Updated 07/21/2009 03:20 PM
Throgs Neck Bridge Repairs To Continue For Weeks
To view our videos, you need to
enable JavaScript. Learn how.
install Adobe Flash 9 or above. Install now.
Then come back here and refresh the page.
Officials from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority said Tuesday that it will be nearly three more weeks before traffic on the Throgs Neck Bridge returns to normal, following a fire earlier this month.
The agency says the bridge's third Bronx-bound lane and the Cross Island Parkway ramp will be closed until August 10th.
Starting Saturday, most trucks will once again be allowed to use the Bronx-bound side of the bridge; access has been restricted for trucks since the fire.
"Good news is on the way," said MTA Acting Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer Helena Williams. "We do have some relief for motorists, including our truckers and cars."
The July 10th fire damaged several steel girders under the bridge, forcing the lane closures and causing traffic to be redirected to the Whitestone and RFK Bridges.
"There obviously is an impact when there's this type of thing," said MTA Bridges and Tunnels President Susan Kupferman. "We're working very hard to mitigate it. We think that we have a plan that will relieve some of that, but, you know, there will be impact and we're going to make the repairs as quickly as possible."
About 100,000 people use the bridge to cross between Queens and the Bronx every day. Drivers who spoke to NY1 said they already have had enough of the delays.
"Three weeks? Wow, that's pretty ridiculous," said one driver.
"It causes traffic jams and all that stuff," said another. "It's tough."
"You really don't want to go out the door," said a third. "I live next to the bridge and the horns are beeping and it's a lot of chaos."
Some drivers said they are not optimistic that the work will be completed on schedule.
"I mean they're saying that it's ambitious, which means they hope to have it done, but I tend to doubt it," said a driver. "But I hope they do."
The fire has been connected to the use of a blow torch in a construction shed under the bridge. According to the president of MTA Bridges and Tunnels, the contractor has assumed responsibility for the fire and will be paying for all the repairs.
The MTA says it will be updating its website with the latest information. For more, go to www.mta.info.