Enemy territory anyway.
Both options are good for looks, neither will bring back the freedoms and rights of the residents.
which option will give Cuomo a literal heart attack while on the bathroom when no one else is home ?
What does this mean? The depiction in the article shows a regular road with traffic lights would be the “community grid” solution but what happens to the interstate highway? Does it move or is it just gone? And if so, do their rosy projections take into account the loss of traffic coming from the interstate itself?
Liberals should not be allowed to make any projections using numbers
“...what will happen to the land that’s now under the aging viaduct’s shadow?”
Why do I suspect the politician already know what is going to happen to this land? Somehow I believe money has already changed hands to make sure of the outcome. /s
The land under the 81 viaduct will sit unused for decades, as committees argue indefinitely about how the half-billion$ prove will be paid, and what will happen to that land. The viaduct itself will slowly deteriorate, making a city-spanning eyesore fraught with crime. Sections will be perpetually propped open temporarily for passage to the other side.
Syracuse should choose the kind and compassionate act, put homeless shelters on the existing viaduct, ladders would allow the homeless to panhandle on the street below.
The know that the denser areas always draw liberals who let it degenerate into slums but who keep voting Dem....
One of the old maps at the City Waterworks Office had a sketch of a "Can of Worms" on the plat of that area....a recognizable name to old timers.
Maybe Cuomo can build a film studio there. Oh wait...he did...in Syracuse. $15 million spent on the building, and the State ended up selling it for $1.00 (one dollar). Included corruption, indictments, and convictions of everyone but Cuomo.
New York Spent $15 Million to Build a Film Hub. It Just Sold for $1
NYS DOT report favors 'Community Grid' for I-81 replacement
Meanwhile....
Inside Destiny USAs mortgage emergency: Crisis or hardball bargaining?
And all while Upstate's depopulation continues apace.