Laurelton Parkway Website Links For
Belt
 

Information About

Laurelton Parkway




  shield Belt Pkwy Shieldsvg
  reference Route 907B/907C/907D
  length Mi 2529
  length Round 2
  length Ref 1
  established 1941
  direction A West
  starting Terminus I-278 in Brooklyn
  junction I-678 in Queens <br> NY 878 in Queens
  direction B East
  ending Terminus Cross Island / Southern Pkwys in Queens
  counties Kings , Queens
  commons category
  customcommons pika


The Belt Parkway, also known as the '''Belt System''' or '''Circumferential Parkway''', is a series of Limited-access Highway s that form a complete circle around the New York City Boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens on Long Island . The system is composed of four separate parkways; however, three of the four are signed as the "Belt Parkway". The three parkways that make up the signed "Belt Parkway" are 25.29 miles (40.7 km) long.


ROUTE DESCRIPTION

The Shore Parkway, '''Southern Parkway''', '''Laurelton Parkway''' and s. Excluding the Cross Island Parkway, the other three segments are now known collectively as the official "Belt Parkway". It is designated an east-west route, and its exit numbering system begins, in standard fashion, at the western terminus of the Shore Parkway, the westernmost parkway in the system. The numbering increases as the parkway proceeds eastward, and continues onto the Cross Island at the eastern terminus of the Belt Parkway. The north-south parkway retains the numbering scheme to its northern terminus.


Shore Parkway

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The Shore Parkway begins at the Gowanus Expressway near the east end of the Verrazano Narrows Bridge and proceeds westward through Brooklyn . The Shore, the part of the system most people think of when they mention "Belt Parkway," makes a large arc to the south, passing under the Narrows bridge and entering the Coney Island area. The parkway turns east, roughly following the former path of Coney Island Creek before skipping across former islands in Jamaica Bay to reach the Southern Parkway.


Southern Parkway


The Southern Parkway, distinct from the Southern State Parkway in Nassau and Suffolk counties, is located entirely within the median of Conduit Boulevard between Cross Bay Boulevard and Brookville Boulevard. Just west of Brookville, the Southern exits the median, turning to the northeast and becoming the Laurelton Parkway.


Laurelton Parkway

The Laurelton Parkway is a short connector between the Southern Parkway and the Cross Island Parkway. At exit 25A ( Southern State Parkway ), the Laurelton, as well as the Belt Parkway, becomes the Cross Island Parkway .


Cross Island Parkway

See Also: Cross Island Parkway


The Cross Island Parkway continues north from the interchange with the Southern State Parkway near the border of Nassau County , then west to the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge , where it terminates at the Whitestone Expressway .


HISTORY


The Belt Parkway was proposed by builder and highway advocate Robert Moses in 1930 to provide modern highway access to Manhattan and to connect to, and use similar design principles to, Parkway s already constructed on Long Island and Westchester County, New York . Construction began in 1934 . The full loop was completed when the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway (also known as the "BQE") was finished in 1960 .


The Belt System

Though some signage bears the name "Belt Parkway," the original plan never called for a highway of that name, rather a system of different named parkways called the "Belt System." The ''Belt System'' is made up of a series of interconnecting highways, none of which are actually named the ''Belt Parkway''. Originally, the highways were the Gowanus Parkway from the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel to the Shore Parkway; the entirety of the Shore, Southern, Laurelton, and Cross Island Parkways; the Whitestone Parkway from the Cross Island to the Grand Central Parkway ; and the Grand Central from the Whitestone to the Triborough Bridge .

All of the original parkways, except the Gowanus, were built on strips of green and treed rights-of-way in a more pleasant surrounding than most highways of their time. The Gowanus Parkway was built as an elevated structure over Third and Hamilton Avenues in order to avoid the active docks and industrial areas in that part of Brooklyn.


Conversion and completion

Like most Parkways In New York State , the parkways comprising the Belt System were closed to commercial traffic, including any vehicle with a non-passenger registration and all commercial trucking of any size. Originally even station wagons, which had "suburban" registrations, were excluded but they were later allowed, along with passenger-registered SUVs and vans.

The system was not completed as a parkway, and some portions of the original system were converted to Expressway s, which allows commercial traffic to use them. These expressway portions included the Gowanus Expressway , replacing Gowanus Parkway as a connector between Manhattan and the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge to Staten Island and New Jersey (now signed as part of Interstate 278 ); Whitestone Expressway , which converted Whitestone Parkway into a truck route to connect the Van Wyck Expressway to the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge (now signed as part of Interstate 678 ); and the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway , built as an expressway to connect the Gowanus Parkway/Expressway to the Triborough Bridge and Grand Central Parkway to complete the system (now signed as part of Interstate 278 ).


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