From David Kestenbaum at Planet Money:
"You would never look at a map of the Hudson River (see above), point to the spot where the Tappan Zee Bridge is, and say, "Put the bridge here!" The   Tappan Zee crosses one of the widest points on the Hudson — the bridge   is more than three miles long. And if you go just a few miles south,  the  river gets much narrower. As you might expect, it would have been   cheaper and easier to build the bridge across the narrower spot on the   river.
So  I wanted to answer a simple  question: Why did they build the Tappan Zee  where they did, rather than  building it a few miles south?"
As you might imagine, building a big expensive bridge in the wrong place had nothing to do with economics, science, environmental concerns, engineering, logic or common sense, but everything to with... what's left? Politics.  Find out more here.  







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