NY 9J
New York 9J north of Castleton goes through the mud plains of the Hudson River and is flat and wide, formerly 3 lanes wide with a center passing lane.
Taken on Friday May 8, 2020 at Rensselear County.Why ads? π€ / Privacy Policy π³
New York 9J north of Castleton goes through the mud plains of the Hudson River and is flat and wide, formerly 3 lanes wide with a center passing lane.
Taken on Friday May 8, 2020 at Rensselear County.Historical topographic maps give you a look at what Port of Rensselaer and Albany looked like prior to modern developments.
Heading across the Dunn Memorial Bridge to Rensslear.
I often think people romanticize cities before the highways - often city streets were narrowed with fewer lanes, more parallel parking added, after the highways were built. Broadway with the old Dunn Bridge and all the slip ramps to the bridge was kind of a monster on its own when mixed and mashed traffic heading in all directions with six lanes in front of the D & H building. Old Broadway and State wasn't particularly pedestrian friendly back in the 1950s and 1960s. I'm playing the devils advocate to a degree here but ramming a lot of traffic throughout urban downtowns isn't necessarily conducive to healthy, pedestrian scale neighborhoods. I'm not defending Frank Fuller's baby, Interstate 787 but we shouldn't be romantic about saving the Old Broadway / Old Dunn Bridge. It was pretty hideous for any body but the motorist back then.
This section of NY 22 along the Hoosick River is quite pretty with the Taconic Mountains surrouding it.