I certainly have neither time nor inclination to read the entire NJ DEP 1988 directive regarding the creation of the Hudson River Waterfront Walkway.
It had been challenged in court by developers but was eventually upheld, whether Pat agrees with it or not.
Therefore, every developer who builds on the part of the NJ shoreline designated in the directive must also provide the 30-ft wide public walkway along the perimeter of the property which abuts the water.
Most of the developers who must comply with this law develop new housing. Liberty National developed a golf course with planned housing. BGC has no housing, but is a private golf course. I have not read the law, but I suspect that they also had to comply with the DEP 30-ft walkway requirement.
Whether the Walkway is currently continuous is totally beside the point.
It was not designed to be continuous from the beginning.
The BGC part of it was supposed to wrap around the whole perimeter of the course adjacent to water all the way to Constable Hook (hence the bridge), but Homeland Security recommended against it, so the work on the walkway has stopped at the current Helipad location (a good financial break for BGC, actually).
Pat's argument that the bridge is insanity because 800 ft of it only extends the walkway by 200 yards is invalid, bacause the walkway WAS supposed to continue all the way to Constable Hook.
Regarding the flying balls on 17th - since the walkway requirement had presumably been known from the beginning, the golf course should have been designed to protect the walking public from a close encounter with a struck golf ball.
Alternatively, a protective steel mesh canopy could be installed, like along the 18th hole at Liberty National, which is contiguous to their part of the Walkway.