Skip to main content

Tappen Zee Bridge box seat is the best in the house

Bridge construction has sometimes been called theatre, with many acts and players building up to a finale. There is no better place to watch good theatre than from a prestigious box seat. This is especially true for the new Tappen Zee Bridge that is taking shape across the Hudson River in the US state of New York. In this case the box seat is just that – a box that sits high atop the old bridge, and it is occupied by a pair of peregrine falcons and their three babies. The family can be seen on-line thanks
May 21, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A falcon’s eye view of progress on the new Tappen Zee Bridge
Bridge construction has sometimes been called theatre, with many acts and players building up to a finale. There is no better place to watch good theatre than from a prestigious box seat.

This is especially true for the new Tappen Zee Bridge that is taking shape across the Hudson River in the US state of New York. In this case the box seat is just that – a box that sits high atop the old bridge, and it is occupied by a pair of peregrine falcons and their three babies.

The family can be seen on-line thanks to a live stream from a web-cam, the Falcon-Cam. The comings and goings of the parents and the grabbing for food by the chicks are clearly visible by %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal clicking here Visit new ny bridge gallery page false http://www.newnybridgegallery.com/falconcam.php false false%>.

The chicks, two females and one male, were recently tagged with identifying bands by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. The bands placed on their ankles allow identification of chicks and the tracking of their health and migration habits.

The New York State Thruway Authority in cooperation with conservation and environmental groups put the box there last year. It will be relocated from the old bridge when the new bridge, which is taking shape right beside the old bridge, is nearly finished and the old bridge is demolished.

The nest box on the Tappan Zee Bridge is one of many installed on New York’s skyscrapers and bridges to foster growth in the falcon population. While there may have good conservation credentials to placing a falcon box on the bridge, there is also a good maintenance reason for it, according to the authority.

Peregrine falcons feed on other birds including seagulls, starlings and pigeons whose acidic droppings can deteriorate surfaces.

Related Content

  • Snow removal: a right way and a wrong way
    June 12, 2015
    Snow. That winter menace for road users. Often it catches drivers unaware; often its efficient removal is planned for by road authorities. Some regions and countries get more snow than others, such as Scandinavia, northern Europe and North America, and are better at it.
  • VIDEO: Rollerman Blondeau takes to the hills, Grimsel Pass
    July 26, 2016
    Sure, it’s a spectacular run down a mountain road. But it’s also an extremely visual reminder that highway infrastructure is important for work and play. Let’s not forget that the road - in this case Switzerland’s Grimsel Pass, 2,164m - has to be smooth enough for Jean Yves “Rollerman” Blondeau to reach those speeds without being chucked over edge and down a cliff. The pass is a driver’s delight as it crosses the continental divide in the Alps where rivers flow one way towards the North Sea and the ot
  • Pavement Preservation Recycling Alliance Forum set for Niagara Falls
    May 18, 2015
    It has been just over three months since the first Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit in Paris -- PPRS Paris 2015 -- and now the focus will shift to a similarly exciting forum in North America. Under the banner of the cooperative Pavement Preservation Recycling Alliance (PPRA), all specialists in the sector are invited to the beautiful Canadian city of Niagara Falls to share experiences on how to protect, maintain and rehabilitate road assets in the most cost effective manner while embracing recy
  • Mumbai names BrihanMumbai Municipal as winner for coastal freeway
    April 15, 2015
    The state government of Maharashtra in India has named BrihanMumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) as preferred bidder for construction of Mumbai’s Coastal Freeway worth around US$1.36 billion. The 35.6km freeway, subject to clearance from the central government in New Delhi, will run from Mumbai’s business district, called Nariman Point, to the northern suburb of Kandivli. Coastal Freeway, which runs beside the sea, on reclaimed lands, landfill sites and some small bridges, is the alternative to the mor