Tappan Zee Bridge

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{{Infobox_Bridge |bridge_name= Tappan Zee Bridge |image= Tappan Zee Bridge from below.jpg |caption= |official_name= The Governor Malcolm Wilson Tappan Zee Bridge |also_known_as= |carries= 7 lanes (3 northbound, 3 southbound, 1 reversible) of I-87/I-287 (New York State Thruway) |crosses= Hudson River |locale= Nyack, New York and Tarrytown, New York |maint= New York State Thruway Authority |id= |design= Cantilever bridge |mainspan= 369.42 meters (1,212 feet) |length= 4,880.76 meters (16,013 feet) |width= |clearance= |below= 42.06 meters (138 feet) |traffic= 135,000 |open= December 15, 1955 |closed= |toll= $4.00 (southbound) (EZ-Pass) |map_cue= |map_image= |map_text= |map_width= |lat= 41.070000 |long= -73.895000 }}

The Tappan Zee Bridge is a cantilever bridge in New York over the Hudson River at its widest point, the Tappan Zee. The Tappan Zee is named for an Indian tribe from the area called the "Tappan". "Zee" is Dutch for "Sea". In 1994, the bridge was renamed to The Governor Malcolm Wilson Tappan Zee Bridge after Malcolm Wilson, former Governor of New York. It connects Nyack in Rockland County with Tarrytown in Westchester County. Construction started in March 1952 and it was opened for traffic on December 15, 1955. The total length of the bridge and approaches is 16,013 feet (just over 3 miles, 4.881 km). The cantilever span is 1212 feet (369.42 meters) providing a 138-foot (42-meter) clearance over the water.

The bridge is part of the New York State Thruway mainline, and also designated as Interstate 87 and Interstate 287. The span carries seven lanes of automotive traffic, with the center lane being switchable between eastbound and westbound traffic depending on the prevalent commuter direction. (On business days, the center lane is eastbound in the morning and westbound in the evening.) This is accomplished via a movable center barrier.

The bridge was built with a design lifetime of just 50 years due to a scarcity of materials during the Korean War. The deteriorating structure, combined with concern of over-usage by increased traffic over the bridge has led to plans to repair the bridge or replace it with a tunnel. These plans and discussions have since been dormant after the projected cost to complete this project increased from $4 billion to $20 billion.

Most eastbound car traffic is subject to a toll of $4.00, payable in cash or via E-ZPass.

Image:Tappan Zee Bridge.jpg

The Tappan Zee in popular culture

  • In a song in Maurice Sendak's animated film and stage production Really Rosie, the title character claims she will "tap across the Tappan Zee."
  • The first line of the Fountains of Wayne song Little Red Light on the album Welcome Interstate Managers is "Sitting in traffic on the Tappan Zee".
  • The bridge can be seen out of the train windows during the dinner scene between Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint on the train in "North by Northwest".

See also

External links

{{Crossings navbox |structure = Crossings |place = Hudson River |bridge = Tappan Zee Bridge |bridge signs = Image:I-87.svg Image:I-287.svg Image:NYS Thruway Sign.gif |upstream = Bear Mountain Bridge |upstream signs = Image:US 6.svg Image:US 202.svg |downstream = George Washington Bridge |downstream signs = Image:I-95.svg Image:US 1.svg Image:US 9.svg }}