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TheBrooklyn–Queens Greenway is a protected, linear path separated from motor vehicles in theNew York Cityboroughs ofBrooklyn andQueens. It would connectConey Island in the south of Brooklyn toFort Totten in the north of Queens. Although the concept has existed for decades and some construction has been implemented, a fully connected, protected route has yet to be completed.
The path would connect major sites in the two boroughs, such as theNew York Aquarium, theBrooklyn Museum, theBrooklyn Botanic Garden, theNew York Hall of Science, theQueens Botanical Garden, and theKissena Park velodrome.[1] The 40-mile (64 km) route would connect paths inProspect Park, alongEastern Parkway andOcean Parkway in Brooklyn, and inAlley Pond Park,Cunningham Park,Forest Park,Kissena Park andRidgewood Reservoir in Queens.[2]
The greenway sections are being build and managed under the joint auspices of theNew York City Department of Transportation and theNew York City Department of Parks and Recreation.

Building on the greenway paths ofFrederick Law Olmsted andRobert Moses, aGreenway Master Plan was released in 1993 by the Department of City Planning, largely due to pressure starting in 1987 from David Lutz, the director of Neighborhood Open Space Coalition.[3] According to the 1993 report, only 59 miles of the proposed 350 mile city-wide greenway exists in usable condition, 106 miles are need of substantial improvement, and 183 miles are proposed new paths; most of the Brookly-Queens Greenway is listed as “needed improvement”, but there were some proposed additions such as a path over theWhitestone Bridge.[4]
Under theMichael Bloomberg administration aBrooklyn-Queens Greenway Guide was released. The 77 page document shows route directions, maps, and areas of interest. One paragraph spoke about improvements to the greenway: "Among the projects in development are the Laurelton Southern Greenway, a 32-mile greenway, which will run along the southern and eastern shores of Queens and eastern Brooklyn, connecting Highland Park to Fort Totten and Little Bay Park. The Queens East River and North Shore Greenway is a 10.6 mile greenway which will run from the Pulaski Bridge in Queens to the Flushing Bay Promenade along the East River and North Shore shorelines in Queens. Finally, the Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway will run along Brooklyn’s East River waterfront from the Pulaski Bridge to Erie Basin and beyond to Pier 69 in Bay Ridge."[5]
Starting in 2019, the Department of Parks and Recreation began “Destination: Greenways!” a project to fast-track greenway improvements in sections of both Brooklyn and Queens. Community visioning sessions happened in 2020 and conceptual sketches were released in 2022.[6] As of 2024, none of the projects in Queens have started construction even though $40 million in funding has been dedicated to the project.[7]
In 2022 the New York City Council passedLocal Law 115 which requires NYC DOT and Parks to publish a citywide greenway plan in 2025, and annual updates thereafter. TheEric Adams Administration published theGreater Greenways: NYC Greenway Plan dated December 31st, 2024, though released later. The document mentions the Destination: Greenways! for both Brooklyn and Queens as “ongoing” projects.[8] The report was criticized for being released seven months after the law required it to be published and for whitewashing a mayoral term of scaling back efforts new bike/pedestrian safety infrastructure.[9]
The northern terminus of the Brooklyn–Queens Greenway is in Little Bay Park, near the north end of Utopia Parkway in the shadow of theThrogs Neck Bridge. Passing the entrance toFort Totten Park, the Greenway runs south, parallel to theCross Island Parkway and is known as "Joe Michaels Mile." After crossing busyNorthern Boulevard, the route becomes a well signed bike route along quiet residential streets, climbing to the formerLong Island Motor Parkway.
The LIMP section of the Greenway is above-grade and most is closed to motor vehicle traffic. Using the LIMP, a branch of the Greenway goes eastward intoAlley Pond Park to picnic tables, tennis courts and locker rooms. This eastern branch proceeds to the Alley Pond Adventure Course and the Winchester Boulevard bike lane.
The westward or main line of the Greenway makes its way throughCunningham Park andKissena Park, and eventually goes around the south side ofQueens Botanical Garden on streets, crossing College Point Boulevard on its own high overpass intoFlushing Meadows-Corona Park.
Once in Flushing Meadows, the Greenway runs along the eastern shores of both Meadow and Willow Lakes, exiting the park onto Jewel Avenue. The route continues on quiet residential streets such as Hoover and Coolidge Avenues, and on more heavily trafficked ones such as Main Street, and crossesQueens Boulevard. The Greenway entersForest Park at the Overlook and continues down Forest Park Drive passing the Urban Park Ranger station atWoodhaven Boulevard, the George Seuffert, Sr. Bandshell, and the Forest Park Golf Course. Exiting the park, the Greenway continues along parts of Cooper Avenue and other local streets toHighland Park and theRidgewood Reservoir.
After exitingHighland Park, the Brooklyn leg of the Greenway uses various local streets inEast New York to connect toEastern Parkway. From here to the end, there is little mixing with motor traffic for the 3-mile (5 km) Eastern Parkway bike route, 2 miles (3 km) throughProspect Park, and the 5-mile (8 km)Ocean Parkway to the southern terminus at theRiegelmann Boardwalk inConey Island. The Brooklyn portion is less hilly than the Queens portion, except in Prospect Park where it crosses over theterminal moraine that divides Long Island in half.
40°41′49″N73°51′36″W / 40.697°N 73.860°W /40.697; -73.860