Pave Baby Pave: Mayor de Blasio Announces Record 5,000 Lane Miles Of City Roadways Have Been Repaved

May 18, 2018Over 1/4 of 19,000  lane miles of city streets have been repaved since 2014, an unprecedented pace;  on Staten Island, over 42 percent of streets have been repavedNEW  YORK—Mayor  Bill de Blasio today announced that thanks to a ten-year investment of $1.6  billion in street repaving, New York City had this week paved its 5,000th  lane-mile since 2014. That’s over 1/4 of the 19,000 total lane-miles citywide,  long enough for a road to Las Vegas and back. The increased repaving has driven  down potholes 44 percent. The Mayor made the announcement while visiting a  Department of Transportation yard on Staten Island, where 42 percent of  roadways have been resurfaced in the last four years.“Smoother  streets have meant fewer potholes. We paved it forward with a big investment in  repaving, and the men and women of the DOT have delivered,” said Mayor de  Blasio. “We will keep up this pace, and bring on new equipment, new asphalt  and new ways to avoid the frustration of newly paved streets getting dug up.”“For  nearly a decade and a half prior to the de Blasio Administration, the streets  of Staten Island and New York City suffered the structural fatigue of  disinvestment," said Staten Island Borough President James Oddo. “I  remember the first one-on-one formal presentation I made on this issue to the  Mayor at Staten Island Borough Hall in October 2014. We asked for an extraordinary  effort. What has resulted since that meeting has been more than that — it has  been historic. Our job is far from done, including closing the back door of  ‘street cuts,’ but the improvement in our roads is tangible, noticeable and  most appreciated. The Administration’s sustained commitment to Pave, Baby, Pave  is something to herald from Tottenville to St. George and across this  metropolis.”    The  Mayor also announced several investments and innovations coming to DOT’s paving  efforts:Reining  in street cuts for utility work – A newly paved street can last 10 to 20  years. But too often, repaved streets are quickly marred by utility “street  cuts."  

Starting in July, the DOT will dramatically reduce street  cuts for repairs for a full two years after a street is repaved on Staten  Island (the current permit-hold time is 18 months, with any repairs made during  that time requiring significant and costly restoration of the street at the  utility’s expense). If successful, the policy will be applied citywide.  Going  forward, DOT will also meet regularly with National Grid and Con Edison to  better plan and coordinate any disruptive work they plan on city roadways.New  paving equipment – As part of the City’s increased investment in paving, DOT announced that it has  made a $36 million investment in its fleet of street paving equipment –  including new trucks, milling equipment and steamrollers -- that have increased  the productivity and efficiency of its Roadways work crews.Rubberized  asphalt – After a recent successful pilot along Fingerboard Road on Staten Island, DOT  will be looking to expand the use of innovative roadway materials that combines  recycled crumb rubber with liquid asphalt.  Rubberized streets appear to  suffer fewer cracks and also offer quieter drives.Red  asphalt – DOT will expand the use of red asphalt for dedicated bus lanes.  Bus  lanes paved with red asphalt are more cost-effective: they last longer and  completely eliminate the need for street painting and touch-ups.High-Performance  Asphalt Overlay – After the successful conversions of Manhattan’s First Avenue and Fordham Road  in the Bronx, DOT will explore the transformation of the City’s concrete  roadways with a new overlay of asphalt.  Concrete roads with an asphalt  layer reduce traffic noise and are less expensive to repair.DOT  indicated major streets in every borough that will be repaved in the last six  weeks of the current fiscal year that ends on June 30, including:Third and Fifth Avenues in ManhattanCastle Hill and Lafayette Avenues in the BronxNorthern and Vernon Boulevards in QueensRochester and Troy Avenues in BrooklynArden Avenue and Todt Hill Road on Staten Island  “5,000  miles of repaved roadways is a really big deal, and it is definitely something  worth celebrating,” said City Council Speaker Corey Johnson. “Ensuring  our roads are safe and well taken care of has always been a priority for the  City Council and I applaud Mayor de Blasio and DOT for making this investment  in street repaving.”“Thanks  to Mayor de Blasio’s unprecedented investment in paving over the last four  years, we have reached this significant milestone while at the same time seeing  potholes and pothole complaints decline dramatically – by more than fifty  percent,” said DOT Commissioner Polly Trottenberg. “As our paving crews  now transition from potholes to road repaving, we ask that New York drivers  give them the necessary space and maintain a safe speed as we try to pave as  many streets during these warm weather months.”“Thank  you to DOT for getting this much-needed work done on Staten Island,” said Congress  Member Dan Donovan.  

“I look forward to our future collaboration to  address Staten Island’s transportation needs.”“Since  my colleagues and I worked with the administration to drastically increase the  budget for street repaving and to emphasize long-term restorations over  patchwork repairs, nearly half of the roads on Staten Island have been  repaved,” said Council Minority Leader Steven Matteo.  “That  is no small feat, especially given the dilapidated state our roads were in when  this Mayor took office. Borough President Oddo, Mayor de Blasio and  Commissioner Trottenberg rightfully deserve credit for this great work and I  look forward to continue working with them to keep these efforts going.""For  too long, our roads were left to deteriorate, worsening year after year under  the weight of traffic, salt and ice," said Council Member Debi Rose.  "That downward trajectory changed in 2015, when we began to invest  additional money in our roads, and as a result, we are now in a much better  place. From Mariners Harbor to Rosebank, this increased funding has made a real  difference in the quality of life of everyone who uses our roads. It also  improves our safety and our wallets, as we now spend less time veering left and  right to avoid potholes. I thank everyone who worked together to make this  milestone possible and I look forward to the coming paving season."In  2015, the Mayor announced a $1.6 billion commitment to resurface roads all over  the city over ten years. DOT repaved 1,265 lane miles in FY16, and 1,324 lane  miles in FY17.  So far in FY18, crews have resurfaced over 1,000  lane-miles.  It is the highest three-year output of paved lane-miles in  DOT’s recorded history.DOT  both procures and produces asphalt at its two plants for resurfacing and  filling potholes. In 2017, DOT used nearly 1.3 million tons of  asphalt.   For information about DOT’s ongoing work to address potholes  and maintain the City’s road network, please visit www.nyc.gov/dotPothole conditions should be reported  immediately to The Daily Pothole or to 311.

日期:2021/12/30点击:19