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Free NYC Tour? Walk, Jog, Bike Brooklyn BridgesWilliamsburg, Carroll St., Marine Parkway, Brooklyn Bridge and more
Take a free, self-guided tour of NYC. Bike, hike, walk or jog across Brooklyn's many bridges, starting with three bridges to Manhattan, and two small, historic bridges.
"The best things in life are free," they say. And it's true, walking or biking across the many (and very different) bridges of Brooklyn is a fun, family-friendly way to explore New York City, whether as a tourist, newly arrived college student, or a lifelong resident. Bikeable, Walkable Manhattan-Brooklyn BridgesThe Original Brooklyn Bridge (not for sale) This mile-long bridge first spanned the East River in 1883, at 7,308 feet long with a 1600-foot span. If there's only time to walk one way, head toward Manhattan's skyline; it’s wildly romantic at sunset.
Manhattan BridgeThe Manhattan Bridge celebrated its 100th birthday in 2009.
Williamsburg Bridge The views of NY Harbor, the skyline,and the Manhattan Bridge are spectacular. Built in 1902, this bridge enabled immigrant Jews and Italians working and living in crowded conditions on the lower east side of Manhattan to start a new life in less-populous Brooklyn.
Small Historic Bridges Within Brooklyn For Biking, WalkingCarroll St. Bridge Brooklyn's quaintest, this tiny 1889 bridge spans the Gowanus Canal, linking Park Slope and Carroll Gardens. It is also a national landmark.The bridge is the oldest of four so-called “rectile” bridges in the US (referring to the mechanism whereby the bridge slides along tracks on the shore, allowing boats and ships to pass below). History buffs note: A sign reading “Any person driving over this bridge faster than a walk will be subject to a penalty of five dollars for each offense” is a replica of a sign once marking this bridge.
Union St. Bridge.This bridge has a cool mechanism, called a "double-leaf Scherzer rolling lift bascule"
Bikeable, Walkable Bridges to Queens Marine Parkway Bridge, AKA Gil Hodges Bridge This bridge, with lovely water views, is a fisherman's favorite. It's near the Atlantic Ocean and named for Gil Hodges, the Brooklyn Dodgers' first baseman and Mets manager.
Pulaski Bridge Named after Polish freedom fighter Casimir Pulaski (1747-1779) who was recruited by Benjamin Franklin to help the colonies fight the British, the Pulaski Bridge is a six-lane drawbridge over Newtown Creek, which divides Brooklyn and Queens.
Car-Only Bridges: Kosciusko and Verrazano-Narrows Bridge The Kosciusko Bridge spans the Brooklyn-Queens Expwy where it meets the Long Island Expressway. They say that 170,000 vehicles a day cross the Kosciusko Bridge, so-named in honor of after an 18th-century Polish engineer who fought against the British in the Revolutionary War and later served as chief engineer of West Point. Note the two eagles atop the bridge towers, one Polish and one American. Check out the elegant Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, connecting Brooklyn and Staten Island, another Brooklyn beauty. For an active outing—and a free tour of New York City's borough of Brooklyn from a different angle—bike, hike, walk, stroll or jog across the Brooklyn Bridge, but Brooklyn's other bridges.
The copyright of the article Free NYC Tour? Walk, Jog, Bike Brooklyn Bridges in New York Travel is owned by Ellen Freudenheim. Permission to republish Free NYC Tour? Walk, Jog, Bike Brooklyn Bridges in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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