One of the world’s largest floating cranes successfully completed the first of many enormous lifts for the New NY Bridge project on April 24, 2015, following months of planning and…
The New NY Bridge project marked another milestone this spring as Tappan Zee Constructors, LLC placed concrete for the crossing’s northern Westchester abutment. The structure will support the new bridge’s…
While frigid weather conditions have limited river work in recent weeks, Tappan Zee Constructors, LLC (TZC) has been forging ahead with the parts of the bridge that anchor it to…
While the Hudson Valley was spared the worst of Winter Storm Juno on Jan. 26 and 27, the still-severe weather event underscored the challenges associated with building a major bridge…
The New NY Bridge will stand as an iconic landmark for generations to come, and it is being built by thousands of talented men and women from many trades and skills. With years of training and experience, each of these individuals plays a role in ensuring that the bridge is built to the highest standards of quality. Watch as members of the project team share their insights and experiences in constructing the new twin-span crossing, which will be completed in 2018.
With the arrival of 2015, the New NY Bridge project is looking ahead at a new year of construction. With a fleet of approximately 130 floating cranes, barges, tugboats and…
Aggregate piers were installed to help support the future Rockland landing of the new bridge. On the shores of Rockland County, at the western terminus of the New NY Bridge,…
The New NY Bridge will feature dynamic lighting installed by Welsbach Electrical Corp., as seen in this conceptual rendering On the lengthy roster of world-class industry experts working on the…
Watch the first year of construction fly by in just over two minutes of video showing how Tappan Zee Constructors, LLC (TZC) is building foundations for the new twin-span bridge. The time-lapse video was compiled from photos taken by the project’s construction cams, which are positioned to capture the daily action from six different vantage points and post the images on the project website. Look for additional time-lapse videos as the New NY Bridge continues to rise from the Hudson River.
If all the concrete used to build the New NY Bridge was used to build a typical sidewalk, the path would extend approximately 1,500 miles from the project site to…