Andrew Cuomo tours the second span of the Kosciuszko Bridge

They’ve built a bridge — and now you can get over it!

The second span of the Kosciuszko Bridge will finally open to traffic this week, state officials announced Sunday.

Beginning early Thursday, drivers will get access to both the four-lane Brooklyn-bound bridge as well as the five-lane Queens-bound span, which had been operating in both directions since April 2017.

On Wednesday, pedestrians and cyclists will get to preview the crossing car-free from noon to 6 p.m. The new bridge features a 20-foot bicycle and pedestrian path.

The two spans replaced the original 1939 Kosciuszko Bridge, which was dramatically detonated in October 2017.

Construction on the new bridges began in 2014, initially with a 2023 expected completion date.

In a statement, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the bridge’s ahead-of-schedule completion “[demonstrates] to the nation that it’s possible to take on big projects and to get them done on time and on budget.”

“While the federal administration obsesses over building walls, in New York we are building bridges and other infrastructure critical to moving our 21st century economy forward,” Cuomo said.

The Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge between Brooklyn and Staten Island was the last new bridge to open within city limits — way back in 1964.