Former Location of Little Hell Gate (New York City, New York)
USA /
New Jersey /
West New York /
New York City, New York
World
/ USA
/ New Jersey
/ West New York
World / United States / New York
historical layer / disappeared object
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Little Hell Gate was a waterway in New York City, New York, USA. It passed between Randall's Island and Ward's Island, near the confluence of the Harlem River and East River.
The east end of Little Hell Gate opened into the Hell Gate passage, of the East River, opposite Lawrence Point, Queens. The west end met the Harlem River across from East 116th Street, Manhattan.
The Triboro Bridge opened in 1936, allowing easy access to Ward's and Randall's Islands. This spurred the conversion of both islands to parkland. Soon thereafter, the city began filling in the passage between the two, to expand and connect the two parks.
Few traces of Little Hell Gate still exist. Only indentations in the shoreline of the joined island in the East River indicate the former entrances to the waterway. Today, parkland and part of the New York City Fire Department Academy occupy its former location.
The 1,000-foot long Little Hell Gate Bridge, designed by George Washington Bridge-architect Othmar Ammann, had crossed the channel and was rendered obsolete when the Little Hell Gate was filled and a service road built along the deteriorating bridge. Efforts were made in the mid-1990s to preserve the bridge in the face of plans by the New York City Department of Transportation to destroy it.
The east end of Little Hell Gate opened into the Hell Gate passage, of the East River, opposite Lawrence Point, Queens. The west end met the Harlem River across from East 116th Street, Manhattan.
The Triboro Bridge opened in 1936, allowing easy access to Ward's and Randall's Islands. This spurred the conversion of both islands to parkland. Soon thereafter, the city began filling in the passage between the two, to expand and connect the two parks.
Few traces of Little Hell Gate still exist. Only indentations in the shoreline of the joined island in the East River indicate the former entrances to the waterway. Today, parkland and part of the New York City Fire Department Academy occupy its former location.
The 1,000-foot long Little Hell Gate Bridge, designed by George Washington Bridge-architect Othmar Ammann, had crossed the channel and was rendered obsolete when the Little Hell Gate was filled and a service road built along the deteriorating bridge. Efforts were made in the mid-1990s to preserve the bridge in the face of plans by the New York City Department of Transportation to destroy it.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Hell_Gate
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 40°47'26"N 73°55'20"W
- Site of Polo Grounds I 2.4 km
- Herman Goldman Athletic Field 3.8 km
- Seneca Village (Site) 4.1 km
- Yankee Stadium (1923-2008) 4.2 km
- Robert Fulton War Memorial Site 4.4 km
- IRT Ninth Avenue Line tunnel 4.6 km
- Site of Polo Grounds II, III and IV 4.9 km
- Lever Bros. Research Center 5.9 km
- Site of Hilltop Park 6 km
- Former Site Of Ford Edgewater Assembly Plant 6.1 km
- Randall's Island 0.2 km
- Ditmars-Steinway 1.7 km
- East (Spanish) Harlem 1.8 km
- Mott Haven 2 km
- Astoria 2.3 km
- Harlem (Manhattan, NY) 2.8 km
- Manhattan 4.2 km
- Western Queens 6.3 km
- The Bronx 10 km
- Queens 16 km