Proposes contest awarding a $100,000 prize for the best “design alternative”

BUFFALO, N.Y. — NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo came to Western New York on Thursday to pitch his previously announced plan to make the property tax cap permanent and to reduce income tax rates for middle-class New Yorkers.

But he then surprised those in attendance at the Millennium Hotel when he announced his plan for a state-sponsored design competition for an alternative to the skyway, offering a $100,000 prize for the best design.

“The idea would be to take it down,” Cuomo confirmed to WGRZ-TV following his prepared remarks.

“But when you take it down you have questions to address…such as how do the southtowns get up to Buffalo, what is the transportation alternative, how do you access the outer harbor…so those questions are the questions that would have to be thought through. But there are a lot of planners, architects, and designers who I think would jump at the idea,” Cuomo said.

“I think Western New Yorkers and members of the community who live in the Southern Tier would embrace a comprehensive competition to look at how that roadway could be improved,” said Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, who noted the Skyway is often closed during inclement weather.

The Skyway opened on October 19, 1955, after several years of construction, and during which three workers lost their lives.

Technically an elevated limited access highway, the Skyway accommodates 40,000 vehicles on an average day.

It spans the Buffalo River reaching a height of 100 feet and was built in that fashion to accommodate the lake freighters which were once commonplace when Buffalo was a thriving lake port.

“It was built at a different time for a different city with a different purpose," Cuomo said.

Cuomo’s voice now joins the chorus of others who've called for the Skyway's removal, most notably U.S. Rep. Brian Higgins (D-South Buffalo).

The idea of replacing it also has the enthusiastic support of NY State Senator Tim Kennedy (D-Buffalo) who was recently named chair of the State Senate Transportation Committee.

“It's time for us to come up with a new vision for the next generation of Western New Yorkers," Kennedy said.

At the same time the Governor is setting the wheels in motion for its demise, however, the state is currently spending $29 million dollars to repair the Skyway.

That could be an indication that its replacement could still be many years away, lest the state wastes the money it is currently spending to keep it operating.