New York Post

BQE truck 'stop'

Rush repairs or boot rigs: DOT

- By DANIELLE FURFARO and KHRISTINA NARIZHNAYA Additional reporting by Emily Saul

Sections of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway will eventually become so unstable that the city has to ban trucks from the highway — sending the rumbling rigs into surroundin­g neighborho­ods — unless a reconstruc­tion plan can be fast-tracked, transporta­tion officials say.

City Department of Transporta­tion officials say they are trying to avoid the gridlock nightmare by asking the state to approve a process called “design build.’’ The measure would allow both the project’s design and constructi­on to be bid on and completed by the same contractor

The move would cuts costs, shaving about $113 million from the project’s current $1.9 billion price tag, the DOT says.

Just as importantl­y, it will save time, which is crucial in this case given the age and heavy use of the BQE, the agency says.

The move requires special legislativ­e approval because the separate bidding process had been establishe­d years ago.

If the agency doesn’t get permission, the reconstruc­tion project could extend two years, to 2028, forcing the city to kick trucks off the highway between Atlantic Avenue and Sands Street and onto local roadways, according to the DOT.

“If we don’t get this completed in 2026, we’re going to have to limit the weight that the bridge can carry,” said DOT Commission­er Polly Trottenber­g.

“If this project isn’t done, we’re going to be diverting trucks.”

That move would cause massive gridlock in the neighborho­ods around the highway, Trottenber­g said.

Traffic would.be diverted down roads such as Tillary and Adams streets and Flatbush Avenue, officials said.

The notion didn’t sit well Sun- day with residents in local neighborho­ods such as Brooklyn Heights, who said the area is already too congested.

It would turn “a horrible situation into an absolute nightmare,” said Peter Bray, executive director of the Brooklyn Heights Associatio­n.

Resident Michele Hauser said, “If I wanted to live on a truck route, I wouldn’t be living in Brooklyn Heights. It’s not fair to all the people who kill themselves to live in nice neighborho­ods.’’

Trottenber­g has trekked to Albany three years in a row to try to convince the Legislatur­e to pass a bill allowing design build, but it keeps narrowly failing.

State Sen. Marty Golden said he plans to introduce a new bill as soon as possible.

 ??  ?? HIGHWAY HELL: Trucks will have to be redirected to local streets if the BQE doesn’t get approval for fast-tracked repairs, officials say.
HIGHWAY HELL: Trucks will have to be redirected to local streets if the BQE doesn’t get approval for fast-tracked repairs, officials say.

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