I’ve just returned from my third trip to Greater NYC in the last month. I still love sights like the Manhattan skyline, and it’s still painful but compelling to drive past MetLife Stadium. The things that really excite me, though, are the bridges. I love engineering achievements related to water, particularly bridges and dams. I don’t just get excited to walk the Brooklyn Bridge Promenade, I also get excited to walk through Brooklyn Heights and see the neighborhood where John Roebling lived. In particular, I love suspension bridges, and the George Washington is one of the best in the world. Driving the upper level and seeing the perfect geometry of the rise and fall of the supporting cables, with the exposed frame of the towers juxtaposed against the exposed cliffs on either side of the Hudson is a thrill. It’s not quite the prettiest bridge I’ve ever seen, but it is the sexiest.
Driving from Newark to Tarrytown on Sunday night took me across the Washington. On my return trip to Newark last night, I had a choice. Return to the Washington, or go across the Tappan Zee, the decrepit, ugly pile of crap that has been identified as one of the bridges most likely to fail in the US.
I went back to the Washington, but I thought about the Tappan Zee and was bummed that I didn’t get a good view of it on the way down 87. In the end, the Washington is too good to pass up and the Tappan Zee is literally in danger of falling apart on the drive across, not to mention further out of the way. But it was still tempting and I’d like to cross it another day.
If the Washington is a bit like Pebble Beach, with its cliffside sex appeal, stunning views, and poor “pace of play” dictated by policy from the people up top, then what courses are like the Tappan Zee? Decrepit, beaten up, but still noteworthy and with a certain charm that stems from their generally poor initial conception and years of neglect. I’ll nominate Poppy Hills and East Potomac.