main cables (at the anchorages) were supposed to contain one of several ornamented designs, such as a wing, fin, tire, or even a statue at the end of each main cable. This was later eliminated in order to save costs after the start of the Great Depression in 1929.[43]

Suspension towers

 
View of the suspension towers from the upper deck

The suspension towers on each side of the river are each 604 feet (184 m) tall.[1] They are composed of sections weighing between 37 and 40 short tons (33 and 36 long tons) and contain a combined 475,000 rivets.[44] Each bridge has two archways, one above and one below the decks.[11]

The original design for the George Washington Bridge's suspension towers called for them to be encased in concrete and granite in a Revival style, similar to the Brooklyn Bridge.[44][15][45] The granite was supposed to help support the steel structure of the towers. After further scrutiny of the proposed bridge's engineering, it was found that the steel alone could support the towers.[46] It was ultimately decided that the supporting structure of the towers should be made entirely of steel, with the granite serving only as a facade.[47] The towers would have also contained elevators to carry sightseers to the top of each tower, with restaurants and observatory decks at the pinnacles.[15][48][41]

The facades were postponed in 1929 during the Great Depression, when rising material costs made such a plan unfeasible.[49][50][51] The entire weight of the bridge was supported by the steel structure, and the purely decorative masonry could be added later.[15][52] Even though the steel towers had been left that way for cost reasons, aesthetic critiques of the bare steel towers were favorable.[51][50] Several groups, such as the American Institute of Steel Construction, believed that covering the steel framework with masonry would be both misleading and "fundamentally ugly".[53]

The masonry facades and the observatory decks were ultimately never built; the exposed steel towers, with their distinctive criss-crossed bracing, became one of the George Washington Bridge's most identifiable characteristics.[35][2] While the exposed steel towers' design was negatively received by a few critics such as Raymond Hood and William A. Boring, the public reception at the bridge's opening was generally positive.[18] The Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier wrote of the towers: "The structure is so pure, so resolute, so regular that here, finally, steel architecture seems to laugh."[54][29] Milton MacKaye wrote in The New Yorker that the George Washington Bridge had established Ammann as "one of the immortals of bridge engineering and design, a genius."[55] After the George Washington Bridge was successfully constructed without masonry towers, Ammann did not incorporate any masonry towers in his bridge plans.[44] Ammann wrote that the "sturdy appearance and well-balanced distribution of steel in the columns and bracing" gave the bridge's towers "a good appearance, a neat appearance".[15][56]

American flag

 
The George Washington Bridge's flag as seen from the center of the upper deck

Since 1947 or 1948, the bridge has flown the world's largest free-flying American flag in the New Jersey tower. The flag measures 90 feet (27 m) long, 60 feet (18 m) wide, and 450 pounds (200 kg).[57][16] Until 1976, the flag was taken out of a garage in New Jersey and manually erected on national holidays. During the United States' bicentennial, a mechanical hoisting system was installed, and the flag was stored along the bridge's girders when not in use.[57] It is hoisted on special occasions when weather allows,[58][59] and appears on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Flag Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, and Veterans Day.[16] Since 2006, the flag is also flown on September 11 of each year, honoring those lost in the September 11 attacks.[59] On events where the flag is flown, the tower lights are lit from dusk until 11:59 p.m.[1]

History

The bridge sits near the sites of Fort Washington (in New York) and Fort Lee (in New Jersey), which were fortified positions used by General George Washington and his American forces as they attempted to deter the occupation of New York City in 1776 during the American Revolutionary War. Unsuccessful, Washington evacuated Manhattan by crossing between the two forts.[60][b]

Until the first decade of the 20th century, passage across the lower Hudson River was possible only by ferry.[62][63] There were more than 200 separate municipalities along the lower Hudson River and the New York Bay, but no unified agency to control commerce or transport in the area.[64] A fixed crossing of the Hudson was first proposed in 1888 by civil engineer Gustav Lindenthal, who later became New York City's bridge commissioner.[65] The Hudson and Manhattan Railroad and the Pennsylvania Railroad opened three pairs of tubes under the lower Hudson in the 1900s.[62] The first vehicular crossing across the lower Hudson River, the Holland Tunnel, was opened in 1927, connecting Lower Manhattan with Jersey City.[66]

Planning

 
George Washington Bridge looking east from Fort Lee, New Jersey

Plans for a vehicular bridge across the Hudson River were being considered as early as 1906, during the planning for the Holland Tunnel.[67] Three possible locations for a Hudson River bridge were considered in the vicinity of 57th, 110th, and 179th Streets in Manhattan.[68] These three locations were considered to be the only suitable locations for suspension bridges; other sites were rejected on the grounds of aesthetics, geography, or traffic flows.[67][69] In 1920, English architect Alfred C. Bossom proposed a double-decker bridge with room for vehicular and railroad traffic near 57th Street in Midtown Manhattan. The same year, Othmar Ammann and Gustav Lindenthal proposed a vehicular and railroad bridge to 57th Street in Manhattan, topped by an office building that would have been the world's tallest.[70] Lindenthal's plan failed because it did not receive permits from the United States Army Corps of Engineers or approval from the city, and because Midtown Manhattan real estate developers and planners opposed the plan. Ammann unsuccessfully attempted to convince Lindenthal to build his bridge elsewhere, without a tower atop the bridge's terminus.[71] In January 1924, the New York State Chamber of Commerce voted against the 57th Street location in favor of another location upstream.[72] Despite this, Lindenthal proposed that the Hudson River bridge be built there, and carry 16 railroad tracks and 12 lanes of automotive traffic.[73]

Meanwhile, Ammann became chief engineer of the Port of New York Authority (now the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey), which was created in 1921 to oversee commerce and transport along the lower Hudson River and New York Bay.[64] He had disassociated himself from Lindenthal's proposal by 1923, conducting his own studies on the feasibility of a bridge from 178th Street in Fort Washington, Manhattan, to Fort Lee in New Jersey.[71] Ammann's advocacy for the Fort Washington–Fort Lee bridge gained support from both New Jersey governor George Silzer and New York governor Alfred E. Smith by mid-1923.[64] [71] In May 1924, Colonel Frederick Stuart Greene, the New York Superintendent of Public Works, announced a plan to construct a suspension bridge between Fort Lee and Fort Washington. At that location, both sides were surrounded by steep cliffs (The Palisades on the New Jersey side, and Washington Heights on the New York side). Thus, it was possible to build the bridge without either impeding maritime traffic or requiring lengthy approach ramps from ground level.[74]

A New Jersey state assemblyman introduced a bill for the Hudson River bridge that December.[75] This bill was passed in the New Jersey Assembly in February 1925.[76] After an initial rejection by Silzer, the Assembly made modifications before passing the bill again in March,[77] after which Silzer signed the bill.[78] Around the same time, the New York state legislature was also considering a similar bill.[9] A dispute developed between New York civic groups, who supported the construction of the Hudson River Bridge; and the Parks Conservation Association, who believed that the bridge towers would degrade the quality of Fort Washington Park directly underneath the proposed bridge's deck.[79][80] In late March 1925, the chairman of the Parks Conservation Association noted that the proposed New York state legislation would provide for the actual construction of the bridge, rather than just the planning.[81] Ultimately, the Hudson River bridge bill was passed in the New York state legislature, and Smith approved the bill that April.[82]

 
Aerial view of the bridge surrounded by cliffs on either side

In March 1925, Silzer asked Ammann to devise preliminary plans for the Hudson River bridge. Ammann found that the width of the Hudson River decreased by more than 1,000 feet (300 m) when it passed between Fort Lee and Fort Washington. The ledges of Fort Lee and Fort Washington were respectively 300 and 200 feet (91 and 61 m) above mean water level at this point, which was not only ideal geography for a suspension bridge, but also allowed the bridge to be high enough to give sufficient clearance for maritime traffic.[9] However, the differing heights meant that a large cut had to be made through the Fort Lee ledge so that the bridge approach could be built there.[83] The same month, the New Jersey legislature asked for funds for test bores to determine if the geological strata would support the bridge.[9] In response to continuing concerns from park preservationists, Ammann stated that placing the New York suspension tower anywhere else would make the bridge look asymmetrical, which he believed was a worse outcome than placing the tower within the park.[84]

The states conducted a study in mid-1925, which found that the Hudson River bridge would be able to pay for itself in twenty-five years if a 50-cent toll were to be placed on every vehicle.[15] After funding was secured, surveyors began examining feasible sites for the future bridge's approaches in August 1925. By law, the New York end of the Hudson River Bridge could only be constructed between 178th and 185th Streets, and the New Jersey end had to be built directly across the river.[83] Geologists made 300-foot (91 m) test bores on the New Jersey side to determine if the site was feasible for laying foundations for the bridge.[85] Othmar Ammann was hired as the bridge's chief engineer.[50] In Ammann's original plans for the bridge, which had been published in March 1925, he had envisioned that the bridge would contain two sidewalks; a roadway that could carry up to 8,000 vehicles per hour; and space for four railroad tracks, in case the two North River railroad tunnels downstream exceeded their train capacity.[9] Cass Gilbert was hired in January 1926 to design architectural elements for the Hudson River bridge, including the suspension towers. The bridge design had yet to be finalized, and its cost could not even be estimated at that point due to the complexity of factors.[86]

Gilbert released preliminary sketches of the Hudson River bridge that March; by then, the architect had decided that the span would be a suspension bridge.[45] The sketch accompanied a feasibility report that Ammann and other engineers presented to the Port of New York Authority, which was to operate the bridge. The central span was to be 3,500 feet (1,100 m) long, longer than any other suspension bridge in existence at the time, and 200 feet above mean high water. The bridge would initially carry four lanes of vehicular traffic and sidewalk lanes; the plans called for three additional phases of expansion, culminating in an eight-lane bridge deck with four rapid-transit tracks underneath. The span would be supported by two towers, each 650 feet (200 m) tall.[87][71] There would also be space to build a second deck in the future below the main deck.[88] Ammann's team also found that the most feasible location for the bridge was at 179th Street in Manhattan (as opposed to 181st or 175th Streets). This was both because the 179th Street location was more aesthetically appealing than the other two locations, and because a 179th Street bridge would be cheaper and shorter in length than a bridge at either of the other streets.[87] At this point in the planning process, the Hudson River bridge's estimated cost was $40 million[45] or $50 million.[87] Because of the proposed bridge's length, engineers also had to test the strength of materials, including suspension cables, that were to be used in the span.[89][90][32] Ammann's research department constructed scale models of various designs for the bridge and tested them in wind tunnels.[32]

By late 1926, one engineer predicted that construction on the Hudson River bridge would start the following summer.[91] In December 1926, the final plans for the bridge were approved by the public[92] and by the War Department.[93] The Port Authority planned to sell off $50 million worth of bonds to pay for the bridge, and the initial $20 million bond issue was sold that December.[94] Further issues arose when the New Jersey Assembly passed a bill in March 1927, which increased the New Jersey governor's power to veto Port Authority contracts. Smith, the New York governor, and Silzer, the now-former New Jersey governor who had been appointed Port Authority chairman, both objected to the bill since the Port Authority had been intended as a bi-state venture.[95][96] Afterward, the then-current New Jersey governor A. Harry Moore worked with legislators to revise the legislation.[97] The revised law was ultimately not a significant deviation from the Port Authority's practice at the time, wherein the Port Authority was already submitting its contracts to New Jersey government for review.[98]

Construction

The George Washington Bridge's construction employed three teams of workers: one each for the New Jersey tower, the New York tower, and the deck.[99] The construction process was relatively safe, although twelve or thirteen workers died during its construction.[18][99] Of these, three were killed when the foundation for the New Jersey tower flooded; a fourth worker was killed by a blast at the New Jersey anchorage; and the others died because of their own carelessness, according to Port Authority records.[99]

First contracts

In April 1927, the Port Authority opened the first bids for the construction of the Hudson River bridge. It was specifically seeking bids for the construction of the New Jersey suspension tower's foundation.[100] The Manhattan suspension anchorage's location was still undecided at this time.[101] A bid for the New Jersey tower was awarded later that month.[102] In May, the Port Authority opened more bids for the construction of the bridge's approaches and anchorage on the New Jersey side.[103] Dredging operations on the Hudson River, which would allow large ships to pass underneath the bridge, also started that May.[104] By late August, the Port Authority had started condemning plots of land for the bridge's approaches.[105]

Montgomery B. Case, chief construction engineer,[106] began construction on the Hudson River bridge began on September 21, 1927, with groundbreaking ceremonies held at the sites of both future suspension towers.[107][108] Each tower was to have a base with a perimeter measuring 89 by 98 feet (27 by 30 m), and descending 80 feet into the riverbed. The riverbed around the towers' sites was dredged first, and then steel pilings were placed in the riverbed to create a watertight cofferdam. The cofferdams for the bridge were the largest ever built at the time.[36][109] In early October of that year, the Port Authority received bids for the construction of the bridge deck. There were two main methods being considered for the span's construction: the cheaper "wire-cable" method and the more expensive "eyebar" method.[110][40] The wire-cable method, where the vertical suspender wires are attached directly to the main cables and the deck directly, would require a stiffening truss to support the deck. The eyebar method, where the suspender wires are attached to a chain of eyebars (metal bars with holes in them), would be self-supporting.[35][111] Ultimately, the Port Authority chose the wire-cable design because of costs, and it awarded the contract for constructing the deck to John A. Roebling Sons' Company.[39][40][35] The corresponding contract for manufacturing the steel was awarded to the McClintic-Marshall Company [Wikidata].[112] The first serious accident during the bridge's construction occurred in December 1927, when three men drowned while working in a caisson on the New Jersey side.[113]

Towers and anchorages

 
The Manhattan suspension tower, seen from below

Bids for the Manhattan suspension tower were advertised in March 1928.[114] At this point, 64% of the total projected worth of construction contracts had been awarded. The piers that provided foundation for the New Jersey suspension tower and approaches were being constructed.[88] The cliffs on both sides of the river were high enough that only minimal bridge approaches were required on either side. The towers' foundations could reach at most 190 feet (58 m) below mean low water, where the foundations would hit a layer of solid rock.[115] In May 1928, builders started drilling a 50-foot-deep (15 m) cut through the Palisades on the New Jersey side so that the Hudson River bridge approach could be built.[116] By June 1928, half of the money earned during the previous year's $20 million bond sale had been spent on construction.[117] By that October, nearly all blasting operations had been completed. The suspension tower on the New Jersey side had been constructed to a height of 250 feet (76 m), and the tower on the New York side was progressing as well.[118] The suspension towers consisted of 13 segments, each of which were almost 50 feet high.[36]

The New York anchorage required 370,000 short tons (330,000 long tons; 340,000 t) of concrete, being freestanding, while the New Jersey anchorage was blasted into the Palisades.[18] By March 1929, the concrete structure of the New York anchorage had been completed, three months ahead of schedule. The anchorage on the New Jersey side, which had been fully bored, consisted of two holes that had been bored 250 feet into the face of the Palisades. On the New Jersey side, 225,000 cubic yards (172,000 m3) of rock had to be blasted out to make way for the New Jersey approach. The suspension towers were nearly complete at the time of the report; only 100 feet of each tower's height remained to be built. Anchors were being placed in the two holes that were being drilled for the New Jersey anchorage, and this task was also nearing completion.[41]

In April, the Port Authority acquired the last of the properties that were in the path of the bridge's Manhattan approach.[119] Plans for the Manhattan approach were approved by the New York City Board of Estimate around the same time. The approach was to consist of scenic, meandering ramps leading to both Riverside Drive and the Henry Hudson Parkway, which run along the eastern bank of the Hudson River at the bottom of the cliff in Washington Heights. The bridge would also connect to 178th and 179th Streets, at the top of Washington Heights. A third connection would be made to an underground highway running between and parallel to 178th and 179th Streets; this connection would become the 178th–179th Street Tunnels, and would later be replaced by the Trans-Manhattan Expressway.[120] The original plan for the approach to the underground highway stated that the approach would be made using a monumental stone viaduct descending from the span at a 2.2% gradient.[109] The Port Authority started evicting residents in the approach's path in October 1929.[121] The same month, the Port Authority sold the final $30 million in bonds to pay for the bridge.[122]

The plans for the Hudson River bridge's Fort Lee approach were also changed in January 1930. Originally, the bridge would have terminated in a traffic circle,[123] a type of intersection design that was being built around New Jersey during the 1920s and 1930s.[124] However, the revised plans called for a grade-separated highway approach that would connect to a traffic "distributing basin" with ramps to nearby highways.[123] The total cost of land acquisition for the bridge approaches on both sides of the Hudson River exceeded $10 million.[125]

Cable spinning

 
A close up view of a vertical suspender cable, which is connected to the larger main cable with what is called a "saddle"

After the towers were completed, two temporary catwalks were built between the two suspension towers.[126][36] Then, workers began laying the bridge's four main cables, a series of thick cables that stretch between the tops of the two towers and carry what would later become the upper deck. The first strand of the first main cable was hoisted between both towers in July 1929, in a ceremony attended by the governors of both states and the mayors of New York City and Fort Lee.[127] The two temporary catwalks allowed workers to spin the wires for the main cables on-site.[126][128] The wires for the cables were spun by dozens of reels at a dock near the base of the New York anchorage; each reel contained 30 miles of wire at any given time.[37] A total of 105,986 wires were used in the bridge when it was completed.[36][37]

By February 1930, the bridge was halfway complete; since construction was two months ahead of schedule, the bridge was scheduled to open in early 1932. A team of 350 men was spinning the wires for each of the 36-inch-wide (91 cm) main cables, which were 22% complete. In addition, the builders had started ordering steel for the deck.[129] By April, the spinning of the main cables was half complete.[130] The first main cable was completed in late July 1930,[131] and the other three main cables were completed that August,[132] with the laying of the last wire being marked by a ceremony.[10] The spinning of the main cables had taken ten months in total.[42]

After the main cables were laid, workers spun the suspender wires that connected the main cables with the deck. When it was finished, the system of cables would support 90,000 short tons (80,000 long tons) of the deck's weight, though the cables would be strong enough to carry 350,000 short tons (310,000 long tons), four times as much weight.[133][37] The construction of a lower deck for rail usage was postponed, since the start of the Depression meant that there would not be enough railroad traffic to justify the construction of such a deck in the near future.[134]

Nearing completion

 
An aerial image included as Exhibit 2 of the "1930 Agreement" between the Port of New York Authority and the City of New York
 
An exhibit in the "1930 Agreement" between the Port of New York Authority and the City of New York depicts a roadway connection over Riverside Drive

An agreement between the Port of New York Authority and the City of New York, dated July 29, 1930, was formed to convey property and property easements granted in relation to the New York Approach to the then Hudson River Bridge.[135] That month, the Port Authority opened the bidding process for contracts to build the Hudson River bridge's approaches on the New York side. These included contracts for the 178th-179th Street Tunnels and the Riverside Drive connection.[136] The tunnel contracts were awarded later that month.[131] In August, the bidding process for the Fort Lee approaches was opened.[137] Bids for the Riverside Drive connection were received the following month.[138]

Prior to and during construction, the bridge was unofficially known as the "Hudson River Bridge" or "Fort Lee Bridge".[139] The Hudson River Bridge Association started seeking suggestions for the bridge's official name in October 1930. Residents of New York and New Jersey were encouraged to send naming choices to the association, which would then forward the suggestions to the Port Authority.[140] According to ballot voting submitted to the Port Authority, the "Hudson River Bridge" name was the most popular choice.[139] The Port Authority preferred the name "George Washington Memorial Bridge", which had been proposed by a board member, and still others championed the name "Palisades Bridge".[15][141] However, the Port Authority formally adopted the "George Washington" name on January 13, 1931, honoring the general and future president's evacuation of Manhattan at the bridge's location during the Revolutionary War.[142] This was described as potentially confusing, since there was already a "Washington Bridge" connecting 181st Street with the Bronx, directly across Manhattan from the "George Washington Bridge" across the Hudson River.[71][143] Shortly afterward, the Port Authority Board of Commissioners voted to reconsider the renaming of the Hudson River Bridge, stating that it was open to alternate names.[144] Hundreds of naming choices had been submitted by this time.[145] The most popular naming choices were those of Washington, Christopher Columbus, and Hudson River namesake Henry Hudson.[146] The span was again officially named for George Washington in April 1931.[147][148] This decision was applauded by then-congressman Fiorello La Guardia, who felt that other options "insulted the memory of our first President and encouraged the Reds".[15][141]

 
View of the bridge looking north from Edgewater, New Jersey, early 1931

The system of girders to support the deck were installed throughout 1930, and the last girder was installed in late December 1930.[149] In March 1931, the Port Authority announced that the Hudson River Bridge was set to open later that year, rather than in 1932 as originally planned. At that time, the Port Authority had opened bids for paving the road surface.[150] Later that month, the agency published a report, which stated that the bridge's early opening date was attributable to how quickly and efficiently the various materials had been transported.[151] In June 1931, forty bankers became the first people to cross the bridge.[152]

Work was progressing quickly on the bridge approaches in New Jersey,[153] and the New York City government was considering building another bridge between Manhattan and the Bronx (the Alexander Hamilton Bridge) to connect with the George Washington Bridge.[154] Bids for constructing tollbooths and floodlight towers were opened in July 1931.[155]

Opening and early years

Opening

 
The cover of the November 1931 edition of the Jester of Columbia, the humor magazine at Columbia University, celebrating the opening of the George Washington Bridge

The George Washington Bridge was dedicated on October 24, 1931,and the bridge opened to traffic on October 25, 1931, eight months ahead of schedule.[156][20] The opening ceremony, attended by 30,000 guests, was accompanied by a show from military airplanes, as well as speeches from politicians including New Jersey governor Morgan Foster Larson and New York governor Franklin D. Roosevelt. The first people to cross the George Washington Bridge were reportedly two elementary school students who roller-skated across the bridge from the New York side.[20][157] Pedestrians were allowed to walk the length of the George Washington Bridge between 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. The bridge was formally opened to traffic the next day.[158] The Port Authority collected tolls for drivers who used the bridge in either direction; as with the Holland Tunnel, the toll was set at 50 cents for passenger cars, with different toll rates for other vehicle types.[158] Pedestrians paid a toll of 10 cents each, which was lowered to 5 cents in 1934.[159] Within the first 24 hours of the George Washington Bridge's official opening, 56,312 cars used the span, as well as 100,000 pedestrians (including those who had walked across after the ceremony).[158] The Port Authority reported that 33,540 pedestrians crossed the bridge on the first day, of which 20,000 paid a toll to cross.[16]

During the George Washington Bridge's construction, the cost of the bridge was estimated at $75 million,[160] and the bridge was expected to carry eight million vehicles and 1.5 million pedestrians in its first year of operation.[85] When the George Washington Bridge opened, it was estimated that eight million vehicles would use the bridge in its first year, and that the bridge could ultimately carry 60 million vehicles annually after a second deck was added. The bridge's final cost was estimated at $60 million.[161][162] Real-estate speculators believed that the bridge's construction would raise real-estate values in Fort Lee, since the borough's residents would be able to more easily access New York City. During the construction of the George Washington Bridge, speculators spent millions of dollars to buy land around the bridge's New Jersey approach.[163] The bridge was later credited with helping raise land prices and encouraging residential development in formerly agricultural parts of Bergen County. It also spurred the rise of the trucking industry along the United States' East Coast, supplanting much of the freight railroads that used to carry cargo.[164]

In the George Washington Bridge's first week of operation, the bridge carried 116,265 vehicles, compared to the Holland Tunnel's 173,010 vehicles, despite the fact that the tunnel had fewer lanes than the bridge did. During that time span, 56,000 pedestrians used the bridge.[165] A week after the bridge opened, the 10-lane tollbooth was expanded to 14 lanes because of heavy weekend traffic volumes.[166] In its first year of operation, the George Washington Bridge saw 5.5 million vehicular crossings and nearly 500,000 pedestrian crossings.[167] Traffic counts on the George Washington Bridge grew year after year. By the time of the bridge's tenth anniversary in 1941, the span had been used by 72 million vehicles total, including a record 9.1 million vehicles in 1940.[168]

Early modifications

New Jersey Route 4, which connected directly to the bridge's western end, opened in July 1932.[169] The 178th-179th Street Tunnels, which connected Amsterdam Avenue on the eastern side of Manhattan to the bridge's eastern end on the west side of Manhattan, were supposed to be completed in late 1932.[170] Direct approaches to Riverside Drive and the Hudson River Parkway were completed in 1937,[18] and the tunnels were completed in 1938–1939. A ramp eastward from the bridge and southward to the Harlem River Drive was also completed around this time. On the New Jersey side, state highways were also being modernized to handle bridge traffic.[171] The bridge's westbound entrance ramp from Fort Washington Avenue, at the top of the cliff on the Manhattan side, opened in April 1939.[172] The corresponding eastbound exit ramp, as well as the 178th Street Tunnel, opened in June 1940. The 179th Street tunnel opened in 1950.[173]

Originally, the George Washington Bridge's single deck consisted of six lanes, with an unpaved center median. In 1946, the median was paved over and two more lanes were created on the upper level, widening it from six lanes to eight lanes.[21][162] The two center lanes on the upper level served as reversible lanes, which could handle traffic in either direction, depending on traffic flows.[174]

The bridge was initially lit by 200 lights to provide warning to pilots flying at night.[175] The Port Authority enacted a photography ban during World War II in the 1940s.[176] Additionally, from May 1942 to May 1945, the lights on the bridge were shut off at night as a precautionary measure. After the war ended, the lights were turned back on, but the photography ban was upheld.[177]

Lower deck

 
USS Nautilus passes under the bridge in 1956, when the bridge had only a single deck

The completion of the George Washington Bridge's lower deck, as well as the construction of a new bus terminal and other highway connections near the bridge, were recommended in a 1955 study that suggested improvements to the New York City area's highway system. The lower deck was approved by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.[178][179] A Bergen County leader voted against the construction of the lower level in 1956, temporarily delaying construction plans.[180] The New York City Planning Commission approved the George Washington Bridge improvement in June 1957,[181] and the Port Authority allocated funds to the improvement that July.[182][183] The $183 million project included the construction of the lower deck; the George Washington Bridge Expressway, a 12-lane expressway connecting to the Alexander Hamilton Bridge and the Cross Bronx Expressway (later I-95 and US 9); the George Washington Bridge Bus Station above the expressway; and a series of new ramps to and from the Henry Hudson Parkway.[183][184] On the New Jersey side, two depressed toll plazas, one in each direction, were to be constructed for lower level traffic.[179][184] Highway connections were also being built on the New Jersey side, including a direct approach from I-95.[185]

Construction of the approaches started in September 1958.[174] Work on the lower level itself started on June 2, 1959,[134] but work was briefly halted later that year because of a lack of steel.[186] By February 1960, construction was underway on the lower level; the supporting steelwork for the future deck had been completed, and the sections for the lower deck were being installed.[183] The George Washington Bridge's lower deck would comprise 75 steel slabs; each slab weighed 220 tons and measured 108 feet (33 m) wide by 90 feet (27 m) feet long, with a thickness of 30 feet (9.1 m). The construction of the slabs proceeded from either side of the bridge.[174] The right-of-way for the George Washington Bridge Expressway had been almost entirely cleared except for the ventilation buildings for the 178th-179th Street Tunnels.[183] The segments of the lower deck had been laid completely by September 1960, at which point workers started pouring the concrete for the deck's roadway, a process that took five weeks.[187] The layer of concrete measured 4 inches (10 cm) thick.[174] Finally, the deck was paved over with a 2.5-inch (6.4 cm) layer of asphalt.[188][174]

New ramps to the George Washington Bridge in New Jersey, including from the newly completed I-95, opened in mid-1962.[189] The lower deck was opened to the public on August 29, 1962.[17][174] The lower level, nicknamed "Martha" after George's wife Martha Washington,[190][60] increased the capacity of the bridge by 75 percent,[174] and simultaneously made the George Washington Bridge the world's only 14-lane suspension bridge.[17][191] In addition to providing extra capacity, the lower level served to stiffen the bridge in high winds; before the lower deck was constructed, the George Washington Bridge was known to swing up to 30 inches (76 cm).[184] The George Washington Bridge Bus Station and the Alexander Hamilton Bridge both opened on January 18, 1963, thus allowing more traffic to use the George Washington Bridge.[192] In the first year after the lower level's opening, the expanded bridge had carried 44 million vehicles. By comparison, 35.86 million vehicles had crossed the bridge in an 11-month period between September 1, 1961 and July 31, 1962. In addition, traffic congestion at the George Washington Bridge was reduced after the lower level opened, and the Port Authority was able to make repairs to the upper level for the first time in the bridge's history.[193]

Later history

Late 20th century

A fixed median was added to the upper deck in the 1970s.[16] The bridge was carrying 82.8 million vehicles per year by 1980.[29] The George Washington Bridge was designated a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers on October 24, 1981, the 50th anniversary of the bridge's dedication ceremony.[2] The 50th anniversary was also marked with a parade of automobiles. At that point, 1.8 billion vehicles had used the bridge throughout its lifetime.[164]

In 1990, the Port Authority announced a minor rehabilitation for the George Washington Bridge. As part of the project, the supporting structural steel for the upper deck would be replaced, and some ramps would be rebuilt.[194] The ramps on the New York side, connecting with Riverside Drive and the Henry Hudson Parkway, were to be reconstructed for $27.6 million after studies in the late 1980s showed deterioration on these ramps.[195] Although the Port Authority had announced the repairs in advance, the start of roadwork in September 1990 caused extensive traffic jams.[196]

Early 21st century

 
Lower deck

Starting on July 4, 2000, and for subsequent special occasions, each of the George Washington Bridge's suspension towers has been illuminated by 380 light fixtures that highlight the exposed steel structure.[197] On each tower there are a mix of 150 and 1000 watt metal halide lamp fixtures.[198] The architectural lighting design was completed by Domingo Gonzalez Associates.[199]

In 2000, the Port Authority proposed building a ramp from the lower level to the Palisades Interstate Parkway on the New Jersey side.[200] Originally, the ramp would have cost $86.5 million and would have been completed in 2003 or 2004. However, the connection was ultimately not built.[201]

 
George Washington Bridge seen from Castle Village, shrouded in winter fog in December 2013

In December 2011, the Port Authority announced plans to repair the bridge. For the first time, the vertical suspender ropes would be replaced, at an expected cost of more than $1 billion paid for by toll revenue.[202] On August 5, 2013, repair crews began an $82-million effort to fix cracks in upper-deck structural steel caused by traffic, particularly heavy trucks. The plan called for replacing 632 road deck panels, which would add at least 20 years of service life to the roadway. The work proceeded at night, and was slated to be complete by year's end. However, delays prevented completion and ultimately the work was halted for the winter.[203] Work restarted in June 2014, and was expected to last another 12 weeks.[204]

The Port Authority also started work on some other projects to renovate or replace bridge components. The lower level was repaved in 2016, and repainting work and maintenance platform replacement on the lower deck was completed in 2017.[205] The bridge's 592 suspender ropes, which run vertically between the main suspension cables and the deck, were to be replaced between 2017 and 2023 to fix damage caused by excessive heat and humidity.[7][205] The staircases leading to the sidewalks on both the northern and southern sides of the upper deck were also being replaced with ramps that were compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. The Trans-Manhattan Expressway was being renovated in conjunction with this project.[205] On the New Jersey side, the Palisades Interstate Parkway cloverleaf ramp onto the eastbound George Washington Bridge would be replaced at a cost of $112.6 million by 2019. Two overpasses near the bridge would also be refurbished by 2022.[206][207]

Road connections

New Jersey

The George Washington Bridge carries I-95 and US 1/9 between New Jersey and New York. Coming from New Jersey, US 46 terminates at the state border in the middle of the bridge. Further west, I-80, US 9W, New Jersey Route 4, and the New Jersey Turnpike also feed into the bridge via either I-95, U.S. 1/9, or U.S. 46 but end before reaching it. I-80 also gives drivers from the Garden State Parkway and Route 17 access to the bridge, and access from it as seen by signage on I-95 south. The Palisades Interstate Parkway connects directly to the bridge's upper level, though not to the lower level;[208] however, a ramp to link the Interstate Parkway to the lower level was proposed in 2000.[200] The marginal roads and local streets above the highways are known as GWB Plaza.[208] The bridge's toll plaza, which collects tolls from eastbound traffic only, is located on the New Jersey side.[209][1][210]

New York

 
Ramps on the New York side, seen in 1973

On the New York side, the 12-lane Trans-Manhattan Expressway heads east across the narrow neck of Upper Manhattan, from the bridge to the Harlem River. It provides access from both decks to 178th and 179th Streets, which cross Manhattan horizontally; the Henry Hudson Parkway and Riverside Drive, on the Hudson River's eastern bank along the west side of Manhattan; and to Amsterdam Avenue and the Harlem River Drive, on the Harlem River's western bank on the east side. The expressway connects directly with the Alexander Hamilton Bridge, which spans the Harlem River as part of the Cross-Bronx Expressway (I-95), providing access to the Major Deegan Expressway (I-87).[208] Heading towards New Jersey, local access to the bridge is available from 179th Street. There are also ramps connecting the bridge to the George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal,[211] a commuter bus terminal with direct access to the New York City Subway at the 175th Street station on the IND Eighth Avenue Line (served by the A train).[212]

Originally, the approach to the George Washington Bridge from the New York side consisted of a roundabout encircling a fountain, which was designed by Cass Gilbert. This plan was scrapped after it was deemed to be infeasible, due to the congestion that the weaving movements would create.[33] The final plans called for meandering roadways from Riverside Drive and Henry Hudson Parkway, which run along the eastern bank of the Hudson River at the bottom of the cliff in Washington Heights. The Henry Hudson Parkway actually passes under the New York side's anchorage using an underpass designed by Gilbert.[120][209] The connection to the 178th–179th Street Tunnels, which connected to the southbound Harlem River Drive, opened in 1940.[173] The tunnels were replaced by the Trans-Manhattan Expressway, which opened in 1962.[17][174] The tunnels and expressway were built to minimize disruption to the Washington Heights neighborhood, which had already been developed at the time.[213]

Alternate routes

Further south along the Hudson River, the Lincoln Tunnel (Route 495) and Holland Tunnel (Interstate 78/Route 139) also enter Manhattan.[214] Both tunnels are operated by the Port Authority, which collects tolls from drivers crossing the Hudson River eastbound toward New York City.[215] The Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge (I-278), connecting the New York City boroughs of Staten Island and Brooklyn, is the southernmost alternate route. It connects to the Bayonne Bridge, Goethals Bridge, and Outerbridge Crossing between Staten Island and New Jersey.[214] All four bridges to Staten Island collect tolls for drivers driving into the island.[c]

Farther north within the New York metropolitan area, the Tappan Zee Bridge (Interstates 87/287 and New York State Thruway) avoids the congested Cross Bronx Expressway and the city proper. Thruway traffic sometimes uses the George Washington Bridge as a detour, since no roads cross the Hudson River between the George Washington and Tappan Zee bridges.[217] The Tappan Zee Bridge also charges tolls for eastbound drivers.[218] Even farther north is the Bear Mountain Bridge, carrying U.S. 6 and U.S. 202, about 20 miles (32 km) north of the Tappan Zee Bridge; it also charges tolls for eastbound drivers.[219]

Tolls

As of January 8, 2023, the tolls-by-mail rate going from New Jersey to New York are $17 for cars and motorcycles; there is no toll for passenger vehicles going from New York to New Jersey. New Jersey and New York–issued E-ZPass users are charged $12.75 for cars and $11.75 for motorcycles during off-peak hours, and $14.75 for cars and $13.75 for motorcycles during peak hours. Users with E-ZPass issued from agencies outside of New Jersey and New York are charged the tolls-by-mail rate.[220]

 
The upper-level toll plaza with heavy traffic congestion

Tolls are collected at a series of tollbooths on the New Jersey side. The bridge has 29 toll lanes: 12 in the main upper-level toll plaza, 10 in the lower-level toll plaza, and seven in the Palisades Interstate Parkway toll plaza leading to the upper level.[1][210] The toll plazas on the lower level and Palisades Parkway are not staffed during the overnight hours and accept only E-ZPass transactions during this period.[3][210]

Originally, tolls were collected in both directions. The original toll booth was designed by Gilbert, who also designed a classical-style maintenance booth, neither of which is extant.[209] In August 1970, the toll was abolished for westbound drivers, and at the same time, eastbound drivers saw their tolls doubled. The tolls of eleven other New York–New Jersey and Hudson River crossings along a 130-mile (210 km) stretch, from the Outerbridge Crossing in the south to the Rip Van Winkle Bridge in the north, were also changed to south- or eastbound-only at that time.[221] E-ZPass was accepted for toll payment on the George Washington Bridge starting in July 1997.[222] Soon afterward, the Port Authority proposed removing the tollbooths for the E-ZPass lanes on the lower level and Palisades Parkway toll plazas, replacing them with electronic toll collection gantries to allow motorists to maintain highway speeds.[223]

Pedestrians and cyclists may cross free of charge on the south sidewalk. Pedestrians traveling in either direction originally paid tolls of 10 cents when the bridge opened.[16] The pedestrian toll was reduced to 5 cents in 1935[224] and discontinued altogether in 1940.[225]

Open road tolling was implemented for drivers going from Palisades Interstate Parkway on February 2, 2020, on the lower level on November 7, 2020, and on the upper level on July 10, 2022.[226] The tollbooths will be dismantled, and drivers will no longer be able to pay cash at the bridge. Instead, there will be cameras mounted onto new overhead gantries on the New Jersey side going to New York. A vehicle without E-ZPass will have a picture taken of its license plate and a bill for the toll will be mailed to its owner. For E-ZPass users, sensors will detect their transponders wirelessly.[227] In March 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all-electronic tolling was temporarily placed in effect for all Port Authority crossings, including the George Washington Bridge.[228] Cash toll collection was temporarily reinstated on the upper level only from October 2020[226] to July 2022 while the required open road tolling infrastructure was being installed.[229][230] The carpool discount was eliminated when open-road tolling commenced on the upper level in July 2022.[229][230]

Historic toll rates

Tolls for the bridge cost $.50 one way in 1931, but have been raised over the years to a $17 cash toll for passenger vehicles, which was enacted on January 8, 2023.[231]

Historic vehicular toll rates for the George Washington Bridge
Years Toll Toll equivalent
in 2021[232]
Direction collected Ref.
1931–1970 $0.50 $8.91–3.49 each direction [20]
1970–1975 $1.00 $6.98–5.04 eastbound only [221]
1975–1983 $1.50 $7.55–4.93 eastbound only [233]
1983–1987 $2.00 $6.58–4.77 eastbound only [234]
1987–1991 $3.00 $7.16–5.97 eastbound only [235]
1991–2001 $4.00 $7.96–6.12 eastbound only [236]
2001–2008 $6.00 $9.18–7.55 eastbound only [237]
2008–2011 $8.00 $10.07–9.64 eastbound only [238]
2011–2012 $12.00 $14.46–14.16 eastbound only [239]
2012–2014 $13.00 $15.34–14.88 eastbound only [240]
2014–2015 $14.00 $16.03–16.00 eastbound only [241]
2015–2020 $15.00 $17.15–15.90 eastbound only [242]
2020–2023 $16.00 $16.75–$16.00 eastbound only [243]
Since January 8, 2023 $17.00 $17.00 eastbound only [244]

Prior to July 10, 2022, a discounted carpool toll ($7.75) was available at all times for cars with three or more passengers using NY or NJ E-ZPass, who proceed through a staffed toll lane (provided they have registered with the free "Carpool Plan"), except if entering from the Palisades Interstate Parkway entrance to the bridge.[245] The Carpool Plan ended when the George Washington Bridge implemented cashless tolling.[230]

Non-motorized access

 
Southern sidewalk

The George Washington Bridge contains two sidewalks that can be used by pedestrians and bicyclists. The southern sidewalk (accessible by a long, steep ramp on the Manhattan side of the bridge) is shared by cyclists and pedestrians. The entrance in Manhattan is at 178th Street, just west of Cabrini Boulevard, and also has access to the Hudson River Greenway north of the bridge. Both sidewalks are accessible on the New Jersey side from Hudson Terrace.[246] The George Washington Bridge carries New York State Bicycle Route 9, a bike route that runs from New York City north to Rouses Point.[247]

The Port Authority closed the northern sidewalk at all times in 2008.[246] Though it offers direct access into Palisades Interstate Park, the northern sidewalk requires stairway climbs and descents on both sides, which was inaccessible for people with physical disabilities and posed a risk in poor weather conditions.[248] Advocacy groups such as Transportation Alternatives also suggested improvements.[249]

As part of the project to replace the bridge's vertical support cables, the connections to both sidewalks will be enhanced or rebuilt and made ADA-compliant. While the south-side cables are being replaced, that sidewalk will be closed and the north sidewalk will be open. Once the entire project is completed in 2023, pedestrians will use the south sidewalk and cyclists will use the north sidewalk. The sidewalk aspect of the project is expected to cost $118 million.[206][207]

Incidents

Suicides and deaths

The George Washington Bridge is among the most frequently chosen sites in the New York metropolitan area for suicide by jumping or falling off the bridge.[250] The first death by jumping occurred before the bridge even opened, though it was unintentional. On September 21, 1930, a stunt jumper named Norman J. Terry jumped off the bridge's deck in front of a crowd of thousands, but because his body was facing the wrong way, he broke his neck upon hitting the water.[251][252][253] The first intentional suicide occurred on November 3, 1931, a little more than one week after the bridge opened.[254]

Several suicide attempts off the George Washington Bridge have been widely publicized. In 1994, a person going by the name "Prince" called The Howard Stern Show while on the bridge, threatening to kill himself, but Howard Stern managed to talk him out of it.[255][256] The 2010 suicide of Tyler Clementi, who had jumped from the bridge, drew national attention to cyberbullying and the struggles facing LGBT youth.[257]

In 2012, a record 18 people threw themselves off the bridge to their deaths, while 43 others attempted to do so but survived.[258] There were 18 deaths reported in both 2014 and 2015. In 2014, 74 people were stopped by the Port Authority police, while the next year, another 86 people were stopped by the Port Authority police. In 2016, there were 12 reported deaths, a decrease from previous years, while 70 people were stopped by the Port Authority police.[259] In 2017, the Port Authority proposed equipping a two-person Emergency Services Unit team with harnesses to prevent suicides from the bridge.[260] Following 15 reported deaths and 68 attempts in 2017, the Port Authority installed protective netting and an 11-foot-high (3.4 m) fence along each upper level sidewalk. The netting partially overhangs the sidewalks in order to prevent potential jumpers from scaling the fence directly.[261][25] The southern sidewalk was closed from September to December 2017 so that a temporary fence could be installed there. Once the temporary fence had been erected, the permanent 11-foot-high barrier was constructed on the northern sidewalk, followed by the permanent barrier on the southern sidewalk.[25][26]

Controversies and protests

From September 9 to 13, 2013, dedicated toll lanes for one of the local Fort Lee entrances to the bridge's upper level were reduced from three to one, with the two other lanes diverted to highway traffic, without notification to local government officials and emergency responders. The closures were made on the direction of aides and appointees of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, causing a political controversy called "Bridgegate".[262] The local toll lane reductions caused massive traffic congestion, with major delays for school transportation and police and emergency service responses within Fort Lee.[263][264] The repercussions and controversy surrounding these actions have been investigated by the Port Authority,[265] federal prosecutors,[266] and a New Jersey legislature committee.[267][268]

On September 12, 2020, a hundred anti-police brutality protesters from the Black Lives Matter movement converged from both New York and New Jersey, closing the upper level of the bridge for about an hour before walking to the New York City Police Department's 34th Precinct in Manhattan.[269][270]

Other incidents

 
The bridge seen in 1978

On December 28, 1966, a 19-year-old pilot made an emergency landing on the bridge's New Jersey side after his plane's engine failed. There were no deaths reported, because there was very little traffic at the time, but the pilot and his passenger were injured.[271][16] At the time, there was no median barrier on the bridge's upper deck.[16]

In June 1977, two tractor-trailers nearly fell off the lower level after jackknifing, then going through both the roadway barrier and a mesh net next to the roadway. One of the drivers was hurt slightly, while the other driver was not hurt. The accident also involved a third tractor-trailer and two passenger cars, none of whose occupants were hurt.[272] Accidents involving trucks dumping their cargo have also occurred on the George Washington Bridge. Watermelons, frozen chicken parts, and horse manure have all fallen onto the bridge's roadway at some point.[29]

The first-ever complete closure of the George Washington Bridge occurred on August 6, 1980, when a truck carrying highly flammable propane gas across the bridge started to leak.[29][273] As a safety precaution in case the fuel started to ignite, traffic across the bridge was halted for several hours, and 2,000 people living near the bridge were evacuated. Since the George Washington Bridge is the primary crossing between New Jersey and New York City, the closure caused traffic jams that stretched for up to 30 miles (48 km), and the effects of this congestion could be seen more than 45 miles (72 km) away.[273] Two police officers eventually plugged the leak with an inexpensive device.[274] Up to that point, trucks carrying flammable material had been allowed to use the George Washington Bridge.[275] After the incident, New York City officials conducted a study on whether to prohibit hazardous cargo from traveling through the city.[276]

In popular culture

The bridge is seen in a number of movies set in New York:[277]

  • Ball of Fire (1941) was the first film to show the bridge. [278]
  • In Force of Evil (1948), Leo Morse is buried under the bridge by the mob of gangsters employing his brother Joe.[279][280]
  • In How to Marry a Millionaire (1953), Loco and Brewster are fêted as being in the 50 millionth car to cross the bridge as part of the "George Washington Bridge Week" festivities.[279]
  • In Network (1976), Schumacher tells a funny story in which, having overslept for a news shoot about the bridge's new lower deck, gets into a cab wearing a raincoat over his pajamas and tells the driver to take him to the middle of the bridge. The taxi driver, concerned that Schumacher intends to jump, begs him: "Don't do it buddy! You're a young man!" [279]
  • Sully (2016) reenacts how Sullenberger overflew the bridge by a few hundred feet.[281]
  • The bridge was also shown in The Godfather (1972),[279][282] and Cop Land (1997).[283][284]

The bridge has been featured in music. In the opening singalong for Sesame Street, Ernie sang the words "George Washington Bridge" to the tune of Sobre las Olas ("The Loveliest Night of the Year").[285] In addition, William Schuman's 1950 work George Washington Bridge.[286][287][288]

In visual art, the first issue of the comic Atomic War! published in November 1952, the George Washington Bridge is shown collapsing during a bombing of New York City.[289] Additionally, painters George Ault and Valeri Larko have both created artworks named after the bridge.[290] Video games such as Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty also showed the George Washington Bridge.[291]

The bridge is also represented on the story quilt Woman on a Bridge #1 of 5: Tar Beach, 1988 (permanent collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City), by Afro-American visual artist Faith Ringgold. Based on it, she later published her first children book, Tar Beach, 1991, where the GWB is always present in the landscape. It is the story of Cassie, a young girl dreaming to fly above her Harlem home. Her own father had been a worker to build the bridge, opened on the very day she was born. She finds it as beautiful as a diamond necklace. This book has received over 20 awards including the Ezra Jack Keats New Writer Award and the Coretta Scott King Award for Illustration.

The construction of the bridge is detailed in George Washington Bridge: A Timeless Marvel[292] and George Washington Bridge: Poetry in Steel.[190][280] The bridge and the nearby Little Red Lighthouse are the subjects of Hildegarde Swift's 1942 children's book The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge.[293][280]

 
From Riverside Drive, at night

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ There were 51 million motorists paying eastbound tolls in 2016, so the traveled number is approximately twice this figure.[4]
  2. ^ In 1910, the Washington Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution erected a stone monument to the Battle of Fort Washington. The monument is about 100 yards (91 m) northeast of the Little Red Lighthouse, near the eastern bridge anchorage.[61]
  3. ^ MTA Bridges and Tunnels collects tolls for the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge[216] while the Port Authority collects tolls for the other three bridges to Staten Island.[215]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l . Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Archived from the original on March 1, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d "George Washington Bridge". ASCE Metropolitan Section. Retrieved November 12, 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d "Traffic Restrictions – George Washington Bridge". The Port Authority of NY & NJ. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  4. ^ a b "New York City Bridge Traffic Volumes" (PDF). New York City Department of Transportation. 2016. p. 11. Retrieved March 16, 2018.
  5. ^ a b "What is the world's busiest bridge?". Travel Trivia. Retrieved June 23, 2020. A staggering 108 million vehicles cross the bridge annually, making the George Washington Bridge the busiest bridge on Earth
  6. ^ a b Collins, Beth (December 2, 2011). "10 record-breaking bridges". CNN. Retrieved November 13, 2018.
    • "George Washington Bridge". Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Retrieved May 10, 2019. George Washington Bridge – The busiest bridge in the world, connecting northern Manhattan and Fort Lee, NJ.
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Sources

  • Rastorfer, Darl (2000). "Chapter 2: The George Washington Bridge". Six bridges : the legacy of Othmar H. Ammann. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-08047-6. OCLC 41977224.
  • Reier, Sharon (2000). The Bridges of New York. New York City Series. Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-41230-6.
  • Rockland, Michael Aaron (2008). The George Washington Bridge: Poetry in Steel. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-4375-8.
  • Stern, Robert A. M.; Gilmartin, Patrick; Mellins, Thomas (1987). New York 1930: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars. New York: Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-3096-1. OCLC 13860977.

External links

Route map:

KML is from Wikidata
  • George Washington Bridge Official Site by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
  • George Washington Bridge at Bridges & Tunnels
  • George Washington Bridge at NYCRoads.com
  • George Washington Bridge at Structurae
  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. NY-129, "George Washington Bridge", 77 photos, 12 color transparencies, 6 data pages, 8 photo caption pages
  • The George Washington Bridge in Heavy Smog, View Toward the New Jersey Side of the Hudson River from World Digital Library

george, washington, bridge, this, article, about, bridge, between, manhattan, jersey, nearby, bridge, between, manhattan, bronx, washington, bridge, other, bridges, named, washington, bridge, washington, bridge, disambiguation, 19th, century, american, politic. This article is about the bridge between Manhattan and New Jersey For the nearby bridge between Manhattan and the Bronx see Washington Bridge For other bridges named Washington Bridge see Washington Bridge disambiguation For the 19th century American politician see George Washington Bridges For the Marvel comics character see G W Bridge For the bus station see George Washington Bridge Bus Station For the work for concert band see William Schuman The George Washington Bridge is a double decked suspension bridge spanning the Hudson River connecting Fort Lee New Jersey with Manhattan in New York City The bridge is named after George Washington the first president of the United States The George Washington Bridge is the world s busiest motor vehicle bridge 5 6 7 carrying over 103 million vehicles in 2016 update a It is owned by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey a bi state government agency that operates infrastructure in the Port of New York and New Jersey The George Washington Bridge is also informally known as the GW Bridge the GWB the GW or the George 8 and was known as the Fort Lee Bridge or Hudson River Bridge during construction The George Washington Bridge measures 4 760 feet 1 450 m long and has a main span of 3 500 feet 1 100 m It was the longest main bridge span in the world from its 1931 opening until the Golden Gate Bridge opened in 1937 George Washington BridgeThe bridge seen from New Jersey in July 2010Coordinates40 51 06 N 73 57 10 W 40 8517 N 73 9527 W 40 8517 73 9527 George Washington Bridge Carries14 lanes 8 upper deck 6 lower deck of I 95 entire span US 1 9 entire span US 46 New Jersey side Upper deck sidewalk south side pedestrians and cyclistsCrossesHudson RiverLocaleFort Lee New Jersey and New York City Washington Heights Manhattan New York United StatesOther name s GWBGWGW BridgeThe GeorgeG DubNamed forU S President George WashingtonMaintained byPort Authority of New York and New JerseyCharacteristicsDesignDouble decked suspension bridgeMaterialSteelTotal length4 760 ft 1 450 m 1 Width119 ft 36 m 1 Height604 ft 184 m 1 Longest span3 500 ft 1 067 m 2 Clearance above14 ft 4 3 m upper level 13 5 ft 4 1 m lower level 3 Clearance below212 ft 65 m at mid span 1 HistoryDesignerOthmar Ammann chief engineer Edward W Stearns assistant chief engineer Allston Dana design engineer Cass Gilbert architect Montgomery Case construction engineer Construction startSeptember 21 1927 95 years ago 1927 09 21 bridge construction June 2 1959 63 years ago 1959 06 02 lower level OpenedOctober 25 1931 91 years ago 1931 10 25 upper level August 29 1962 60 years ago 1962 08 29 lower level StatisticsDaily traffic289 827 2016 4 Toll Eastbound only As of January 8 2023 Cars 17 00 Tolls by Mail 14 75 for Peak E ZPass 12 75 for Off peak E ZPass Peak hours Weekdays 6 10 a m 4 8 p m Sat amp Sun 11 a m 9 p m These toll rates viewtalkeditLocationThe George Washington Bridge is an important travel corridor within the New York metropolitan area It has an upper level that carries four lanes in each direction and a lower level with three lanes in each direction for a total of 14 lanes of travel The speed limit on the bridge is 45 mph 72 km h The bridge s upper level also carries pedestrian and bicycle traffic Interstate 95 I 95 and U S Route 1 9 US 1 9 composed of US 1 and US 9 cross the river via the bridge U S Route 46 US 46 which lies entirely within New Jersey terminates halfway across the bridge at the state border with New York At its eastern terminus in New York City the bridge continues onto the Trans Manhattan Expressway part of I 95 connecting to the Cross Bronx Expressway The idea of a bridge across the Hudson River was first proposed in 1906 but it was not until 1925 that the state legislatures of New York and New Jersey voted to allow for the planning and construction of such a bridge Construction on the George Washington Bridge started in September 1927 the bridge was ceremonially dedicated on October 24 1931 and opened to traffic the next day The opening of the George Washington Bridge contributed to the development of Bergen County New Jersey in which Fort Lee is located The upper deck was widened from six to eight lanes in 1946 The six lane lower deck was constructed beneath the existing span from 1958 to 1962 because of increasing traffic flow Contents 1 Description 1 1 Decks 1 2 Cables 1 3 Suspension towers 1 4 American flag 2 History 2 1 Planning 2 2 Construction 2 2 1 First contracts 2 2 2 Towers and anchorages 2 2 3 Cable spinning 2 2 4 Nearing completion 2 3 Opening and early years 2 3 1 Opening 2 3 2 Early modifications 2 4 Lower deck 2 5 Later history 2 5 1 Late 20th century 2 5 2 Early 21st century 3 Road connections 3 1 New Jersey 3 2 New York 3 3 Alternate routes 4 Tolls 4 1 Historic toll rates 5 Non motorized access 6 Incidents 6 1 Suicides and deaths 6 2 Controversies and protests 6 3 Other incidents 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 10 External linksDescription Edit The bridge looking south at sunset from the New York side of the Hudson River The George Washington Bridge was designed by chief civil engineer Othmar Ammann 9 10 11 design engineer Allston Dana 12 10 and assistant chief engineer Edward W Stearns 13 10 with Cass Gilbert as consulting architect 14 15 It connects Fort Lee in Bergen County New Jersey with Washington Heights in Manhattan New York 16 17 The bridge s construction required 113 000 short tons 101 000 long tons 103 000 t of fabricated steel 28 000 short tons 25 000 long tons 25 000 t of wire stretching 106 000 miles 171 000 km and 20 000 short tons 18 000 long tons 18 000 t of masonry 18 11 Decks Edit The bridge carries 14 lanes of traffic seven in each direction 16 17 As such the George Washington Bridge contains more vehicular lanes than any other suspension bridge and is the world s busiest vehicular bridge 5 19 6 7 The fourteen lanes of the bridge are split unevenly across two levels the upper level contains eight lanes while the lower level contains six lanes 16 17 The upper level opened on October 25 1931 20 and is 90 feet 27 m wide 1 The upper level originally had six lanes though two more lanes were added in 1946 21 Although the lower level was part of the original plans for the bridge it did not open until August 29 1962 17 The upper level has a vertical clearance of 14 feet 4 3 m and all trucks and other oversize vehicles must use the upper level Trucks are banned from the lower level which has a clearance of 13 6 feet 4 1 m All lanes on both levels are 8 feet 6 inches 2 59 m wide 3 22 Vehicles carrying hazardous materials HAZMATs are prohibited on the lower level due to its enclosed nature HAZMAT carrying vehicles may use the upper level provided that they conform to strict guidelines as outlined in the Port Authority s Red Book 3 23 There are two sidewalks on the upper span of the bridge one on each side However cyclists and pedestrians can usually only utilize the southern sidewalk since the northern sidewalk is normally closed 24 The northern sidewalk was temporarily reopened in 2017 while a temporary suicide prevention fence was installed on the southern sidewalk in preparation for the installation of permanent fences on both sidewalks 25 26 The George Washington Bridge measures 4 760 feet 1 450 m long and has a main span of 3 500 feet 1 100 m 1 18 Accounting for the height of the lower deck the bridge stretches 212 feet 65 m above mean high water at its center 1 and 195 feet 59 m above mean high water under the New York anchorage 27 The bridge s main span was the longest main bridge span in the world at the time of its opening in 1931 and was nearly double the 1 850 feet 560 m of the previous record holder the Ambassador Bridge in Detroit 28 29 It held this title until the opening of the Golden Gate Bridge in 1937 2 The completion of the George Washington Bridge proved that longer suspension bridges were both physically and economically feasible Prior to the bridge s construction engineers had believed that a suspension span s length was a large indicator of a suspension bridge s economic feasibility 30 The George Washington Bridge s total width is 119 feet 36 m 1 When the upper deck was built it was only 12 feet 3 7 m thick without any stiffening trusses on the sides resulting in a deck weighing 1 100 pounds per square foot 5 400 kg m2 and a length to thickness ratio of about 350 to 1 31 32 At the time of the George Washington Bridge s opening most long suspension spans had stiffening trusses on their sides and spans generally had a length to thickness ratio of 60 to 1 which translated to a weight of 13 000 to 14 000 pounds per square foot 63 000 to 68 000 kg m2 and a thickness equivalent to an 11 story building 33 30 34 During the planning process Ammann designed the deck around the deflection theory an as yet unconfirmed assumption that longer suspension decks did not need to be as stiff in proportion to its length because the weight of the longer deck itself would provide a counterweight against the deck s movement This had been tested by Leon Moisseiff when he designed the Manhattan Bridge in 1909 though it was less than half the length of the George Washington Bridge 34 Stiffening trusses were ultimately excluded from the George Washington Bridge s design to save money instead a system of plate girders was installed on the underside of the upper deck This provided the stiffening that was necessary for the bridge deck and it was replicated on the lower deck during its construction The plate girders underneath each deck combined with an open truss design on the bridge s side that connected the decks with each other resulted in an even stiffer span that was able to resist torsional forces 33 Cables Edit Detail of main cables in New Jersey anchorage The George Washington Bridge is supported by a total of 105 986 wires There are four main cables which suspend the upper deck and are held up by the suspension towers Each main cable contained 61 strands with each strand made of 434 individual wires for a total of 26 474 wires per main cable The cables were then covered by a sheath of weather resistant steel 35 36 37 The bridge uses a wire cable design of suspension wherein the vertical suspender wires are attached directly to the main cables and the deck directly 38 39 40 The main cables each measure 3 feet 0 91 m in diameter 11 Each side of the bridge contains an anchorage for the main cables The anchorage on the New York side is a concrete structure while the anchorage on the New Jersey side is bored directly into the cliff of the Palisades 41 42 Originally the ends of the main cables at the anchorages were supposed to contain one of several ornamented designs such as a wing fin tire or even a statue at the end of each main cable This was later eliminated in order to save costs after the start of the Great Depression in 1929 43 Suspension towers Edit View of the suspension towers from the upper deck The suspension towers on each side of the river are each 604 feet 184 m tall 1 They are composed of sections weighing between 37 and 40 short tons 33 and 36 long tons and contain a combined 475 000 rivets 44 Each bridge has two archways one above and one below the decks 11 The original design for the George Washington Bridge s suspension towers called for them to be encased in concrete and granite in a Revival style similar to the Brooklyn Bridge 44 15 45 The granite was supposed to help support the steel structure of the towers After further scrutiny of the proposed bridge s engineering it was found that the steel alone could support the towers 46 It was ultimately decided that the supporting structure of the towers should be made entirely of steel with the granite serving only as a facade 47 The towers would have also contained elevators to carry sightseers to the top of each tower with restaurants and observatory decks at the pinnacles 15 48 41 The facades were postponed in 1929 during the Great Depression when rising material costs made such a plan unfeasible 49 50 51 The entire weight of the bridge was supported by the steel structure and the purely decorative masonry could be added later 15 52 Even though the steel towers had been left that way for cost reasons aesthetic critiques of the bare steel towers were favorable 51 50 Several groups such as the American Institute of Steel Construction believed that covering the steel framework with masonry would be both misleading and fundamentally ugly 53 The masonry facades and the observatory decks were ultimately never built the exposed steel towers with their distinctive criss crossed bracing became one of the George Washington Bridge s most identifiable characteristics 35 2 While the exposed steel towers design was negatively received by a few critics such as Raymond Hood and William A Boring the public reception at the bridge s opening was generally positive 18 The Swiss French architect Le Corbusier wrote of the towers The structure is so pure so resolute so regular that here finally steel architecture seems to laugh 54 29 Milton MacKaye wrote in The New Yorker that the George Washington Bridge had established Ammann as one of the immortals of bridge engineering and design a genius 55 After the George Washington Bridge was successfully constructed without masonry towers Ammann did not incorporate any masonry towers in his bridge plans 44 Ammann wrote that the sturdy appearance and well balanced distribution of steel in the columns and bracing gave the bridge s towers a good appearance a neat appearance 15 56 American flag Edit The George Washington Bridge s flag as seen from the center of the upper deck Since 1947 or 1948 the bridge has flown the world s largest free flying American flag in the New Jersey tower The flag measures 90 feet 27 m long 60 feet 18 m wide and 450 pounds 200 kg 57 16 Until 1976 the flag was taken out of a garage in New Jersey and manually erected on national holidays During the United States bicentennial a mechanical hoisting system was installed and the flag was stored along the bridge s girders when not in use 57 It is hoisted on special occasions when weather allows 58 59 and appears on Martin Luther King Jr Day Presidents Day Memorial Day Flag Day Independence Day Labor Day Columbus Day and Veterans Day 16 Since 2006 the flag is also flown on September 11 of each year honoring those lost in the September 11 attacks 59 On events where the flag is flown the tower lights are lit from dusk until 11 59 p m 1 History EditThe bridge sits near the sites of Fort Washington in New York and Fort Lee in New Jersey which were fortified positions used by General George Washington and his American forces as they attempted to deter the occupation of New York City in 1776 during the American Revolutionary War Unsuccessful Washington evacuated Manhattan by crossing between the two forts 60 b Until the first decade of the 20th century passage across the lower Hudson River was possible only by ferry 62 63 There were more than 200 separate municipalities along the lower Hudson River and the New York Bay but no unified agency to control commerce or transport in the area 64 A fixed crossing of the Hudson was first proposed in 1888 by civil engineer Gustav Lindenthal who later became New York City s bridge commissioner 65 The Hudson and Manhattan Railroad and the Pennsylvania Railroad opened three pairs of tubes under the lower Hudson in the 1900s 62 The first vehicular crossing across the lower Hudson River the Holland Tunnel was opened in 1927 connecting Lower Manhattan with Jersey City 66 Planning Edit George Washington Bridge looking east from Fort Lee New Jersey Plans for a vehicular bridge across the Hudson River were being considered as early as 1906 during the planning for the Holland Tunnel 67 Three possible locations for a Hudson River bridge were considered in the vicinity of 57th 110th and 179th Streets in Manhattan 68 These three locations were considered to be the only suitable locations for suspension bridges other sites were rejected on the grounds of aesthetics geography or traffic flows 67 69 In 1920 English architect Alfred C Bossom proposed a double decker bridge with room for vehicular and railroad traffic near 57th Street in Midtown Manhattan The same year Othmar Ammann and Gustav Lindenthal proposed a vehicular and railroad bridge to 57th Street in Manhattan topped by an office building that would have been the world s tallest 70 Lindenthal s plan failed because it did not receive permits from the United States Army Corps of Engineers or approval from the city and because Midtown Manhattan real estate developers and planners opposed the plan Ammann unsuccessfully attempted to convince Lindenthal to build his bridge elsewhere without a tower atop the bridge s terminus 71 In January 1924 the New York State Chamber of Commerce voted against the 57th Street location in favor of another location upstream 72 Despite this Lindenthal proposed that the Hudson River bridge be built there and carry 16 railroad tracks and 12 lanes of automotive traffic 73 Meanwhile Ammann became chief engineer of the Port of New York Authority now the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey which was created in 1921 to oversee commerce and transport along the lower Hudson River and New York Bay 64 He had disassociated himself from Lindenthal s proposal by 1923 conducting his own studies on the feasibility of a bridge from 178th Street in Fort Washington Manhattan to Fort Lee in New Jersey 71 Ammann s advocacy for the Fort Washington Fort Lee bridge gained support from both New Jersey governor George Silzer and New York governor Alfred E Smith by mid 1923 64 71 In May 1924 Colonel Frederick Stuart Greene the New York Superintendent of Public Works announced a plan to construct a suspension bridge between Fort Lee and Fort Washington At that location both sides were surrounded by steep cliffs The Palisades on the New Jersey side and Washington Heights on the New York side Thus it was possible to build the bridge without either impeding maritime traffic or requiring lengthy approach ramps from ground level 74 A New Jersey state assemblyman introduced a bill for the Hudson River bridge that December 75 This bill was passed in the New Jersey Assembly in February 1925 76 After an initial rejection by Silzer the Assembly made modifications before passing the bill again in March 77 after which Silzer signed the bill 78 Around the same time the New York state legislature was also considering a similar bill 9 A dispute developed between New York civic groups who supported the construction of the Hudson River Bridge and the Parks Conservation Association who believed that the bridge towers would degrade the quality of Fort Washington Park directly underneath the proposed bridge s deck 79 80 In late March 1925 the chairman of the Parks Conservation Association noted that the proposed New York state legislation would provide for the actual construction of the bridge rather than just the planning 81 Ultimately the Hudson River bridge bill was passed in the New York state legislature and Smith approved the bill that April 82 Aerial view of the bridge surrounded by cliffs on either side In March 1925 Silzer asked Ammann to devise preliminary plans for the Hudson River bridge Ammann found that the width of the Hudson River decreased by more than 1 000 feet 300 m when it passed between Fort Lee and Fort Washington The ledges of Fort Lee and Fort Washington were respectively 300 and 200 feet 91 and 61 m above mean water level at this point which was not only ideal geography for a suspension bridge but also allowed the bridge to be high enough to give sufficient clearance for maritime traffic 9 However the differing heights meant that a large cut had to be made through the Fort Lee ledge so that the bridge approach could be built there 83 The same month the New Jersey legislature asked for funds for test bores to determine if the geological strata would support the bridge 9 In response to continuing concerns from park preservationists Ammann stated that placing the New York suspension tower anywhere else would make the bridge look asymmetrical which he believed was a worse outcome than placing the tower within the park 84 The states conducted a study in mid 1925 which found that the Hudson River bridge would be able to pay for itself in twenty five years if a 50 cent toll were to be placed on every vehicle 15 After funding was secured surveyors began examining feasible sites for the future bridge s approaches in August 1925 By law the New York end of the Hudson River Bridge could only be constructed between 178th and 185th Streets and the New Jersey end had to be built directly across the river 83 Geologists made 300 foot 91 m test bores on the New Jersey side to determine if the site was feasible for laying foundations for the bridge 85 Othmar Ammann was hired as the bridge s chief engineer 50 In Ammann s original plans for the bridge which had been published in March 1925 he had envisioned that the bridge would contain two sidewalks a roadway that could carry up to 8 000 vehicles per hour and space for four railroad tracks in case the two North River railroad tunnels downstream exceeded their train capacity 9 Cass Gilbert was hired in January 1926 to design architectural elements for the Hudson River bridge including the suspension towers The bridge design had yet to be finalized and its cost could not even be estimated at that point due to the complexity of factors 86 Gilbert released preliminary sketches of the Hudson River bridge that March by then the architect had decided that the span would be a suspension bridge 45 The sketch accompanied a feasibility report that Ammann and other engineers presented to the Port of New York Authority which was to operate the bridge The central span was to be 3 500 feet 1 100 m long longer than any other suspension bridge in existence at the time and 200 feet above mean high water The bridge would initially carry four lanes of vehicular traffic and sidewalk lanes the plans called for three additional phases of expansion culminating in an eight lane bridge deck with four rapid transit tracks underneath The span would be supported by two towers each 650 feet 200 m tall 87 71 There would also be space to build a second deck in the future below the main deck 88 Ammann s team also found that the most feasible location for the bridge was at 179th Street in Manhattan as opposed to 181st or 175th Streets This was both because the 179th Street location was more aesthetically appealing than the other two locations and because a 179th Street bridge would be cheaper and shorter in length than a bridge at either of the other streets 87 At this point in the planning process the Hudson River bridge s estimated cost was 40 million 45 or 50 million 87 Because of the proposed bridge s length engineers also had to test the strength of materials including suspension cables that were to be used in the span 89 90 32 Ammann s research department constructed scale models of various designs for the bridge and tested them in wind tunnels 32 By late 1926 one engineer predicted that construction on the Hudson River bridge would start the following summer 91 In December 1926 the final plans for the bridge were approved by the public 92 and by the War Department 93 The Port Authority planned to sell off 50 million worth of bonds to pay for the bridge and the initial 20 million bond issue was sold that December 94 Further issues arose when the New Jersey Assembly passed a bill in March 1927 which increased the New Jersey governor s power to veto Port Authority contracts Smith the New York governor and Silzer the now former New Jersey governor who had been appointed Port Authority chairman both objected to the bill since the Port Authority had been intended as a bi state venture 95 96 Afterward the then current New Jersey governor A Harry Moore worked with legislators to revise the legislation 97 The revised law was ultimately not a significant deviation from the Port Authority s practice at the time wherein the Port Authority was already submitting its contracts to New Jersey government for review 98 Construction Edit The George Washington Bridge s construction employed three teams of workers one each for the New Jersey tower the New York tower and the deck 99 The construction process was relatively safe although twelve or thirteen workers died during its construction 18 99 Of these three were killed when the foundation for the New Jersey tower flooded a fourth worker was killed by a blast at the New Jersey anchorage and the others died because of their own carelessness according to Port Authority records 99 First contracts Edit In April 1927 the Port Authority opened the first bids for the construction of the Hudson River bridge It was specifically seeking bids for the construction of the New Jersey suspension tower s foundation 100 The Manhattan suspension anchorage s location was still undecided at this time 101 A bid for the New Jersey tower was awarded later that month 102 In May the Port Authority opened more bids for the construction of the bridge s approaches and anchorage on the New Jersey side 103 Dredging operations on the Hudson River which would allow large ships to pass underneath the bridge also started that May 104 By late August the Port Authority had started condemning plots of land for the bridge s approaches 105 Montgomery B Case chief construction engineer 106 began construction on the Hudson River bridge began on September 21 1927 with groundbreaking ceremonies held at the sites of both future suspension towers 107 108 Each tower was to have a base with a perimeter measuring 89 by 98 feet 27 by 30 m and descending 80 feet into the riverbed The riverbed around the towers sites was dredged first and then steel pilings were placed in the riverbed to create a watertight cofferdam The cofferdams for the bridge were the largest ever built at the time 36 109 In early October of that year the Port Authority received bids for the construction of the bridge deck There were two main methods being considered for the span s construction the cheaper wire cable method and the more expensive eyebar method 110 40 The wire cable method where the vertical suspender wires are attached directly to the main cables and the deck directly would require a stiffening truss to support the deck The eyebar method where the suspender wires are attached to a chain of eyebars metal bars with holes in them would be self supporting 35 111 Ultimately the Port Authority chose the wire cable design because of costs and it awarded the contract for constructing the deck to John A Roebling Sons Company 39 40 35 The corresponding contract for manufacturing the steel was awarded to the McClintic Marshall Company Wikidata 112 The first serious accident during the bridge s construction occurred in December 1927 when three men drowned while working in a caisson on the New Jersey side 113 Towers and anchorages Edit The Manhattan suspension tower seen from below Bids for the Manhattan suspension tower were advertised in March 1928 114 At this point 64 of the total projected worth of construction contracts had been awarded The piers that provided foundation for the New Jersey suspension tower and approaches were being constructed 88 The cliffs on both sides of the river were high enough that only minimal bridge approaches were required on either side The towers foundations could reach at most 190 feet 58 m below mean low water where the foundations would hit a layer of solid rock 115 In May 1928 builders started drilling a 50 foot deep 15 m cut through the Palisades on the New Jersey side so that the Hudson River bridge approach could be built 116 By June 1928 half of the money earned during the previous year s 20 million bond sale had been spent on construction 117 By that October nearly all blasting operations had been completed The suspension tower on the New Jersey side had been constructed to a height of 250 feet 76 m and the tower on the New York side was progressing as well 118 The suspension towers consisted of 13 segments each of which were almost 50 feet high 36 The New York anchorage required 370 000 short tons 330 000 long tons 340 000 t of concrete being freestanding while the New Jersey anchorage was blasted into the Palisades 18 By March 1929 the concrete structure of the New York anchorage had been completed three months ahead of schedule The anchorage on the New Jersey side which had been fully bored consisted of two holes that had been bored 250 feet into the face of the Palisades On the New Jersey side 225 000 cubic yards 172 000 m3 of rock had to be blasted out to make way for the New Jersey approach The suspension towers were nearly complete at the time of the report only 100 feet of each tower s height remained to be built Anchors were being placed in the two holes that were being drilled for the New Jersey anchorage and this task was also nearing completion 41 In April the Port Authority acquired the last of the properties that were in the path of the bridge s Manhattan approach 119 Plans for the Manhattan approach were approved by the New York City Board of Estimate around the same time The approach was to consist of scenic meandering ramps leading to both Riverside Drive and the Henry Hudson Parkway which run along the eastern bank of the Hudson River at the bottom of the cliff in Washington Heights The bridge would also connect to 178th and 179th Streets at the top of Washington Heights A third connection would be made to an underground highway running between and parallel to 178th and 179th Streets this connection would become the 178th 179th Street Tunnels and would later be replaced by the Trans Manhattan Expressway 120 The original plan for the approach to the underground highway stated that the approach would be made using a monumental stone viaduct descending from the span at a 2 2 gradient 109 The Port Authority started evicting residents in the approach s path in October 1929 121 The same month the Port Authority sold the final 30 million in bonds to pay for the bridge 122 The plans for the Hudson River bridge s Fort Lee approach were also changed in January 1930 Originally the bridge would have terminated in a traffic circle 123 a type of intersection design that was being built around New Jersey during the 1920s and 1930s 124 However the revised plans called for a grade separated highway approach that would connect to a traffic distributing basin with ramps to nearby highways 123 The total cost of land acquisition for the bridge approaches on both sides of the Hudson River exceeded 10 million 125 Cable spinning Edit A close up view of a vertical suspender cable which is connected to the larger main cable with what is called a saddle After the towers were completed two temporary catwalks were built between the two suspension towers 126 36 Then workers began laying the bridge s four main cables a series of thick cables that stretch between the tops of the two towers and carry what would later become the upper deck The first strand of the first main cable was hoisted between both towers in July 1929 in a ceremony attended by the governors of both states and the mayors of New York City and Fort Lee 127 The two temporary catwalks allowed workers to spin the wires for the main cables on site 126 128 The wires for the cables were spun by dozens of reels at a dock near the base of the New York anchorage each reel contained 30 miles of wire at any given time 37 A total of 105 986 wires were used in the bridge when it was completed 36 37 By February 1930 the bridge was halfway complete since construction was two months ahead of schedule the bridge was scheduled to open in early 1932 A team of 350 men was spinning the wires for each of the 36 inch wide 91 cm main cables which were 22 complete In addition the builders had started ordering steel for the deck 129 By April the spinning of the main cables was half complete 130 The first main cable was completed in late July 1930 131 and the other three main cables were completed that August 132 with the laying of the last wire being marked by a ceremony 10 The spinning of the main cables had taken ten months in total 42 After the main cables were laid workers spun the suspender wires that connected the main cables with the deck When it was finished the system of cables would support 90 000 short tons 80 000 long tons of the deck s weight though the cables would be strong enough to carry 350 000 short tons 310 000 long tons four times as much weight 133 37 The construction of a lower deck for rail usage was postponed since the start of the Depression meant that there would not be enough railroad traffic to justify the construction of such a deck in the near future 134 Nearing completion Edit An aerial image included as Exhibit 2 of the 1930 Agreement between the Port of New York Authority and the City of New York An exhibit in the 1930 Agreement between the Port of New York Authority and the City of New York depicts a roadway connection over Riverside Drive An agreement between the Port of New York Authority and the City of New York dated July 29 1930 was formed to convey property and property easements granted in relation to the New York Approach to the then Hudson River Bridge 135 That month the Port Authority opened the bidding process for contracts to build the Hudson River bridge s approaches on the New York side These included contracts for the 178th 179th Street Tunnels and the Riverside Drive connection 136 The tunnel contracts were awarded later that month 131 In August the bidding process for the Fort Lee approaches was opened 137 Bids for the Riverside Drive connection were received the following month 138 Prior to and during construction the bridge was unofficially known as the Hudson River Bridge or Fort Lee Bridge 139 The Hudson River Bridge Association started seeking suggestions for the bridge s official name in October 1930 Residents of New York and New Jersey were encouraged to send naming choices to the association which would then forward the suggestions to the Port Authority 140 According to ballot voting submitted to the Port Authority the Hudson River Bridge name was the most popular choice 139 The Port Authority preferred the name George Washington Memorial Bridge which had been proposed by a board member and still others championed the name Palisades Bridge 15 141 However the Port Authority formally adopted the George Washington name on January 13 1931 honoring the general and future president s evacuation of Manhattan at the bridge s location during the Revolutionary War 142 This was described as potentially confusing since there was already a Washington Bridge connecting 181st Street with the Bronx directly across Manhattan from the George Washington Bridge across the Hudson River 71 143 Shortly afterward the Port Authority Board of Commissioners voted to reconsider the renaming of the Hudson River Bridge stating that it was open to alternate names 144 Hundreds of naming choices had been submitted by this time 145 The most popular naming choices were those of Washington Christopher Columbus and Hudson River namesake Henry Hudson 146 The span was again officially named for George Washington in April 1931 147 148 This decision was applauded by then congressman Fiorello La Guardia who felt that other options insulted the memory of our first President and encouraged the Reds 15 141 View of the bridge looking north from Edgewater New Jersey early 1931 The system of girders to support the deck were installed throughout 1930 and the last girder was installed in late December 1930 149 In March 1931 the Port Authority announced that the Hudson River Bridge was set to open later that year rather than in 1932 as originally planned At that time the Port Authority had opened bids for paving the road surface 150 Later that month the agency published a report which stated that the bridge s early opening date was attributable to how quickly and efficiently the various materials had been transported 151 In June 1931 forty bankers became the first people to cross the bridge 152 Work was progressing quickly on the bridge approaches in New Jersey 153 and the New York City government was considering building another bridge between Manhattan and the Bronx the Alexander Hamilton Bridge to connect with the George Washington Bridge 154 Bids for constructing tollbooths and floodlight towers were opened in July 1931 155 Opening and early years Edit Opening Edit The cover of the November 1931 edition of the Jester of Columbia the humor magazine at Columbia University celebrating the opening of the George Washington Bridge The George Washington Bridge was dedicated on October 24 1931 and the bridge opened to traffic on October 25 1931 eight months ahead of schedule 156 20 The opening ceremony attended by 30 000 guests was accompanied by a show from military airplanes as well as speeches from politicians including New Jersey governor Morgan Foster Larson and New York governor Franklin D Roosevelt The first people to cross the George Washington Bridge were reportedly two elementary school students who roller skated across the bridge from the New York side 20 157 Pedestrians were allowed to walk the length of the George Washington Bridge between 6 p m and 11 p m The bridge was formally opened to traffic the next day 158 The Port Authority collected tolls for drivers who used the bridge in either direction as with the Holland Tunnel the toll was set at 50 cents for passenger cars with different toll rates for other vehicle types 158 Pedestrians paid a toll of 10 cents each which was lowered to 5 cents in 1934 159 Within the first 24 hours of the George Washington Bridge s official opening 56 312 cars used the span as well as 100 000 pedestrians including those who had walked across after the ceremony 158 The Port Authority reported that 33 540 pedestrians crossed the bridge on the first day of which 20 000 paid a toll to cross 16 During the George Washington Bridge s construction the cost of the bridge was estimated at 75 million 160 and the bridge was expected to carry eight million vehicles and 1 5 million pedestrians in its first year of operation 85 When the George Washington Bridge opened it was estimated that eight million vehicles would use the bridge in its first year and that the bridge could ultimately carry 60 million vehicles annually after a second deck was added The bridge s final cost was estimated at 60 million 161 162 Real estate speculators believed that the bridge s construction would raise real estate values in Fort Lee since the borough s residents would be able to more easily access New York City During the construction of the George Washington Bridge speculators spent millions of dollars to buy land around the bridge s New Jersey approach 163 The bridge was later credited with helping raise land prices and encouraging residential development in formerly agricultural parts of Bergen County It also spurred the rise of the trucking industry along the United States East Coast supplanting much of the freight railroads that used to carry cargo 164 In the George Washington Bridge s first week of operation the bridge carried 116 265 vehicles compared to the Holland Tunnel s 173 010 vehicles despite the fact that the tunnel had fewer lanes than the bridge did During that time span 56 000 pedestrians used the bridge 165 A week after the bridge opened the 10 lane tollbooth was expanded to 14 lanes because of heavy weekend traffic volumes 166 In its first year of operation the George Washington Bridge saw 5 5 million vehicular crossings and nearly 500 000 pedestrian crossings 167 Traffic counts on the George Washington Bridge grew year after year By the time of the bridge s tenth anniversary in 1941 the span had been used by 72 million vehicles total including a record 9 1 million vehicles in 1940 168 Early modifications Edit New Jersey Route 4 which connected directly to the bridge s western end opened in July 1932 169 The 178th 179th Street Tunnels which connected Amsterdam Avenue on the eastern side of Manhattan to the bridge s eastern end on the west side of Manhattan were supposed to be completed in late 1932 170 Direct approaches to Riverside Drive and the Hudson River Parkway were completed in 1937 18 and the tunnels were completed in 1938 1939 A ramp eastward from the bridge and southward to the Harlem River Drive was also completed around this time On the New Jersey side state highways were also being modernized to handle bridge traffic 171 The bridge s westbound entrance ramp from Fort Washington Avenue at the top of the cliff on the Manhattan side opened in April 1939 172 The corresponding eastbound exit ramp as well as the 178th Street Tunnel opened in June 1940 The 179th Street tunnel opened in 1950 173 Originally the George Washington Bridge s single deck consisted of six lanes with an unpaved center median In 1946 the median was paved over and two more lanes were created on the upper level widening it from six lanes to eight lanes 21 162 The two center lanes on the upper level served as reversible lanes which could handle traffic in either direction depending on traffic flows 174 The bridge was initially lit by 200 lights to provide warning to pilots flying at night 175 The Port Authority enacted a photography ban during World War II in the 1940s 176 Additionally from May 1942 to May 1945 the lights on the bridge were shut off at night as a precautionary measure After the war ended the lights were turned back on but the photography ban was upheld 177 Lower deck Edit USS Nautilus passes under the bridge in 1956 when the bridge had only a single deckThe completion of the George Washington Bridge s lower deck as well as the construction of a new bus terminal and other highway connections near the bridge were recommended in a 1955 study that suggested improvements to the New York City area s highway system The lower deck was approved by the U S Army Corps of Engineers 178 179 A Bergen County leader voted against the construction of the lower level in 1956 temporarily delaying construction plans 180 The New York City Planning Commission approved the George Washington Bridge improvement in June 1957 181 and the Port Authority allocated funds to the improvement that July 182 183 The 183 million project included the construction of the lower deck the George Washington Bridge Expressway a 12 lane expressway connecting to the Alexander Hamilton Bridge and the Cross Bronx Expressway later I 95 and US 9 the George Washington Bridge Bus Station above the expressway and a series of new ramps to and from the Henry Hudson Parkway 183 184 On the New Jersey side two depressed toll plazas one in each direction were to be constructed for lower level traffic 179 184 Highway connections were also being built on the New Jersey side including a direct approach from I 95 185 Construction of the approaches started in September 1958 174 Work on the lower level itself started on June 2 1959 134 but work was briefly halted later that year because of a lack of steel 186 By February 1960 construction was underway on the lower level the supporting steelwork for the future deck had been completed and the sections for the lower deck were being installed 183 The George Washington Bridge s lower deck would comprise 75 steel slabs each slab weighed 220 tons and measured 108 feet 33 m wide by 90 feet 27 m feet long with a thickness of 30 feet 9 1 m The construction of the slabs proceeded from either side of the bridge 174 The right of way for the George Washington Bridge Expressway had been almost entirely cleared except for the ventilation buildings for the 178th 179th Street Tunnels 183 The segments of the lower deck had been laid completely by September 1960 at which point workers started pouring the concrete for the deck s roadway a process that took five weeks 187 The layer of concrete measured 4 inches 10 cm thick 174 Finally the deck was paved over with a 2 5 inch 6 4 cm layer of asphalt 188 174 New ramps to the George Washington Bridge in New Jersey including from the newly completed I 95 opened in mid 1962 189 The lower deck was opened to the public on August 29 1962 17 174 The lower level nicknamed Martha after George s wife Martha Washington 190 60 increased the capacity of the bridge by 75 percent 174 and simultaneously made the George Washington Bridge the world s only 14 lane suspension bridge 17 191 In addition to providing extra capacity the lower level served to stiffen the bridge in high winds before the lower deck was constructed the George Washington Bridge was known to swing up to 30 inches 76 cm 184 The George Washington Bridge Bus Station and the Alexander Hamilton Bridge both opened on January 18 1963 thus allowing more traffic to use the George Washington Bridge 192 In the first year after the lower level s opening the expanded bridge had carried 44 million vehicles By comparison 35 86 million vehicles had crossed the bridge in an 11 month period between September 1 1961 and July 31 1962 In addition traffic congestion at the George Washington Bridge was reduced after the lower level opened and the Port Authority was able to make repairs to the upper level for the first time in the bridge s history 193 Later history Edit Late 20th century Edit A fixed median was added to the upper deck in the 1970s 16 The bridge was carrying 82 8 million vehicles per year by 1980 29 The George Washington Bridge was designated a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers on October 24 1981 the 50th anniversary of the bridge s dedication ceremony 2 The 50th anniversary was also marked with a parade of automobiles At that point 1 8 billion vehicles had used the bridge throughout its lifetime 164 In 1990 the Port Authority announced a minor rehabilitation for the George Washington Bridge As part of the project the supporting structural steel for the upper deck would be replaced and some ramps would be rebuilt 194 The ramps on the New York side connecting with Riverside Drive and the Henry Hudson Parkway were to be reconstructed for 27 6 million after studies in the late 1980s showed deterioration on these ramps 195 Although the Port Authority had announced the repairs in advance the start of roadwork in September 1990 caused extensive traffic jams 196 Early 21st century Edit Lower deck Starting on July 4 2000 and for subsequent special occasions each of the George Washington Bridge s suspension towers has been illuminated by 380 light fixtures that highlight the exposed steel structure 197 On each tower there are a mix of 150 and 1000 watt metal halide lamp fixtures 198 The architectural lighting design was completed by Domingo Gonzalez Associates 199 In 2000 the Port Authority proposed building a ramp from the lower level to the Palisades Interstate Parkway on the New Jersey side 200 Originally the ramp would have cost 86 5 million and would have been completed in 2003 or 2004 However the connection was ultimately not built 201 George Washington Bridge seen from Castle Village shrouded in winter fog in December 2013 In December 2011 the Port Authority announced plans to repair the bridge For the first time the vertical suspender ropes would be replaced at an expected cost of more than 1 billion paid for by toll revenue 202 On August 5 2013 repair crews began an 82 million effort to fix cracks in upper deck structural steel caused by traffic particularly heavy trucks The plan called for replacing 632 road deck panels which would add at least 20 years of service life to the roadway The work proceeded at night and was slated to be complete by year s end However delays prevented completion and ultimately the work was halted for the winter 203 Work restarted in June 2014 and was expected to last another 12 weeks 204 The Port Authority also started work on some other projects to renovate or replace bridge components The lower level was repaved in 2016 and repainting work and maintenance platform replacement on the lower deck was completed in 2017 205 The bridge s 592 suspender ropes which run vertically between the main suspension cables and the deck were to be replaced between 2017 and 2023 to fix damage caused by excessive heat and humidity 7 205 The staircases leading to the sidewalks on both the northern and southern sides of the upper deck were also being replaced with ramps that were compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 The Trans Manhattan Expressway was being renovated in conjunction with this project 205 On the New Jersey side the Palisades Interstate Parkway cloverleaf ramp onto the eastbound George Washington Bridge would be replaced at a cost of 112 6 million by 2019 Two overpasses near the bridge would also be refurbished by 2022 206 207 Road connections EditNew Jersey Edit The George Washington Bridge carries I 95 and US 1 9 between New Jersey and New York Coming from New Jersey US 46 terminates at the state border in the middle of the bridge Further west I 80 US 9W New Jersey Route 4 and the New Jersey Turnpike also feed into the bridge via either I 95 U S 1 9 or U S 46 but end before reaching it I 80 also gives drivers from the Garden State Parkway and Route 17 access to the bridge and access from it as seen by signage on I 95 south The Palisades Interstate Parkway connects directly to the bridge s upper level though not to the lower level 208 however a ramp to link the Interstate Parkway to the lower level was proposed in 2000 200 The marginal roads and local streets above the highways are known as GWB Plaza 208 The bridge s toll plaza which collects tolls from eastbound traffic only is located on the New Jersey side 209 1 210 New York Edit Ramps on the New York side seen in 1973 On the New York side the 12 lane Trans Manhattan Expressway heads east across the narrow neck of Upper Manhattan from the bridge to the Harlem River It provides access from both decks to 178th and 179th Streets which cross Manhattan horizontally the Henry Hudson Parkway and Riverside Drive on the Hudson River s eastern bank along the west side of Manhattan and to Amsterdam Avenue and the Harlem River Drive on the Harlem River s western bank on the east side The expressway connects directly with the Alexander Hamilton Bridge which spans the Harlem River as part of the Cross Bronx Expressway I 95 providing access to the Major Deegan Expressway I 87 208 Heading towards New Jersey local access to the bridge is available from 179th Street There are also ramps connecting the bridge to the George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal 211 a commuter bus terminal with direct access to the New York City Subway at the 175th Street station on the IND Eighth Avenue Line served by the A train 212 Originally the approach to the George Washington Bridge from the New York side consisted of a roundabout encircling a fountain which was designed by Cass Gilbert This plan was scrapped after it was deemed to be infeasible due to the congestion that the weaving movements would create 33 The final plans called for meandering roadways from Riverside Drive and Henry Hudson Parkway which run along the eastern bank of the Hudson River at the bottom of the cliff in Washington Heights The Henry Hudson Parkway actually passes under the New York side s anchorage using an underpass designed by Gilbert 120 209 The connection to the 178th 179th Street Tunnels which connected to the southbound Harlem River Drive opened in 1940 173 The tunnels were replaced by the Trans Manhattan Expressway which opened in 1962 17 174 The tunnels and expressway were built to minimize disruption to the Washington Heights neighborhood which had already been developed at the time 213 Alternate routes Edit Further south along the Hudson River the Lincoln Tunnel Route 495 and Holland Tunnel Interstate 78 Route 139 also enter Manhattan 214 Both tunnels are operated by the Port Authority which collects tolls from drivers crossing the Hudson River eastbound toward New York City 215 The Verrazzano Narrows Bridge I 278 connecting the New York City boroughs of Staten Island and Brooklyn is the southernmost alternate route It connects to the Bayonne Bridge Goethals Bridge and Outerbridge Crossing between Staten Island and New Jersey 214 All four bridges to Staten Island collect tolls for drivers driving into the island c Farther north within the New York metropolitan area the Tappan Zee Bridge Interstates 87 287 and New York State Thruway avoids the congested Cross Bronx Expressway and the city proper Thruway traffic sometimes uses the George Washington Bridge as a detour since no roads cross the Hudson River between the George Washington and Tappan Zee bridges 217 The Tappan Zee Bridge also charges tolls for eastbound drivers 218 Even farther north is the Bear Mountain Bridge carrying U S 6 and U S 202 about 20 miles 32 km north of the Tappan Zee Bridge it also charges tolls for eastbound drivers 219 Tolls EditAs of January 8 2023 update the tolls by mail rate going from New Jersey to New York are 17 for cars and motorcycles there is no toll for passenger vehicles going from New York to New Jersey New Jersey and New York issued E ZPass users are charged 12 75 for cars and 11 75 for motorcycles during off peak hours and 14 75 for cars and 13 75 for motorcycles during peak hours Users with E ZPass issued from agencies outside of New Jersey and New York are charged the tolls by mail rate 220 The upper level toll plaza with heavy traffic congestion Tolls are collected at a series of tollbooths on the New Jersey side The bridge has 29 toll lanes 12 in the main upper level toll plaza 10 in the lower level toll plaza and seven in the Palisades Interstate Parkway toll plaza leading to the upper level 1 210 The toll plazas on the lower level and Palisades Parkway are not staffed during the overnight hours and accept only E ZPass transactions during this period 3 210 Originally tolls were collected in both directions The original toll booth was designed by Gilbert who also designed a classical style maintenance booth neither of which is extant 209 In August 1970 the toll was abolished for westbound drivers and at the same time eastbound drivers saw their tolls doubled The tolls of eleven other New York New Jersey and Hudson River crossings along a 130 mile 210 km stretch from the Outerbridge Crossing in the south to the Rip Van Winkle Bridge in the north were also changed to south or eastbound only at that time 221 E ZPass was accepted for toll payment on the George Washington Bridge starting in July 1997 222 Soon afterward the Port Authority proposed removing the tollbooths for the E ZPass lanes on the lower level and Palisades Parkway toll plazas replacing them with electronic toll collection gantries to allow motorists to maintain highway speeds 223 Pedestrians and cyclists may cross free of charge on the south sidewalk Pedestrians traveling in either direction originally paid tolls of 10 cents when the bridge opened 16 The pedestrian toll was reduced to 5 cents in 1935 224 and discontinued altogether in 1940 225 Open road tolling was implemented for drivers going from Palisades Interstate Parkway on February 2 2020 on the lower level on November 7 2020 and on the upper level on July 10 2022 226 The tollbooths will be dismantled and drivers will no longer be able to pay cash at the bridge Instead there will be cameras mounted onto new overhead gantries on the New Jersey side going to New York A vehicle without E ZPass will have a picture taken of its license plate and a bill for the toll will be mailed to its owner For E ZPass users sensors will detect their transponders wirelessly 227 In March 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic all electronic tolling was temporarily placed in effect for all Port Authority crossings including the George Washington Bridge 228 Cash toll collection was temporarily reinstated on the upper level only from October 2020 226 to July 2022 while the required open road tolling infrastructure was being installed 229 230 The carpool discount was eliminated when open road tolling commenced on the upper level in July 2022 229 230 Historic toll rates Edit Tolls for the bridge cost 50 one way in 1931 but have been raised over the years to a 17 cash toll for passenger vehicles which was enacted on January 8 2023 231 Historic vehicular toll rates for the George Washington Bridge Years Toll Toll equivalentin 2021 232 Direction collected Ref 1931 1970 0 50 8 91 3 49 each direction 20 1970 1975 1 00 6 98 5 04 eastbound only 221 1975 1983 1 50 7 55 4 93 eastbound only 233 1983 1987 2 00 6 58 4 77 eastbound only 234 1987 1991 3 00 7 16 5 97 eastbound only 235 1991 2001 4 00 7 96 6 12 eastbound only 236 2001 2008 6 00 9 18 7 55 eastbound only 237 2008 2011 8 00 10 07 9 64 eastbound only 238 2011 2012 12 00 14 46 14 16 eastbound only 239 2012 2014 13 00 15 34 14 88 eastbound only 240 2014 2015 14 00 16 03 16 00 eastbound only 241 2015 2020 15 00 17 15 15 90 eastbound only 242 2020 2023 16 00 16 75 16 00 eastbound only 243 Since January 8 2023 17 00 17 00 eastbound only 244 Prior to July 10 2022 a discounted carpool toll 7 75 was available at all times for cars with three or more passengers using NY or NJ E ZPass who proceed through a staffed toll lane provided they have registered with the free Carpool Plan except if entering from the Palisades Interstate Parkway entrance to the bridge 245 The Carpool Plan ended when the George Washington Bridge implemented cashless tolling 230 Non motorized access Edit Southern sidewalk The George Washington Bridge contains two sidewalks that can be used by pedestrians and bicyclists The southern sidewalk accessible by a long steep ramp on the Manhattan side of the bridge is shared by cyclists and pedestrians The entrance in Manhattan is at 178th Street just west of Cabrini Boulevard and also has access to the Hudson River Greenway north of the bridge Both sidewalks are accessible on the New Jersey side from Hudson Terrace 246 The George Washington Bridge carries New York State Bicycle Route 9 a bike route that runs from New York City north to Rouses Point 247 The Port Authority closed the northern sidewalk at all times in 2008 246 Though it offers direct access into Palisades Interstate Park the northern sidewalk requires stairway climbs and descents on both sides which was inaccessible for people with physical disabilities and posed a risk in poor weather conditions 248 Advocacy groups such as Transportation Alternatives also suggested improvements 249 As part of the project to replace the bridge s vertical support cables the connections to both sidewalks will be enhanced or rebuilt and made ADA compliant While the south side cables are being replaced that sidewalk will be closed and the north sidewalk will be open Once the entire project is completed in 2023 pedestrians will use the south sidewalk and cyclists will use the north sidewalk The sidewalk aspect of the project is expected to cost 118 million 206 207 Incidents EditSuicides and deaths Edit The George Washington Bridge is among the most frequently chosen sites in the New York metropolitan area for suicide by jumping or falling off the bridge 250 The first death by jumping occurred before the bridge even opened though it was unintentional On September 21 1930 a stunt jumper named Norman J Terry jumped off the bridge s deck in front of a crowd of thousands but because his body was facing the wrong way he broke his neck upon hitting the water 251 252 253 The first intentional suicide occurred on November 3 1931 a little more than one week after the bridge opened 254 Several suicide attempts off the George Washington Bridge have been widely publicized In 1994 a person going by the name Prince called The Howard Stern Show while on the bridge threatening to kill himself but Howard Stern managed to talk him out of it 255 256 The 2010 suicide of Tyler Clementi who had jumped from the bridge drew national attention to cyberbullying and the struggles facing LGBT youth 257 In 2012 a record 18 people threw themselves off the bridge to their deaths while 43 others attempted to do so but survived 258 There were 18 deaths reported in both 2014 and 2015 In 2014 74 people were stopped by the Port Authority police while the next year another 86 people were stopped by the Port Authority police In 2016 there were 12 reported deaths a decrease from previous years while 70 people were stopped by the Port Authority police 259 In 2017 the Port Authority proposed equipping a two person Emergency Services Unit team with harnesses to prevent suicides from the bridge 260 Following 15 reported deaths and 68 attempts in 2017 the Port Authority installed protective netting and an 11 foot high 3 4 m fence along each upper level sidewalk The netting partially overhangs the sidewalks in order to prevent potential jumpers from scaling the fence directly 261 25 The southern sidewalk was closed from September to December 2017 so that a temporary fence could be installed there Once the temporary fence had been erected the permanent 11 foot high barrier was constructed on the northern sidewalk followed by the permanent barrier on the southern sidewalk 25 26 Controversies and protests Edit From September 9 to 13 2013 dedicated toll lanes for one of the local Fort Lee entrances to the bridge s upper level were reduced from three to one with the two other lanes diverted to highway traffic without notification to local government officials and emergency responders The closures were made on the direction of aides and appointees of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie causing a political controversy called Bridgegate 262 The local toll lane reductions caused massive traffic congestion with major delays for school transportation and police and emergency service responses within Fort Lee 263 264 The repercussions and controversy surrounding these actions have been investigated by the Port Authority 265 federal prosecutors 266 and a New Jersey legislature committee 267 268 On September 12 2020 a hundred anti police brutality protesters from the Black Lives Matter movement converged from both New York and New Jersey closing the upper level of the bridge for about an hour before walking to the New York City Police Department s 34th Precinct in Manhattan 269 270 Other incidents Edit The bridge seen in 1978 On December 28 1966 a 19 year old pilot made an emergency landing on the bridge s New Jersey side after his plane s engine failed There were no deaths reported because there was very little traffic at the time but the pilot and his passenger were injured 271 16 At the time there was no median barrier on the bridge s upper deck 16 In June 1977 two tractor trailers nearly fell off the lower level after jackknifing then going through both the roadway barrier and a mesh net next to the roadway One of the drivers was hurt slightly while the other driver was not hurt The accident also involved a third tractor trailer and two passenger cars none of whose occupants were hurt 272 Accidents involving trucks dumping their cargo have also occurred on the George Washington Bridge Watermelons frozen chicken parts and horse manure have all fallen onto the bridge s roadway at some point 29 The first ever complete closure of the George Washington Bridge occurred on August 6 1980 when a truck carrying highly flammable propane gas across the bridge started to leak 29 273 As a safety precaution in case the fuel started to ignite traffic across the bridge was halted for several hours and 2 000 people living near the bridge were evacuated Since the George Washington Bridge is the primary crossing between New Jersey and New York City the closure caused traffic jams that stretched for up to 30 miles 48 km and the effects of this congestion could be seen more than 45 miles 72 km away 273 Two police officers eventually plugged the leak with an inexpensive device 274 Up to that point trucks carrying flammable material had been allowed to use the George Washington Bridge 275 After the incident New York City officials conducted a study on whether to prohibit hazardous cargo from traveling through the city 276 In popular culture EditThe bridge is seen in a number of movies set in New York 277 Ball of Fire 1941 was the first film to show the bridge 278 In Force of Evil 1948 Leo Morse is buried under the bridge by the mob of gangsters employing his brother Joe 279 280 In How to Marry a Millionaire 1953 Loco and Brewster are feted as being in the 50 millionth car to cross the bridge as part of the George Washington Bridge Week festivities 279 In Network 1976 Schumacher tells a funny story in which having overslept for a news shoot about the bridge s new lower deck gets into a cab wearing a raincoat over his pajamas and tells the driver to take him to the middle of the bridge The taxi driver concerned that Schumacher intends to jump begs him Don t do it buddy You re a young man 279 Sully 2016 reenacts how Sullenberger overflew the bridge by a few hundred feet 281 The bridge was also shown in The Godfather 1972 279 282 and Cop Land 1997 283 284 The bridge has been featured in music In the opening singalong for Sesame Street Ernie sang the words George Washington Bridge to the tune of Sobre las Olas The Loveliest Night of the Year 285 In addition William Schuman s 1950 work George Washington Bridge 286 287 288 In visual art the first issue of the comic Atomic War published in November 1952 the George Washington Bridge is shown collapsing during a bombing of New York City 289 Additionally painters George Ault and Valeri Larko have both created artworks named after the bridge 290 Video games such as Metal Gear Solid 2 Sons of Liberty also showed the George Washington Bridge 291 The bridge is also represented on the story quilt Woman on a Bridge 1 of 5 Tar Beach 1988 permanent collection of the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum in New York City by Afro American visual artist Faith Ringgold Based on it she later published her first children book Tar Beach 1991 where the GWB is always present in the landscape It is the story of Cassie a young girl dreaming to fly above her Harlem home Her own father had been a worker to build the bridge opened on the very day she was born She finds it as beautiful as a diamond necklace This book has received over 20 awards including the Ezra Jack Keats New Writer Award and the Coretta Scott King Award for Illustration The construction of the bridge is detailed in George Washington Bridge A Timeless Marvel 292 and George Washington Bridge Poetry in Steel 190 280 The bridge and the nearby Little Red Lighthouse are the subjects of Hildegarde Swift s 1942 children s book The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge 293 280 From Riverside Drive at nightSee also Edit Transport portal Engineering portal New Jersey portal New York state portal New York City portalList of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in New Jersey List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in New York List of fixed crossings of the Hudson RiverReferences EditNotes Edit There were 51 million motorists paying eastbound tolls in 2016 so the traveled number is approximately twice this figure 4 In 1910 the Washington Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution erected a stone monument to the Battle of Fort Washington The monument is about 100 yards 91 m northeast of the Little Red Lighthouse near the eastern bridge anchorage 61 MTA Bridges and Tunnels collects tolls for the Verrazzano Narrows Bridge 216 while the Port Authority collects tolls for the other three bridges to Staten Island 215 Citations Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Facts amp Info George Washington Bridge Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Archived from the original on March 1 2019 Retrieved February 27 2010 a b c d George Washington Bridge ASCE Metropolitan Section Retrieved November 12 2016 a b c d Traffic Restrictions George Washington Bridge The Port Authority of NY amp NJ Retrieved June 18 2018 a b New York City Bridge Traffic Volumes PDF New York City Department of Transportation 2016 p 11 Retrieved March 16 2018 a b What is the world s busiest bridge Travel Trivia Retrieved June 23 2020 A staggering 108 million vehicles cross the bridge annually making the George Washington Bridge the busiest bridge on Earth a b Collins Beth December 2 2011 10 record breaking bridges CNN Retrieved November 13 2018 George Washington Bridge Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Retrieved May 10 2019 George Washington Bridge The busiest bridge in the world connecting northern Manhattan and Fort Lee NJ a b c Maag Christopher May 9 2019 How crews will re suspend the GWB while 280 000 cars drive beneath them daily North Jersey Media Group Retrieved May 10 2019 High above the Hudson engineers are working to rehang the world s busiest bridge while it remains in service Rose Lacey March 2 2006 Inside the Booth Forbes Archived from the original on August 22 2006 Retrieved January 15 2008 Like the PATH trains which also connect New York to New Jersey the G W Bridge is run by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey a public agency that employees 7 000 workers sic and has annual revenues of 2 9 billion Ervolino Bill October 24 2018 Happy birthday George Washington Bridge You look pretty good for 87 North Jersey Retrieved January 12 2019 By 1962 New Jerseyans were routinely referring to Ammann s masterpiece as the GWB and the George Jones Charisse October 20 2006 Upkeep Costs Rise as USA s Bridges Age USA Today Retrieved January 15 2008 The George Washington Bridge locals call it the GW is one of a collection of dazzling spans that link New York s five boroughs or the city and New Jersey a b c d e Hudson Bridge Is Nearer Realization The New York Times March 1 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 a b c d Last Wire Of Span Spun Over Hudson The New York Times August 8 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 18 2018 a b c d Reier 2000 p 100 Allston Dana Is Engineer of Design for the Ft Lee Bridge Scarsdale Inquirer No Volume XI Number 6 Scarsdale Women s Club Publications December 27 1927 Retrieved September 17 2018 Rastorfer 2000 p 163 Rastorfer 2000 pp 43 163 a b c d e f g h Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 679 a b c d e f g h i j George Washington Bridge 80th Anniversary The Port Authority of NY amp NJ October 25 2011 Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 18 2018 a b c d e f g Ingraham Joseph C August 30 1962 Lower Deck of George Washington Bridge Is Opened The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 6 2010 a b c d e f Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 681 Rastorfer 2000 p 41 a b c d Two Governors Open Great Hudson Bridge As Throngs Look On PDF The New York Times October 25 1931 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 6 2010 a b History George Washington Bridge Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Retrieved March 6 2010 New York City Truck Route Map Reverse Side PDF nyc gov New York City Department of Transportation June 8 2015 Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2017 Retrieved September 12 2017 For the Red Book itself see HAZARDOUS MATERIALS Transportation Regulations at Tunnel and Bridge Facilities PDF The Port Authority of NY amp NJ Archived from the original PDF on June 10 2019 Retrieved June 18 2018 Pedestrian amp Bicycle Information George Washington Bridge The Port Authority of NY amp NJ Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 18 2018 a b c Suicide Prevention Fence Coming To George Washington Bridge Walkway CBS New York CBS New York September 18 2017 Retrieved November 23 2018 a b Krisel Brendan September 19 2017 Safety Fences Coming To George Washington Bridge Walkways Washington Heights Inwood NY Patch Retrieved November 23 2018 Tides of Bridge Traffic The New York Times October 18 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 18 2018 The World s Great Spans The New York Times October 18 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 a b c d e Carmody Deirdre October 10 1981 A 50 Year View of the George Washington Bridge The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2018 a b Reier 2000 pp 100 101 Rastorfer 2000 pp 59 61 a b c Reier 2000 p 101 a b c Rastorfer 2000 p 63 a b Billington D P 1985 The Tower and the Bridge The New Art of Structural Engineering Princeton paperbacks Princeton University Press p 136 ISBN 978 0 691 02393 9 Retrieved November 14 2018 a b c d Rastorfer 2000 p 49 a b c d e Skinner Frank W October 18 1931 How the Bridge Was Built The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 a b c d Eddy J L Jr May 25 1930 Weaving A Great Span Over The Hudson River The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 Rastorfer 2000 p 50 a b Fort Lee Contract Goes To Roebling The New York Times October 14 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 a b c American Bridge Plan Looms as Victor in Keen Hudson Span Controversy PDF Brooklyn Daily Eagle October 9 1927 pp A11 Retrieved June 5 2018 via Fultonhistory com a b c Work is Speeded on Hudson Bridge The New York Times March 24 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 a b Rastorfer 2000 p 57 Rastorfer 2000 pp 57 59 a b c Rastorfer 2000 p 45 a b c Sketch of Proposed 40 000 000 Bridge Across the Hudson The New York Times March 11 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 Rastorfer 2000 p 43 Billington David P 1985 The Tower and the Bridge The New Art of Structural Engineering Princeton University Press pp 134 ISBN 0 691 02393 X Reier 2000 pp 103 104 Rastorfer 2000 pp 43 45 a b c Richman Steven M The Bridges of New Jersey Portraits of Garden State Crossings p 118 Rutgers University Press 2005 ISBN 9780813535104 The engineer Othmar Ammann and his architect Cass Gilbert had originally designed statuesque anchors which were abandoned for cost reasons a b Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 679 Reier 2000 p 104 Brock H i September 6 1931 A Span That Symbolizes The Steel Age The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Criticize Masonry For Hudson Bridge The New York Times July 7 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Rastorfer 2000 pp 41 43 Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 682 Reier 2000 pp 104 105 a b Berkowitz Natalie July 2 1989 Old Glory Fills Crew With Pride The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 13 2018 George Washington Bridge Interesting Facts PDF Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Archived from the original PDF on December 14 2006 Retrieved May 28 2007 a b World s Largest Free Flying American Flag to Fly at George Washington Bridge in Honor of 9 11 Victims Press release Port Authority of New York and New Jersey September 8 2006 Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved February 27 2010 a b 85 Years Strong George Washington Bridge Still Adds Grace to NYC Skyline ASCE News June 21 2018 Retrieved January 12 2019 Renner James January 1998 DAR Monument Washington Heights amp Inwood Online Archived from the original on September 25 2010 Retrieved March 13 2010 a b Cudahy Brian J 2002 Rails Under the Mighty Hudson 2nd ed New York Fordham University Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 82890 257 1 OCLC 911046235 Historic Structures Report Holland Tunnel National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 4 1993 p 9 Retrieved September 11 2020 a b c Reier 2000 p 95 Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 675 Great Crowd Treks Into Holland Tubes After Gala Opening The New York Times November 13 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 9 2018 a b Vehicular Tunnel Under the Hudson Seems Assured New York Sun January 26 1919 pp 1 7 via Fultonhistory com Want Three Bridges Across North River The New York Times December 6 1908 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 3 2018 Tunnels Not Bridge Favored To Jersey The New York Times April 22 1913 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 4 2018 Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 pp 675 677 a b c d e Stern Gilmartin amp Mellins 1987 p 677 Chamber Opposes Bridge At 57th St The New York Times January 4 1924 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 Lindenthal Gustav January 13 1924 Lindenthal Outlines Hudson Bridge Plan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 Greene Tells Plan For Hudson Bridge The New York Times May 4 1924 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 For New Hudson Bridge The New York Times December 30 1924 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 Arthur Kill Spans Voted In Trenton The New York Times February 11 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 Pass Fort Lee Bridge Bill The New York Times March 3 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 Silzer Signs Bill For Hudson Bridge The New York Times March 10 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 To Fight For Bridge At 178th Street The New York Times March 19 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 Location of Great Anchorage for Fort Lee Bridge in Park Is Cause of New York Protests PDF Newburgh News February 15 1926 p 1 Retrieved June 5 2018 via Fultonhistory com Cites Bill Putting Park In Jeopardy The New York Times March 22 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 Governor Approves 128 Bills Vetoes 17 The New York Times April 3 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 1 2018 a b Survey Hudson Site For Longest Bridge The New York Times August 18 1925 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 Defends The Plans For Hudson Bridge The New York Times February 25 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 a b Staff January 1930 Giant of World s Bridges Rising in New York Popular Mechanics p 464 Gilbert to Design the Hudson Bridge The New York Times January 6 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 a b c 50 000 000 Bridge To Ft Lee Approved By Interstate Board The New York Times March 13 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 a b Reports Progress On Hudson Bridge The New York Times March 11 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Hudson Suspension Span Will Be Carefully Tested The New York Times July 18 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 Materials Entering Into Big Span Across Hudson River at Fort Lee Will be Well Tested PDF Newburgh News August 12 1926 p 16 Retrieved June 8 2018 via Fultonhistory com Tells Hudson Span Plans The New York Times October 21 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 Final Hearing Backs Hudson Bridge Plan The New York Times December 3 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 Gets Final Permit For Hudson Bridge The New York Times December 14 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 Fort Lee Bridge Bonds Are Awarded The New York Times December 10 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 3 2018 Jersey Bridge Bill Faces Court Fight The New York Times March 26 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Treaty Abrogation on Port Authority Between New York and New Jersey Go to Court PDF Ballston Spa Daily Journal March 28 1927 p 1 Retrieved June 5 2018 via Fultonhistory com Still Seek Way Out Of Bridge Tangle The New York Times April 1 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 No Upset Likely In Bridge Program The New York Times April 3 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 a b c Reier 2000 p 102 First Bids Opened For Ft Lee Bridge The New York Times April 12 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 More Time on Bridge Bids The New York Times April 25 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 First Contract Let For Hudson Bridge The New York Times April 30 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 18 Bids Received On Hudson Bridge The New York Times June 1 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Biggest Dredge in World Starts Work To Prepare Hudson River for Bridge The New York Times May 8 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Seeks Land at Fort Lee The New York Times August 29 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 New Span To Be Lecture Subject The Montclair Times November 6 1931 Ground Is Broken For Hudson Bridge The New York Times September 22 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 International News Service September 22 1927 Start Digging For New Span PDF Yonkers Statesman p 9 Retrieved June 5 2018 via Fultonhistory com a b World s Largest Suspension Bridge Over Hudson River To Be Opened to Traffic in 1932 PDF Brooklyn Daily Eagle March 11 1928 pp 20A Retrieved June 8 2018 via Fultonhistory com Open Bids For Span Over Hudson River The New York Times October 4 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Steinman David Barnard 1922 A Practical Treatise on Suspension Bridges Their Design Construction and Erection Wiley p 74 Bridge Steel Ordered The New York Times October 21 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 3 Drown at Work in Hudson Caisson The New York Times December 24 1927 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Hudson Bridge Bids In For Manhattan Side The New York Times March 6 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Fast Bridge Work At Staten Island The New York Times April 15 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Groove Cut In Palisades For Hudson Bridge Road The New York Times May 6 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Bond Men Watch Hudson River Span The New York Times September 29 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Poore C G October 7 1928 Bridging The Hudson A Spectacular Job The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Buys Final Plot For Hudson Bridge The New York Times April 14 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 a b Bridge Approaches Beautify Hudson The New York Times April 18 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 To Raze 20 Flats In Path Of Bridge The New York Times October 27 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Municipal Loans Port of New York Authority The New York Times October 23 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 18 2018 a b Plan to Eliminate Hudson Span Plaza The New York Times January 8 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 Peterson Iver November 12 1991 Squaring Traffic Circles With Lights and Bridges The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 Land for the New Hudson River Bridge Approaches to Cost Over 10 000 000 The New York Times April 20 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 a b Rastorfer 2000 p 55 First Wire Hoisted For Hudson Bridge The New York Times July 10 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Poore C G September 15 1929 A Dizzy Task For Men Without Nerves The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 Hudson River Bridge Now 50 Complete The New York Times February 25 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 Pushes Hudson Span Work The New York Times April 19 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 a b Finish First Cable For Hudson Bridge The New York Times July 29 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 To Complete Span Cables The New York Times August 5 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 Poore C G July 14 1929 Weaving Bridge Cables High Above The Hudson The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2018 a b New Deck Begun On Bridge Here The New York Times June 2 1959 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 Records and Briefs New York State Appellate Division p 94 Retrieved June 16 2020 For media related to this agreement see Media July 29 1930 PA NY Agreement jpg and Media Page 1 of the 1930 Agreement between City of New York and Port of New York Authority jpg Will Get Bids Monday On Bridge Approach The New York Times July 10 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 Ft Lee Bridge To Have Approach 350 Ft Wide The New York Times August 6 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 12 Bid on Bridge Drives The New York Times September 16 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 a b Maeder Jay February 17 2011 Name That Bridge 1931 Edition The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 18 2011 Seek Name for Bridge The New York Times October 26 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 a b Reier 2000 p 103 Washington Memorial Bridge Is Name of New Hudson Span The New York Times January 14 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Informs President of Bridge Naming The New York Times January 15 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Port Board Votes to Rename Hudson Bridge The New York Times January 23 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 New Bridge Names Pour In The New York Times January 30 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Washington Leads as Name for Bridge The New York Times February 12 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Hudson Span Named George Washington The New York Times April 24 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Giant Span Given Name PDF Buffalo Courier Express April 24 1931 p 2 Retrieved June 8 2018 via Fultonhistory com Final Rivets Driven In Bridge Girders The New York Times December 30 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 New Hudson Bridge To Open This Year The New York Times March 4 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Lauds Port Facilities In Building Of Bridge The New York Times March 15 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Forty Bankers Hike Over Hudson Bridge The New York Times June 24 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2018 New Jersey Highways to Serve New Hudson River Bridge The New York Times April 26 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Asks Funds to Plan New Harlem Bridge The New York Times May 6 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Bridge Bids Opened The New York Times July 7 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Reier 2000 p 105 Reier 2000 pp 105 106 a b c 56 312 Cars Cross Bridge on First Day The New York Times October 26 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 6 2010 Pedestrians to Get Lower Bridge Toll The New York Times November 9 1934 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 Speeding the Hudson Bridge Popular Science November 1929 p 49 Retrieved October 19 2011 Warner Arthur October 18 1931 An Astounding Span Of Steel And Wire The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 a b Rastorfer 2000 p 39 Heavy Realty Sales In Bergen County The New York Times June 8 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 a b Hanley Robert October 25 1981 What Hath a Bridge Wrought The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2018 More Autos Use Tunnel Than New Bridge The New York Times November 1 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 Bridge Service Extended The New York Times October 31 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 Washington Bridge a Year Old The New York Times October 25 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 Hudson Span Marks Tenth Anniversary The New York Times October 26 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 10 2018 Hudson Bridge Link Ready The New York Times July 24 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 10 2018 Tube To Hudson Span To Be Ready In Fall The New York Times January 24 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 Mathieu George M July 23 1939 City s Improved Exits Ready The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 New Bridge Ramp Ready The New York Times April 7 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 10 2018 a b Cross city Tunnel Opens Tomorrow Manhattan s First East West Drive Goes Under Heights From Washington Bridge PDF The New York Times June 26 1940 p 25 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 26 2021 a b c d e f g h New 6 Lane Lower Level Adds 75 to Capacity PDF Riverdale Press August 30 1962 p 12 Retrieved June 18 2018 via Fultonhistory com 200 Washington Bridge Lights To Warn Night Flying Aviators The New York Times May 30 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 8 2018 Photo Ban Emphasized The New York Times July 24 1942 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 10 2018 Bridge Lights On Tonight The New York Times May 15 1945 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 10 2018 Excerpts From Proposal to Meet City s Bridge and Highway Needs for Next 2 Decades The New York Times January 17 1955 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 a b Little Falls Resident Works On George Washington Bridge Project PDF Little Falls Herald July 26 1960 p 12 Retrieved June 15 2018 via Fultonhistory com Ingraham Joseph C March 5 1956 Plan For 2 Decks On Bridge Fades The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 7 2018 Bridge Program Advanced By City The New York Times June 5 1957 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 Ingraham Joseph C July 12 1957 Fund Is Allotted Bridge To Jersey The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 a b c d Stengren Bernard February 22 1960 George Washington Bridge Loops to Open in Fall The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 a b c Dedication Rites Set Tomorrow For George Washington 2nd Deck PDF Tarrytown Daily News August 28 1962 p 5 Retrieved June 18 2018 via Fultonhistory com It s A Rocky Road To Bigger Bridge The New York Times September 20 1961 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 Ingraham Joseph C October 27 1959 Lack of Steel Halts A Bridge Job Here The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 5 Week Pouring Job Is Begun For Lower Roadway of Bridge The New York Times September 28 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 2d Deck of Bridge Near Completion The New York Times July 27 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 Jersey to Open New Ramps With Rise in Bridge Traffic The New York Times July 31 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 a b Rockland 2008 p 81 82 Marvin Scott October 25 2013 Happy birthday George Washington Bridge See rare 1981 interview with the man who crossed it on horse on the first day WPIX Retrieved February 10 2020 And with a total of 14 lanes it s the only one of its kind New York New Jersey Win Double Header Brooklyn Daily January 18 1963 pp 7 16 via Fultonhistory com 2d Level of Bridge Brings New Record For Hudson Traffic The New York Times August 29 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 18 2018 Osby Liv March 3 1990 Bridge tunnel repairs could slow commuters Daily Record Morristown NJ p 3 Retrieved November 13 2018 via Newspapers com Hudson crossing ramps in NYC will be rebuilt The Courier News Bridgewater NJ March 10 1991 p 18 Retrieved November 13 2018 via Newspapers com James George September 8 1990 Chaos Set Off By Shutdown At Bridge The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 20 2018 George Washington Bridge Interesting Facts PDF Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Archived from the original PDF on December 14 2006 Retrieved February 20 2017 Schneider Daniel September 24 2000 F Y I The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 20 2017 Yee Roger 2007 Lighting Spaces Visual Profile p 64 ISBN 978 1 58471 116 2 a b Egbert Bill January 15 2001 Wish list likened to Erie Canal impact New York Daily News p 4 Retrieved November 13 2018 via Newspapers com Khan Liza December 27 2000 87M ramp could ease traffic The Journal News White Plains NY p 23 Retrieved November 13 2018 via Newspapers com Haughney Christine December 8 2011 Now 80 George Washington Bridge Will Undergo Repairs The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 9 2011 New York City s George Washington Bridge to undergo major construction project starting Monday syracuse com The Associated Press August 2 2013 Retrieved June 30 2014 Overnight repair work on GWB begins 3 upper level lanes close down 7online com June 16 2014 Retrieved July 7 2014 a b c A Look at the Timeline for Restoring the George Washington Bridge New York YIMBY New York YIMBY February 2 2017 Retrieved May 31 2018 a b Projects ramping up around the GWB North Jersey May 2 2016 Retrieved November 13 2018 a b George Washington Bridge Restoring the George Construction Program Supplemental Information on Bicycle and Pedestrian Access PDF New Jersey Bike and Walk Coalition Retrieved April 18 2019 a b c Google May 30 2018 George Washington Bridge Map Google Maps Google Retrieved May 30 2018 a b c Rastorfer 2000 p 71 a b c Tolls Bridges amp Tunnels Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Retrieved February 27 2010 Google July 30 2013 GW Bridge ramps to GW Bridge Bus Terminal Map Google Maps Google Retrieved July 30 2013 MTA Neighborhood Maps neighborhood Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2018 Retrieved October 1 2018 Rastorfer 2000 p 66 a b LaRock Hana December 16 2013 How to Avoid the Tolls From New Jersey to New York USA Today Retrieved May 31 2018 a b New Toll Fare Rates for the Bridges amp Tunnels Effective December 6 2015 at 3 00 AM Port Authority of New York amp New Jersey Retrieved November 23 2015 2017 Toll Information MTA Bridges amp Tunnels Retrieved March 16 2017 Newman Andy October 10 1997 Finding Alternatives to Alternate Routes The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 31 2018 Incentive Pricing Toll Schedules Cashless Tolling New York State Thruway November 7 2014 Retrieved January 12 2019 Bear Mountain Bridge History Facts nysba ny gov Retrieved October 23 2022 Tolls Port Authority of New York amp New Jersey Retrieved February 2 2020 a b Moran Nancy August 13 1970 One Way Tolls Confusing Some Drivers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 9 2018 MacFarquhar Neil July 29 1997 Some Changes Via E Z Pass at George Washington Bridge The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 13 2018 E ZPass bridge tollbooths may be history Central New Jersey Home News New Brunswick NJ June 19 2000 p 3 Retrieved November 13 2018 via Newspapers com Toll Rules Fixed By Port Authority The New York Times December 31 1934 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 18 2018 Jersey Bridge Tolls End For Pedestrians The New York Times May 29 1940 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 18 2018 a b Higgs Larry October 22 2020 Cash tolls at the Lincoln Tunnel and GWB are back but not for long nj Retrieved December 24 2020 GWB Lincoln amp Holland tunnels getting rid of toll booths New Jersey 101 5 July 25 2019 Retrieved July 26 2019 In Line With Emergency Orders From New York and New Jersey Port Authority to Collect Tolls Exclusively by Electronic Means and Temporarily Suspend Cash Toll Collection at Hudson River Crossings Port Authority of New York and New Jersey March 22 2020 Retrieved March 28 2020 a b Alexander Dan June 9 2022 Major toll changes for George Washington Bridge drivers coming this summer New Jersey 101 5 Retrieved June 10 2022 a b c Higgs Larry June 9 2022 Cashless tolls are coming to the GWB but carpool discounts are ending nj Retrieved June 10 2022 Strunsky Steve December 5 2014 How the George Washington Bridge toll has risen through the years NJ Advance Media Retrieved June 19 2016 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 Port Authority Bridge and Tunnel Tolls Increase at Midnight The New York Times May 5 1975 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 9 2018 Anderson Susan Heller Carroll Maurice December 21 1983 New York Day by Day The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 10 2018 Tolls to Rise April 12 on Hudson Crossings The New York Times April 3 1987 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 10 2018 Levine Richard March 23 1991 Port Authority Raises Tolls for 6 Bridges and Tunnels to 4 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 10 2018 Smothers Ronald January 26 2001 Port Authority Increases Tolls and Train Fare The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 10 2018 Epstein Joe January 4 2008 Port Authority raises bridge and tunnel toll to 8 NJ com Retrieved April 16 2018 Commuters Face Higher Hudson River Crossing Tolls For Start Of Work Week CBS New York New York WCBS TV September 18 2011 Retrieved April 16 2018 Toll Increases Take Effect On Port Authority Crossings CBS New York New York WCBS TV December 2 2012 Retrieved April 16 2018 Tolls Going Up At Port Authority Crossings CBS New York New York WCBS TV December 5 2014 Retrieved April 16 2018 Latest round of Port Authority toll hikes take effect this weekend ABC7 New York December 4 2015 Retrieved April 16 2018 This is How Much New Tolls Cost for NYC Bridges Tunnels NBC New York January 4 2020 Retrieved January 5 2020 Higgs Larry December 31 2022 Tolls are going up on N J highways bridges and tunnels in 2023 Here s how much and where NJ com Retrieved January 3 2023 Tolls www panynj gov Retrieved March 28 2020 a b Pedestrian amp Bicycle Information George Washington Bridge Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Archived from the original on October 30 2019 Retrieved February 27 2010 State Bicycle Route 9 Map New York State Department of Transportation Retrieved January 12 2019 Yellin Deena October 12 2014 A controversial planned GWB pedestrian lane attracts critics The Record Bergen County Archived from the original on October 14 2014 Retrieved June 19 2016 It includes replacing stairways on the bridge s north side with access ramps and removing a tight hairpin turn on the south side walkway to make it safer and accessible to wheelchairs Support Grows in NJ for GW Bridge to River Road Connector Path Reclaim Magazine Transportation Alternatives 15 Summer 2003 Retrieved February 27 2010 Zabriskie Phil The Mysteries of the Suicide Tourist New York Magazine Retrieved April 13 2012 Dittrich Luke August 9 2016 Patient H M A Story of Memory Madness and Family Secrets Random House Publishing Group pp 27 29 ISBN 978 0 679 64380 7 213 foot Leap Kills Stunter PDF Troy Times Associated Press September 22 1930 p 1 Retrieved June 5 2018 via Fultonhistory com Dies In Stunt Dive From Ft Lee Bridge The New York Times September 22 1930 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 6 2018 First Suicide at New Bridge The New York Times November 4 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 Shock Jock Howard Stern Stops Caller s Suicide Leap Media Man phoned in threat from edge of bridge Radio personality says he decided to keep this man laughing until authorities could arrive Los Angeles Times December 8 1994 Retrieved on July 23 2013 Weber Bruce December 8 1994 Now a Caller From the G W Bridge Stern to the Rescue The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2018 Parker Ian January 29 2012 The Story of a Suicide The New Yorker Retrieved February 5 2012 Messing Philip January 14 2013 Sad GWB suicide record New York Post Retrieved January 14 2013 12 people jumped to deaths from George Washington Bridge in 2016 Daily News New York Tracy Thomas Greene Leonard February 21 2017 Exclusive Port Authority eyeing harness equipped suicide prevention units on George Washington Bridge Daily News New York Retrieved September 12 2018 At George Washington Bridge a Fence Rises to Deter Suicides The New York Times December 29 2017 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 9 2018 Baxter Christopher March 11 2014 UPDATED Timeline of Port Authority s George Washington Bridge controversy The Star Ledger Retrieved March 31 2014 For Christie perhaps a bridge too far The Washington Post January 9 2014 The backstory of Christie s Bridgegate scandal USA Today January 10 2014 Retrieved February 2 2014 Strunsky Steve October 16 2013 George Washington Bridge lane closures prompt internal review lawmaker outrage The Star Ledger Retrieved April 3 2014 Chung Jen January 9 2014 U S Attorney Now Investigating Bridgegate Gothamist Archived from the original on January 12 2014 Retrieved January 10 2014 Costa Robert January 13 2014 Broader investigation of N J bridge closures launched The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2014 A Hiring by Christie Raises Questions Over Cooperation The New York Times January 16 2014 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 20 2014 Keogh Elizabeth Protesters stop traffic on NYC side of George Washington Bridge nydailynews com Retrieved September 14 2020 Protesters Shut Down George Washington Bridge Clash With NYPD NBC New York Retrieved September 14 2020 Pilot 19 Defends Bridge Landing The New York Times December 28 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 18 2018 McFadden Robert D June 10 1977 Two Trucks Rip Net Over Hudson But Bridge Beam Catches the Cabs The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 25 2018 a b McFadden Robert D August 8 1980 A Propane Gas Leak On Bridge To Jersey Causes Huge Tie up The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2018 Buder Leonard August 9 1980 Koch Salutes 2 Who Plugged Propane Leak The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2018 Farber M A August 8 1980 Tank Truck Followed Regulations Officials Report The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2018 Farber M A August 9 1980 Propane Leak Spurs Study By New York The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 28 2018 Rockland 2008 p 123 Rockland 2008 p 125 a b c d Rockland 2008 p 124 a b c Megraw Jeremy October 25 2011 I G Dubs A Love Letter to the George Washington Bridge on its 80th Birthday nypl org New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Retrieved September 17 2018 Hay Susan September 7 2016 Sully The untold story of US Airways Flight 1549 Toronto Global News Retrieved September 18 2018 The New York Filming Locations of The Godfather Then and Now Scouting NY January 26 2014 Retrieved September 18 2018 Rockland 2008 p 126 The Real Cop Land New York Magazine August 18 1997 p 30 Retrieved September 20 2018 Rockland 2008 pp 133 134 Rockland 2008 p 133 William Schuman s GWB Tribute Finds New Resonance New York s Classical Music Radio Station WQXR January 10 2014 Retrieved September 17 2018 Swift Hildegarde 1942 The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge Lynd Ward illustrator 2002 ed Harcourt Brace and World ISBN 0 15 204571 6 Atomic War 1 p 09 Rockland 2008 p 130 Keighley Geoff May 16 2012 The Final Hours of Metal Gear Solid 2 Sons of Liberty GameSpot Retrieved April 2 2019 Rastorfer Darl 2006 George Washington Bridge a timeless marvel New York N Y The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey in association with Darl Rastorfer and Associates ISBN 978 0 9789640 0 9 OCLC 85791384 Fort Washington Park Highlights The Little Red Lighthouse NYC Parks June 26 1939 Retrieved September 17 2018 For the book itself see Swift Hildegarde 1974 The little red lighthouse and the great gray bridge New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovich ISBN 978 0 15 204573 9 OCLC 695588 Sources Edit Rastorfer Darl 2000 Chapter 2 The George Washington Bridge Six bridges the legacy of Othmar H Ammann New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08047 6 OCLC 41977224 Reier Sharon 2000 The Bridges of New York New York City Series Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 41230 6 Rockland Michael Aaron 2008 The George Washington Bridge Poetry in Steel New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 4375 8 Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Patrick Mellins Thomas 1987 New York 1930 Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars New York Rizzoli ISBN 978 0 8478 3096 1 OCLC 13860977 External links EditRoute map KML file edit help Template Attached KML George Washington BridgeKML is from Wikidata Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Washington Bridge George Washington Bridge Official Site by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey George Washington Bridge at Bridges amp Tunnels George Washington Bridge at NYCRoads com George Washington Bridge at Structurae Historic American Engineering Record HAER No NY 129 George Washington Bridge 77 photos 12 color transparencies 6 data pages 8 photo caption pages The George Washington Bridge in Heavy Smog View Toward the New Jersey Side of the Hudson River from World Digital Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Washington Bridge amp oldid 1134243278, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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