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A Freight Plan for the NYMTC Region<br />

The Plan would be incomplete if it did not recommend next steps for studying each of<br />

these important corridors in detail. All five experience high levels of congestion throughout<br />

the day. All five are the subject of major improvement studies. Most of these<br />

improvements would facilitate the movement of all vehicular traffic – including trucks,<br />

buses, and autos. The projects identified below would have particular significance for<br />

<strong>regional</strong> <strong>freight</strong> movement. Many are being independently evaluated through their own<br />

feasibility studies, MISs, and EISs. These studies will provide detailed quantitative analyses<br />

of the projects’ impacts on traffic congestion and air pollution.<br />

This section presents the impacts on traffic operations for some of these projects, determined<br />

by using NYMTC’s Best Practices Model, the <strong>regional</strong> travel demand model.<br />

Because a selected group of highway projects, including improvements to all of the corridors,<br />

was analyzed as part of a single model run, a comparative assessment of the<br />

improvements to each corridor was not conducted for this report. Nor could all projects<br />

be evaluated as part of the model run, as the definition of some of the projects changed<br />

during the course of the study or was insufficiently advanced to support a modeled analysis.<br />

A qualitative assessment is provided in these cases. Impacts other than direct transportation<br />

impacts also are qualitatively evaluated. These findings are not intended to be<br />

definitive, but rather to provide an order of magnitude sense of the potential impacts of<br />

the projects.<br />

Action 1 – The Northern Crossing Corridor – Conduct a Regional Analysis<br />

Description<br />

The Northern Crossing corridor is one of the most important <strong>freight</strong> and passenger corridors<br />

in the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City region. The corridor extends from the George Washington<br />

Bridge in the west to the Throgs Neck Bridge in the east. It includes I-95 to the Bronx border<br />

with Westchester County, and extends south along the Major Deegan Expressway to<br />

the Triborough Bridge. The corridor includes at least four major bridges and numerous<br />

large north-south and east-west highways. Some of the region’s busiest transportation<br />

facilities, and some of the region’s worst traffic congestion, are found in the Northern<br />

Crossing corridor. The travel markets include trips to Manhattan, the Bronx, Long Island,<br />

Westchester County, and points further north in <strong>New</strong> England. The area spans two states,<br />

includes numerous counties, and contains facilities under the jurisdiction of at least four<br />

<strong>regional</strong> transportation agencies. This corridor also includes major rail <strong>freight</strong> facilities in<br />

the western and southern Bronx.<br />

The importance of the Northern Crossing corridor to <strong>regional</strong> <strong>freight</strong> movement was<br />

illustrated previously in Figures 3.3 and 3.4. This corridor, along with the Southern<br />

Crossing corridor described below, is critical to the cross-harbor movement of goods<br />

between the region and most of North America. Due to restrictions in the Holland and<br />

Lincoln Tunnels, the Northern and Southern Crossing corridors are the only two routes<br />

into the region available to full sized tractor-trailers and hazardous material carriers.<br />

Only the Northern Crossing permits today’s standard 53-foot trailers. While traffic from<br />

the north and through traffic seeking to circumvent the region can use the Tappan Zee<br />

Cambridge Systematics, Inc. 5-37

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