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Wikipedia

Interstate 495 (New York)

Interstate 495 (I-495), commonly known as the Long Island Expressway (LIE), is an auxiliary Interstate Highway in the US state of New York. It is jointly maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT), the New York City Department of Transportation (NYCDOT), MTA Bridges and Tunnels (TBTA), and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ).

Interstate 495

Long Island Expressway
Map of Long Island with I-495 highlighted in red and service routes in pink
Route information
Auxiliary route of I-95
Maintained by NYSDOT, NYCDOT, TBTA, and PANYNJ
Length66.38 mi[1] (106.83 km)
Existed1958[2]–present
RestrictionsNo hazardous goods allowed inside the Queens–Midtown Tunnel
Major junctions
West endQueens–Midtown Tunnel portal in Murray Hill
Major intersections
East end NY 25 / CR 58 in Calverton
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesNew York, Queens, Nassau, Suffolk
Highway system
I-490 NY 531

Spanning approximately 66 miles (106 km) along a west–east axis, I-495 traverses Long Island from the western portal of the Queens–Midtown Tunnel in the New York City borough of Manhattan to County Route 58 (CR 58) in Riverhead in the east. I-495 intersects with I-295 in Bayside, Queens, through which it connects with I-95. The 2017 route log erroneously shows the section of highway between I-278 in Long Island City and I-678 in Corona as New York State Route 495 (NY 495).[3]

The LIE designation, despite being commonly applied to I-495 in full, technically refers to the stretch of highway in Nassau and Suffolk counties. The section from the Queens–Midtown Tunnel to Queens Boulevard is known as the Queens–Midtown Expressway, and the section between Queens Boulevard and the Queens–Nassau county line is known as the Horace Harding Expressway. The service roads which run parallel to either side of the expressway in Queens are signed as Borden Avenue and Queens Midtown Expressway and as Horace Harding Expressway and Horace Harding Boulevard; from the Queens–Nassau county line to Sills Road, they are designated as the unsigned New York State Route 906A (NY 906A) and New York State Route 906B (NY 906B).

Route description

New York City

The expressway begins at the western end of the Queens–Midtown Tunnel in the Murray Hill section of Manhattan. The route heads eastward, passing under the FDR Drive and East River as it proceeds through the TBTA-maintained tunnel to Queens. Once on Long Island, the highway passes through the tunnel's former toll plaza and becomes the Queens–Midtown Expressway as it travels through the western portion of the borough. A mile (1.6 km) after entering Queens, I-495 meets I-278 (Brooklyn–Queens Expressway) at exit 17, then briefly becomes a two-level, 12-lane highway traveling across Calvary Cemetery. Merging into one level at Maurice Avenue, I-495 continues through the neighborhoods of Maspeth, Elmhurst, and Rego Park. East of NY 25 (Queens Boulevard) in Rego Park, I-495 becomes the Horace Harding Expressway. I-495 heads northeast through Corona to Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, intersecting both the Grand Central Parkway and the Van Wyck Expressway (I-678) within the park limits. Because the interchanges in this area are close together, the highway employs two sets of collector–distributor roads through this area: one between 69th and 99th streets and one between the Grand Central Parkway and I-678.[4]

 
I-495 in Queens with heavy traffic. The LIE is locally known as "the world's longest parking lot".[5]

The expressway continues east as a six-lane highway, veering to the southeast to bypass Kissena Park before curving back to the northeast to meet the Clearview Expressway (I-295) at the northern edge of Cunningham Park. Past I-295, I-495 passes by the "Queens Giant", the oldest and tallest tree in the New York metropolitan area. The tree, located just north of I-495 in Alley Pond Park, is visible from the highway's westbound lanes. To the east, the freeway connects to the Cross Island Parkway at exit 31 in the park prior to exiting the New York City limits, crossing into Nassau County and becoming the LIE.[4]

Although the LIE name officially begins outside the New York City border, almost all locals and most signage use "the Long Island Expressway" or "the LIE" to refer the entire length of I-495.[6] The service roads of I-495 are called Borden Avenue and Queens Midtown Expressway between I-278 and Queens Boulevard, and they are known as Horace Harding Expressway between Queens Boulevard and the Nassau County line.[4] The Horace Harding Expressway section follows the path of Horace Harding Boulevard (also previously called Nassau Boulevard),[7][8] which was named for J. Horace Harding (1863–1929), a finance magnate who directed the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad and the New York Municipal Railways System. Harding used his influence to promote the development of Long Island's roadways, lending strong support to Robert Moses's "great parkway plan". Harding also urged construction of a highway from Queens Boulevard to the Nassau County Line, in order to provide better access to Oakland Country Club, where he was a member. After his death, the boulevard he helped build was named for him. Horace Harding was not related to the former President Warren G. Harding.[9]

Nassau and Suffolk counties

Heading into Nassau County, the expressway contains a high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lane in each direction, which begins at exit 33 and runs to central Suffolk County. I-495 and the adjacent Northern State Parkway, which parallels the LIE through the county, meet three times, although they actually cross only once at exit 46 near the county line. I-495 interchanges with the Seaford–Oyster Bay Expressway (NY 135). In Suffolk County, the LIE continues its eight-lane configuration with the HOV lane to exit 64 (NY 112). At this point, the HOV lane ends and the highway narrows to six lanes; additionally, the concrete Jersey barrier gives way to a wide, grassy median, the asphalt road surface is replaced by a concrete surface, and the expressway is no longer illuminated by streetlights, reflecting the road's location in a more rural area of Long Island.[4]

 
I-495 in Nassau County

From NY 112 east, the expressway runs through more rural, woodland areas on its trek towards Riverhead. Exit 68 (William Floyd Parkway) marks the terminus of the service roads, which are fragmented by this point. Exit 70 (CR 111) in Manorville is the last full interchange, as it is the last interchange that allows eastbound traffic on, and the first to allow westbound off. After exit 71 (NY 24/Nugent Drive), the expressway begins to narrow as it approaches its eastern terminus. Until 2008, just before exit 72 (NY 25), the three eastbound lanes narrowed to two, which, in turn, narrowed almost immediately to a single lane at exit 73, which lies 800 feet (240 m) east of exit 72. As of 2008, of the two lanes, one lane is designated for exit 72 and the other is for exit 73, which ends the squeeze into a single lane that formerly existed at exit 73. At exit 73, all traffic along the expressway is diverted onto a ramp leading to eastbound CR 58, marking the east end of the route.[4]

HOV restrictions

There is one HOV lane in each direction, in the median of the highway, between exit 32 (Little Neck Parkway), near the Queens–Nassau border, to exit 64 (NY 112), in central Suffolk County.[2] From 6:00 am to 10:00 am and from 3:00 pm to 8:00 pm Monday through Friday, the HOV lanes are limited to busses, motorcycles, and Clean Pass vehicles without occupancy requirement and passenger vehicles with at least two occupants. Trailers and commercial trucks are always prohibited therein.[10] Vehicles are only allowed to enter and exit the lanes at designated junctions.[11]

Originally, the HOV lanes were restricted to passenger vehicles with at least two occupants. Starting in 2006, drivers of certain hybrid vehicle models were allowed to use the lanes even if they were driving alone.[12] By 2014, over one-third of all traffic on the LIE between exits 32 and 64 used the HOV lane during peak hours. NYSDOT contemplated restricting the lanes to passenger vehicles with at least three occupants but ultimately decided against this change.[11]

History

I-495 was constructed in stages from 1940 to 1972.[13] Its completion was intended to alleviate congestion along local roads in Long Island.[13][14] Most of the highway in Queens was built as part of the Interstate Highway System, with 90 percent funding from the federal government and 10 percent from the New York state government. The portion of the highway in Nassau and Suffolk counties was built with equal funding from the federal and state governments.[15]

Construction of Queens segment

Queens–Midtown Expressway

The first piece of what is now I-495, the Queens–Midtown Tunnel linking Manhattan and Queens, was opened to traffic on November 15, 1940.[16] The highway connecting the tunnel to Laurel Hill Boulevard was built around the same time and named the "Midtown Highway".[17][18] The tunnel, the Midtown Highway, and the segment of Laurel Hill Boulevard between the highway and Queens Boulevard all became part of a realigned NY 24 in the mid-1940s.[18][19] Parts of this highway were built on the right-of-way of a streetcar line that extended from Hunters Point to southern Flushing.[20] In the 1940s, city planner Robert Moses proposed the construction of a system of highways that would traverse the New York City area.[21] The plan was to cost $800 million (equivalent to $12.3 billion in 2021[22]), and, in February 1945, the city agreed to pay $60 million (equivalent to $725 million in 2021[22]) of that cost.[23] That November, the city, state, and federal governments agreed to fund several new highways in New York City. Among these was the Queens Midtown Expressway, which was to cost $10.62 million (equivalent to $128 million in 2021[22]).[24]

 
Crossing New Calvary Cemetery

Plans did not proceed further until March 1951, when Moses proposed constructing the six-lane Queens–Midtown Expressway between Laurel Hill and Queens boulevards. This was part of a larger, $30-million (equivalent to $253 million in 2021[22]) plan that also included the Horace Harding Expressway.[25][26] By October 1952, the cost of the two projects had increased to $55 million (equivalent to $457 million in 2021[22]), of which the Queens–Midtown Expressway was to cost $21 million (equivalent to $174 million in 2021[22]).[27] To help fund the Queens–Midtown Expressway, Moses reallocated funding from two other highway projects in early 1953.[28] That October, the New York City Planning Commission approved a minor revision to the Queens–Midtown Expressway's route in Maspeth and South Elmhurst, thus reducing land acquisition costs by $769,000 (equivalent to $6.31 million in 2021[22]).[29]

The city government awarded the first construction contracts for the highway in July 1953.[30] The first section of the highway to open was the 1.1-mile (1.8 km) section between Laurel Hill Boulevard and Maurice Avenue, which opened on February 24, 1955. The six-lane highway ran through Calvary Cemetery.[31][32] Afterward, the old Midtown Highway became known as the "Queens–Midtown Expressway".[33][34] The entire highway from Laurel Hill Boulevard (by this point upgraded into the Brooklyn–Queens Expressway) to the junction of Queens Boulevard (NY 24 and NY 25) and Horace Harding Boulevard (NY 25D) opened on November 5, 1955. This 3.2-mile (5.1 km) section of the LIE had cost $29.5 million (equivalent to $236 million in 2021[22]) and was funded by the TBTA, of which Moses was chair.[35][36] NY 24 initially remained routed on Laurel Hill and Queens boulevards.[37]

Horace Harding Expressway

The LIE was built over much of Horace Harding Boulevard within eastern Queens and Power House Road within western Nassau County. Prior to the LIE's construction, the route was designated as NY 25D. As part of his March 1951 proposal for the Queens–Midtown Expressway, Moses proposed widening an 8.5-mile (13.7 km) stretch of Horace Harding Boulevard between Queens Boulevard and the Queens–Nassau border from 160 to 260 feet (49 to 79 m).[25][26] That May, the New York City Board of Estimate approved the widening of Horace Harding Boulevard and Power House Road and constructing an expressway in the road's median at a cost of $25 million (equivalent to $211 million in 2021[22]).[38] The project's cost had increased to $34 million (equivalent to $282 million in 2021[22]) by October 1952.[27] The same year, the New York State Department of Public Works later modified the highway's route in the vicinity of Little Neck Parkway, near the Queens–Nassau border, because of complaints from residents. At Little Neck Parkway, Horace Harding Boulevard continued northeast and then eastward, whereas the LIE was to take a more southerly path.[39]

 
I-495 as seen from the intersection of Horace Harding Expressway and Main Street

Work began on the Horace Harding Expressway in 1955.[40] However, it soon encountered delays because of weather conditions, construction worker strikes, and difficulties in building across existing roads and swampy land.[40][41] Business owners along Horace Harding Boulevard complained that the project was reducing their income and isolating their businesses from surrounding neighborhoods.[42] A 1.5-mile (2.4 km) section of the LIE near Alley Pond Park in eastern Queens, between Cloverdale Boulevard in Bayside and Little Neck Parkway, officially opened on September 25, 1957.[43][44] The highway segment reduced the need for cars to use West Alley Road, a winding road that crossed the park.[43][45] Construction on the section between Queens Boulevard in Elmhurst and Parsons Boulevard in Pomonok was several years behind schedule,[46] but this section was open by mid-1959.[47] For several months, the highway abruptly terminated at Parsons Boulevard, and barriers funneled traffic onto the service road; the highway was extended to Peck Avenue in Fresh Meadows in late 1959.[48]

The section of the LIE west of the Clearview Expressway was designated as I-495 in October 1958.[2] The interchange with the Clearview Expressway (I-295) in Bayside was the last section of the LIE in New York City to be completed. Construction on that interchange had started in January 1959.[49][50] By early 1960, the LIE saw more than 120,000 vehicles per day, although congestion frequently built up at Bayside. The marshy land in the vicinity of Flushing Meadows–Corona Park caused cracking on the expressway's pavement.[51] The 0.9-mile (1.4 km) segment of the LIE near the Clearview interchange, between Peck Avenue and 224th Street, officially opened on August 12, 1960.[52] The interchange itself, which contained eight ramps and eight overpasses, was not open at the time because I-295 was still under construction.[49][50] Between 1961 and 1963, in advance of the 1964 New York World's Fair, the NYSDOT-built service roads along I-495 in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park,[53] and it constructed a partial interchange with I-678.[54][55]

Originally, I-495's westbound and eastbound roadways in Queens were separated by a median measuring three to eight feet (0.91 to 2.44 m) wide, with a chainlink fence and emergency telephones.[56] In 1960, state officials announced that they would install a Jersey barrier in the median between 207th Street and the Queens–Nassau border.[57] The remainder of the highway in Queens still contained chainlink fences, which were expensive to repair and could not prevent head-on collisions.[58] In 1970, work commenced on a two-year project to install a Jersey barrier in the median of I-495 from 108th Street to Little Neck Parkway, replacing a 12-foot-wide (3.7 m) median.[59]

Extension to Long Island

Plans for a 90-mile (140 km) highway, the Central Motor Expressway, extending east to Riverhead in Suffolk County, Long Island, were first reported by regional newspaper Newsday in late 1953.[60] This length included the Queens–Midtown Expressway, as well as the section of the Brooklyn–Queens Expressway south of the junction with the Queens–Midtown Expressway.[60][61] Suffolk County supervisors endorsed the plans soon after they were announced.[62] In 1954, New York State Governor Thomas E. Dewey approved plans for the LIE, extending 64 miles (103 km) between the Queens–Nassau border and Riverhead.[63][64] Moses and New York City mayor Robert F. Wagner Jr. said that the proposed highway would not charge tolls, regardless of whether the expressway received federal funding under the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1952.[65] From the outset, a minimum speed limit of 40 mph (64 km/h) was enforced on the segment of the LIE in Nassau and Suffolk counties.[66]

 

New York State Route 495

LocationLong Island
Existed1958–1983

Nassau County

On September 30, 1958, the first section of the LIE outside New York City, a five-mile (8.0 km) segment from the Queens–Nassau county line to Willis Avenue in Roslyn Heights, officially opened to traffic.[67][68] The section of the LIE between Roslyn and the Nassau–Suffolk border was initially controversial; at a public hearing in late 1957, 100 homeowners criticized the alignment of that section of highway.[69] By early the next year, work had commenced on the section of the LIE between Guinea Woods Road (now Glen Cove Road) and Jericho Turnpike.[70] The New York state government awarded a construction contract for the section of the LIE between Jericho Turnpike and South Oyster Bay Road in June 1959.[71] This was followed in November 1959 by a contract for the section between South Oyster Bay Road and the Suffolk County border.[72][73]

 
The LIE in Roslyn Heights, looking west from Parkside Drive in 2021. This segment of the LIE between Willis Avenue and Glen Cove Road opened in 1959.

The LIE was extended to Glen Cove Road in Roslyn on September 29, 1959, with ramps to and from the Northern State Parkway.[74][75] By this time, the LIE was continuous between Bayside and Roslyn.[74] After the Clearview interchange opened, the LIE was continuous between Manhattan and Roslyn, and it was designated in its entirety as NY 24. The old surface alignment of NY 24 south of the expressway became NY 24A.[76] The LIE was extended east from Glen Cove Road to NY 106/NY 107 in Jericho on October 8, 1960,[77][78] and was then opened to South Oyster Bay Road in Syosset in December 1960.[79] By 1962, the NY 24 designation was removed from the LIE and reassigned to its former surface alignment to the south, while the portion of the freeway east of the Clearview Expressway became NY 495 (and later, I-495).[80][81]

Suffolk County

By 1958, it was estimated that the entire highway would not be completed until 1970.[41] Real-estate developers believed that the LIE's construction was not proceeding quickly enough,[82] and Suffolk County's supervisors also advocated for the highway to be completed as soon as possible.[83][84] Bidding for the first section of the LIE in Suffolk County, from the Nassau border to NY 110 in Melville, began in February 1960.[85] Supporters of the highway believed that its completion would reduce traffic on Long Island's west–east arterial roads.[14] Over the next decade, the completion of the LIE in Suffolk County spurred significant population growth in communities along its route.[86]

Over one-third of the LIE within Suffolk County—a 15-mile (24 km) section from Melville to Veterans Memorial Highway (now NY 454) near Islandia—was opened to traffic between 1962 and 1963.[81][87] A five-mile (8.0 km) extension of the LIE from Oyster Bay Road to NY 110 opened in August 1962, bringing the highway into Suffolk County.[88][89] The rest of the highway to Islandia was constructed simultaneously.[90] A 3.5-mile (5.6 km) extension from NY 110 to Deer Park Road opened in October 1962,[91] followed the next month by another 2.7-mile (4.3 km) segment from Deer Park Road to Commack Road.[92][93] A further 6.5-mile (10.5 km) extension opened to NY 454 in August 1963.[94][95]

Three more sections of the LIE—from Islandia to exit 71 near Riverhead—were completed in 1969 and 1970.[96][97] A discontinuous section of highway between William Floyd Parkway and exit 71 opened in June 1969[98][99] and was extended west to Holbrook in December 1969.[100][101] A six-mile (9.7 km) segment between Horse Brook Road and Holbrook, connecting the two sections of the LIE, continued for several months.[102][103] After this section opened on June 9, 1970, the LIE was continuous between Manhattan and Riverhead.[104] There were delays in constructing the easternmost two miles (3.2 km) of the LIE from exit 71 to CR 58.[99] The extension to CR 58 opened to traffic on June 28, 1972.[105][13]

Modifications

Officials had originally predicted that the LIE would carry 80,000 vehicles per day by 1970.[15] In part, because of induced demand, the highway was ineffective in reducing traffic. By 1962, the LIE had reached its peak capacity, carrying between 125,000 and 150,000 vehicles per day.[14] Officials considered constructing four reversible lanes above the existing highway in Queens;[106][107] this plan would have cost about $100 million (equivalent to $696 million in 2021[22]).[108][109] New York City's commissioner of highways also proposed constructing a monorail to alleviate congestion on I-495 in Queens.[110] These plans did not come to fruition, and, by the late 1960s, average rush-hour speeds were about five miles per hour (8.0 km/h).[15][66] The Queens section of I-495 alone carried 180,000 vehicles per day.[15] Major chokepoints existed at the interchanges with I-278, the Grand Central Parkway, I-678, I-295, and the Cross Island Parkway. The westbound roadway between Junction Boulevard and 108th Street also suffered from severe congestion,[66] as did the eastbound roadway near Springfield Boulevard.[111] By 1972, the highway was being used by over 150,000 vehicles a day.[13]

State officials announced plans to designate the segment of the LIE east of I-295 as an Interstate highway following the passage of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1968.[112][113] The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials did not formally extend the I-495 designation from New York City to Riverhead until May 1984.[114] Subsequently, the entirety of the LIE was designated as I-495.[115]

Additional lanes in Queens

The ramp from the westbound I-495 to the westbound I-278 in Queens was so congested that a traffic light was installed on that ramp in 1962.[116] State officials planned to reconstruct the interchange, although the project was delayed for several years. In addition, they planned to build a six-lane viaduct above the existing highway between I-278 and 58th Street, which would carry traffic to and from the Queens–Midtown Tunnel.[117][118] In 1966, the New York City Board of Estimate approved plans to reconstruct the interchange with I-278 as a cloverleaf interchange;[119] the project was planned to cost around $70 million (equivalent to $453 million in 2021[22]) and take three years.[66][15] State officials awarded a contract for the project in June 1967,[120] and work began that October.[121] A ramp from the eastbound I-495 to I-278 opened in 1968.[122] Starting in 1971, one lane of I-495 between the Queens–Midtown Tunnel and Maurice Avenue was converted to a westbound HOV and bus lane during the morning rush hour.[123][124]

Plans to widen I-495 between I-278 and I-678 were announced by New York City mayor John Lindsay in January 1968. Two additional local lanes would be built beside the three existing lanes in each direction.[125][126] The plans were postponed in 1974 after state voters failed to approve a bond issue that would have funded the project.[127] By 1976, officials were again seeking to widen I-495 using federal funds.[128] The federal government gave $270 million (equivalent to $1.48 billion in 2021[22]) for the widening of I-495 in the 1970s,[129] but the state government decided in 1978 to divide this funding among several projects.[129][130] The state allocated $80 million (equivalent to $265 million in 2021[22]) to improve medians and widen shoulders on I-495 in Queens.[130] By the 1980s, the stretch of I-495 between I-278 and the Grand Central Parkway was frequently carrying 110 percent of its capacity,[129] and there were frequent accidents.[131] In 1981, officials proposed several improvements for that highway segment, including adding a two-lane grade-separated service road between the two highways, realigning service roads at 69th and 108th streets, and improving entrance and exit ramps.[129]

Lighting and the HOV lanes

Initially, I-495 lacked street lights in Nassau and Suffolk counties.[132][133] As early as 1969, the county executive for Nassau County had advocated for the installation of street lights along a 15-mile (24 km) stretch of the LIE within that county.[133] Despite constant requests from Nassau County officials, no immediate plans were made until 1980, when the first streetlights were installed in eastern Nassau County. The state government planned to add about 1,425 lamps between the Queens–Nassau border and NY 112 (exit 64) since that segment of I-495 was heavily used. East of NY 112, vehicle usage dropped sharply, so no lights were planned.[132] The final streetlights were installed in 2002.[2]

As early as October 1968, state officials had wanted to widen the highway between I-295 and NY 135 from 6 to 10 lanes.[112] In late 1988, the New York state government proposed adding a fourth lane in each direction to I-495 between Jericho and Medford.[134][135] Following the passage of a $3-billion (equivalent to $6.02 billion in 2021[22]) bond issue that year, the state proposed marking the additional lanes as HOV lanes.[136] The state approved the construction of these lanes east of the Cross Island Parkway in 1991.[137] The lanes were built in sections. The first section to open, a 12-mile (19 km) section in western Suffolk County, was opened in May 1994;[138] two additional sections opened in 1998 and 1999.[139] The lanes soon became well known due to a combination of advertising and free publicity in news articles, and they were heavily patronized even outside of peak hours.[140] The lanes were completed on June 30, 2005, at which point they ran from exit 32 in eastern Queens to exit 64 at Medford in Suffolk County. The lanes had cost $880 million (equivalent to $1.19 billion in 2021[22]) in total.[139] NYSDOT officials estimated that, during rush hours, it would take 45 minutes to travel between exits 32 and 64 using the HOV lanes, as opposed to 90 to 120 minutes using the general-purpose lanes.[141]

Construction of the HOV lanes within Queens was delayed due to opposition from local officials and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.[142] The HOV segment in Queens was canceled altogether in 1998, when Governor George Pataki announced that the additional lanes between exits 30 and 32 in Queens would be entrance and exit lanes, rather than HOV lanes.[143] The HOV project would have rebuilt many bridges along I-495 between exits 33 and 40 in Nassau County. As a concession to homeowners, the HOV lanes were narrowed and built within the existing roadbed, and the bridges were largely kept as is.[144]

Late 1990s to present

Starting in 1998, I-495 was rebuilt between exit 15 (Van Dam Street) and exit 22 (Grand Central Parkway).[145] The renovation cost $200 million (equivalent to $315 million in 2021[22]) and entailed renovating the highway's main and service roads, improving bridges, and replacing drains.[2] The service roads for exit 19 were rebuilt between 74th Street and Queens Boulevard. There were also plans to rebuild westbound exit 16 to Greenpoint Avenue in Long Island City.[145]

The state announced a plan to renovate I-495 in the vicinity of Alley Pond Park and the Cross Island Parkway in 1995.[146] In 2000, Pataki and New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani announced that this segment of I-495 between exits 29 and 32, near Alley Pond Park and the Cross Island Parkway, would be rebuilt at a cost of $112 million (equivalent to $170 million in 2021[22]).[147][148][149] The project was announced after the cancelation of the HOV lanes within Queens.[149] Work started in August 2000 and was substantially completed by 2005.[150] The project included the restoration of 12 acres (4.9 ha) within the park, as well as the construction of new ramps to and from the Cross Island Parkway at exit 30.[145] As part of the reconstruction, two cloverleaf ramps were replaced with flyovers, the shoulders in each direction were converted into travel lanes, the westbound exit 31 to Douglaston Parkway was closed, and new collector–distributor ramps were installed east of the Cross Island Parkway interchange.[150][149]

Starting in 2004, NYSDOT examined proposals to reconfigure exit 22 with I-678 and the Grand Central Parkway in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park. These included plans to construct direct ramps between the highways, relocating the service roads of I-495 so the mainline expressway could be widened, and rebuilding the at-grade junction between College Point Boulevard and Horace Harding Expressway.[151] The interchange with Grand Central Parkway was rebuilt from early 2015 to February 2018, with the replacement of the three overpasses carrying I-495 over the parkway. The $55-million (equivalent to $59 million in 2021[22]) reconstruction included extending merge lanes, replacing and adding lighting, and improving drainage structures.[152][153][154]

Service roads and the proposed interchange

As I-495 was being built across Long Island, it was specifically designed to accommodate certain topographical conditions and proposed interchanges. Exit 30 was originally a partial cloverleaf interchange with the Cross Island Parkway, while eastbound exit 30S was for Easthampton Boulevard with a connecting ramp to the southbound Cross Island Parkway. Exit 31 was originally a westbound only interchange for Douglaston Parkway;[155] it was later combined with the exit for Little Neck Parkway. Exit 39A was intended for the proposed extension of the Wantagh State Parkway near Powell Road in Old Westbury. It was intended to be a full Y interchange with an east-to-southbound-only offramp and a north-to-westbound-only onramp running beneath Powell Road.[156][157]

Exit 40 originally had only same-directional offramps under the expressway providing access to realigned sections of NY 25. When exit 41 was originally constructed, it had no south-to-west connecting ramp. Westbound access to the expressway was provided at the nearby exit 40 onramp at NY 25.[158] An alternate design for exit 42 called for it to be similar to the one proposed for NY 135 and the Bethpage State Parkway,[159] and westbound exit 46 was originally a partial cloverleaf.[160][161] Exit 47 was never built; it had been intended for the extension of the Bethpage State Parkway near Washington Avenue in Plainview.[162] The site of exit 47 is now a truck inspection site between exits 46 and 48, which opened in 2006.[163]

The original right-of-ways for the service roads between exits 48 and 49 were intended to weave around the steep Manetto Hills area of the main road, rather than running parallel to the road as it does today. The land between the service road and the main road was reserved for housing developments. The right-of-way for the original westbound service road still weaves through the development on the north side of the road.[164] Exit 49 was originally a cloverleaf interchange with the outer ramps connecting to the service roads at a point closer to NY 110. This was in preparation for NY 110's formerly proposed upgrade into the Broad Hollow Expressway. After the project was canceled in the 1970s, the west-to-northbound onramp was moved to nearby CR 3 (Pinelawn Road), and the original ramp was replaced with a park and ride.

Exit 52 (Commack Road/CR 4) was intended to be moved west to an interchange with the formerly proposed Babylon–Northport Expressway (realigned NY 231) in the vicinity of the two parking areas. These ramps would have been accessible from the service roads. The westbound offramp and service road at exit 54 (Wicks Road/CR 7) originally terminated at the Long Island Motor Parkway, east of Wicks Road. The westbound onramp was squeezed between the northwest corner of the Wicks Road bridge and exit 53. Excessive weaving between exits 52, 53, and 54 caused NYSDOT to combine all three interchanges into one and replace the west-to-southbound offramp to the Sagtikos State Parkway with a flyover ramp.[165] Exit 54 was eliminated during this project.[162] Exit 55A was meant to be a trumpet interchange for the Hauppauge Spur of NY 347, between the Long Island Motor Parkway (exit 55) and NY 111 (exit 56). The service roads were intended to go around the interchange rather than run parallel to the main road. Ramps on the east side of the Long Island Motor Parkway and west side of NY 111 would be eliminated as part of the interchange's construction. Between exits 57 and 58, there was a proposed extension of the Northern State Parkway.[166]

Prior to the construction of the interchange with CR 97 (Nicolls Road), exit 62 was for Morris and Waverly avenues eastbound and Morris Avenue westbound.[167][168] Exit 68 was originally planned to be built as a cloverleaf interchange without collective–distributor roads.[169] Additionally in the 1970s, Suffolk County Department of Public Works proposed an extension of East Main Street in Yaphank (CR 102) that would have terminated at the west end of this interchange.[170]

In the 1960s and 1970s, the Suffolk County Planning Department considered extending CR 55 to the Grumman Calverton Naval Air Base between exits 70 and 71. This would have provided an additional interchange known as exit 70A. Exit 71 itself was intended to be a cloverleaf interchange with CR 94 (Nugent Drive) and the Hamptons Spur of the LIE.[171] After the Hamptons Spur proposal was canceled, the plans for exit 71 were altered to call for a complete diamond interchange.

Unbuilt expansions

Extensions of the expressway

 
The route of I-495, had it received its westward and eastward extensions. The existing segment is shown in black, while the western (Mid-Manhattan Expressway) and eastern (North Fork) extensions are shown in red. The green, pink, and brown lines each represent the different proposed Long Island Sound crossings for I-495.

Across Manhattan

Plans for I-495 called for it to extend across Manhattan on the Mid-Manhattan Expressway (MME, also called the Mid-Manhattan Elevated Expressway) to the Lincoln Tunnel, which it would follow into New Jersey and connect to I-95 in Secaucus. The I-495 designation was assigned to the New Jersey approach to the tunnel in anticipation of the MME being completed.[96] However, the project was canceled and the MME was officially removed from I-495 on January 1, 1970.[172] The New Jersey stretch of I-495 became Route 495 in 1979.[173]

 
Signage for the Lincoln Tunnel on 12th Avenue (NY 9A). This is one of the few remaining signs of the former I-495 to New Jersey.

Manhattan Borough President Samuel Levy first proposed the MME connector in 1936.[174] The plan called for an expressway link crossing Midtown Manhattan near 34th Street, then, as now, a heavily traveled crosstown surface street. The original idea was a pair of two-lane tunnels, the MME connecting the West Side Highway on Hudson River and the FDR Drive on the East River. By 1949, Moses had proposed a six-lane elevated expressway along 30th Street. The expressway was to have two exits, connecting to the West Side Highway and Lincoln Tunnel on the west side of Manhattan and also to the Queens–Midtown Tunnel and FDR Drive on the east side of the island.[175] It would be constructed within a 100-foot-wide (30 m) right-of-way immediately south of 30th Street. The viaduct would require substantial demolition of highrise buildings within Midtown Manhattan. Moses suggested charging tolls on the new roadway, which was estimated to cost $26 million (equivalent to $238 million in 2021[22]) to construct, excluding $23 million (equivalent to $211 million in 2021[22]) in land acquisition costs.[176]

A later proposal had the roadway situated 10 stories above valuable commercial real estate. Air rights above the expressway would be sold and new highrise buildings would be constructed above the expressway; buildings would be constructed below the viaduct as well. One unusual variation involved running the roadway through the sixth and seventh floors of the Empire State Building.[177][178] In 1963, plans for the expressway were finalized, and it received the I-495 designation. Beginning from its elevated connections to 12th Avenue (NY 9A) or the West Side Highway, the MME would mostly follow 30th Street east of Ninth Avenue. The expressway would travel east as a six-lane elevated route, 10 stories above the city streets to allow for commercial development both above and below the skyway deck. At Second Avenue, it would swing north for connections with the FDR Drive. Between First and Second avenues, ramps would be constructed to provide access to the Queens–Midtown Tunnel.[179][180]

In December 1965, Moses canceled his plans for the MME due to opposition from the city government, which wanted to build a crosstown tunnel instead.[181] The MME project was ultimately canceled, and the I-495 designation removed from the expressway on January 1, 1970.[182] In 1971, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller removed state plans for the MME, along with about a dozen other highway plans including I-78 through New York City, of which another crosstown highway known as the Lower Manhattan Expressway (LOMEX) was part.[183]

Across Suffolk County

Long Island, meanwhile, lobbied to extend I-495 east over NY 495. The extension took place in the early 1980s, at which time the NY 495 signs were taken down and I-495 was extended to the east end of the LIE. The section of I-495 in the vicinity of the Lincoln Tunnel was redesignated as NY 495 at this time. The extension of I-495 to Riverhead makes the highway a spur, which should have an odd first digit according to the Interstate Highway System's numbering scheme. Even first digits are usually assigned to bypasses, connectors, and beltways, as I-495 was prior to the 1980s.[2] A proposed Long Island Crossing would have extended the LIE across Long Island Sound to I-95 in either Guilford, Connecticut; Old Saybrook, Connecticut; or Rhode Island via a series of existing and artificial islands, but a lack of funding as well as public opposition led to the demise of these proposals.[184]

CR 48 in Suffolk County was originally intended to become part of the North Fork extension of the LIE.[164][185]

Subway line

A New York City Subway line along the LIE corridor had been proposed in the 1929 and 1939 IND Second System plans as an extension of the BMT Broadway Line east of the 60th Street Tunnel, prior to the construction of the expressway.[186][187] These were the predecessors to a line proposed in 1968 as part of the Program for Action. It would have split from the IND Queens Boulevard Line west of the Woodhaven Boulevard station and go to Kissena Boulevard via a right-of-way parallel and adjacent to the LIE.[188] In Phase I, it would go to Kissena Boulevard at Queens College and ,in Phase II, to Fresh Meadows and Bayside.[186] This "Northeastern Queens" line would have been built in conjunction with the planned widening of the expressway. The subway tracks would have been placed under the expressway or its service roads or in the median of a widened LIE in a similar manner to the Blue Line of the Chicago "L".[188][186][189] It had been previously proposed to run the line from the 63rd Street tunnel under Northern Boulevard to Flushing (near the current Flushing–Main Street station), then south under Kissena and Parsons boulevards to meet with the LIE at Queens College.[190]

The LIE line was approved in July 1968.[191] The line was opposed by many residents of the surrounding communities because it would entail widening I-495, which would necessitate the demolition of nearby homes.[192] By 1973, the final design for the Northeast Queens LIE line was published.[186] The LIE line was canceled later that year because state residents had voted against a $3.5-billion (equivalent to $16.5 billion in 2021[22]) bond measure that would have paid for five subway extensions, including the LIE line. This was the second time that voters declined a bond issue to finance this extension, with the first being on November 2, 1971, for $2.5 billion (equivalent to $13 billion in 2021[22]).[193]

Exit list

CountyLocationmi[194][195]kmExitDestinationsNotes
ManhattanMurray Hill0.000.0034th Street / 35th Street / Second Avenue / 37th Street / Third Avenue / 38th Street / 41st Street – Downtown, Crosstown, UptownWestbound exits from the Queens–Midtown Tunnel
Second Avenue / 34th Street / 40th StreetEastbound entrances to the Queens–Midtown Tunnel
East River1.011.63Queens–Midtown Tunnel (toll)
QueensHunters Point1.432.3013Borden Avenue – Pulaski BridgeEastbound exit and entrance
1.532.4614 
 
NY 25A east (21st Street) – Long Island City
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; western terminus of NY 25A
Long Island City2.093.3615Van Dam Street – Ed Koch Queensboro BridgeWestbound exit and entrance
2.343.7716Hunters Point Avenue / Greenpoint Avenue – Ed Koch Queensboro BridgeWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
2.614.2017W 
 
 
 
I-278 west (Brooklyn–Queens Expressway) to I-95 / 48th Street – Brooklyn, Staten Island
Exits 35A-B on I-278; access via service roads
17E 
 
 
 
  I-278 east (Brooklyn–Queens Expressway) to I-95 – Bronx, LaGuardia Airport
Westbound exit is via exit 17W and 48th Street
Maspeth3.475.5818Maurice AvenueEastbound exit is part of exit 17
Elmhurst4.306.9269th Street / Grand AvenueWestbound exit and eastbound entrance; part of exit 19
5.278.4819  NY 25 (Queens Boulevard) / Woodhaven Boulevard – RockawaysNo eastbound entrance from Woodhaven Boulevard
5.588.9820Junction BoulevardWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Corona6.9111.1221108th StreetWestbound exit is part of exit 22A
7.2511.6722A  Grand Central Parkway – RFK Bridge, Eastern Long IslandSigned eastbound as exits 22A (east) and 22B (west); exits 10E-W on Grand Central Parkway
7.3511.8322B   I-678 (Van Wyck Expressway) / College Point Boulevard – Whitestone Bridge, Kennedy AirportSigned eastbound as exits 22C (I-678 south), 22D (I-678 north), 22E (C.P. Blvd); exits 12A-B on I-678
Flushing8.4513.6023Main Street
9.1014.6524Kissena BoulevardEastbound access to 164th Street
Fresh Meadows10.0216.1325Utopia Parkway / 164th Street / 188th Street – St. John's UniversitySigned for 188th Street eastbound and 164th Street westbound
11.0417.7726Francis Lewis BoulevardEastbound exit and westbound entrance
Bayside11.4318.3927  
 
 
 
I-295 (Clearview Expressway) to I-95 / Grand Central Parkway – Bronx
Signed as exits 27S (south) and 27N (north); exits 4E-W on I-295
11.9319.2028Oceania Street / Francis Lewis BoulevardWestbound exit and eastbound entrance; also serves 188th Street
12.3119.8129Springfield Boulevard
12.9120.7830East Hampton Boulevard / Douglaston ParkwayEastbound exit only
Oakland Gardens13.2721.3631S 
 
  Cross Island Parkway south – Kennedy Airport
Exits 30E-W on Cross Island Parkway
31N 
 
Cross Island Parkway north – Whitestone Bridge
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
Little Neck14.2522.9332Little Neck Parkway / Douglaston ParkwayNo eastbound signage for Douglaston Parkway
NassauLake Success15.4324.8333Lakeville Road (CR 11) / Community Drive (CR 11A) – Great Neck
HOV 2+ Lane eastWestern terminus of HOV lane
North Hills16.3726.3434New Hyde Park Road (CR 5B)
17.5728.2835Shelter Rock Road (CR 8) – ManhassetWestbound exit is via exit 36
18.4329.6636Searingtown Road (CR 101) – Port Washington
Roslyn Heights18.9530.5037Willis Avenue – Mineola, Roslyn
East Hills20.1432.4138 
 
 
 
 
Northern State Parkway east to Meadowbrook State Parkway south – Hauppauge, Jones Beach
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; exit 29A on Northern Parkway
East HillsOld Westbury
village line
20.3132.6939Glen Cove Road (CR 1) – Hempstead, Glen Cove
Jericho24.0738.7440  NY 25 (Jericho Turnpike) – Mineola, SyossetSigned as exits 40W (west) and 40E (east)
25.2340.6041   NY 106 / NY 107 (N Broadway) – Hicksville, Oyster BaySigned as exits 41S (south) and 41N (north)
26.0541.9242  Northern State Parkway – New York, HauppaugeSame-directional exit ramps only; entrance ramps located west of exit 46
Syosset43ARobbins LaneWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
27.0743.5643South Oyster Bay Road (CR 9) – Bethpage, Syosset
SyossetWoodbury line27.8344.7944  NY 135 – Seaford, SyossetSigned as exits 44S (south) and 44N (north) eastbound; exits 13E-W on NY 135
Woodbury28.1745.3445Manetto Hill Road – Plainview, WoodburyEastbound exit and westbound entrance
Plainview28.9546.5946Sunnyside Boulevard – Plainview
29.6547.72Truck inspection station (eastbound)
NassauSuffolk
county line
PlainviewMelville
hamlet line
29.6847.7748Round Swamp Road (CR 110) – Old Bethpage, Farmingdale
SuffolkMelville31.8251.2149  NY 110 – Amityville, HuntingtonSigned as exits 49S (south) and 49N (north)
MelvilleDix Hills line34.2555.1250Bagatelle Road – Dix Hills, Wyandanch
Dix Hills35.8757.7351  NY 231 – Babylon, Northport
37.0059.55Rest Area & Long Island Welcome Center (eastbound)
38.5662.0652  CR 4 (Commack Road) – North Babylon, CommackWestbound exit is part of exit 53
BrentwoodCommack line39.2863.2253  Sagtikos State Parkway – Bay Shore, Kings ParkExits S1E-W on Sagtikos Parkway
Brentwood54  CR 7 (Wicks Road)Now an unnumbered interchange via exit 53
BrentwoodHauppauge line41.7267.1455  CR 67 (Motor Parkway) – Central Islip
Hauppauge42.6668.6556  NY 111 – Islip, Smithtown
Islandia44.3071.2957  NY 454 – Patchogue, Commack
45.6473.4558Old Nichols Road – Central Islip, Nesconset
Ronkonkoma47.5076.4459  CR 93 (Ocean Avenue) – Oakdale, Ronkonkoma
Lake Ronkonkoma48.1977.5560CR 29 (Ronkonkoma Avenue) – Lake Ronkonkoma, Sayville
Holbrook49.6279.8661  CR 19 (Patchogue–Holbrook Road) – Patchogue, Holbrook
Holtsville51.2482.4662  CR 97 (Nicolls Road) – Stony Brook, Blue Point
HoltsvilleFarmingville
Medford tripoint
53.0485.3663  CR 83 (North Ocean Avenue) – Mount Sinai, Patchogue
Medford54.2987.3764  NY 112 – Patchogue, Port Jefferson
HOV 2+ Lane westEastern terminus of HOV lane
55.4489.2265  CR 16 (Horse Block Road) – Centereach, Shirley
Yaphank57.4192.3966  CR 101 (Sills Road) – East Patchogue, Yaphank
58.5594.2367  CR 21 (Yaphank Avenue) – Yaphank, Brookhaven
60.1796.8368  CR 46 (William Floyd Parkway) – Wading River, ShirleySigned as exits 68S (south) and 68N (north) westbound
Manorville64.05103.0869Wading River Road (CR 25) – Wading River, Center Moriches
65.25105.0170 
 
CR 111 south – Manorville, Eastport
Northern terminus of CR 111
ManorvilleCalverton line69.27111.4871 
 
NY 24 south (CR 94) – Hampton Bays, Calverton
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; northbound terminus of NY 24
Calverton70.75113.8672  NY 25 (Middle Country Road) – Riverhead, CalvertonEastbound exit and westbound entrance
71.02114.3073 
 
CR 58 east (Old Country Road) – Greenport, Orient
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Mid-Manhattan Expressway (canceled)

If built, the MME would have had the following exits:[196]

mikmDestinationsNotes
0.000.00 
 
I-495 west (Lincoln Tunnel)
Continuation into New Jersey
0.200.32  NY 9A (West Side Elevated Highway)
0.400.646th Avenue – Times Square / Madison Square Park
1.502.41  FDR Drive
1.652.66 
 
I-495 east (Queens–Midtown Tunnel)
Continuation into Queens
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

  • 495 Productions - Reality show production company named for the highway
  • L.I.E. - 2001 film whose title is based on the initials of the highway

References

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External links

KML is from Wikidata
  • Interstate 495 at Alps' Roads • New York Routes
  • Interstate 495 - New York (AARoads.com)
  • I-495 (Greater New York Roads)
  • Long Island's Official Online Community & LIE Relief Site March 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine

interstate, york, interstate, commonly, known, long, island, expressway, auxiliary, interstate, highway, state, york, jointly, maintained, york, state, department, transportation, nysdot, york, city, department, transportation, nycdot, bridges, tunnels, tbta, . Interstate 495 I 495 commonly known as the Long Island Expressway LIE is an auxiliary Interstate Highway in the US state of New York It is jointly maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation NYSDOT the New York City Department of Transportation NYCDOT MTA Bridges and Tunnels TBTA and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey PANYNJ Interstate 495Long Island ExpresswayMap of Long Island with I 495 highlighted in red and service routes in pinkRoute informationAuxiliary route of I 95Maintained by NYSDOT NYCDOT TBTA and PANYNJLength66 38 mi 1 106 83 km Existed1958 2 presentRestrictionsNo hazardous goods allowed inside the Queens Midtown TunnelMajor junctionsWest endQueens Midtown Tunnel portal in Murray HillMajor intersectionsI 278 in Long Island City Grand Central Parkway in Flushing Meadows Corona Park I 678 in Flushing I 295 in Bayside Cross Island Parkway in Alley Pond Park Northern State Parkway in East Hills NY 135 in Syosset Sagtikos State Parkway Sunken Meadow State Parkway in CommackEast endNY 25 CR 58 in CalvertonLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesNew York Queens Nassau SuffolkHighway systemInterstate Highway SystemMain Auxiliary Suffixed Business FutureNew York HighwaysInterstate US State Reference Parkways I 490 NY 531Spanning approximately 66 miles 106 km along a west east axis I 495 traverses Long Island from the western portal of the Queens Midtown Tunnel in the New York City borough of Manhattan to County Route 58 CR 58 in Riverhead in the east I 495 intersects with I 295 in Bayside Queens through which it connects with I 95 The 2017 route log erroneously shows the section of highway between I 278 in Long Island City and I 678 in Corona as New York State Route 495 NY 495 3 The LIE designation despite being commonly applied to I 495 in full technically refers to the stretch of highway in Nassau and Suffolk counties The section from the Queens Midtown Tunnel to Queens Boulevard is known as the Queens Midtown Expressway and the section between Queens Boulevard and the Queens Nassau county line is known as the Horace Harding Expressway The service roads which run parallel to either side of the expressway in Queens are signed as Borden Avenue and Queens Midtown Expressway and as Horace Harding Expressway and Horace Harding Boulevard from the Queens Nassau county line to Sills Road they are designated as the unsigned New York State Route 906A NY 906A and New York State Route 906B NY 906B Contents 1 Route description 1 1 New York City 1 2 Nassau and Suffolk counties 1 2 1 HOV restrictions 2 History 2 1 Construction of Queens segment 2 1 1 Queens Midtown Expressway 2 1 2 Horace Harding Expressway 2 2 Extension to Long Island 2 2 1 Nassau County 2 2 2 Suffolk County 2 3 Modifications 2 3 1 Additional lanes in Queens 2 3 2 Lighting and the HOV lanes 2 3 3 Late 1990s to present 2 4 Service roads and the proposed interchange 3 Unbuilt expansions 3 1 Extensions of the expressway 3 1 1 Across Manhattan 3 1 2 Across Suffolk County 3 2 Subway line 4 Exit list 4 1 Mid Manhattan Expressway canceled 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description EditNew York City Edit The expressway begins at the western end of the Queens Midtown Tunnel in the Murray Hill section of Manhattan The route heads eastward passing under the FDR Drive and East River as it proceeds through the TBTA maintained tunnel to Queens Once on Long Island the highway passes through the tunnel s former toll plaza and becomes the Queens Midtown Expressway as it travels through the western portion of the borough A mile 1 6 km after entering Queens I 495 meets I 278 Brooklyn Queens Expressway at exit 17 then briefly becomes a two level 12 lane highway traveling across Calvary Cemetery Merging into one level at Maurice Avenue I 495 continues through the neighborhoods of Maspeth Elmhurst and Rego Park East of NY 25 Queens Boulevard in Rego Park I 495 becomes the Horace Harding Expressway I 495 heads northeast through Corona to Flushing Meadows Corona Park intersecting both the Grand Central Parkway and the Van Wyck Expressway I 678 within the park limits Because the interchanges in this area are close together the highway employs two sets of collector distributor roads through this area one between 69th and 99th streets and one between the Grand Central Parkway and I 678 4 I 495 in Queens with heavy traffic The LIE is locally known as the world s longest parking lot 5 The expressway continues east as a six lane highway veering to the southeast to bypass Kissena Park before curving back to the northeast to meet the Clearview Expressway I 295 at the northern edge of Cunningham Park Past I 295 I 495 passes by the Queens Giant the oldest and tallest tree in the New York metropolitan area The tree located just north of I 495 in Alley Pond Park is visible from the highway s westbound lanes To the east the freeway connects to the Cross Island Parkway at exit 31 in the park prior to exiting the New York City limits crossing into Nassau County and becoming the LIE 4 Although the LIE name officially begins outside the New York City border almost all locals and most signage use the Long Island Expressway or the LIE to refer the entire length of I 495 6 The service roads of I 495 are called Borden Avenue and Queens Midtown Expressway between I 278 and Queens Boulevard and they are known as Horace Harding Expressway between Queens Boulevard and the Nassau County line 4 The Horace Harding Expressway section follows the path of Horace Harding Boulevard also previously called Nassau Boulevard 7 8 which was named for J Horace Harding 1863 1929 a finance magnate who directed the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad and the New York Municipal Railways System Harding used his influence to promote the development of Long Island s roadways lending strong support to Robert Moses s great parkway plan Harding also urged construction of a highway from Queens Boulevard to the Nassau County Line in order to provide better access to Oakland Country Club where he was a member After his death the boulevard he helped build was named for him Horace Harding was not related to the former President Warren G Harding 9 Nassau and Suffolk counties Edit Heading into Nassau County the expressway contains a high occupancy vehicle HOV lane in each direction which begins at exit 33 and runs to central Suffolk County I 495 and the adjacent Northern State Parkway which parallels the LIE through the county meet three times although they actually cross only once at exit 46 near the county line I 495 interchanges with the Seaford Oyster Bay Expressway NY 135 In Suffolk County the LIE continues its eight lane configuration with the HOV lane to exit 64 NY 112 At this point the HOV lane ends and the highway narrows to six lanes additionally the concrete Jersey barrier gives way to a wide grassy median the asphalt road surface is replaced by a concrete surface and the expressway is no longer illuminated by streetlights reflecting the road s location in a more rural area of Long Island 4 I 495 in Nassau County From NY 112 east the expressway runs through more rural woodland areas on its trek towards Riverhead Exit 68 William Floyd Parkway marks the terminus of the service roads which are fragmented by this point Exit 70 CR 111 in Manorville is the last full interchange as it is the last interchange that allows eastbound traffic on and the first to allow westbound off After exit 71 NY 24 Nugent Drive the expressway begins to narrow as it approaches its eastern terminus Until 2008 just before exit 72 NY 25 the three eastbound lanes narrowed to two which in turn narrowed almost immediately to a single lane at exit 73 which lies 800 feet 240 m east of exit 72 As of 2008 update of the two lanes one lane is designated for exit 72 and the other is for exit 73 which ends the squeeze into a single lane that formerly existed at exit 73 At exit 73 all traffic along the expressway is diverted onto a ramp leading to eastbound CR 58 marking the east end of the route 4 HOV restrictions Edit There is one HOV lane in each direction in the median of the highway between exit 32 Little Neck Parkway near the Queens Nassau border to exit 64 NY 112 in central Suffolk County 2 From 6 00 am to 10 00 am and from 3 00 pm to 8 00 pm Monday through Friday the HOV lanes are limited to busses motorcycles and Clean Pass vehicles without occupancy requirement and passenger vehicles with at least two occupants Trailers and commercial trucks are always prohibited therein 10 Vehicles are only allowed to enter and exit the lanes at designated junctions 11 Originally the HOV lanes were restricted to passenger vehicles with at least two occupants Starting in 2006 drivers of certain hybrid vehicle models were allowed to use the lanes even if they were driving alone 12 By 2014 over one third of all traffic on the LIE between exits 32 and 64 used the HOV lane during peak hours NYSDOT contemplated restricting the lanes to passenger vehicles with at least three occupants but ultimately decided against this change 11 History EditI 495 was constructed in stages from 1940 to 1972 13 Its completion was intended to alleviate congestion along local roads in Long Island 13 14 Most of the highway in Queens was built as part of the Interstate Highway System with 90 percent funding from the federal government and 10 percent from the New York state government The portion of the highway in Nassau and Suffolk counties was built with equal funding from the federal and state governments 15 Construction of Queens segment Edit Queens Midtown Expressway EditThe first piece of what is now I 495 the Queens Midtown Tunnel linking Manhattan and Queens was opened to traffic on November 15 1940 16 The highway connecting the tunnel to Laurel Hill Boulevard was built around the same time and named the Midtown Highway 17 18 The tunnel the Midtown Highway and the segment of Laurel Hill Boulevard between the highway and Queens Boulevard all became part of a realigned NY 24 in the mid 1940s 18 19 Parts of this highway were built on the right of way of a streetcar line that extended from Hunters Point to southern Flushing 20 In the 1940s city planner Robert Moses proposed the construction of a system of highways that would traverse the New York City area 21 The plan was to cost 800 million equivalent to 12 3 billion in 2021 22 and in February 1945 the city agreed to pay 60 million equivalent to 725 million in 2021 22 of that cost 23 That November the city state and federal governments agreed to fund several new highways in New York City Among these was the Queens Midtown Expressway which was to cost 10 62 million equivalent to 128 million in 2021 22 24 Crossing New Calvary CemeteryPlans did not proceed further until March 1951 when Moses proposed constructing the six lane Queens Midtown Expressway between Laurel Hill and Queens boulevards This was part of a larger 30 million equivalent to 253 million in 2021 22 plan that also included the Horace Harding Expressway 25 26 By October 1952 the cost of the two projects had increased to 55 million equivalent to 457 million in 2021 22 of which the Queens Midtown Expressway was to cost 21 million equivalent to 174 million in 2021 22 27 To help fund the Queens Midtown Expressway Moses reallocated funding from two other highway projects in early 1953 28 That October the New York City Planning Commission approved a minor revision to the Queens Midtown Expressway s route in Maspeth and South Elmhurst thus reducing land acquisition costs by 769 000 equivalent to 6 31 million in 2021 22 29 The city government awarded the first construction contracts for the highway in July 1953 30 The first section of the highway to open was the 1 1 mile 1 8 km section between Laurel Hill Boulevard and Maurice Avenue which opened on February 24 1955 The six lane highway ran through Calvary Cemetery 31 32 Afterward the old Midtown Highway became known as the Queens Midtown Expressway 33 34 The entire highway from Laurel Hill Boulevard by this point upgraded into the Brooklyn Queens Expressway to the junction of Queens Boulevard NY 24 and NY 25 and Horace Harding Boulevard NY 25D opened on November 5 1955 This 3 2 mile 5 1 km section of the LIE had cost 29 5 million equivalent to 236 million in 2021 22 and was funded by the TBTA of which Moses was chair 35 36 NY 24 initially remained routed on Laurel Hill and Queens boulevards 37 Horace Harding Expressway Edit The LIE was built over much of Horace Harding Boulevard within eastern Queens and Power House Road within western Nassau County Prior to the LIE s construction the route was designated as NY 25D As part of his March 1951 proposal for the Queens Midtown Expressway Moses proposed widening an 8 5 mile 13 7 km stretch of Horace Harding Boulevard between Queens Boulevard and the Queens Nassau border from 160 to 260 feet 49 to 79 m 25 26 That May the New York City Board of Estimate approved the widening of Horace Harding Boulevard and Power House Road and constructing an expressway in the road s median at a cost of 25 million equivalent to 211 million in 2021 22 38 The project s cost had increased to 34 million equivalent to 282 million in 2021 22 by October 1952 27 The same year the New York State Department of Public Works later modified the highway s route in the vicinity of Little Neck Parkway near the Queens Nassau border because of complaints from residents At Little Neck Parkway Horace Harding Boulevard continued northeast and then eastward whereas the LIE was to take a more southerly path 39 I 495 as seen from the intersection of Horace Harding Expressway and Main Street Work began on the Horace Harding Expressway in 1955 40 However it soon encountered delays because of weather conditions construction worker strikes and difficulties in building across existing roads and swampy land 40 41 Business owners along Horace Harding Boulevard complained that the project was reducing their income and isolating their businesses from surrounding neighborhoods 42 A 1 5 mile 2 4 km section of the LIE near Alley Pond Park in eastern Queens between Cloverdale Boulevard in Bayside and Little Neck Parkway officially opened on September 25 1957 43 44 The highway segment reduced the need for cars to use West Alley Road a winding road that crossed the park 43 45 Construction on the section between Queens Boulevard in Elmhurst and Parsons Boulevard in Pomonok was several years behind schedule 46 but this section was open by mid 1959 47 For several months the highway abruptly terminated at Parsons Boulevard and barriers funneled traffic onto the service road the highway was extended to Peck Avenue in Fresh Meadows in late 1959 48 The section of the LIE west of the Clearview Expressway was designated as I 495 in October 1958 2 The interchange with the Clearview Expressway I 295 in Bayside was the last section of the LIE in New York City to be completed Construction on that interchange had started in January 1959 49 50 By early 1960 the LIE saw more than 120 000 vehicles per day although congestion frequently built up at Bayside The marshy land in the vicinity of Flushing Meadows Corona Park caused cracking on the expressway s pavement 51 The 0 9 mile 1 4 km segment of the LIE near the Clearview interchange between Peck Avenue and 224th Street officially opened on August 12 1960 52 The interchange itself which contained eight ramps and eight overpasses was not open at the time because I 295 was still under construction 49 50 Between 1961 and 1963 in advance of the 1964 New York World s Fair the NYSDOT built service roads along I 495 in Flushing Meadows Corona Park 53 and it constructed a partial interchange with I 678 54 55 Originally I 495 s westbound and eastbound roadways in Queens were separated by a median measuring three to eight feet 0 91 to 2 44 m wide with a chainlink fence and emergency telephones 56 In 1960 state officials announced that they would install a Jersey barrier in the median between 207th Street and the Queens Nassau border 57 The remainder of the highway in Queens still contained chainlink fences which were expensive to repair and could not prevent head on collisions 58 In 1970 work commenced on a two year project to install a Jersey barrier in the median of I 495 from 108th Street to Little Neck Parkway replacing a 12 foot wide 3 7 m median 59 Extension to Long Island Edit Plans for a 90 mile 140 km highway the Central Motor Expressway extending east to Riverhead in Suffolk County Long Island were first reported by regional newspaper Newsday in late 1953 60 This length included the Queens Midtown Expressway as well as the section of the Brooklyn Queens Expressway south of the junction with the Queens Midtown Expressway 60 61 Suffolk County supervisors endorsed the plans soon after they were announced 62 In 1954 New York State Governor Thomas E Dewey approved plans for the LIE extending 64 miles 103 km between the Queens Nassau border and Riverhead 63 64 Moses and New York City mayor Robert F Wagner Jr said that the proposed highway would not charge tolls regardless of whether the expressway received federal funding under the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1952 65 From the outset a minimum speed limit of 40 mph 64 km h was enforced on the segment of the LIE in Nassau and Suffolk counties 66 New York State Route 495LocationLong IslandExisted1958 1983Nassau County EditOn September 30 1958 the first section of the LIE outside New York City a five mile 8 0 km segment from the Queens Nassau county line to Willis Avenue in Roslyn Heights officially opened to traffic 67 68 The section of the LIE between Roslyn and the Nassau Suffolk border was initially controversial at a public hearing in late 1957 100 homeowners criticized the alignment of that section of highway 69 By early the next year work had commenced on the section of the LIE between Guinea Woods Road now Glen Cove Road and Jericho Turnpike 70 The New York state government awarded a construction contract for the section of the LIE between Jericho Turnpike and South Oyster Bay Road in June 1959 71 This was followed in November 1959 by a contract for the section between South Oyster Bay Road and the Suffolk County border 72 73 The LIE in Roslyn Heights looking west from Parkside Drive in 2021 This segment of the LIE between Willis Avenue and Glen Cove Road opened in 1959 The LIE was extended to Glen Cove Road in Roslyn on September 29 1959 with ramps to and from the Northern State Parkway 74 75 By this time the LIE was continuous between Bayside and Roslyn 74 After the Clearview interchange opened the LIE was continuous between Manhattan and Roslyn and it was designated in its entirety as NY 24 The old surface alignment of NY 24 south of the expressway became NY 24A 76 The LIE was extended east from Glen Cove Road to NY 106 NY 107 in Jericho on October 8 1960 77 78 and was then opened to South Oyster Bay Road in Syosset in December 1960 79 By 1962 the NY 24 designation was removed from the LIE and reassigned to its former surface alignment to the south while the portion of the freeway east of the Clearview Expressway became NY 495 and later I 495 80 81 Suffolk County Edit By 1958 it was estimated that the entire highway would not be completed until 1970 41 Real estate developers believed that the LIE s construction was not proceeding quickly enough 82 and Suffolk County s supervisors also advocated for the highway to be completed as soon as possible 83 84 Bidding for the first section of the LIE in Suffolk County from the Nassau border to NY 110 in Melville began in February 1960 85 Supporters of the highway believed that its completion would reduce traffic on Long Island s west east arterial roads 14 Over the next decade the completion of the LIE in Suffolk County spurred significant population growth in communities along its route 86 Over one third of the LIE within Suffolk County a 15 mile 24 km section from Melville to Veterans Memorial Highway now NY 454 near Islandia was opened to traffic between 1962 and 1963 81 87 A five mile 8 0 km extension of the LIE from Oyster Bay Road to NY 110 opened in August 1962 bringing the highway into Suffolk County 88 89 The rest of the highway to Islandia was constructed simultaneously 90 A 3 5 mile 5 6 km extension from NY 110 to Deer Park Road opened in October 1962 91 followed the next month by another 2 7 mile 4 3 km segment from Deer Park Road to Commack Road 92 93 A further 6 5 mile 10 5 km extension opened to NY 454 in August 1963 94 95 Three more sections of the LIE from Islandia to exit 71 near Riverhead were completed in 1969 and 1970 96 97 A discontinuous section of highway between William Floyd Parkway and exit 71 opened in June 1969 98 99 and was extended west to Holbrook in December 1969 100 101 A six mile 9 7 km segment between Horse Brook Road and Holbrook connecting the two sections of the LIE continued for several months 102 103 After this section opened on June 9 1970 the LIE was continuous between Manhattan and Riverhead 104 There were delays in constructing the easternmost two miles 3 2 km of the LIE from exit 71 to CR 58 99 The extension to CR 58 opened to traffic on June 28 1972 105 13 Modifications Edit Officials had originally predicted that the LIE would carry 80 000 vehicles per day by 1970 15 In part because of induced demand the highway was ineffective in reducing traffic By 1962 the LIE had reached its peak capacity carrying between 125 000 and 150 000 vehicles per day 14 Officials considered constructing four reversible lanes above the existing highway in Queens 106 107 this plan would have cost about 100 million equivalent to 696 million in 2021 22 108 109 New York City s commissioner of highways also proposed constructing a monorail to alleviate congestion on I 495 in Queens 110 These plans did not come to fruition and by the late 1960s average rush hour speeds were about five miles per hour 8 0 km h 15 66 The Queens section of I 495 alone carried 180 000 vehicles per day 15 Major chokepoints existed at the interchanges with I 278 the Grand Central Parkway I 678 I 295 and the Cross Island Parkway The westbound roadway between Junction Boulevard and 108th Street also suffered from severe congestion 66 as did the eastbound roadway near Springfield Boulevard 111 By 1972 the highway was being used by over 150 000 vehicles a day 13 State officials announced plans to designate the segment of the LIE east of I 295 as an Interstate highway following the passage of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1968 112 113 The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials did not formally extend the I 495 designation from New York City to Riverhead until May 1984 114 Subsequently the entirety of the LIE was designated as I 495 115 Additional lanes in Queens Edit The ramp from the westbound I 495 to the westbound I 278 in Queens was so congested that a traffic light was installed on that ramp in 1962 116 State officials planned to reconstruct the interchange although the project was delayed for several years In addition they planned to build a six lane viaduct above the existing highway between I 278 and 58th Street which would carry traffic to and from the Queens Midtown Tunnel 117 118 In 1966 the New York City Board of Estimate approved plans to reconstruct the interchange with I 278 as a cloverleaf interchange 119 the project was planned to cost around 70 million equivalent to 453 million in 2021 22 and take three years 66 15 State officials awarded a contract for the project in June 1967 120 and work began that October 121 A ramp from the eastbound I 495 to I 278 opened in 1968 122 Starting in 1971 one lane of I 495 between the Queens Midtown Tunnel and Maurice Avenue was converted to a westbound HOV and bus lane during the morning rush hour 123 124 Plans to widen I 495 between I 278 and I 678 were announced by New York City mayor John Lindsay in January 1968 Two additional local lanes would be built beside the three existing lanes in each direction 125 126 The plans were postponed in 1974 after state voters failed to approve a bond issue that would have funded the project 127 By 1976 officials were again seeking to widen I 495 using federal funds 128 The federal government gave 270 million equivalent to 1 48 billion in 2021 22 for the widening of I 495 in the 1970s 129 but the state government decided in 1978 to divide this funding among several projects 129 130 The state allocated 80 million equivalent to 265 million in 2021 22 to improve medians and widen shoulders on I 495 in Queens 130 By the 1980s the stretch of I 495 between I 278 and the Grand Central Parkway was frequently carrying 110 percent of its capacity 129 and there were frequent accidents 131 In 1981 officials proposed several improvements for that highway segment including adding a two lane grade separated service road between the two highways realigning service roads at 69th and 108th streets and improving entrance and exit ramps 129 Lighting and the HOV lanes Edit Initially I 495 lacked street lights in Nassau and Suffolk counties 132 133 As early as 1969 the county executive for Nassau County had advocated for the installation of street lights along a 15 mile 24 km stretch of the LIE within that county 133 Despite constant requests from Nassau County officials no immediate plans were made until 1980 when the first streetlights were installed in eastern Nassau County The state government planned to add about 1 425 lamps between the Queens Nassau border and NY 112 exit 64 since that segment of I 495 was heavily used East of NY 112 vehicle usage dropped sharply so no lights were planned 132 The final streetlights were installed in 2002 2 As early as October 1968 state officials had wanted to widen the highway between I 295 and NY 135 from 6 to 10 lanes 112 In late 1988 the New York state government proposed adding a fourth lane in each direction to I 495 between Jericho and Medford 134 135 Following the passage of a 3 billion equivalent to 6 02 billion in 2021 22 bond issue that year the state proposed marking the additional lanes as HOV lanes 136 The state approved the construction of these lanes east of the Cross Island Parkway in 1991 137 The lanes were built in sections The first section to open a 12 mile 19 km section in western Suffolk County was opened in May 1994 138 two additional sections opened in 1998 and 1999 139 The lanes soon became well known due to a combination of advertising and free publicity in news articles and they were heavily patronized even outside of peak hours 140 The lanes were completed on June 30 2005 at which point they ran from exit 32 in eastern Queens to exit 64 at Medford in Suffolk County The lanes had cost 880 million equivalent to 1 19 billion in 2021 22 in total 139 NYSDOT officials estimated that during rush hours it would take 45 minutes to travel between exits 32 and 64 using the HOV lanes as opposed to 90 to 120 minutes using the general purpose lanes 141 Construction of the HOV lanes within Queens was delayed due to opposition from local officials and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation 142 The HOV segment in Queens was canceled altogether in 1998 when Governor George Pataki announced that the additional lanes between exits 30 and 32 in Queens would be entrance and exit lanes rather than HOV lanes 143 The HOV project would have rebuilt many bridges along I 495 between exits 33 and 40 in Nassau County As a concession to homeowners the HOV lanes were narrowed and built within the existing roadbed and the bridges were largely kept as is 144 Late 1990s to present Edit Starting in 1998 I 495 was rebuilt between exit 15 Van Dam Street and exit 22 Grand Central Parkway 145 The renovation cost 200 million equivalent to 315 million in 2021 22 and entailed renovating the highway s main and service roads improving bridges and replacing drains 2 The service roads for exit 19 were rebuilt between 74th Street and Queens Boulevard There were also plans to rebuild westbound exit 16 to Greenpoint Avenue in Long Island City 145 The state announced a plan to renovate I 495 in the vicinity of Alley Pond Park and the Cross Island Parkway in 1995 146 In 2000 Pataki and New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani announced that this segment of I 495 between exits 29 and 32 near Alley Pond Park and the Cross Island Parkway would be rebuilt at a cost of 112 million equivalent to 170 million in 2021 22 147 148 149 The project was announced after the cancelation of the HOV lanes within Queens 149 Work started in August 2000 and was substantially completed by 2005 150 The project included the restoration of 12 acres 4 9 ha within the park as well as the construction of new ramps to and from the Cross Island Parkway at exit 30 145 As part of the reconstruction two cloverleaf ramps were replaced with flyovers the shoulders in each direction were converted into travel lanes the westbound exit 31 to Douglaston Parkway was closed and new collector distributor ramps were installed east of the Cross Island Parkway interchange 150 149 Starting in 2004 NYSDOT examined proposals to reconfigure exit 22 with I 678 and the Grand Central Parkway in Flushing Meadows Corona Park These included plans to construct direct ramps between the highways relocating the service roads of I 495 so the mainline expressway could be widened and rebuilding the at grade junction between College Point Boulevard and Horace Harding Expressway 151 The interchange with Grand Central Parkway was rebuilt from early 2015 to February 2018 with the replacement of the three overpasses carrying I 495 over the parkway The 55 million equivalent to 59 million in 2021 22 reconstruction included extending merge lanes replacing and adding lighting and improving drainage structures 152 153 154 Service roads and the proposed interchange Edit As I 495 was being built across Long Island it was specifically designed to accommodate certain topographical conditions and proposed interchanges Exit 30 was originally a partial cloverleaf interchange with the Cross Island Parkway while eastbound exit 30S was for Easthampton Boulevard with a connecting ramp to the southbound Cross Island Parkway Exit 31 was originally a westbound only interchange for Douglaston Parkway 155 it was later combined with the exit for Little Neck Parkway Exit 39A was intended for the proposed extension of the Wantagh State Parkway near Powell Road in Old Westbury It was intended to be a full Y interchange with an east to southbound only offramp and a north to westbound only onramp running beneath Powell Road 156 157 Exit 40 originally had only same directional offramps under the expressway providing access to realigned sections of NY 25 When exit 41 was originally constructed it had no south to west connecting ramp Westbound access to the expressway was provided at the nearby exit 40 onramp at NY 25 158 An alternate design for exit 42 called for it to be similar to the one proposed for NY 135 and the Bethpage State Parkway 159 and westbound exit 46 was originally a partial cloverleaf 160 161 Exit 47 was never built it had been intended for the extension of the Bethpage State Parkway near Washington Avenue in Plainview 162 The site of exit 47 is now a truck inspection site between exits 46 and 48 which opened in 2006 163 The original right of ways for the service roads between exits 48 and 49 were intended to weave around the steep Manetto Hills area of the main road rather than running parallel to the road as it does today The land between the service road and the main road was reserved for housing developments The right of way for the original westbound service road still weaves through the development on the north side of the road 164 Exit 49 was originally a cloverleaf interchange with the outer ramps connecting to the service roads at a point closer to NY 110 This was in preparation for NY 110 s formerly proposed upgrade into the Broad Hollow Expressway After the project was canceled in the 1970s the west to northbound onramp was moved to nearby CR 3 Pinelawn Road and the original ramp was replaced with a park and ride Exit 52 Commack Road CR 4 was intended to be moved west to an interchange with the formerly proposed Babylon Northport Expressway realigned NY 231 in the vicinity of the two parking areas These ramps would have been accessible from the service roads The westbound offramp and service road at exit 54 Wicks Road CR 7 originally terminated at the Long Island Motor Parkway east of Wicks Road The westbound onramp was squeezed between the northwest corner of the Wicks Road bridge and exit 53 Excessive weaving between exits 52 53 and 54 caused NYSDOT to combine all three interchanges into one and replace the west to southbound offramp to the Sagtikos State Parkway with a flyover ramp 165 Exit 54 was eliminated during this project 162 Exit 55A was meant to be a trumpet interchange for the Hauppauge Spur of NY 347 between the Long Island Motor Parkway exit 55 and NY 111 exit 56 The service roads were intended to go around the interchange rather than run parallel to the main road Ramps on the east side of the Long Island Motor Parkway and west side of NY 111 would be eliminated as part of the interchange s construction Between exits 57 and 58 there was a proposed extension of the Northern State Parkway 166 Prior to the construction of the interchange with CR 97 Nicolls Road exit 62 was for Morris and Waverly avenues eastbound and Morris Avenue westbound 167 168 Exit 68 was originally planned to be built as a cloverleaf interchange without collective distributor roads 169 Additionally in the 1970s Suffolk County Department of Public Works proposed an extension of East Main Street in Yaphank CR 102 that would have terminated at the west end of this interchange 170 In the 1960s and 1970s the Suffolk County Planning Department considered extending CR 55 to the Grumman Calverton Naval Air Base between exits 70 and 71 This would have provided an additional interchange known as exit 70A Exit 71 itself was intended to be a cloverleaf interchange with CR 94 Nugent Drive and the Hamptons Spur of the LIE 171 After the Hamptons Spur proposal was canceled the plans for exit 71 were altered to call for a complete diamond interchange Unbuilt expansions EditExtensions of the expressway Edit The route of I 495 had it received its westward and eastward extensions The existing segment is shown in black while the western Mid Manhattan Expressway and eastern North Fork extensions are shown in red The green pink and brown lines each represent the different proposed Long Island Sound crossings for I 495 This map viewtalkedit Across Manhattan EditPlans for I 495 called for it to extend across Manhattan on the Mid Manhattan Expressway MME also called the Mid Manhattan Elevated Expressway to the Lincoln Tunnel which it would follow into New Jersey and connect to I 95 in Secaucus The I 495 designation was assigned to the New Jersey approach to the tunnel in anticipation of the MME being completed 96 However the project was canceled and the MME was officially removed from I 495 on January 1 1970 172 The New Jersey stretch of I 495 became Route 495 in 1979 173 Signage for the Lincoln Tunnel on 12th Avenue NY 9A This is one of the few remaining signs of the former I 495 to New Jersey Manhattan Borough President Samuel Levy first proposed the MME connector in 1936 174 The plan called for an expressway link crossing Midtown Manhattan near 34th Street then as now a heavily traveled crosstown surface street The original idea was a pair of two lane tunnels the MME connecting the West Side Highway on Hudson River and the FDR Drive on the East River By 1949 Moses had proposed a six lane elevated expressway along 30th Street The expressway was to have two exits connecting to the West Side Highway and Lincoln Tunnel on the west side of Manhattan and also to the Queens Midtown Tunnel and FDR Drive on the east side of the island 175 It would be constructed within a 100 foot wide 30 m right of way immediately south of 30th Street The viaduct would require substantial demolition of highrise buildings within Midtown Manhattan Moses suggested charging tolls on the new roadway which was estimated to cost 26 million equivalent to 238 million in 2021 22 to construct excluding 23 million equivalent to 211 million in 2021 22 in land acquisition costs 176 A later proposal had the roadway situated 10 stories above valuable commercial real estate Air rights above the expressway would be sold and new highrise buildings would be constructed above the expressway buildings would be constructed below the viaduct as well One unusual variation involved running the roadway through the sixth and seventh floors of the Empire State Building 177 178 In 1963 plans for the expressway were finalized and it received the I 495 designation Beginning from its elevated connections to 12th Avenue NY 9A or the West Side Highway the MME would mostly follow 30th Street east of Ninth Avenue The expressway would travel east as a six lane elevated route 10 stories above the city streets to allow for commercial development both above and below the skyway deck At Second Avenue it would swing north for connections with the FDR Drive Between First and Second avenues ramps would be constructed to provide access to the Queens Midtown Tunnel 179 180 In December 1965 Moses canceled his plans for the MME due to opposition from the city government which wanted to build a crosstown tunnel instead 181 The MME project was ultimately canceled and the I 495 designation removed from the expressway on January 1 1970 182 In 1971 New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller removed state plans for the MME along with about a dozen other highway plans including I 78 through New York City of which another crosstown highway known as the Lower Manhattan Expressway LOMEX was part 183 Across Suffolk County Edit Long Island meanwhile lobbied to extend I 495 east over NY 495 The extension took place in the early 1980s at which time the NY 495 signs were taken down and I 495 was extended to the east end of the LIE The section of I 495 in the vicinity of the Lincoln Tunnel was redesignated as NY 495 at this time The extension of I 495 to Riverhead makes the highway a spur which should have an odd first digit according to the Interstate Highway System s numbering scheme Even first digits are usually assigned to bypasses connectors and beltways as I 495 was prior to the 1980s 2 A proposed Long Island Crossing would have extended the LIE across Long Island Sound to I 95 in either Guilford Connecticut Old Saybrook Connecticut or Rhode Island via a series of existing and artificial islands but a lack of funding as well as public opposition led to the demise of these proposals 184 CR 48 in Suffolk County was originally intended to become part of the North Fork extension of the LIE 164 185 Subway line Edit A New York City Subway line along the LIE corridor had been proposed in the 1929 and 1939 IND Second System plans as an extension of the BMT Broadway Line east of the 60th Street Tunnel prior to the construction of the expressway 186 187 These were the predecessors to a line proposed in 1968 as part of the Program for Action It would have split from the IND Queens Boulevard Line west of the Woodhaven Boulevard station and go to Kissena Boulevard via a right of way parallel and adjacent to the LIE 188 In Phase I it would go to Kissena Boulevard at Queens College and in Phase II to Fresh Meadows and Bayside 186 This Northeastern Queens line would have been built in conjunction with the planned widening of the expressway The subway tracks would have been placed under the expressway or its service roads or in the median of a widened LIE in a similar manner to the Blue Line of the Chicago L 188 186 189 It had been previously proposed to run the line from the 63rd Street tunnel under Northern Boulevard to Flushing near the current Flushing Main Street station then south under Kissena and Parsons boulevards to meet with the LIE at Queens College 190 The LIE line was approved in July 1968 191 The line was opposed by many residents of the surrounding communities because it would entail widening I 495 which would necessitate the demolition of nearby homes 192 By 1973 the final design for the Northeast Queens LIE line was published 186 The LIE line was canceled later that year because state residents had voted against a 3 5 billion equivalent to 16 5 billion in 2021 22 bond measure that would have paid for five subway extensions including the LIE line This was the second time that voters declined a bond issue to finance this extension with the first being on November 2 1971 for 2 5 billion equivalent to 13 billion in 2021 22 193 Exit list EditCountyLocationmi 194 195 kmExitDestinationsNotesManhattanMurray Hill0 000 0034th Street 35th Street Second Avenue 37th Street Third Avenue 38th Street 41st Street Downtown Crosstown UptownWestbound exits from the Queens Midtown TunnelSecond Avenue 34th Street 40th StreetEastbound entrances to the Queens Midtown TunnelEast River1 011 63Queens Midtown Tunnel toll QueensHunters Point1 432 3013Borden Avenue Pulaski BridgeEastbound exit and entrance1 532 4614 NY 25A east 21st Street Long Island CityEastbound exit and westbound entrance western terminus of NY 25ALong Island City2 093 3615Van Dam Street Ed Koch Queensboro BridgeWestbound exit and entrance2 343 7716Hunters Point Avenue Greenpoint Avenue Ed Koch Queensboro BridgeWestbound exit and eastbound entrance2 614 2017W I 278 west Brooklyn Queens Expressway to I 95 48th Street Brooklyn Staten IslandExits 35A B on I 278 access via service roads17E I 278 east Brooklyn Queens Expressway to I 95 Bronx LaGuardia AirportWestbound exit is via exit 17W and 48th StreetMaspeth3 475 5818Maurice AvenueEastbound exit is part of exit 17Elmhurst4 306 92 69th Street Grand AvenueWestbound exit and eastbound entrance part of exit 195 278 4819 NY 25 Queens Boulevard Woodhaven Boulevard RockawaysNo eastbound entrance from Woodhaven Boulevard5 588 9820Junction BoulevardWestbound exit and eastbound entranceCorona6 9111 1221108th StreetWestbound exit is part of exit 22A7 2511 6722A Grand Central Parkway RFK Bridge Eastern Long IslandSigned eastbound as exits 22A east and 22B west exits 10E W on Grand Central Parkway7 3511 8322B I 678 Van Wyck Expressway College Point Boulevard Whitestone Bridge Kennedy AirportSigned eastbound as exits 22C I 678 south 22D I 678 north 22E C P Blvd exits 12A B on I 678Flushing8 4513 6023Main Street9 1014 6524Kissena BoulevardEastbound access to 164th StreetFresh Meadows10 0216 1325Utopia Parkway 164th Street 188th Street St John s UniversitySigned for 188th Street eastbound and 164th Street westbound11 0417 7726Francis Lewis BoulevardEastbound exit and westbound entranceBayside11 4318 3927 I 295 Clearview Expressway to I 95 Grand Central Parkway BronxSigned as exits 27S south and 27N north exits 4E W on I 29511 9319 2028Oceania Street Francis Lewis BoulevardWestbound exit and eastbound entrance also serves 188th Street12 3119 8129Springfield Boulevard12 9120 7830East Hampton Boulevard Douglaston ParkwayEastbound exit onlyOakland Gardens13 2721 3631S Cross Island Parkway south Kennedy AirportExits 30E W on Cross Island Parkway31N Cross Island Parkway north Whitestone BridgeWestbound exit and eastbound entranceLittle Neck14 2522 9332Little Neck Parkway Douglaston ParkwayNo eastbound signage for Douglaston ParkwayNassauLake Success15 4324 8333Lakeville Road CR 11 Community Drive CR 11A Great Neck HOV 2 Lane eastWestern terminus of HOV laneNorth Hills16 3726 3434New Hyde Park Road CR 5B 17 5728 2835Shelter Rock Road CR 8 ManhassetWestbound exit is via exit 3618 4329 6636Searingtown Road CR 101 Port WashingtonRoslyn Heights18 9530 5037Willis Avenue Mineola RoslynEast Hills20 1432 4138 Northern State Parkway east to Meadowbrook State Parkway south Hauppauge Jones BeachEastbound exit and westbound entrance exit 29A on Northern ParkwayEast Hills Old Westburyvillage line20 3132 6939Glen Cove Road CR 1 Hempstead Glen CoveJericho24 0738 7440 NY 25 Jericho Turnpike Mineola SyossetSigned as exits 40W west and 40E east 25 2340 6041 NY 106 NY 107 N Broadway Hicksville Oyster BaySigned as exits 41S south and 41N north 26 0541 9242 Northern State Parkway New York HauppaugeSame directional exit ramps only entrance ramps located west of exit 46Syosset43ARobbins LaneWestbound exit and eastbound entrance27 0743 5643South Oyster Bay Road CR 9 Bethpage SyossetSyosset Woodbury line27 8344 7944 NY 135 Seaford SyossetSigned as exits 44S south and 44N north eastbound exits 13E W on NY 135Woodbury28 1745 3445Manetto Hill Road Plainview WoodburyEastbound exit and westbound entrancePlainview28 9546 5946Sunnyside Boulevard Plainview29 6547 72Truck inspection station eastbound Nassau Suffolkcounty linePlainview Melvillehamlet line29 6847 7748Round Swamp Road CR 110 Old Bethpage FarmingdaleSuffolkMelville31 8251 2149 NY 110 Amityville HuntingtonSigned as exits 49S south and 49N north Melville Dix Hills line34 2555 1250Bagatelle Road Dix Hills WyandanchDix Hills35 8757 7351 NY 231 Babylon Northport37 0059 55Rest Area amp Long Island Welcome Center eastbound 38 5662 0652 CR 4 Commack Road North Babylon CommackWestbound exit is part of exit 53Brentwood Commack line39 2863 2253 Sagtikos State Parkway Bay Shore Kings ParkExits S1E W on Sagtikos ParkwayBrentwood54 CR 7 Wicks Road Now an unnumbered interchange via exit 53Brentwood Hauppauge line41 7267 1455 CR 67 Motor Parkway Central IslipHauppauge42 6668 6556 NY 111 Islip SmithtownIslandia44 3071 2957 NY 454 Patchogue Commack45 6473 4558Old Nichols Road Central Islip NesconsetRonkonkoma47 5076 4459 CR 93 Ocean Avenue Oakdale RonkonkomaLake Ronkonkoma48 1977 5560CR 29 Ronkonkoma Avenue Lake Ronkonkoma SayvilleHolbrook49 6279 8661 CR 19 Patchogue Holbrook Road Patchogue HolbrookHoltsville51 2482 4662 CR 97 Nicolls Road Stony Brook Blue PointHoltsville Farmingville Medford tripoint53 0485 3663 CR 83 North Ocean Avenue Mount Sinai PatchogueMedford54 2987 3764 NY 112 Patchogue Port Jefferson HOV 2 Lane westEastern terminus of HOV lane55 4489 2265 CR 16 Horse Block Road Centereach ShirleyYaphank57 4192 3966 CR 101 Sills Road East Patchogue Yaphank58 5594 2367 CR 21 Yaphank Avenue Yaphank Brookhaven60 1796 8368 CR 46 William Floyd Parkway Wading River ShirleySigned as exits 68S south and 68N north westboundManorville64 05103 0869Wading River Road CR 25 Wading River Center Moriches65 25105 0170 CR 111 south Manorville EastportNorthern terminus of CR 111Manorville Calverton line69 27111 4871 NY 24 south CR 94 Hampton Bays CalvertonEastbound exit and westbound entrance northbound terminus of NY 24Calverton70 75113 8672 NY 25 Middle Country Road Riverhead CalvertonEastbound exit and westbound entrance71 02114 3073 CR 58 east Old Country Road Greenport Orient1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Closed former Electronic toll collection HOV only Incomplete accessMid Manhattan Expressway canceled Edit If built the MME would have had the following exits 196 mikmDestinationsNotes0 000 00 I 495 west Lincoln Tunnel Continuation into New Jersey0 200 32 NY 9A West Side Elevated Highway 0 400 646th Avenue Times Square Madison Square Park1 502 41 FDR Drive1 652 66 I 495 east Queens Midtown Tunnel Continuation into Queens1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Incomplete access TolledSee also Edit495 Productions Reality show production company named for the highway L I E 2001 film whose title is based on the initials of the highwayPortals U S Roads New York state New York CityReferences Edit Starks Edward January 27 2022 Table 2 Auxiliary Routes of the Dwight D Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways FHWA Route Log and Finder List Federal Highway Administration Retrieved January 12 2023 a b c d e f Anderson Steve Long Island Expressway NYCRoads Archived from the original on April 2 2010 Retrieved March 18 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 Archived PDF from the original on January 10 2017 Retrieved January 15 2017 a b c d e Google April 21 2018 I 495 New York Map Google Maps Google Retrieved April 21 2018 Popik Barry Entry from June 29 2011 World s Longest Parking Lot Long Island Expressway Archived from the original on September 29 2013 Retrieved October 27 2013 Long Island Expressway Historical Sign Listings New York City Department of Parks and Recreation November 27 2001 Archived from the original on October 10 2012 Retrieved April 22 2012 Plans Are Changed For Queens Subway Traffic Crossings At Nassau And Woodhaven Boulevards Altered To Avoid Congestion Viaduct Project Dropped Main Driveway To Be Depressed Side Routes To Be At Grade New Bids Due Soon The New York Times June 22 1930 Archived from the original on September 28 2015 Retrieved September 1 2015 Highway Program Aids Long Island Growth The New York Times April 27 1930 Retrieved June 27 2015 Walsh Kevin November 2013 NYC Streets Featuring Full Names Forgotten NY Archived from the original on April 5 2015 Retrieved June 14 2015 HOV Lane Information MetroPool Long Island Archived from the original on October 25 2010 Retrieved November 6 2010 a b Solnik Claude July 25 2014 20 years in the fast lane Long Island Business News Retrieved November 6 2022 Hakim Danny February 25 2006 Hybrid Cars to Get High Occupancy Waiver The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2022 a b c d Andelman David A June 24 1972 L I Expressway Nears End of 32 Year Construction The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 a b c Wood Francis January 30 1962 Dilemma of the Dream Road Newsday p 49 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com a b c d e Unger Mike April 27 1968 Construction Ahead For 20 Years First they built the Long Island Expressway and now they have to improve it And if you think today s tieups are bad just wait there ll be more delays down the road Newsday p 8W ProQuest 915886409 58 000 000 Tunnel to Queens Opened The New York Times November 16 1940 p 1 Archived from the original on April 20 2018 Retrieved October 11 2009 New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1940 a b New York with Pictorial Guide Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1942 Official Highway Map of New York State Map 1947 48 ed Cartography by General Drafting State of New York Department of Public Works lagarchivist September 11 2009 Queens Trolley in the 1930s Future Sites of the Long Island Expressway YouTube Retrieved January 12 2023 Moscow Warren March 13 1944 Highway Network Proposed for City Hits Albany Snag PDF The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 19 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w 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 Agreement Reached On Terms Of Legislation At Albany By Moses And Board The New York Times February 20 1945 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 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 Retrieved October 31 2022 a b Moses Will Ask City For Expressway Newsday March 12 1951 p 27 ProQuest 872995697 a b Ingraham Joseph C March 11 1951 New Expressway to Nassau Slated Start on Mid Manhattan Link by Widening Queens Approach Goes to Estimate Board Connecting With Other Routes Condemning of Property The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 a b Queens Midtown Highway Link Construction to Start in Spring New York Herald Tribune October 10 1952 p 11 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1320035827 Highway Projects Revised by Moses Triborough Authority to Drop 2 Bronx Expressways Owing to Hesitancy by the City The New York Times February 2 1953 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 Changes Approved in Queens Highway City Plan Board Backs Shifts in the Midtown Tunnel Route Expected to Save 769 000 The New York Times October 29 1953 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 Queens Road Contract Let Building Starts in 2 Weeks New York Herald Tribune July 31 1953 p 6 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1322502006 Road Opening in Queens Today Is First Link in New Expressway The New York Times February 25 1955 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 Expressway Unit in Queens to Open New York Herald Tribune February 25 1955 p 9 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1328096968 New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Sunoco 1952 New York with Special Maps of Putnam Rockland Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region Map 1955 56 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1954 Ross Don November 6 1955 3 City Expressway Routes Are Opened Harriman and Wagner Attend Urge Vote for Roads Bond Issue New York Herald Tribune p 3 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1326055593 Ingraham Joseph C November 6 1955 Harriman Favors Yes on Road Fund Harriman Pleads for Yes Vote On Bonds as 3 Road Links Open The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 31 2022 New York with Special Maps of Putnam Rockland Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region Map Esso Cartography by General Drafting 1956 Plan Board Adopts Express Way Route 8 Mile Section Across Queens to Nassau County Line to Be Financed by State The New York Times May 24 1951 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 Nassau Road Route Set Horace Harding Expressway Link to Cut Through Deepdale Club The New York Times July 26 1952 Retrieved June 21 2018 a b Stengren Bernard June 10 1958 Road Crews Work on 3 Knots Here Queens and Brooklyn Snarls to Be Unraveled by 60 Some Experts Predict The New York Times Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 a b Greene Bob September 16 1958 LI Wants Expwy Gets Only Promises What s Delaying the Expressway Newsday p 1 ProQuest 884985282 Boenzi Neal August 26 1957 Building of Expressway Cuts Off Queens Stores From Customers A Retailer s Nightmare Construction of New Queens Expressway Isolates Roadside Merchants The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 a b L I Expressway Opens Queens Link Tomorrow The New York Times September 24 1957 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Walling Charles September 24 1957 8 75 Million Expwy Link to Open New York Daily News p 512 Retrieved November 2 2022 via newspapers com Expwy Link Slighted Wait Till Weekend New York Daily News September 26 1957 p 81 Retrieved November 2 2022 via newspapers com Walling Charles September 14 1958 3 More Miles to Open on L I Expressway New York Daily News p 114 Retrieved November 3 2022 via newspapers com Ingraham Joseph C May 28 1959 Motorists Meet Building Snarls 5 Big Construction Projects Lead Drivers to Detour From Usual Routes The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 3 2022 Godbout Oscar August 15 1959 Perilous Detour in Queens to End Work on L I Expressway to Eliminate Barrier That Caused 31 Accidents The New York Times Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 a b L I Expressway To Be Formally Opened New York Herald Tribune August 9 1960 p 3 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325619619 a b L I Highway Link Will Open Friday Clearview Interchange Will End Long Traffic Snarling Detour in Queens The New York Times August 9 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 3 2022 Stengren Bernard February 7 1960 L I Expressway 2d Busiest Here 120 616 Vehicles Use Artery Daily Bottlenecks Are Problems in Bayside The New York Times Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 18 Month Bottleneck Is Ended On L L Expressway at Clearview The New York Times August 13 1960 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Main Road of L I Expressway Near Fair Site to Open Today Section Now 8 Lanes Has Long Been a Bottleneck Some Work Remains The New York Times November 27 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Beltrone Art December 30 1963 Drivers Get a Break Newsday p 11 ProQuest 964419951 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 Retrieved November 1 2022 Gleason Gene December 25 1960 Peril Seen in L I Expressway s Phone Sites They re in Narrow Center Mall Motorists Must Cross the Road New York Herald Tribune p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325623186 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 Retrieved November 5 2022 City Finds Upkeep of Fences Costly Carroll Urges New Type of Barrier on Expressways The New York Times February 9 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 L I Xway Divider Job Will Take Two Years New York Daily News July 14 1970 p 280 Retrieved January 13 2019 via newspapers com a b Bookbinder Bernie September 1 1953 Super Expressway to Link All LI Newsday p 1 ProQuest 879637877 L I Survey Ready for New Roads Work Due in 55 On Expressways New York Herald Tribune December 4 1954 p 4 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1322565897 Nassau Urges Speedup In Super Expressway Plans Newsday October 16 1953 p 4 ProQuest 879634212 Dewey Speeds L I Expressway Approves Bill to Add 64 Miles Governor Speeds L I Expressway The New York Times March 28 1954 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Way Is Cleared by Dewey For 64 Mile L I Thruway New York Herald Tribune March 28 1954 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1318051925 Moses Wagner Say Expressway Will Be Toll Free Newsday August 23 1955 p 7 ProQuest 898068127 a b c d Ingraham Joseph C August 21 1967 L I Expressway to Be Snarled for Years Improvements Begun but Many Obstacles Slow the Work L I Expressway to Be Snarled for Many Years The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2019 News from the Field of Travel The New York Times September 28 1958 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Greene Bob October 1 1958 Moses Bids State Snap L I Expwy Land Governor Local Officials Open 1st Nassau Link of Expressway Newsday p 3 ProQuest 913529358 Hundreds Assail L I Road Section Hearing Draws Homeowner Protests on Aspects of Expressway Proposal Five Hear Protests The New York Times December 13 1957 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 Dales Douglas March 21 1958 62 000 000 L I Road Project Slated by Harriman for April The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 3 2022 Receive Bids On New Link Of LI Expwy Newsday June 26 1959 p 36 ProQuest 898306364 7 1 Million Is Bid For 3 27 Mile Link In L I Expressway The New York Times November 23 1959 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 4 2022 L I Expressway To Add 3 Miles New York Herald Tribune November 20 1959 p 17 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325106862 a b L I Expressway to Open 2 Links Stretch at Roslyn and New Northern State Access to Go Into Use Tuesday The New York Times September 26 1959 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 Expressway Link Opens Tuesday Newsday Nassau Edition September 25 1959 p 8 Retrieved November 4 2022 via newspapers com New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1960 Murphy John F October 9 1960 Rockefeller Goes Stumping on L I In 12 Hours He Dedicates Projects and Runs Train Fits in Politicking Too The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Rockefeller to Dedicate 2 Road Projects New York Herald Tribune October 8 1960 p 4 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327468107 L I Expressway Link Opened The New York Times December 16 1960 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved June 21 2018 New York and Metropolitan New York Map 1961 62 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Sunoco 1961 a b New York with Sight Seeing Guide Map 1962 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1962 Developers Cite Need of Expressway Speedup of New L I Road Urged New York Herald Tribune August 3 1958 p 1C ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1323967799 State Road Delay Irks Suffolk Board The New York Times July 15 1958 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 2 2022 Bookbinder Bernie July 15 1958 Supervisors Urge Ave To Rush Expwy Newsday p 13 ProQuest 897667813 State to Add Segment To the L I Expressway The New York Times February 11 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 4 2022 Suffolk Growth Follows Expressway Newsday December 1 1971 p 16 ProQuest 916077924 New York Happy Motoring Guide Map 1963 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1963 Expressway Link is Opened on L I New 5 Mile Section Extends Highway to Route 110 in Suffolk County The New York Times August 16 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 5 2018 Retrieved July 5 2018 L I Expressway Link to Open New York Herald Tribune August 15 1962 p 15 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327141946 Markowitz Sam Smith Ed August 9 1962 Expressway Opens to Suffolk in Week Newsday p 4 ProQuest 913539985 Expressway Adds 3 1 2 mile Section Huntington Link Completes Half of Long Island Road The New York Times October 4 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 L I Expressway Strip Opened The New York Times November 21 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 L I Expressway Grows 2 67 Mi New York Herald Tribune November 20 1962 p 27 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325544599 2 Road Sections Are Ready on L I Expressway and Wantagh Extensions to Open The New York Times August 21 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2019 New Sections Ready on 2 Expressways Newsday August 21 1963 p 27 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com a b New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Mobil 1965 New York Map 1969 70 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1968 L I Expressway Section to Open The New York Times June 10 1969 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2019 a b July Opening Set on Expwy Bids Newsday June 10 1969 p 27 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Expressway Route to Open The New York Times December 17 1969 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2019 Expressway Section Slated to Open Today Newsday December 17 1969 p 25 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Butler William May 24 1970 Horrors and Hope Ahead for Island Drivers New York Daily News p 127 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Morris Tom Smith Don May 23 1970 Six Miles of Open Temptation Newsday p 5 ProQuest 915705897 Flusser Martin June 9 1970 East End Fears for Way of Life as Expressway Stretches Out Newsday p 4 ProQuest 915921289 Eichel Larry June 29 1972 It s the End of the Road for the LIE Newsday p 502 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Maiorana Ronald September 26 1962 Barnes Suggests 2d Highway Deck Says Aides Are Studying Plan for L I Expressway Approval Is Needed The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Swift Maurice Kwartler Dick September 26 1962 Expressway Growing Is It Outgrown Newsday p 7 ProQuest 899176383 Barnes Explains Plan to Unclog Expwy Newsday October 4 1963 p 1 ProQuest 913656928 Ingraham Joseph C July 15 1963 Barnes Offers 100 Million Plan To Triple L I Expressway Flow The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Monorail Proposed At L I Expressway To Ease Road Jam The New York Times March 8 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Burks Edward C June 28 1970 Battle of the Bottleneck Rumbling On The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 a b Unger Mike October 31 1968 10 Lanes for Nassau LI Expwy Newsday p 5 ProQuest 915941810 2 Billion Asked for State Roads U S Aid Is Sought to Help to Build 20 Superhighways The New York Times October 31 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Route Numbering Committee Agenda American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials May 23 1984 p 4 Retrieved November 26 2022 Valenti John June 26 2022 50 years of the LIE Love or hate it s hard to imagine Long Island without it Newsday Retrieved November 5 2022 Expressway Ramp to Get Stop Light The New York Times September 5 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Viaduct Will Link Ex ways to Ease Jams New York Daily News December 21 1965 p 84 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Guide Tells How to Skip Ex ways New York Daily News November 8 1967 p 1115 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Bennett Charles G May 21 1966 32 Million Queens Cloverleaf Approved by Board of Estimate It Will Link Brooklyn Queens and Long Island Expressways 50 Maspeth Homeowners Protest Vainly The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2019 43 Million Bids Win Vast Exp wy Contracts New York Daily News June 3 1967 p 306 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Guide Tells How to Skip Ex ways New York Daily News November 8 1967 p 1115 Retrieved November 5 2022 via newspapers com Queens Changes in Effect On L I Expressway Today The New York Times September 16 1968 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2019 Carmody Deirdre October 27 1971 Special Rush Hour Bus Lane Makes Expressway a Breeze The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 21 2018 Sullivan James W October 26 1971 Buses Get Express Lane to City Newsday p 26 ProQuest 916078815 LI Expwy to Be Widened in Queens Newsday January 27 1968 p 6 ProQuest 915695623 Ingraham Joseph C January 27 1968 City to Widen a 5 Mile Stretch Of L I Expressway in Queens Plans Call for 4 New Lanes Along the Busiest Section The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2019 Burks Edward C July 6 1974 State to Restudy L I Expressway Plan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 Two More Lanes Sought for Section Of L I ExpressWay The New York Times May 19 1976 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 a b c d Dallas Gus October 4 1981 Paving way for decongesting LIE New York Daily News p 491 Retrieved January 2 2019 via newspapers com a b Dembart Lee December 23 1978 City to Ask Trade In of Aid Set for L I Expressway The New York Times Retrieved January 2 2019 Norman Michael September 2 1982 Misery a Commuter On L I Expressway The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 5 2022 a b McQuiston John T April 12 1981 Lights Go Up on the Expressway The New York Times Retrieved January 10 2019 a b Pride Don December 26 1969 Nick Moves to Light Expressway Newsday p 13 ProQuest 915924527 Pact to Widen L I Expressway Is Announced The New York Times September 29 1988 Retrieved January 2 2019 Arneberg Marianne September 29 1988 Accord Reached on Road Funds Newsday p 31 Retrieved November 6 2022 via newspapers com Gordy Molly December 14 1988 Car Pool Only Eyed for 4th Lane of LIE Newsday p 2 Retrieved November 6 2022 via newspapers com Lyall Sarah January 3 1991 Long Island Expressway to Get a Fourth Lane for Ride Sharers The New York Times Retrieved January 2 2019 For Traffic Jammed Drivers on Long Island 12 Miles of Relief The New York Times May 26 1994 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 2 2019 a b Toy Vivian S July 10 2005 H O V Lane Done at Last Does It Work The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2022 Lutz Phillip October 30 1994 H O V Lane Fulfills Goals In Peak Time The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 10 2019 Tyrrell Joie August 25 2002 Final Phase Begins on HOV Lanes Newsday p 27 Retrieved November 6 2022 via newspapers com Lii Jane H July 14 1996 Neigborhood sic Report Douglaston 2 Suits Slow Plans for a Speedier Long Island Expressway The New York Times Retrieved January 2 2019 Rohde David May 14 1998 Pataki Cancels Plan to Widen Expressway in Part of Queens The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 10 2019 Rather John August 22 1993 Officials Garner Concessions on L I E Widening in Nassau The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 2 2019 a b c Louis Kathleen August 23 2001 LIE Construction In Queens Will Last At Least Two More Years Queens Chronicle Retrieved January 10 2019 Lii Jane H December 10 1995 Neighborhood Report Douglaston More L I E Fewer Trees The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 12 2020 Harney James February 16 2000 Major LIE upgrading agreed on New York Daily News p 200 Retrieved April 12 2020 via newspapers com Press Release Archives Governor Pataki and Mayor Giuliani Announce Long Island Expressway Plan to Improve Alley Pond Park and Motorist Safety Welcome to NYC gov February 7 2000 Retrieved January 10 2019 a b c LIE Cross Island lanes to close for construction TimesLedger June 20 2002 Retrieved January 10 2019 a b NYSDOT LIE CIP Queens Reconstruction Project New York State Department of Transportation December 1 2004 Retrieved January 10 2019 Brodsky Robert May 13 2004 State Eyes Traffic Changes At L I E GCP Van Wyck Interchange Queens Chronicle Retrieved January 10 2019 Extensive construction work on the LIE in Flushing is complete TimesLedger February 8 2018 Retrieved January 10 2019 Mascali Nikki M February 7 2018 Bridge reconstruction on LIE GCP reaches final phase Cuomo Metro US Retrieved January 10 2019 Governor Cuomo Announces Completion of the 58 Million Reconstruction of Three Bridges at the Long Island Expressway Grand Central Parkway Interchange in Queens Governor Andrew M Cuomo February 6 2018 Retrieved January 10 2019 Saltzman Jeff LIE Cross Island Interchange Reconstruction 2001 Archived from the original on May 16 2009 Retrieved June 25 2010 Anderson Steve Wantagh State Parkway NYCRoads Archived from the original on April 27 2009 Retrieved March 18 2010 Long Island Expressway near proposed Wantagh Parkway Extension WikiMapia Retrieved October 4 2014 Long Island Expressway amp Jericho Turnpike Interchange WikiMapia Retrieved October 4 2014 Map of Nassau County Long Island New York Map Hagstrom Map 1940 Retrieved June 25 2010 permanent dead link Long Island Expressway and Sunnyside Boulevard Original exit 46 Retrieved October 4 2014 NY 135 LIE Interchange project Recommended Modified Alternative Map New York State Department of Transportation Archived from the original on February 28 1997 Retrieved June 25 2010 a b Schifman Jonathan December 30 2017 Why isn t there an Exit 47 on the Long Island Expressway Newsday Retrieved November 3 2022 Domash Shelly Feuer April 9 2006 Checking Trucks for Safety s Sake The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 13 2019 a b Atlas of Suffolk County New York Map Hagstrom Map 1969 Vincent Stuart March 30 1988 Unsnarling a Dangerous Interchange Newsday Suffolk Edition p 37 Retrieved November 3 2022 via newspapers com Map of proposed interchange Map Suffolk County Department of Public Works 1963 Archived from the original on November 29 2007 Retrieved September 20 2007 Aerial Photo by Lockwood Kessler amp Bartlett Incorporated Consulting Engineers of Syosset New York Pre 1971 Nicolls Road Street Map of Lake Ronkonkoma Holbrook Farmingville and Vicinity Map Mooney Frank J 1971 1972 Proposed Park and Ride Center at Yaphank Map Suffolk County Department of Planning County Road System County of Suffolk New York PDF Suffolk County Department of Public Works December 29 2005 Archived PDF from the original on March 20 2009 Retrieved June 25 2010 Proposed Park and Ride Center at Calverton Map Suffolk County Department of Planning State of New York Department of Transportation January 1 1970 Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 26 2009 Retrieved June 25 2010 Route 495 Straight Line Diagram PDF Internet Archives WayBack Machine New Jersey Department of Transportation 2006 Archived from the original PDF on March 21 2006 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Be Useless Without City Approval of 2 Expressway Links The New York Times June 10 1963 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 13 2019 Ingraham Joseph C December 29 1965 3d Midtown Tube to Start Soon Moses Says Shelving Road Plan Midtown Tube to Start Soon Moses Says Shelving Road Plan The New York Times Archived from the original on July 5 2018 Retrieved April 21 2018 State of New York Department of Transportation January 1 1970 Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 26 2009 Retrieved June 25 2010 Vines Francis X March 25 1971 Lower Manhattan Road Killed Under State Plan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 13 2018 Retrieved March 19 2018 Anderson Steve Eastern Long Island Sound Crossings NYCRoads Archived from the original on April 9 2010 Retrieved March 18 2010 Atlas of Suffolk County New York Map Hagstrom Map 1973 a b c d Raskin Joseph B 2013 The Routes Not Taken A Trip Through New York City s Unbuilt Subway System New York New York Fordham University Press doi 10 5422 fordham 9780823253692 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 82325 369 2 Duffus R L September 22 1929 Our Great Subway Network Spreads Wider New Plans Of Board Of Transportation Involve The Building Of More Than One Hundred Miles Of Additional Rapid Transit Routes For New York The New York Times Retrieved August 19 2015 a b Regional Transportation Program Metropolitan Transportation Authority 1969 Retrieved July 26 2016 Burks Edward C February 21 1971 New Line May Get Double Trackage Transit Unit Shift on Queens Super Express The New York Times Retrieved September 26 2015 Kihss Peter April 13 1967 Study is Started for New Subways 3 Routes Proposed to Aid Growing Queens Areas The New York Times Retrieved June 27 2015 Number One Transportation Progress An Interim Report thejoekorner com Metropolitan Transportation Authority December 1968 Archived from the original on August 29 2016 Retrieved August 19 2016 Schumach Murray November 1 1971 To Elmhurst Residents the Issue Is Homes Versus Highways The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 2 2019 1968 1973 the Ten year Program at the Halfway Mark Metropolitan Transportation Authority 1973 2008 Traffic Volume Report for New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 pp 239 241 Archived from the original PDF on September 27 2012 Retrieved January 31 2010 New York County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation August 7 2015 Retrieved September 5 2017 Queens County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation August 7 2015 Archived from the original on June 28 2018 Retrieved September 5 2017 Nassau County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation August 7 2015 Archived from the original on January 11 2018 Retrieved September 5 2017 Suffolk County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation August 7 2015 Retrieved September 5 2017 Anderson Steve Mid Manhattan Expressway I 495 unbuilt NYCRoads Archived from the original on April 1 2013 Retrieved April 29 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Interstate 495 New York and wbr New York State Route 495 KML file edit help Template Attached KML Interstate 495 New York KML is from Wikidata Interstate 495 at Alps Roads New York Routes Interstate 495 New York AARoads com I 495 Greater New York Roads Long Island s Official Online Community amp LIE Relief Site Archived March 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine Long Island Expressway NYC Road Geek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interstate 495 New York amp oldid 1133303460, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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