Senate Resolution No. 787
BY: Senator O'MARA
COMMEMORATING the 100th Birthday of the Corning
Centerway Bridge
WHEREAS, It is the sense of this Legislative Body to support the
preservation and commemoration of venerable landmarks which express and
preserve the social and cultural origins of this great State of New
York; and
WHEREAS, Attendant to such concern, and in full accord with its
long-standing traditions, this Legislative Body is justly proud to
commemorate the 100th Birthday of the Corning Centerway Bridge to be
celebrated with a Kick-off ceremony on Tuesday, May 25, 2021, at
Riverfront Park; and
WHEREAS, Centerway Bridge opened to traffic in 1921, when Warren G.
Harding was president of the United States; it closed to motor vehicles
in 1981, when Ronald Reagan occupied the White House; and
WHEREAS, It was built to relieve the stress of growing automobile
and streetcar traffic on the Bridge Street Bridge, the city's only other
river crossing in the early 20th Century; and
WHEREAS, The project was so controversial that the decision was
submitted to city voters in a 1920 referendum, which passed by a 2-1
margin; and
WHEREAS, In return for its approval, Corning's Houghton family gave
the city 100 acres of land on the Northside that became the Houghton
Plot residential district; and
WHEREAS, This earth-filled, seven-span structure was designed by
pioneer concrete bridge engineer Abraham Burton Cohen (1882-1956) of New
York City; two of his other projects, the Harrison Avenue Bridge in
Scranton, Pennsylvania, and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western
Railroad's Tunkhannock Viaduct, are on the National Register of Historic
Places; and
WHEREAS, Details of the design and construction of the Centerway
Bridge are preserved at Cohen's alma mater, Purdue University, in a
collection of his work; and
WHEREAS, Although high water and a fire in the construction area
complicated the building process, the bridge was finished in the Fall of
1921 and paved the following Spring; and
WHEREAS, Over the next six decades, wind, rain, snow, ice, floods
and increasing traffic caused the deterioration of the bridge until it
became obsolete for 20th Century traffic; and
WHEREAS, It was scheduled for demolition in the Spring of 1980;
before it could be torn down, hundreds of people gathered on the bridge
to demonstrate their support for preservation of the landmark; the "Save
Our Bridge" campaign was successful; and
WHEREAS, An extensive renovation led to its reopening in 1986 for
use by pedestrians, bicyclists and double-decker, English-style buses
carrying tourists from the Corning Museum of Glass to the Market Street
Historic District; a maze painted on the bridge roadway became popular
with children; and
WHEREAS, Use of the bridge by the tourist buses eventually ended;
another major renovation, which began in 2012 and was completed in 2013,
created today's bridgescape of a park suspended above the Chemung River;
and
WHEREAS, It is the custom of this Legislative Body to recognize
those distinct unique features throughout the State of New York such as
the Centerway Bridge in the City of Corning which provide transportation
opportunities for its residents and have become a part of the history of
this great Empire State; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED, That this Legislative Body pause in its deliberations to
commemorate the 100th Birthday of the Corning Centerway Bridge; and be
it further
RESOLVED, That a copy of this Resolution, suitably engrossed, be
transmitted to Mayor William Boland, City of Corning, New York.