Robert Moses Causeway

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Robert Moses Causeway

Robert Moses Causeway highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT
Length8.10 mi[1] (13.04 km)
Existed1951–present
HistoryCompleted in 1964
RestrictionsNo commercial vehicles north of NY 27
Major junctions
South endRobert Moses State Park on Fire Island
Major intersections Ocean Parkway in Captree State Park
NY 27A in West Islip
NY 27 in West Bay Shore
North end Southern State Parkway in Bay Shore
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesSuffolk
Highway system

The Robert Moses Causeway is an 8.10-mile-long (13.04 km) parkway in Suffolk County, New York on Long Island. It is named for the master builder and urban planner Robert Moses. The parkway, originally known as the Captree Causeway, connects West Islip on Long Island to the barrier beach islands, such as Captree Island, Jones Beach Island, and the western tip of Fire Island, to the south. It is designated New York State Route 908J (NY 908J), an unsigned reference route. Except south of NY 27A, the road, like most parkways in New York State, is limited to non-commercial traffic.

Route description

Water tower and Robert Moses Causeway roundabout at Robert Moses State Park
The Fire Island Inlet Bridge carrying the causeway over the Fire Island Inlet as seen from Captree State Park

The Robert Moses Causeway begins inside Robert Moses State Park, located on the western tip of Fire Island. From here, the highway heads north across the Fire Island Inlet on the Fire Island Inlet Bridge. On the north side of the inlet, the road changes from a two-lane undivided road into a four-lane undivided freeway as it enters Captree State Park and approaches a cloverleaf interchange with Ocean Parkway. The parkway becomes a five-lane divided freeway with three northbound lanes and two southbound lanes in the vicinity of the junction.[2]

The parkway then traverses the State Boat Channel Bridge by way of a 665-foot (203 m)-long bascule bridge modeled after the Mill Basin Drawbridge in Mill Basin, Brooklyn. The north foot of the bridge contains an unnumbered interchange to a private road on Captree Island, where the rest of the road is surrounded by protected land. On the section that crosses over the Great South Bay, via the Great South Bay Bridge, the New York City skyline can be faintly seen on a clear day. Originally a toll bridge, the remnants of the former toll plaza for the Great South Bay Bridge can be found on the north side in West Islip. At the cloverleaf interchange with NY 27A, the third northbound lane becomes the deceleration ramp, and from there the rest of the parkway is four lanes wide.[2]

The parkway soon takes a slight northeastern turn and later rises to move over Union Boulevard (County Route 50 or CR 50), the Montauk Branch of the Long Island Rail Road, and Orinoco Drive with no access to either roads. Instead, another cloverleaf interchange is available at NY 27. The road remains elevated as it crosses over Muncey Road and then runs along the west side of Casamento Park, before approaching its northern terminus at the interchange with the Southern State Parkway. The north-to-eastbound ramp to the Southern State and Heckscher State parkways contains an interchange of its own with CR 57 (Bay Shore Road), because that ramp's traffic misses the Southern State Parkway exit to CR 57. The other ramps exist on a partial cloverleaf just west of Bay Shore Road's interchange with the Southern State.[2]

History

The first sprawling trestle crossing from West Islip to Captree Island was completed in 1951. The structure is 3,206.2 meters (2.0 mi) in length with a middle clearance for boats of 18.2 meters (59.7 ft).[3] Originally, one lane was for southbound traffic and the other for northbound traffic. In a bridge opening ceremony, the first car to drive over the bridge was a Suffolk County Sheriff's Office patrol vehicle. In 1967, a new span was built next to the original bridge, carrying three lanes of northbound traffic.[3] The original bridge was reconfigured to carry southbound traffic.

The Fire Island Inlet span was completed in 1964. By 1985 a dual span was proposed to alleviate traffic, but it was never constructed. When first proposed in 1938, the span was to be a vertical-lift bridge with a design similar to that of the Marine Parkway–Gil Hodges Memorial Bridge. Later, the design of the Fire Island Bridge was changed to conform with that of the Great South Bay span, a 600-foot (180 m) steel-arch span with a 60-foot (18 m) clearance.[4][5]

Exit list

All exits south of the Great South Bay Bridge are unnumbered. The entire route is in Suffolk County.

Locationmi[1][6]kmExitDestinationsNotes
Fire Island0.000.00Robert Moses State ParkTraffic circle
Fire Island Inlet0.10–
0.90
0.16–
1.45
Fire Island Inlet Bridge
Captree State Park1.031.66 Ocean Parkway – Jones Beach, Captree State Park
State Boat Channel1.352.17State Boat Channel Bridge
Captree Island1.602.57Captree IslandExit contains ramps for reversing direction on the Causeway
Great South Bay2.50–
4.50
4.02–
7.24
Great South Bay Bridge
West Islip5.258.45RM2 NY 27A – Bay Shore, BabylonSigned as exits RM2E (east) and RM2W (west)
West Bay Shore7.3211.78RM1 NY 27 – New York, MontaukSigned as exits RM1E (east) and RM1W (west); exit 41 on NY 27
Bay Shore7.8012.55
Southern State Parkway west – New York
Northbound exit and southbound entrance
8.2013.20 CR 57 (Bay Shore Road)Southbound access is via Southern Parkway exit 41
8.5013.68

Southern State Parkway east to Sagtikos State Parkway – East Islip
Exit 40 on Southern State Parkway
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b "2007 Traffic Data Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. July 25, 2008. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c Microsoft; Nokia (January 4, 2013). "overview map of the Robert Moses Causeway" (Map). Bing Maps. Microsoft. Retrieved January 4, 2013.
  3. ^ a b National Bridge Inventory, a database compiled by the United States Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration, available at www.nationalbridges.com. Accessed August 29, 2007.
  4. ^ Maiorana, Ronald (June 14, 1964). "New L.I. Bridge Opened By Moses". The New York Times. p. 82. Retrieved April 11, 2010.
  5. ^ Anderson, Steve. "Robert Moses Causeway". NYCRoads. Retrieved April 11, 2010.
  6. ^ Google (January 6, 2016). "Robert Moses Causeway" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 6, 2016.

External links