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| On a recent ramble through my adopted home town, Little Neck, Queens I discovered an element peculiar to NYC's more suburban locales: the grassy central median, or as they say in England, "roundabout." I've only found one or two other than the ones shown on this page, both in Riverdale, Bronx. There's a HUGE one in Brooklyn, where Avenue M and Kings Highway meet, called Fraser Square (even though it's definitely not square) "Roundabouts" are used to effectively flow traffic in the absence of traffic signals or stop signs, and are much more frequent in Britain. But, there are a number of them in Little Neck, where they've probably been since the roads were laid out in the late 19th or early 20th Century. |
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Browvale Lane at Van Zandt and Thebes Avenues. A true roundabout -- all traffic keeps right. Of course in England the direction is reversed and all traffic keeps left.
Browvale, which some maps misspell as "Brownvale," is so-called because it runs on top of a steep crest overlooking Northern Boulevard. It is made up of two words now nearly obsolete in English: brow, crest, and vale, valley.






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Photographed June 22, 2008; page completed June 22.
erpietri@earthlink.net
©2008