Verrazzano Narrows Bridge is an iconic suspension bridge connecting the New York City boroughs of Staten Island and Brooklyn. Located in New York’s Lower New York Bay, the Narrows Bridge connects Upper New York Bay to Lower New York Bay and the Atlantic Ocean.
It’s the only Narrows crossing that is permanently in place. Interstate 278 travels on 7 lanes of the upper deck and 6 lanes of the lower deck of the double-deck bridge. For the first time, a European explorer entered New York Harbor and the Hudson River in 1524, naming the span after Giovanni da Verrazzano.
In the late 1920s, engineer David B. Steinman proposed building a bridge over the Narrows, but the project was shelved for the following two decades. The Staten Island Tunnel project of the 1920s and the Narrows tunnel project of the 1930s were both shelved. In the mid-1930s and early 1940s, there was renewed interest in building a tunnel, but the idea was shot down.