You are reading

City to Close Additional Streets to Traffic, Many in Sunnyside, LIC and Flushing

46th Street, between Greenpoint and Queens Boulevard (Photo: Queens Post)

May 13, 2020 By Allie Griffin

More Queens streets will be closed to traffic and opened to pedestrians as the coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage New York City.

The Department of Transportation (DOT) will open up 12 additional miles of city streets starting tomorrow as part of the city’s Open Streets initiative, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced today.

The City plans to open 40 miles of roadways for pedestrians and cyclists’ exclusive use by the end of the month as the warmer weather brings more and more New Yorkers outside.

Thus far, de Blasio has announced 21 miles across the city, including the routes revealed today.

“We want to make it easier for people to socially distance, particularly as the warmer weather comes on and the Open Streets initiative is helping us to do that,” de Blasio said at a City Hall briefing today.

Newly announced streets in Jackson Heights, Sunnyside, Long Island City and Flushing will open up beginning tomorrow.

Most streets will be closed to traffic between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. each day.

Local deliveries, pickups and drop offs and necessary city service, utility and emergency vehicles are permitted during the open street hours. Such drivers must drive at 5 MPH on the streets.

The City has already converted several Queens streets near parks and a stretch of 34th Avenue in Jackson Heights to pedestrians and cyclists use.

The mayor hopes to make 100 miles of city streets car-free during the course of the pandemic.

He announced the Open Streets initiative and 100-mile goal at the end of April after resisting weeks of pressure from the City Council and bike advocates to close roads to traffic during the health crisis.

The open streets will give New Yorkers with growing cabin fever amid stay-at-home orders additional space to get fresh air while following social distancing rules, supporters say.

The Queens streets, announced today, that will be shut to traffic each day from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. include:

34th Avenue between 78th Street and Junction Boulevard in Jackson Heights

Skillman Avenue between 39th Place and 43rd Street in Sunnyside

39th Avenue between Woodside Avenue and Barnett Avenue in Sunnyside

27th Street between Hunter Street and Queens Plaza South in Long Island City

5th Street between 46th Avenue and 49th Avenue in Long Island City

Roosevelt Avenue between 155th Street and Northern Boulevard in Flushing

Peck Avenue between 137th Street and Main Street in Flushing

In Sunnyside, 46th Street, between Queens Boulevard and Greenpoint Avenue, will close on Saturdays and Sundays between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

23 Comments

Click for Comments 
SuperWittySmitty

Closing 46th Street, between Queens Boulevard and Greenpoint Avenue, should be permanent. This should have happened years ago. It should be a pedestrian-only space. The space under the station has worked out nicely (except for the folks who’ve decided to live there, but that’s another issue.)

2
1
Reply
Sunnysideposthatesme

Imagine needing an ambulance but waiting for it get to you at 5mph. F this stupid city

11
20
Reply
Trump lovers are ACTUALLY this gullible

Yes that’s exactly how it works ? you seem really informed

12
6
Reply
Queens Streets for LOL

Well played. I guess these actually are Queens Streets for “All” if pedestrians cyclists cars delivery trucks and emergency vehicles can all access them equally and safely. We may consider renaming our org since we don’t support this. LOL.

Reply
Re: Annomymous

Zurich has clean and timely public transportation. People can rely on it.

The “old city” is car free… because the streets are narrow, built before they knew there was another continent across the sea.

The “pedestrian area” does not have a line of 4 stories buildings packed with residents. It has only stores and cafes that close around 6pm

Zurich pedestrian area after 7 pm is empty. Likewise on Weekends.

If you want a no-car city, move to Amsterdam (what a great answer, eh? Whoever disagrees just move! Out of my land!)

6
1
Reply
Stupid idea.

You’re not in Zurich.
The mentality is very different.
This is America. The land of the haves and the have nots. This will is destined to fail bigly.

Reply
Jason

Such a stupid idea thanks for making the neighborhood worse, instead of doing things ass backwards how about removing these useless bike lanes for our first responders to drive through a lot easier.

9
2
Reply
Anonymous

Traffic Smurff. Queens has 21000 people per square mile. Zurich has 12000 people per square mile. Queens, by itself, is more dense than Zurich. Sunnyside is more dense than Queens as a whole. We don’t need to be a car first city. NYC is denser than every European city, and is also denser than Tokyo. If you want to drive everywhere, move to Dallas.

9
22
Reply
Rabbi Mankowitz

The more we cannot move about freely the more they can control the population.

17
16
Reply
Disgusted Citizen

Keep the bicycles off the streets designated for pedestrians. They are a bigger danger than cars. They have sent more people to the hospital than cars.

18
6
Reply
Bags of Onions

We should all be concern of the censoring that sunnyside post is conducting in the comments section. Just because a community speaks the truth about handing bags of raw onions to people in desperate need because they didn’t RSVP using your google document is disrespectful and inhuman. The director os SSCS should be ashamed of herself you know who you are lady. How would you feel to be given a bag of raw ONIONS!! Shame on you, JVB ally.

18
3
Reply
NYCsummer

This is great news! Nearly every park in Sunnyside has been closed during these warming months and kids and adults alike have been crammed together on narrow sidewalks while we have all this free road space available for the occasional car.

This is a great public health initiative, no doubt propelled by the good work at Transportation Alternatives.

20
20
Reply
Massive business opportunity

I just heard the city is considering allowing restaurants to set up tables and serve food on these opened streets. Where is the Skillman Project on this? Are they petitioning for this or are they still protesting bike lanes? I want that Sanger Hall burger and a cold beer, momo from Dawa, fish and chips from Horgan, etc. The businesses should be clamoring for Skillman to be closed so they can open back up!

18
11
Reply
PG

39th Avenue between Woodside and Barnett? 39th and Barnett run parallel to each other? Maybe it’s supposed to be Woodside between 39th and Barnett? In which case it’s close for like 100 feet? This makes no sense at all

17
4
Reply
Theorem Ox

Guess the city and the DOT didn’t think things through with 39th Avenue in Woodside.

39th Avenue is the only accessible road to 50th Street between Barnett and Skillman Avenues. By cutting off 39th Avenue, 50th Street becomes completely inaccessible for residents there without violating traffic laws during the day.

20
2
Reply
Tired of BS

Transportation Alternatives uses this plague to expand bike lanes. Their stated goal is to rid the city of cars. They pretend the care about pedestrians.

How is it safe to combine the elderly, children, wheelchair users with bicycles? The City Council and Mayor still have free cars.

22
12
Reply
Blame Russia

We’ll need those extra pedestrian zones for people to sell pencils on if the economy doesn’t get going again soon.

23
2
Reply
Traffic Smurff

prepare for the traffic!
Mua hua hua hua!

“This works in Europe!”

Yeap, European 15th century cities filled up with european mentalities and not 10 millions of diversity…

Who dares to compare Zurich with NYC?

32
5
Reply
Gary

Why 155 to northern on Roosevelt ? It’s residential housing . Nowhere near a park.

19
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

City Council passes bill shifting broker fee burden to landlords, sparking backlash from real estate industry and key critics

Nov. 14, 2024 By Ethan Stark-Miller and QNS News Team

The New York City Council passed a landmark bill on Wednesday, aiming to relieve renters of paying hefty broker fees — a cost that will now fall on the party who hires the listing agent. Known as the FARE Act (Fairness in Apartment Rentals), the legislation passed with a veto-proof majority of 42-8, despite opposition from Republicans and conservative Democrats.