BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 Queens  elected  officials  
 and community leaders joined  
 NYC Parks Commissioner Gabrielle  
 Fialkoff on Friday, Dec.  
 17, to cut the ribbon on the  
 completion of the first phase of  
 reconstruction  of  the Vanderbilt  
 Motor Parkway in Alley  
 Pond Park.  
 “The  Vanderbilt  Motor  
 Parkway is both a recreational  
 asset and a living piece of New  
 York City history — and now  
 this bike and pedestrian path  
 has received the makeover it  
 deserves,” Fialkoff said. 
 Originally  built  in  1908  as  
 a racecourse by the railroad  
 mogul and financier William  
 Vanderbilt Jr., today the path  
 serves  as  a  scenic  bike  and  
 pedestrian walkway that connects  
 Cunningham  and Alley  
 Pond Parks in eastern Queens.  
 The reconstruction project  
 was funded with $1.85 million  
 total, including $1.435 million  
 from  Grodenchik  and  an  additional  
 $415,000 from Mayor  
 Bill de Blasio.  
 The project is the first  
 phase  of  work  that  includes  
 the reconstruction of 0.8 miles  
 of the Vanderbilt Motor Parkway  
 from Winchester Boulevard  
 by the entrance to Alley  
 Pond  Park  to  Springfield  
 Boulevard. The scope of work  
 includes new asphalt pavement, 
  new rustic timber guide  
 rail, benches, trees and shrub  
 plantings.  
 Queens Borough President  
 Donovan Richards, Senator  
 John Liu, Assemblywoman  
 Nily Rozic, Councilman Barry  
 Grodenchik,  Community  
 Board 8 Chair Martha Taylor  
 and President of the Long Island  
 Motor Parkway Preservation  
 Society Howard Kroplick  
 were  in  attendance  for  the  
 ribbon-cutting ceremony. 
 The Vanderbilt Long Island  
 Motor Parkway had not been  
 repaved in decades and was in  
 desperate need of an upgrade,  
 Grodenchik said.  
 IN SCHOLARSHIPS & GRANTS AWARDED ANNUALLY 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.4     COM   |   DEC. 31, 2021 - JAN. 6, 2022 
 NYC Parks Commissioner Gabrielle Fialkoff speaks about the first phase of Vanderbilt Motor Parkway  
 at a press conference held on Friday, Dec. 17.                 Photo by Daniel Avila/NYC Parks 
 “My advocacy for this project  
 was driven by the frequent  
 requests I received from local  
 residents for whom the path  
 provides a clean, safe, quiet  
 place for exercise and recreation; 
   the  ongoing  pandemic  
 only  reinforces  the  importance  
 of access to outdoor public  
 space,” Grodenchik said. “I  
 thank the mayor for providing  
 the funding that will allow the  
 remainder  of  the  path  to  be  
 resurfaced and the Parks Department  
 for doing a magnificent  
 job on the first stretch.”  
 A second phase of renovations, 
  which Mayor de Blasio  
 funded  with  $3.685  million,  
 will  address  the  additional  
 two miles of parkway, from  
 Springfield Boulevard to 199th  
 Street.  It  is  expected  to begin  
 construction next year. 
 Reach reporter Carlotta  
 Mohamed  by  e-mail  at  
 cmohamed@schnepsmedia. 
 com or by phone at (718) 260– 
 4526. 
 Parks cuts ribbon on fi rst  
 phase of reconstruction of  
 Vanderbilt Motor Parkway 
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