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Interstate 678

Interstate 678 (I-678) is a north–south auxiliary Interstate Highway that extends for 14 miles (23 km) through two boroughs of New York City. The route begins at John F. Kennedy International Airport on Jamaica Bay and travels north through Queens and across the East River to the Bruckner Interchange in the Bronx, where I-678 ends and the Hutchinson River Parkway begins.

Interstate 678

Map of the New York City area with I-678 highlighted in red
Route information
Auxiliary route of I-78
Maintained by NYSDOT, MTAB&T, and PANYNJ
Length14.33 mi[1] (23.06 km)
Existedc. 1965[2][3]–present
Major junctions
South end JFK Expressway at John F. Kennedy Airport
Major intersections
North end I-95 / I-278 / Hutchinson River Parkway in Throggs Neck
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesQueens, Bronx
Highway system
NY 635 I-684

I-678 connects to I-495 (the Long Island Expressway) in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park. The highway is known as the Van Wyck Expressway (/væn ˈwɪk/ van WIK or /væn ˈwk/ van WYKE)[4] from JFK Airport to Northern Boulevard (New York State Route 25A or NY 25A), the Whitestone Expressway from NY 25A north to the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge, and the Hutchinson River Expressway from the bridge to the Bruckner Interchange. North of the interchange, I-678 ends and the roadway continues as the Hutchinson River Parkway.

The portion of I-678 north of NY 25A follows the path of the Whitestone Parkway and a short section of the Hutchinson River Parkway's Bronx extension. The Whitestone and Hutchinson River parkways were first opened in 1939, while the Van Wyck Expressway opened in pieces between 1950 and 1953. Both highways were connected to each other and upgraded to meet Interstate Highway standards in the early 1960s. The Hutchinson River and Whitestone Expressways were collectively designated as I-678 c. 1965. The designation was extended southward in 1970 to follow the Van Wyck Expressway to its end at JFK Airport.[5]

Route description

 
I-678 in Jamaica as seen from a Long Island Rail Road train

I-678 begins at JFK Airport in the borough of Queens and proceeds along the stretch of highway known as the Van Wyck Expressway. I-678 progresses westward through the airport, crossing under airport taxiways as a six-lane freeway. Just after the taxiways, the expressway connects with North Service Road, which services the airport's western services. From there, the expressway begins to turn northward and crosses the United Airlines hangar. I-678 continues its northwestern path, curving to the northeast at the interchange with Federal Circle. From there, the highway continues northward, becoming a divided highway and meeting NY 878 (the Nassau Expressway) at exit 1E. I-678 continues northward, crossing under the Nassau Expressway and over NY 27 east (South Conduit Avenue) and the Belt Parkway. A short distance later, the highway intersects NY 27 west (North Conduit Avenue) at exit 1B.[6][7] At this point the highway exits the facility of JFK Airport and maintenance switches to the New York State Department of Transportation.

North of North Conduit Avenue, AirTrain JFK's elevated people mover structure begins to run above the expressway's median, and the Van Wyck descends to an open-cut structure.[8] At this point, I-678 gains service roads on either side, connecting to local streets. I-678 continues northward along the Van Wyck Expressway through Queens, interchanging with Rockaway Boulevard, Linden Boulevard, Liberty Avenue, and Atlantic Avenue at exits 2 through 5, respectively. Just south of Atlantic Avenue, the AirTrain structure diverges to the east.[8] After entering Jamaica, the Van Wyck crosses under a complex, two-level Long Island Rail Road structure with 13 tracks.[6][7]

Continuing northward, the expressway passes Jamaica Hospital Medical Center and intersects Jamaica Avenue at exit 6. I-678 expands to eight lanes as it crosses under Hillside Avenue (NY 25B), which is serviced by exit 7 in the southbound direction. A short distance later, the highway approaches a large interchange with NY 25 (Queens Boulevard) and Main Street at exits 8–9. After crossing under Hoover Avenue, I-678 enters the Kew Gardens Interchange, a complex interchange with traffic from five directions. I-678 crosses on overpasses over Union Turnpike, the Grand Central Parkway, the Jackie Robinson Parkway, and different interchange ramps before returning at-grade in Flushing. There, the highway turns northwestward once again, interchanging with Jewel Avenue via Park Drive East at exit 11. Crossing through Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, I-678 continues northward until exit 12, where there are ramps to College Point Boulevard and the westbound Long Island Expressway (I-495). After the interchange with the Long Island Expressway, the Van Wyck continues northeastward. A short distance later, the expressway crosses under Roosevelt Avenue and the IRT Flushing Line (7 and <7>​ trains) of the New York City Subway. After crossing Roosevelt Avenue, I-678 passes Citi Field to the west, then intersects NY 25A (Northern Boulevard) via exit 13. At this point, I-678 transitions onto the Whitestone Expressway.[6][7]

 
Sign for I-678 at the Bruckner Interchange

The Whitestone Expressway continues northward along with the Van Wyck into College Point, where the service roads resume. I-678 passes over Linden Place, served by exit 14, and continues northeastward past the distribution center of The New York Times to the west. Shortly afterward, I-678's service roads intersect with 20th Avenue in Whitestone, and there are ramps to and from the service roads at exit 15. I-678 passes under 14th Avenue a short distance to the north. Just after 14th Avenue, the lefthand lanes of both directions diverge to exit 16, which continues onto Cross Island Parkway via a left exit. The service roads end at this point.[6][7]

After the interchange with Cross Island Parkway, the Van Wyck Expressway turns to the northwest as a six-lane expressway that passes through Whitestone. After exit 17, which serves 3rd Avenue, the expressway passes over Francis Lewis Park and begins its approach onto the Whitestone Bridge over the East River. The highway leaves Queens and enters the Bronx along the bridge.[6][7] The bridge descends to ground level and I-678 passes through an open-road toll gantry,[7] which is located at the former site of a tollbooth.[9] Afterward, the expressway intersects Lafayette Avenue. North of Lafayette Avenue is the Bruckner Interchange, where I-678's designation ends and the highway continues northward as the Hutchinson River Parkway.[6][7]

History

Whitestone Parkway

In 1936, New York governor Herbert H. Lehman signed a bill that authorized the construction of the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge, which would connect Queens and the Bronx.[10] At its north end, the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge would connect to Eastern Boulevard (later known as Bruckner Boulevard) via the Hutchinson River Parkway.[11] The bridge's south end would connect to a new Whitestone Parkway, which led southwest off the bridge to Northern Boulevard.[11][12] Just south of the bridge, there was to be a three-level interchange between the Whitestone Parkway and the Cross Island Parkway.[13] Plans for the bridge were completed by February 1937, at which time the state started issuing bonds to fund bridge construction.[14] The right-of-way for the Whitestone Bridge and Parkway was legally designated in July 1937.[15]

The Whitestone Bridge and Parkway both opened on April 29, 1939.[16] Construction on the bridge and parkway had been accelerated in preparation for the 1939 New York World's Fair,[16] which opened one day after the Whitestone Bridge and Parkway. The new highway was intended as a major thoroughfare to the World's Fair, which was hosted in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, near the Whitestone Parkway's southern end.[17] In 1953, work began on an interchange between Willets Point Boulevard, Northern Boulevard, and Whitestone Parkway, at the parkway's southern end.[18][19]

Van Wyck Expressway

In the 1940s, Moses proposed the construction of a system of highways that would traverse the New York City area.[20] The plan was to cost $800 million (equivalent to $12.3 billion in 2021[21]), and, in 1945, the city agreed to pay $60 million (equivalent to $725 million in 2021[21]) of that cost.[22] Among them was the Van Wyck Expressway, which would stretch from Idlewild Airport (now JFK Airport) in the south to Queens Boulevard in the north.[20] The six-lane expressway was to be built along the path of what was then Van Wyck Boulevard,[23] and it was to cost $11.65 million.[24][25] The original street and the freeway were both named after former New York City Mayor Robert Anderson Van Wyck, but the pronunciation of "Wyck" was heavily disputed: depending on the person, "Wyck" could rhyme with either "lick" or "like".[4] The Van Wyck Expressway was to be built to higher standards than New York's parkways, as it was intended to handle truck traffic. The highway would contain three lanes in each direction, as well as cobblestone shoulders.[26] Several parks and playgrounds were also built along the expressway's route.[27][26]

In 1946, the city started relocating or demolishing houses in the proposed expressway's right-of-way.[28][29] The city had acquired 355 houses in the expressway's path,[29] and it ultimately relocated 263 households,[30][27] as well as the Van Wyck Avenue Congregational Church.[27] In some cases, the city government placed existing houses on trailers and rolled them to vacant sites nearby, allowing residents to move back into their houses in as little as 24 to 48 hours.[31] One four-story apartment building, which housed 35 families, was placed on metal rollers and relocated away from the expressway's path. Normally, new houses would have been built for these families, but there was not enough land to build individual homes for these families.[32] After some of the houses were relocated, they were sold to military veterans at reduced prices.[33] The first major contract for the Van Wyck Expressway's construction was awarded in September 1947, when Rusciano and Son was contracted to build retaining walls and utilities along the expressway's right of way.[34][35]

Construction was delayed several times; the state government had rejected bids for several major contracts, saying the bids were too high.[36] One of the most complex aspects of the project was the replacement of an overpass carrying the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) near the Jamaica station.[36][37] The LIRR overpass alone cost $3.2 million, as contractors could not interrupt service on the LIRR corridor, which carried 1,635 trains every twenty-four hours.[38] The final construction contract for the Van Wyck's first segment was awarded in January 1950.[26] The segment from Queens Boulevard to Idlewild ultimately cost $17 million.[27] It opened on October 14, 1950,[39][40] with a ceremony attended by New York governor Thomas E. Dewey.[41] The new highway reduced driving time between Idlewild and Manhattan by 20 percent.[42] Later the same year, the Gull Construction Company was contracted to install "safety plantings" in the median, consisting of shrubs and trees, to separate the different directions of traffic.[43] New York state officials announced in 1960 that they would install a Jersey barrier in the Van Wyck's median, replacing the plantings, which had not been effective in preventing crashes.[44]

In April 1949, Dewey signed a contract authorizing a northward extension of the highway to Grand Central Parkway.[45] This segment was to cost $11.6 million.[27] The project included widening a segment of Grand Central Parkway between the Long Island Expressway and the Kew Gardens Interchange.[27][46] In addition, a ramp was built from Main Street to the Van Wyck Expressway, and an overpass was built to carry Queens Boulevard above both Main Street and the highway.[27] The Gull Construction Company received the contract for the segment of the highway between Hoover Avenue and 88th Avenue[47] in September 1950.[48][49] A direct ramp from the northbound Van Wyck to Queens Boulevard opened in June 1953; prior to the opening of this segment, the northbound expressway was frequently congested.[50][51] The extension to Grand Central Parkway opened on November 13, 1953,[52][53] but the ramps from the Van Wyck Expressway to Main Street were delayed for another year, opening in November 1954.[54]

1964 World's Fair upgrades

 
I-678 exit 16 in College Point

In December 1957, the state approved a $9.5-million (equivalent to $71.1 million in 2021[21]) project to widen a 2.1-mile (3.4 km) segment of Whitestone Parkway from Northern Boulevard to the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge, build a new bridge over the Flushing River, and improve the parkway to Interstate Highway standards using funds from the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, in which the federal government would pay 90 percent of the proposed highway's cost.[55] The parkway would be expanded from two to four lanes in each direction, and the interchange with the Cross Island Parkway would also be upgraded.[56] The design process for the upgrade was nearing completion when the state approved the project.[55] The head of the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority (TBTA), Robert Moses, stated that the upgrade could start in 1960. At the time of the announcement, the junction with Northern Boulevard was heavily congested because motorists used local streets to connect to the Grand Central Parkway, opposite Flushing Meadows Park from the Whitestone Parkway.[57] In early 1959, Moses formally asked the United States Army Corps of Engineers for permission to close the existing Flushing River drawbridge permanently.[58] The drawbridge would then be upgraded to Interstate standards, and a second, fixed span would be built adjacent to the drawbridge.[56][58] Several boat operators initially opposed the plans—the bridges would be 40.8 feet (12.4 m) above mean high water, shorter than some of the vessels that used the creek—but they eventually withdrew their opposition.[59]

Flushing Meadows Park was subsequently selected to host the 1964 New York World's Fair. In advance of the World's Fair, city officials announced in early 1960 that they would upgrade the Whitestone Parkway and extend the Van Wyck Expressway northward to the Whitestone Expressway.[60][61] City officials approved a $10 million (equivalent to $71.2 million in 2021[21]) project to upgrade the Whitestone Parkway in May 1960,[62] and work on the parkway began near Northern Boulevard in September 1961.[63] Contracts for the upgrade were awarded in September 1962.[64] The portion of the Hutchinson River Parkway south of Bruckner Boulevard and all of the Whitestone Parkway were converted to Interstate standards. The Whitestone Parkway was subsequently renamed the Whitestone Expressway, and the aforementioned segment of the Hutchinson River Parkway was renamed the Hutchinson River Expressway.[65][66] The new four-lane bridges over the Flushing River opened in June 1963; it temporarily carried two lanes in each direction until the old drawbridge was upgraded.[67] The Whitestone Expressway upgrade was completed on December 12, 1963.[68]

The New York City Planning Commission approved the 3.7-mile (6.0 km) extension of the Van Wyck Expressway in April 1960. At the time, that project was planned to cost $3.48 million.[69] Work on the Van Wyck Expressway Extension, as it was originally known, began in late 1961.[61][63] The extension opened on December 30, 1963,[70][71] although the Long Island Expressway and Jewel Avenue interchanges were not yet completed at the time.[71] The opening of the Jewel Avenue interchange had been delayed by six weeks after a major steel contractor had filed for bankruptcy during the project.[72]

Interstate Highway

As early as 1961, The New York Times had reported that the Whitestone Expressway was to be known as Interstate 678.[63] City traffic commissioner Henry A. Barnes subsequently claimed that Moses had proposed the I-678 designation unilaterally.[73] The Whitestone and Hutchinson River expressways were designated as I-678 c. 1965.[2][3] The I-678 designation was extended southward over the Van Wyck Expressway to JFK Airport on January 1, 1970.[5] Although it is designated as a three-digit auxiliary Interstate Highway, I-678 never intersects with its ostensible "parent" Interstate, I-78. Originally, I-78 would have continued eastward through New York City from its current terminus at the Holland Tunnel along the proposed Lower Manhattan Expressway and over the Williamsburg Bridge to Queens, where it would have followed the Bushwick Expressway past the southern end of the Van Wyck Expressway to Laurelton. From here, I-78 would have continued northward onto an extended Clearview Expressway and to the Bronx.[74][75]

Early plans for I-678 had the highway following the Astoria Expressway, a proposed freeway that would run along the NY 25A corridor from I-278 to the Grand Central Parkway.[74] These plans were mostly canceled by the late 1960s,[76] leading to the truncation of I-78 to the Brooklyn–Queens Expressway (I-278) on January 1, 1970.[5] In March 1971, Governor Nelson Rockefeller revealed a plan for improving New York City highways. The plan denied funding to several proposed New York City Interstate Highways, including the Astoria Expressway. Rockefeller said that these highways did not qualify for a funding agreement from the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1952. The New York Times quoted a state official who said that this move had the effect of canceling these projects.[77] I-78 currently ends at the east portal of the Holland Tunnel.[78][79]

Late 20th century

In early 1988, both directions of the Whitestone Expressway near Northern Boulevard were temporarily closed because several girders in the southbound viaduct had corroded to the point that a structural failure was imminent.[80] This part of the Whitestone Expressway, as well as the Van Wyck Expressway from Fowler Avenue south to the Long Island Expressway, were renovated in the mid-1990s.[81] Starting in 2003, the northbound lanes of the Whitestone Expressway near Northern Boulevard were renovated. The project involved replacing a bascule bridge that had been at the location since the original parkway had opened in 1939, creating two U-turn ramps, and creating a new exit ramp from eastbound Northern Boulevard to Linden Place. Previously, traffic from Northern Boulevard had to cross over three lanes of northbound traffic from the Van Wyck Expressway.[82][83]

 
Bronx–Whitestone Bridge approach replacement

The Jamaica Branch of the AirTrain JFK people mover system was built within the median of the Van Wyck from Atlantic Avenue to the Belt Parkway. Construction started in May 1998.[84][85]: 22  The fact that the Jamaica branch had to be built in the middle of the Van Wyck Expressway, combined with the varying length and curves of the track spans, caused complications during construction. One lane in each direction was closed during the off-peak hours, causing congestion on the Van Wyck.[85]: 22  The AirTrain's guideways above the Van Wyck were completed in August 2001.[86] The system opened in December 2003.[87]

21st century

A $286-million (equivalent to $424 million in 2021[21]) renovation of the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge started in August 2001.[88][89] The project replaced the bridge's span, among other things.[90] The Queens and Bronx approaches were replaced in a project that started in 2008[91] and ended in 2015.[92]

In early 2017, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that as part of his plan to improve JFK Airport, two traffic bottlenecks along I-678 near the airport would be removed. At the Kew Gardens Interchange, the two-lane ramps between the Grand Central Parkway and the Van Wyck Expressway would be upgraded to three lanes in each direction. South of the interchange, the expressway will be expanded from three lanes to four lanes in each direction, with the new lanes being used as either high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV lanes) or bus lanes. These projects, combined, would cost $1.5 billion–2 billion (equivalent to $1.65 billion–2.2 billion in 2021[21]).[93][94] In October 2018, Cuomo released details of his $13-billion (equivalent to $13.9 billion in 2021[21]) plan to rebuild passenger facilities and approaches to JFK Airport. The plan included widened ramps in Kew Gardens and a fourth vehicle lane on the Van Wyck Expressway south of Kew Gardens.[95][96] In addition, northbound exit 5 at Atlantic Avenue and southbound exit 4 at Liberty Avenue would be permanently closed, as these junctions are near each other.[97] Were the proposal approved, construction would begin in early 2020[98][99] and would be completed three years later.[97] In 2021, workers began reconstructing five overpasses of I-678 in southern Queens. Work on an additional five overpasses began in mid-2022.[100]

Also in 2017, NYSDOT began renovating an overpass that carried Jewel Avenue above I-678.[101] The project was completed in 2019 and cost $13 million.[102][103]

Exit list

BoroughLocationmi[104]kmExitDestinationsNotes
QueensJFK Airport0.000.00  John F. Kennedy International AirportSouthern terminus
0.300.48A  U-Turn / Port Authority Police
1.101.77B  Cell Phone Lot / General Aviation / Port Authority AdministrationSouthbound exit only
1.402.25C  Long Term Parking / Rental Cars / Cargo Areas
South Ozone Park1.70–
2.50
2.74–
4.02
1 
 
NY 878 east (Nassau Expressway)
Exit 1 on NY 878
   Belt Parkway / NY 27 – Eastern Long Island, Brooklyn, Verrazano BridgeSigned as exits 1E (east) and 1W (west); exit 19 on Belt Parkway
2.664.282Rockaway BoulevardSigned with exit 1 northbound
3.205.153Linden Boulevard
3.906.284Liberty Avenue
Richmond Hill4.377.035Atlantic AvenueNo southbound exit
4.767.666Jamaica Avenue / Hillside Avenue
Kew Gardens5.008.058
7B
Main Street / Union TurnpikeNo southbound exit to eastbound Union Turnpike; southbound exit signed for Union Turnpike only; signed as exit 8 northbound and exit 7B southbound since 2021
5.348.599
7C
 
 
NY 25 west (Queens Boulevard)
No northbound entrance; signed as exit 9 northbound and exit 7C southbound since 2021
5.879.4510 
 
  Grand Central Parkway west – LaGuardia Airport, RFK Bridge
Northbound exit and southbound entrance; exit 13S on G. C. Parkway; no commercial vehicles
5.909.507A 
 
Jackie Robinson Parkway west – Brooklyn
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; exit 7 on J. Robinson Parkway; no commercial vehicles
Flushing Meadows–Corona Park6.20–
6.90
9.98–
11.10
1169th Road / Jewel Avenue – Flushing Meadows–Corona Park
7.20–
8.30
11.59–
13.36
12  I-495 (Long Island Expressway) / College Point Boulevard – Eastern Long Island, Manhattan, Midtown TunnelSigned as exits 12A (east) and 12B (west); exits 22C–D on I-495 eastbound only; exit 22B on I-495 westbound only
Willets Point8.90–
9.43
14.32–
15.18
13    Grand Central Parkway / NY 25A (Northern Boulevard) / Astoria Boulevard – Eastern Long Island, LaGuardia Airport, RFK Bridge, Citi Field, MarinaSigned southbound as exit 13A (Astoria Boulevard), 13B (Parkway east), 13C (Parkway west), and 13D (NY 25A west); no southbound access to NY 25A east
Flushing CreekBridge (northern terminus of Van Wyck Expressway, southern terminus of Whitestone Expressway)
Flushing9.9015.9314Linden Place
10.8017.381514th Avenue / 20th Avenue
Whitestone11.3018.1916 
 
Cross Island Parkway south – Eastern Long Island
Northern terminus and exit 36 on Cross Island Parkway; no commercial vehicles
11.6018.67173rd AvenueNo southbound exit; Last Exit Before Bridge in Northbound Direction
East River11.90–
12.50
19.15–
20.12
Bronx–Whitestone Bridge (toll)
The BronxThroggs Neck13.6021.8918Lafayette Avenue – Ferry Point Park
13.90–
14.33
22.37–
23.06
19N 
 
I-95 north – New Haven, CT
Northbound exit and southbound entrance; exit 6A on I-95
19S-W 
 
 
 
I-95 south / I-278 west – George Washington Bridge, Trenton, NJ, RFK Bridge, Manhattan
Northbound exit and southbound entrance; other movements via Hutchinson Parkway exit 1; eastern terminus of I-278; exit 6A on I-95
 
 
Hutchinson River Parkway north – New Rochelle, White Plains, Yonkers to Merritt Parkway
Continuation beyond Bruckner Interchange; no commercial vehicles
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

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  25. ^ "$285,000,000 Roads Planned for City; the Folks Back in the Old Country Are Proud of New York City's Mayor-elect". The New York Times. November 26, 1945. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on October 31, 2022. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
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  27. ^ a b c d e f g "Expressway Link to Idlewild Ready Next Fall: Last Mile of Van Wyck to Go From Queens Blvd. to Grand Central Parkway Work in Progress on Van Wyck Expressway Extension". New York Herald Tribune. January 5, 1952. p. 2. ISSN 1941-0646. ProQuest 1326931373.
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  32. ^ "35 Families Will Get Ride in House on Trans-Boulevard Trip in Queens" (PDF). The New York Times. October 29, 1947. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on January 18, 2023. Retrieved December 19, 2017.
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External links

KML is from Wikidata
  • Interstate 678 at Alps' Roads • New York Routes
  • Interstate 678 at interstate-guide.com
  • Van Wyck Expressway: Historic Overview
  • I-678 (Greater New York Roads)

interstate, north, south, auxiliary, interstate, highway, that, extends, miles, through, boroughs, york, city, route, begins, john, kennedy, international, airport, jamaica, travels, north, through, queens, across, east, river, bruckner, interchange, bronx, wh. Interstate 678 I 678 is a north south auxiliary Interstate Highway that extends for 14 miles 23 km through two boroughs of New York City The route begins at John F Kennedy International Airport on Jamaica Bay and travels north through Queens and across the East River to the Bruckner Interchange in the Bronx where I 678 ends and the Hutchinson River Parkway begins Interstate 678Map of the New York City area with I 678 highlighted in redRoute informationAuxiliary route of I 78Maintained by NYSDOT MTAB amp T and PANYNJLength14 33 mi 1 23 06 km Existedc 1965 2 3 presentMajor junctionsSouth endJFK Expressway at John F Kennedy AirportMajor intersectionsNY 878 Belt Parkway in South Ozone Park Grand Central Parkway Jackie Robinson Parkway in Kew Gardens Hills I 495 in Flushing Meadows Park Cross Island Parkway in WhitestoneNorth endI 95 I 278 Hutchinson River Parkway in Throggs NeckLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesQueens BronxHighway systemInterstate Highway SystemMain Auxiliary Suffixed Business FutureNew York HighwaysInterstate US State Reference Parkways NY 635 I 684I 678 connects to I 495 the Long Island Expressway in Flushing Meadows Corona Park The highway is known as the Van Wyck Expressway v ae n ˈ w ɪ k van WIK or v ae n ˈ w aɪ k van WYKE 4 from JFK Airport to Northern Boulevard New York State Route 25A or NY 25A the Whitestone Expressway from NY 25A north to the Bronx Whitestone Bridge and the Hutchinson River Expressway from the bridge to the Bruckner Interchange North of the interchange I 678 ends and the roadway continues as the Hutchinson River Parkway The portion of I 678 north of NY 25A follows the path of the Whitestone Parkway and a short section of the Hutchinson River Parkway s Bronx extension The Whitestone and Hutchinson River parkways were first opened in 1939 while the Van Wyck Expressway opened in pieces between 1950 and 1953 Both highways were connected to each other and upgraded to meet Interstate Highway standards in the early 1960s The Hutchinson River and Whitestone Expressways were collectively designated as I 678 c 1965 The designation was extended southward in 1970 to follow the Van Wyck Expressway to its end at JFK Airport 5 Contents 1 Route description 2 History 2 1 Whitestone Parkway 2 2 Van Wyck Expressway 2 3 1964 World s Fair upgrades 2 4 Interstate Highway 2 4 1 Late 20th century 2 4 2 21st century 3 Exit list 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoute description Edit I 678 in Jamaica as seen from a Long Island Rail Road train I 678 begins at JFK Airport in the borough of Queens and proceeds along the stretch of highway known as the Van Wyck Expressway I 678 progresses westward through the airport crossing under airport taxiways as a six lane freeway Just after the taxiways the expressway connects with North Service Road which services the airport s western services From there the expressway begins to turn northward and crosses the United Airlines hangar I 678 continues its northwestern path curving to the northeast at the interchange with Federal Circle From there the highway continues northward becoming a divided highway and meeting NY 878 the Nassau Expressway at exit 1E I 678 continues northward crossing under the Nassau Expressway and over NY 27 east South Conduit Avenue and the Belt Parkway A short distance later the highway intersects NY 27 west North Conduit Avenue at exit 1B 6 7 At this point the highway exits the facility of JFK Airport and maintenance switches to the New York State Department of Transportation North of North Conduit Avenue AirTrain JFK s elevated people mover structure begins to run above the expressway s median and the Van Wyck descends to an open cut structure 8 At this point I 678 gains service roads on either side connecting to local streets I 678 continues northward along the Van Wyck Expressway through Queens interchanging with Rockaway Boulevard Linden Boulevard Liberty Avenue and Atlantic Avenue at exits 2 through 5 respectively Just south of Atlantic Avenue the AirTrain structure diverges to the east 8 After entering Jamaica the Van Wyck crosses under a complex two level Long Island Rail Road structure with 13 tracks 6 7 Continuing northward the expressway passes Jamaica Hospital Medical Center and intersects Jamaica Avenue at exit 6 I 678 expands to eight lanes as it crosses under Hillside Avenue NY 25B which is serviced by exit 7 in the southbound direction A short distance later the highway approaches a large interchange with NY 25 Queens Boulevard and Main Street at exits 8 9 After crossing under Hoover Avenue I 678 enters the Kew Gardens Interchange a complex interchange with traffic from five directions I 678 crosses on overpasses over Union Turnpike the Grand Central Parkway the Jackie Robinson Parkway and different interchange ramps before returning at grade in Flushing There the highway turns northwestward once again interchanging with Jewel Avenue via Park Drive East at exit 11 Crossing through Flushing Meadows Corona Park I 678 continues northward until exit 12 where there are ramps to College Point Boulevard and the westbound Long Island Expressway I 495 After the interchange with the Long Island Expressway the Van Wyck continues northeastward A short distance later the expressway crosses under Roosevelt Avenue and the IRT Flushing Line 7 and lt 7 gt trains of the New York City Subway After crossing Roosevelt Avenue I 678 passes Citi Field to the west then intersects NY 25A Northern Boulevard via exit 13 At this point I 678 transitions onto the Whitestone Expressway 6 7 Sign for I 678 at the Bruckner Interchange The Whitestone Expressway continues northward along with the Van Wyck into College Point where the service roads resume I 678 passes over Linden Place served by exit 14 and continues northeastward past the distribution center of The New York Times to the west Shortly afterward I 678 s service roads intersect with 20th Avenue in Whitestone and there are ramps to and from the service roads at exit 15 I 678 passes under 14th Avenue a short distance to the north Just after 14th Avenue the lefthand lanes of both directions diverge to exit 16 which continues onto Cross Island Parkway via a left exit The service roads end at this point 6 7 After the interchange with Cross Island Parkway the Van Wyck Expressway turns to the northwest as a six lane expressway that passes through Whitestone After exit 17 which serves 3rd Avenue the expressway passes over Francis Lewis Park and begins its approach onto the Whitestone Bridge over the East River The highway leaves Queens and enters the Bronx along the bridge 6 7 The bridge descends to ground level and I 678 passes through an open road toll gantry 7 which is located at the former site of a tollbooth 9 Afterward the expressway intersects Lafayette Avenue North of Lafayette Avenue is the Bruckner Interchange where I 678 s designation ends and the highway continues northward as the Hutchinson River Parkway 6 7 History EditWhitestone Parkway Edit In 1936 New York governor Herbert H Lehman signed a bill that authorized the construction of the Bronx Whitestone Bridge which would connect Queens and the Bronx 10 At its north end the Bronx Whitestone Bridge would connect to Eastern Boulevard later known as Bruckner Boulevard via the Hutchinson River Parkway 11 The bridge s south end would connect to a new Whitestone Parkway which led southwest off the bridge to Northern Boulevard 11 12 Just south of the bridge there was to be a three level interchange between the Whitestone Parkway and the Cross Island Parkway 13 Plans for the bridge were completed by February 1937 at which time the state started issuing bonds to fund bridge construction 14 The right of way for the Whitestone Bridge and Parkway was legally designated in July 1937 15 The Whitestone Bridge and Parkway both opened on April 29 1939 16 Construction on the bridge and parkway had been accelerated in preparation for the 1939 New York World s Fair 16 which opened one day after the Whitestone Bridge and Parkway The new highway was intended as a major thoroughfare to the World s Fair which was hosted in Flushing Meadows Corona Park near the Whitestone Parkway s southern end 17 In 1953 work began on an interchange between Willets Point Boulevard Northern Boulevard and Whitestone Parkway at the parkway s southern end 18 19 Van Wyck Expressway Edit In the 1940s Moses proposed the construction of a system of highways that would traverse the New York City area 20 The plan was to cost 800 million equivalent to 12 3 billion in 2021 21 and in 1945 the city agreed to pay 60 million equivalent to 725 million in 2021 21 of that cost 22 Among them was the Van Wyck Expressway which would stretch from Idlewild Airport now JFK Airport in the south to Queens Boulevard in the north 20 The six lane expressway was to be built along the path of what was then Van Wyck Boulevard 23 and it was to cost 11 65 million 24 25 The original street and the freeway were both named after former New York City Mayor Robert Anderson Van Wyck but the pronunciation of Wyck was heavily disputed depending on the person Wyck could rhyme with either lick or like 4 The Van Wyck Expressway was to be built to higher standards than New York s parkways as it was intended to handle truck traffic The highway would contain three lanes in each direction as well as cobblestone shoulders 26 Several parks and playgrounds were also built along the expressway s route 27 26 In 1946 the city started relocating or demolishing houses in the proposed expressway s right of way 28 29 The city had acquired 355 houses in the expressway s path 29 and it ultimately relocated 263 households 30 27 as well as the Van Wyck Avenue Congregational Church 27 In some cases the city government placed existing houses on trailers and rolled them to vacant sites nearby allowing residents to move back into their houses in as little as 24 to 48 hours 31 One four story apartment building which housed 35 families was placed on metal rollers and relocated away from the expressway s path Normally new houses would have been built for these families but there was not enough land to build individual homes for these families 32 After some of the houses were relocated they were sold to military veterans at reduced prices 33 The first major contract for the Van Wyck Expressway s construction was awarded in September 1947 when Rusciano and Son was contracted to build retaining walls and utilities along the expressway s right of way 34 35 Construction was delayed several times the state government had rejected bids for several major contracts saying the bids were too high 36 One of the most complex aspects of the project was the replacement of an overpass carrying the Long Island Rail Road LIRR near the Jamaica station 36 37 The LIRR overpass alone cost 3 2 million as contractors could not interrupt service on the LIRR corridor which carried 1 635 trains every twenty four hours 38 The final construction contract for the Van Wyck s first segment was awarded in January 1950 26 The segment from Queens Boulevard to Idlewild ultimately cost 17 million 27 It opened on October 14 1950 39 40 with a ceremony attended by New York governor Thomas E Dewey 41 The new highway reduced driving time between Idlewild and Manhattan by 20 percent 42 Later the same year the Gull Construction Company was contracted to install safety plantings in the median consisting of shrubs and trees to separate the different directions of traffic 43 New York state officials announced in 1960 that they would install a Jersey barrier in the Van Wyck s median replacing the plantings which had not been effective in preventing crashes 44 In April 1949 Dewey signed a contract authorizing a northward extension of the highway to Grand Central Parkway 45 This segment was to cost 11 6 million 27 The project included widening a segment of Grand Central Parkway between the Long Island Expressway and the Kew Gardens Interchange 27 46 In addition a ramp was built from Main Street to the Van Wyck Expressway and an overpass was built to carry Queens Boulevard above both Main Street and the highway 27 The Gull Construction Company received the contract for the segment of the highway between Hoover Avenue and 88th Avenue 47 in September 1950 48 49 A direct ramp from the northbound Van Wyck to Queens Boulevard opened in June 1953 prior to the opening of this segment the northbound expressway was frequently congested 50 51 The extension to Grand Central Parkway opened on November 13 1953 52 53 but the ramps from the Van Wyck Expressway to Main Street were delayed for another year opening in November 1954 54 1964 World s Fair upgrades Edit I 678 exit 16 in College Point In December 1957 the state approved a 9 5 million equivalent to 71 1 million in 2021 21 project to widen a 2 1 mile 3 4 km segment of Whitestone Parkway from Northern Boulevard to the Bronx Whitestone Bridge build a new bridge over the Flushing River and improve the parkway to Interstate Highway standards using funds from the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 in which the federal government would pay 90 percent of the proposed highway s cost 55 The parkway would be expanded from two to four lanes in each direction and the interchange with the Cross Island Parkway would also be upgraded 56 The design process for the upgrade was nearing completion when the state approved the project 55 The head of the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority TBTA Robert Moses stated that the upgrade could start in 1960 At the time of the announcement the junction with Northern Boulevard was heavily congested because motorists used local streets to connect to the Grand Central Parkway opposite Flushing Meadows Park from the Whitestone Parkway 57 In early 1959 Moses formally asked the United States Army Corps of Engineers for permission to close the existing Flushing River drawbridge permanently 58 The drawbridge would then be upgraded to Interstate standards and a second fixed span would be built adjacent to the drawbridge 56 58 Several boat operators initially opposed the plans the bridges would be 40 8 feet 12 4 m above mean high water shorter than some of the vessels that used the creek but they eventually withdrew their opposition 59 Flushing Meadows Park was subsequently selected to host the 1964 New York World s Fair In advance of the World s Fair city officials announced in early 1960 that they would upgrade the Whitestone Parkway and extend the Van Wyck Expressway northward to the Whitestone Expressway 60 61 City officials approved a 10 million equivalent to 71 2 million in 2021 21 project to upgrade the Whitestone Parkway in May 1960 62 and work on the parkway began near Northern Boulevard in September 1961 63 Contracts for the upgrade were awarded in September 1962 64 The portion of the Hutchinson River Parkway south of Bruckner Boulevard and all of the Whitestone Parkway were converted to Interstate standards The Whitestone Parkway was subsequently renamed the Whitestone Expressway and the aforementioned segment of the Hutchinson River Parkway was renamed the Hutchinson River Expressway 65 66 The new four lane bridges over the Flushing River opened in June 1963 it temporarily carried two lanes in each direction until the old drawbridge was upgraded 67 The Whitestone Expressway upgrade was completed on December 12 1963 68 The New York City Planning Commission approved the 3 7 mile 6 0 km extension of the Van Wyck Expressway in April 1960 At the time that project was planned to cost 3 48 million 69 Work on the Van Wyck Expressway Extension as it was originally known began in late 1961 61 63 The extension opened on December 30 1963 70 71 although the Long Island Expressway and Jewel Avenue interchanges were not yet completed at the time 71 The opening of the Jewel Avenue interchange had been delayed by six weeks after a major steel contractor had filed for bankruptcy during the project 72 Interstate Highway Edit As early as 1961 The New York Times had reported that the Whitestone Expressway was to be known as Interstate 678 63 City traffic commissioner Henry A Barnes subsequently claimed that Moses had proposed the I 678 designation unilaterally 73 The Whitestone and Hutchinson River expressways were designated as I 678 c 1965 2 3 The I 678 designation was extended southward over the Van Wyck Expressway to JFK Airport on January 1 1970 5 Although it is designated as a three digit auxiliary Interstate Highway I 678 never intersects with its ostensible parent Interstate I 78 Originally I 78 would have continued eastward through New York City from its current terminus at the Holland Tunnel along the proposed Lower Manhattan Expressway and over the Williamsburg Bridge to Queens where it would have followed the Bushwick Expressway past the southern end of the Van Wyck Expressway to Laurelton From here I 78 would have continued northward onto an extended Clearview Expressway and to the Bronx 74 75 Early plans for I 678 had the highway following the Astoria Expressway a proposed freeway that would run along the NY 25A corridor from I 278 to the Grand Central Parkway 74 These plans were mostly canceled by the late 1960s 76 leading to the truncation of I 78 to the Brooklyn Queens Expressway I 278 on January 1 1970 5 In March 1971 Governor Nelson Rockefeller revealed a plan for improving New York City highways The plan denied funding to several proposed New York City Interstate Highways including the Astoria Expressway Rockefeller said that these highways did not qualify for a funding agreement from the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1952 The New York Times quoted a state official who said that this move had the effect of canceling these projects 77 I 78 currently ends at the east portal of the Holland Tunnel 78 79 Late 20th century Edit In early 1988 both directions of the Whitestone Expressway near Northern Boulevard were temporarily closed because several girders in the southbound viaduct had corroded to the point that a structural failure was imminent 80 This part of the Whitestone Expressway as well as the Van Wyck Expressway from Fowler Avenue south to the Long Island Expressway were renovated in the mid 1990s 81 Starting in 2003 the northbound lanes of the Whitestone Expressway near Northern Boulevard were renovated The project involved replacing a bascule bridge that had been at the location since the original parkway had opened in 1939 creating two U turn ramps and creating a new exit ramp from eastbound Northern Boulevard to Linden Place Previously traffic from Northern Boulevard had to cross over three lanes of northbound traffic from the Van Wyck Expressway 82 83 Bronx Whitestone Bridge approach replacement The Jamaica Branch of the AirTrain JFK people mover system was built within the median of the Van Wyck from Atlantic Avenue to the Belt Parkway Construction started in May 1998 84 85 22 The fact that the Jamaica branch had to be built in the middle of the Van Wyck Expressway combined with the varying length and curves of the track spans caused complications during construction One lane in each direction was closed during the off peak hours causing congestion on the Van Wyck 85 22 The AirTrain s guideways above the Van Wyck were completed in August 2001 86 The system opened in December 2003 87 21st century Edit A 286 million equivalent to 424 million in 2021 21 renovation of the Bronx Whitestone Bridge started in August 2001 88 89 The project replaced the bridge s span among other things 90 The Queens and Bronx approaches were replaced in a project that started in 2008 91 and ended in 2015 92 In early 2017 Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that as part of his plan to improve JFK Airport two traffic bottlenecks along I 678 near the airport would be removed At the Kew Gardens Interchange the two lane ramps between the Grand Central Parkway and the Van Wyck Expressway would be upgraded to three lanes in each direction South of the interchange the expressway will be expanded from three lanes to four lanes in each direction with the new lanes being used as either high occupancy vehicle lanes HOV lanes or bus lanes These projects combined would cost 1 5 billion 2 billion equivalent to 1 65 billion 2 2 billion in 2021 21 93 94 In October 2018 Cuomo released details of his 13 billion equivalent to 13 9 billion in 2021 21 plan to rebuild passenger facilities and approaches to JFK Airport The plan included widened ramps in Kew Gardens and a fourth vehicle lane on the Van Wyck Expressway south of Kew Gardens 95 96 In addition northbound exit 5 at Atlantic Avenue and southbound exit 4 at Liberty Avenue would be permanently closed as these junctions are near each other 97 Were the proposal approved construction would begin in early 2020 98 99 and would be completed three years later 97 In 2021 workers began reconstructing five overpasses of I 678 in southern Queens Work on an additional five overpasses began in mid 2022 100 Also in 2017 NYSDOT began renovating an overpass that carried Jewel Avenue above I 678 101 The project was completed in 2019 and cost 13 million 102 103 Exit list EditBoroughLocationmi 104 kmExitDestinationsNotesQueensJFK Airport0 000 00 John F Kennedy International AirportSouthern terminus0 300 48A U Turn Port Authority Police1 101 77B Cell Phone Lot General Aviation Port Authority AdministrationSouthbound exit only1 402 25C Long Term Parking Rental Cars Cargo AreasSouth Ozone Park1 70 2 502 74 4 021 NY 878 east Nassau Expressway Exit 1 on NY 878 Belt Parkway NY 27 Eastern Long Island Brooklyn Verrazano BridgeSigned as exits 1E east and 1W west exit 19 on Belt Parkway2 664 282Rockaway BoulevardSigned with exit 1 northbound3 205 153Linden Boulevard3 906 284Liberty AvenueRichmond Hill4 377 035Atlantic AvenueNo southbound exit4 767 666Jamaica Avenue Hillside AvenueKew Gardens5 008 0587BMain Street Union TurnpikeNo southbound exit to eastbound Union Turnpike southbound exit signed for Union Turnpike only signed as exit 8 northbound and exit 7B southbound since 20215 348 5997C NY 25 west Queens Boulevard No northbound entrance signed as exit 9 northbound and exit 7C southbound since 20215 879 4510 Grand Central Parkway west LaGuardia Airport RFK BridgeNorthbound exit and southbound entrance exit 13S on G C Parkway no commercial vehicles5 909 507A Jackie Robinson Parkway west BrooklynSouthbound exit and northbound entrance exit 7 on J Robinson Parkway no commercial vehiclesFlushing Meadows Corona Park6 20 6 909 98 11 101169th Road Jewel Avenue Flushing Meadows Corona Park7 20 8 3011 59 13 3612 I 495 Long Island Expressway College Point Boulevard Eastern Long Island Manhattan Midtown TunnelSigned as exits 12A east and 12B west exits 22C D on I 495 eastbound only exit 22B on I 495 westbound onlyWillets Point8 90 9 4314 32 15 1813 Grand Central Parkway NY 25A Northern Boulevard Astoria Boulevard Eastern Long Island LaGuardia Airport RFK Bridge Citi Field MarinaSigned southbound as exit 13A Astoria Boulevard 13B Parkway east 13C Parkway west and 13D NY 25A west no southbound access to NY 25A eastFlushing CreekBridge northern terminus of Van Wyck Expressway southern terminus of Whitestone Expressway Flushing9 9015 9314Linden Place10 8017 381514th Avenue 20th AvenueWhitestone11 3018 1916 Cross Island Parkway south Eastern Long IslandNorthern terminus and exit 36 on Cross Island Parkway no commercial vehicles11 6018 67173rd AvenueNo southbound exit Last Exit Before Bridge in Northbound DirectionEast River11 90 12 5019 15 20 12Bronx Whitestone Bridge toll The BronxThroggs Neck13 6021 8918Lafayette Avenue Ferry Point Park13 90 14 3322 37 23 0619N I 95 north New Haven CTNorthbound exit and southbound entrance exit 6A on I 9519S W I 95 south I 278 west George Washington Bridge Trenton NJ RFK Bridge ManhattanNorthbound exit and southbound entrance other movements via Hutchinson Parkway exit 1 eastern terminus of I 278 exit 6A on I 95 Hutchinson River Parkway north New Rochelle White Plains Yonkers to Merritt ParkwayContinuation beyond Bruckner Interchange no commercial vehicles1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Incomplete access Tolled Route transitionSee also EditPortals U S roads New York CityReferences Edit New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 2008 Traffic Volume Report for New York State PDF Report Albany New York State Department of Transportation pp 242 243 Archived from the original PDF on September 27 2012 Retrieved July 13 2010 a b Sinclair Oil Corporation Rand McNally and Company 1964 New York and Metropolitan New York Map 1 757 000 Chicago Sinclair Oil Corporation Lower New York and Long Island inset a b Gulf Oil Corporation Rand McNally and Company 1965 Metropolitan New York City Area Tourgide sic map Map 1 364 152 Pittsburgh PA Gulf Oil Corporation Metropolitan New York City area including Westchester County N Y and northeastern New Jersey inset OCLC 246639605 a b Bilefsky Dan May 26 2011 Stuck on the Van Wyck Expressway Just Try to Pronounce It The New York Times p A28 Archived from the original on September 16 2017 Retrieved June 20 2012 a b c State of New York Department of Transportation January 1 1970 Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State PDF Albany State of New York Department of Transportation Archived PDF from the original on March 26 2009 Retrieved July 14 2010 a b c d e f Microsoft Nokia July 14 2010 Overview Map of Interstate 678 Map Bing Maps Microsoft Retrieved July 14 2010 a b c d e f g Google January 6 2017 Overview Map of I 678 Map Google Maps Google Retrieved January 6 2017 a b Federal Aviation Administration New York State Department of Transportation 1997 JFK International Airport Light Rail System Environmental Impact Statement Vol 1 Washington DC Federal Aviation Administration p 1 12 Retrieved August 26 2017 via Google Books Castillo Alfonso A October 2 2017 Cashless Tolling Arrives at All MTA Bridges Newsday Archived from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 Lehman Signs Bill for Relief Bonds PDF The New York Times May 21 1936 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 a b Esso General Drafting 1940 New York Map 1 687 000 New York Esso New York City inset Esso General Drafting 1942 New York with Pictorial Guide Map 1 687 000 New York Esso New York City inset 13 Enter Bids to Build 3 Belt Parkway Bridges Lowest Opened by Department of Parks Is 330 651 Three Level Bridge Designed for Cross Island Parkway New York Herald Tribune January 14 1939 p 10 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1331193083 Whitestone Bridge at Financing Stage Authority Scans Two Plans for a Bond Issue to Build Bronx Queens Span PDF The New York Times February 15 1937 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 City Gets Queens Land 2 1 2 Mile Strip Being Taken for Link to Whitestone Bridge PDF The New York Times July 22 1937 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 a b Whitestone Span to Open Saturday The New York Times April 27 1939 p 23 Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved April 4 2010 1 000 000 to See Fair Opening PDF The New York Times April 30 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 Corona to Get Interchange at Parking Field New York Daily News May 8 1953 p 633 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Low Bidder on Interchange The New York Times May 9 1953 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 a b Moscow Warren March 13 1944 Highway Network Proposed for City Hits Albany Snag PDF The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 a b c d e f g Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved January 1 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series Road Plan Allots 60 Million to City PDF The New York Times February 20 1945 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 Dozen Major Airlines Seek Space At Idlewild Openning sic About Oct 1 PDF The New York Times May 21 1945 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 City Reveals 300 000 000 Highway Plan 100 Million To Be Spent in Year 200 Million Later on 100 Miles of Roads Six Lanes for Most Of Belt Parkway Idlewild Expressway Is Among Projects U S and State Aid Pledged New York Herald Tribune November 26 1945 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1291234632 285 000 000 Roads Planned for City the Folks Back in the Old Country Are Proud of New York City s Mayor elect The New York Times November 26 1945 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 a b c Ingraham Joseph C January 24 1950 Airport Highway to Open This Year New Link Between Queens Boulevard and New York International Airport The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 a b c d e f g Expressway Link to Idlewild Ready Next Fall Last Mile of Van Wyck to Go From Queens Blvd to Grand Central Parkway Work in Progress on Van Wyck Expressway Extension New York Herald Tribune January 5 1952 p 2 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1326931373 Veterans Will Get 2 000 Houses Here PDF The New York Times May 18 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 a b Family Moving Takes a 2 Story House With It Veteran Picks Up New Home From City to Replace One Condemned for Airport Veteran s House Is Moved to Make Way for Expressway New York Herald Tribune May 18 1946 p 15 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1291264467 Van Wyck Expressway PDF The New York Times October 1 1948 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 Wheels to Speed Shift of Housing Skids Abandoned for Moving of Queens Homes From Line of New Expressway The New York Times March 13 1946 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 35 Families Will Get Ride in House on Trans Boulevard Trip in Queens PDF The New York Times October 29 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 Homes on Highway Site Saved for Veterans Use New York Herald Tribune January 3 1948 p 23 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1335152332 Van Wyck Contract Let 2 558 748 Project Is First Major Step on Expressway The New York Times September 4 1947 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 Developing Firm Buys Large South Shore Tract New York Herald Tribune September 4 1947 p 36 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1313539934 a b Airport s Highway Lags on High Cost Idlewild to Open in 80 Days but Manhattan Route Is 1 1 2 Years From Completion The New York Times May 10 1948 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 State Opens Bids May 26 On Van Wyck Underpass New York Herald Tribune May 10 1948 p 3 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327364387 Commuters Curb Bridge Expansion Train Every 52 Seconds Makes Engineering Problem Above Wider Route to Idlewild The New York Times January 26 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 Opening Set Today for 3 Road Links PDF The New York Times October 14 1950 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 New Express Highways in Three Boroughs Open Today New York Herald Tribune October 14 1950 p 3 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327516763 Ingraham Joseph C October 15 1950 Dewey Shows Foes How He Spends As He Opens 47 000 000 Roads The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Thorne B k October 22 1950 New Expressway Shortens Trip to Idlewild Short Road The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Expressway Contract Let Flushing Co Gets 456 944 Job for Van Wyck Safety Plantings New York Herald Tribune December 3 1950 p 20 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325160999 Stengren Bernard May 12 1960 Parkways Here to Get Dividers State to Spend 2 500 000 to Prevent Accidents Jersey Also Acting The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Dewey Upholds Dual Jobs for Teachers Here Out of License Teaching Is Indorsed Too Van Wyck Expressway Bill Signed New York Herald Tribune April 26 1949 p 5 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1335497767 State Opens Bids on Queens Road Widening White Plastic to Replace Painted Guide Line The New York Times January 11 1951 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Van Wyck Bids Received The New York Times August 3 1950 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Contract Let on Queens Route The New York Times September 16 1950 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Queens Contract Let State Makes Award for Building Van Wyek Expressway New York Herald Tribune September 17 1950 p 42 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325154306 8 Highway Interchange in Queens Opens One of Last Links Monday The New York Times June 13 1953 p 17 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 95116986 Idlewild Link Opens Monday New York Herald Tribune June 13 1953 p 6 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1322491495 2 Arterial Links to Speed Traffic Will Be Opened in City Tomorrow PDF The New York Times November 12 1953 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved December 19 2017 Van Wyck Route Link To Interchange Is Ready New York Herald Tribune November 12 1953 p 21 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1322461754 Queens Thoroughfare Extended The New York Times November 24 1954 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 a b 9 5 Million Project to Aid Boro Traffic PDF Long Island Star Journal December 16 1957 p 1 Archived PDF from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved March 11 2018 via Fultonhistory com a b Flushing Span Hearing is Set for April 15 New York Daily News March 8 1959 p 683 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Parkway Link to End Northern Blvd Jams PDF Long Island Star Journal January 9 1958 p 1 Archived PDF from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved March 11 2018 via Fultonhistory com a b Ingraham Joseph C January 15 1959 Widening Sought for Whitestone Drawbridge Closing Asked to Build Second Span for an 8 Lane Parkway The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Nevard Jacques April 16 1959 Opposition Ended on Flushing Span Harbor Craft Men Reverse Position on Fixed Bridge Across Mouth of Creek The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Ingraham Joseph C May 13 1963 State Warns Contractors to End Lag In World s Fair Road Jobs 5 Projects in Queens Running Late and Traffic Is a Mess Static Warns Contractors to End Lag in World s Fair Road Jobs The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 a b Highway Work Set on 3 New Projects PDF Long Island Star Journal December 7 1961 p 2 Archived PDF from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved March 11 2018 via Fultonhistory com 25 Million in Roads Approved for City PDF The New York Times May 19 1960 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved January 14 2018 a b c First Work Set on Roads to Fair Queens Interchange Begins Tomorrow Traffic to Shift The New York Times September 17 1961 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved November 1 2022 Whitestone X Way New Flushing Span OK PDF Long Island Star Journal September 28 1962 p 3 Archived PDF from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved March 11 2018 via Fultonhistory com Rand McNally and Company 1962 Long Island and New York City Map 1 82 902 Chicago Rand McNally and Company Long Island Western Section inset OCLC 55707497 Esso General Drafting 1963 New York Happy Motoring Guide Map 1963 ed 1 687 000 Convent Station NJ Esso Northern approaches to New York City inset OCLC 26606599 New 4 Lane Bridge Over Flushing River Opens Today The New York Times June 4 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved November 1 2022 New Expressway Link Opens in Queens Today The New York Times December 12 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Bennett Charles G April 6 1961 New Queens Road to 64 Fair Voted Planners Back Extension of Van Wyck Expressway by 3 7 Miles to North World s Fair Expressway Link To Queens Is Voted by Planners The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Stengren Bernard December 28 1963 All Major Roads to World s Fair Expected to Be Ready in a Month New Queens Road to Open Monday The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 a b Beltrone Art December 30 1963 Drivers Get a Break Newsday p 11 ProQuest 964419951 Ingraham Joseph C May 13 1963 State Warns Contractors to End Lag In World s Fair Road Jobs 5 Projects in Queens Running Late and Traffic Is a Mess Static Warns Contractors to End Lag in World s Fair Road Jobs The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 1 2022 Retrieved November 1 2022 Zinman Dave April 11 1966 Moses Builds Road With Pencil Barnes Newsday p 21 ProQuest 915362471 a b Gulf Oil Company Rand McNally and Company 1960 New Jersey and Metropolitan New York Map 1 390 000 Chicago Gulf Oil Company Road map of metropolitan New York City inset OCLC 986509183 Expressway Plans Regional Plan News Regional Plan Association 73 74 1 18 May 1964 Retrieved February 27 2017 via Archive org New York State Department of Commerce Rand McNally and Company 1969 New York State Highways Map 1 868 032 Albany State of New York Department of Commerce Metropolitan New York City inset OCLC 1009635438 Cliness Francis X March 25 1971 Lower Manhattan Road Killed Under State Plan PDF The New York Times p 78 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved April 14 2010 New York State Department of Transportation March 2 2010 New York County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation Archived from the original on April 8 2013 Retrieved November 6 2010 New York State Department of Transportation January 2017 Official Description of Highway Touring Routes Bicycling Touring Routes Scenic Byways amp Commemorative Memorial Designations in New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation Archived PDF from the original on January 10 2017 Retrieved January 15 2017 James George March 3 1988 Sign of Collapse Leads to Closing of Queens Road The New York Times Archived from the original on March 12 2018 Retrieved March 12 2018 Federal Aviation Administration New York State Department of Transportation 1994 Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Section 4 f Evaluation Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Airport Access Program Vol 1 Washington DC Federal Aviation Administration p 62 Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved March 12 2018 via Google Books Dworkowitz Alexander October 20 2003 State to Begin Construction on Whitestone Expressway Times Ledger Queens NY Archived from the original on March 12 2018 Retrieved March 12 2018 Rhoades Liz July 10 2003 Expect Some Inconveniences with Whitestone Expwy Work Queens Chronicle Archived from the original on January 18 2023 Retrieved March 12 2018 Chan Sewell January 12 2005 Train to J F K Scores With Fliers but Not with Airport Workers The New York Times Archived from the original on July 29 2017 Retrieved July 22 2016 a b Project Profile USA New York Airtrain PDF University College London Bartlett School of Planning September 6 2011 Archived PDF from the original on August 17 2016 Retrieved July 23 2016 Scheinbart Betsy August 23 2001 AirTrain s Guideway above Van Wyck Is Complete Times Ledger Queens NY Archived from the original on September 2 2017 Retrieved September 1 2017 Stellin Susan December 14 2003 Travel Advisory A Train to the Plane At Long Last The New York Times Archived from the original on December 22 2016 Retrieved December 21 2016 A New Look for a Classic Bridge Press release MTA Archived from the original on March 5 2009 Retrieved November 2 2007 Roth Alisa October 12 2003 A Onetime Thing of Beauty Gets a Little Prettying Up The New York Times Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved April 4 2010 Chan Sewell February 18 2005 A Bridge Too Fat The New York Times Archived from the original on June 11 2018 Retrieved March 12 2018 Bronx Whitestone Bridge Approach Upgrade Bronx Times December 5 2008 Archived from the original on March 12 2018 Retrieved February 24 2018 Bridges amp Tunnels Bronx Whitestone Queens Approach Reconstruction Project Completed with Reopening of Third Avenue Exit Press release MTA May 8 2015 Archived from the original on March 12 2018 Retrieved February 24 2018 Governor Cuomo Presents 2nd Proposal of 2017 State of the State Transforming JFK International Airport for the 21st Century Press release Office of Governor Andrew Cuomo January 4 2017 Archived from the original on January 6 2017 Retrieved January 6 2017 Transforming JFK PDF Office of Governor Andrew Cuomo January 4 2017 Archived PDF from the original on January 7 2017 Retrieved January 6 2017 A Vision Plan for John F Kennedy International Airport PDF Airport Advisory Panel January 4 2017 Archived PDF from the original on January 5 2017 Retrieved January 5 2017 McGeehan Patrick 2017 Remaking Kennedy Airport Is Governor s Next Big Plan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved December 1 2017 Cuomo s 13 Billion Solution to the Mess That Is J F K Airport The New York Times October 4 2018 Archived from the original on October 4 2018 Retrieved October 5 2018 Cuomo JFK Airport renovation includes central hub 2 new terminals Newsday Archived from the original on October 4 2018 Retrieved October 5 2018 a b Van Wyck rebuild kills on off ramps Queens Chronicle Archived from the original on August 15 2019 Retrieved August 15 2019 Governor Cuomo Announces 13 Billion Plan to Transform JFK Into a World Class 21st Century Airport governor ny gov Government of New York October 4 2018 Archived from the original on October 4 2018 Retrieved October 5 2018 Rivoli Dan Kennedy Airport to get 13 billion renovation and two new terminals New York Daily News Archived from the original on October 5 2018 Retrieved October 5 2018 Van Wyck Expressway to JFK Airport Capacity and Access Improvements Contract 1 D900048 Project PDF New York State Department of Transportation January 2022 Archived PDF from the original on May 24 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 Jewel Avenue Bridge undergoes 13 million makeover Forest Hills Post October 18 2017 Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 Parry Bill July 19 2019 Governor announces completion of 13 million Jewel Avenue Bridge rehabilitation project QNS com QNS com Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 13M overhaul of Van Wyck Expressway bridge complete Real Estate Weekly August 1 2019 Archived from the original on October 31 2022 Retrieved October 31 2022 New York State Department of Transportation 2009 pp 242 243 Google 2017 harvp error no target CITEREFGoogle2017 help New York State Department of Transportation August 7 2015 Queens County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation Archived from the original on June 28 2018 Retrieved September 5 2017 New York State Department of Transportation August 7 2015 Bronx County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation Archived from the original on January 24 2020 Retrieved September 5 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Interstate 678 KML file edit help Template Attached KML Interstate 678KML is from Wikidata Interstate 678 at Alps Roads New York Routes Interstate 678 at interstate guide com Van Wyck Expressway Historic Overview I 678 Greater New York Roads Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interstate 678 amp oldid 1134478336, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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