New York City is moving on its goals to create car -free paths and bicycles with an advertisement on renewals to a particularly narrow hallway on the east side of Manhattan.
The Design and Construction Department recently invited three design construction teams to submit offers for what the agency calls East Side Greenway 14th Street Connector. The final structure will be essentially a bridge that provides the premises an alternative and wider way to reach the East River Park to the southern end of Captain Patrick J. Brown Walk.
The asphalted strip currently among the destinations is only four feet in places. It cannot be made more wide thanks to the nearby team of Con Edison, said Ian Michaels, the DDC’s public information director. )People have been complaining of this for years, long before the DDC existed. ”
The connector must offer bidirectional lanes for cyclists and walkers.
After Reviewing Replies to Request for Qualifications, DDC Shared Late in July That Three Partnership Will Reply to Request for Proposals – Joint Ventures of Skanska Usa Building Inc. and Claire Weisz Architects Llp (WXY), Walst Construction Co II and Jacobs Civil Consultants Inc., and Weeks Marine Inc. and Kiewit Engineering Corp. DDC Expectations Construction on the $ 163 Million City Capital Project to Start in Fall of 2027 and will be substantially completed by early 2030.

Courtesy of the New York City Design and Construction Department
Construction plans connect with a good number of other reforms that the city is making. The DDC is lifting the entire East River Park from eight to 10 feet larger than its existing elevation as part of the coastal resilience project on the east. Destined to reduce the risk of flood along a 2.4 mile section, the construction will offer a suitable foot for the southern end of the connector, said Michaels.
The planned bridge is also one of the 114 capital projects of the newly launched green green plan in New York. The departments of the city, defense groups, as well as WXY and WSP USA, contributed to the document, the first of its kind in more than 30 years to detail where they can be expanded and connected by bicycle, walking and greenery through the five districts.
“The 14th St Pinch Point Has long in Barrier to Saffely Accessing the Manhattan Waterfront Greenway, and Alleviating It Will Create Opportunity for New Yorkers of All Backglounds, Ages, and Abilities to Access Our Waterfront and Safely Walk or Bike Around the City,” Said Sofia Greenway Manager for the East Coast Greenway Alliance and Steering Committee Member for the New York City Greenways Coalition, Which contributed to the published plan. “The recent launch of the Greenways Plan of Greenways helps identify crucial barriers and gaps like this, so that we can create a network of perfect and intuitive greenways.”
Jon Orcutt, another member of the Coalition Management Committee and Bike New York’s Bar Assistant, added: “ It is great for the city to move to eliminate the pinch. Ironically, it will create the next pesic point on the east side along Captain Brown Walk. It is not so narrow, but it is still lower than a multipurpose path. ”
