You are reading

City Completes Revamp of Historic Stretch of Vanderbilt Motor Parkway in Alley Pond Park

The Parks Dept. has completed a $1.85 million revamp of a section of the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway in Oakland Gardens. Pictured are attendees at a ceremonial ribbon-cutting event Friday (NYC Parks/ Daniel Avila)

The Parks Dept. has completed a $1.85 million revamp of a section of the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway in Oakland Gardens. Pictured are attendees at a ceremonial ribbon-cutting event Friday (NYC Parks/ Daniel Avila)

Dec. 22, 2021 By Michael Dorgan

The Parks Dept. has completed a $1.85 million revamp of a historic section of pathway that goes through Alley Pond Park in Oakland Gardens – and several officials visited the area last Friday to hold a ceremonial ribbon-cutting event.

The section of pathway — which runs 0.8 miles from the entrance of Alley Pond Park on Winchester Boulevard to Springfield Boulevard — has undergone a major overhaul with a new asphalt pavement, guide rails, benches, trees and shrubs put down.

The pathway forms part of the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway, which was one of the first concrete roads in the nation for automobiles having been built more than a century ago, according to the Parks Dept.

Council Member Barry Grodenchik allocated $1.44 million in city funds toward the project, with Mayor Bill de Blasio adding $415,000 from the city budget.

Grodenchik said that the parkway had not been repaved in decades and was in desperate need of an upgrade.

“The path provides a clean, safe, quiet place for exercise and recreation,” Grodenchik said at the ceremony. “The ongoing pandemic only reinforces the importance of access to outdoor public space.”

The city has revamped a section of the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway in Oakland Gardens (NYC Parks/ Daniel Avila)

NYC Parks Commissioner Gabrielle Fialkoff, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, State Senator John Liu and Assembly Member Nily Rozic also attended the ceremony.

The project forms part one of a two-phase redevelopment of the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway that connects Alley Pond Park to Cunningham Park.

The second phase, which is expected to cost $3.7 million, will see the renovation of two additional miles of parkway from Springfield Boulevard to 199th Street. Funding for this phase is coming from the mayor’s office.

The Vanderbilt Motor Parkway has a rich history and was originally built as a private racetrack in 1908 by William K. Vanderbilt, Jr., a railroad mogul and financier. Vanderbilt was the great-grandson of the railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt.

The private parkway was opened to the public as a toll road in 1912 and stretched 45-miles from Fresh Meadows in Queens to Lake Ronkonkoma in Suffolk County.

It was the first long-distance concrete highway in the U.S. to have bridges and overpasses — and was used primarily by the city’s elite commuting to their Long Island estates, according to the Parks Dept.

The parkway acquired the nickname “Rumrunner’s Road” during Prohibition as bootleggers often used it to dodge the police. The parkway was closed down in 1938 after becoming outdated and insolvent.

The route was then deeded over to New York City as well as Nassau and Suffolk counties. The Queens section was turned into a bicycle path.

Fialkoff said that the current redevelopments will preserve the pathway for generations.

“The Vanderbilt Motor Parkway is both a recreational asset and a living piece of New York City history and… has received the makeover it deserves,” Fialkoff said.

Community Board 8 Chair Martha Taylor and Long Island Motor Parkway Preservation Society President Howard Kroplick also attended the ceremony.

Attendees at a ceremonial ribbon-cutting event Friday marking the revamp of a section of the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway in Oakland Gardens.(NYC Parks/ Daniel Avila)

William K. Vanderbilt, Jr.

William K. Vanderbilt, Jr. pictured in 1911 with his racing cap and goggles on (Photo via Wiki Commons)

The parkway once stretched 45-miles from Fresh Meadows in the Queens to Lake Ronkonkoma in Suffolk County (Google Maps)

email the author: news@queenspost.com

One Comment

Click for Comments 
Barry Vertal

The Vanderbilt Motor Pkwy to me will always be known as the bicycle path. I was 8 years old in 1960 and lived on 198th Street between 75th Ave and Union Turnpike.
It was an amazing adventure to ride on it especially when the sun was setting in the dense forest. A thrill I’ll remember forever with all the others.

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Repeat hate crime offender charged in anti-Muslim subway attack in Forest Hills: DA

A Southeast Queens man is being held without bail after he was criminally charged with assault in the first degree as a hate crime and other charges for allegedly punching and kicking a Muslim woman on an E train in Forest Hills during the early morning hours of Wednesday, June 18.

Naved Durrni, 34, of 106th Avenue in Jamaica, was arraigned in Queens Criminal Court on Thursday and additionally charged with aggravated harassment in the first and second degrees.

Hate Crimes Task Force investigating bomb threats against Mamdani: NYPD

The NYPD’s Hate Crimes Task Force launched a probe into multiple death threats made against Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani after his district office at 24-08 32nd St. in Astoria received four expletive-filled phone voicemails, on various dates, making threatening anti-Muslim statements by an unknown individual, including a threat to blow up his car.

The calls were made from an untraceable number and labeled the mayoral candidate a “terrorist who is not welcome in New York or America” in a message phoned in on Wednesday morning.

Seven teens indicted for attempted murder in brutal Kissena Park gang attack on two girls: DA

A Queens grand jury indicted seven teenagers for attempted murder, gang assault, robbery, and other crimes for an attack on two girls inside Kissena Park in Flushing in early May.

The defendants, who are all 17 years old, were variously arraigned in Queens Supreme Court between June 4 and Wednesday in two separate 25-count indictments with two counts of attempted murder in the second degree. If convicted, they face up to 25 years in prison.

Queens Defenders founder charged with stealing nonprofit funds as second scandal unfolds

The founder of the Queens Defenders and her husband have lawyered up after they were indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly stealing tens of thousands of dollars from the non-profit organization.

Former Queens Defenders executive director Lori Zeno, 64, surrendered Wednesday at the Brooklyn federal courthouse. Zeno was arraigned on an indictment charging her and Rashad Ruhani, 55, with wire fraud conspiracy, theft, money laundering conspiracy and other crimes.