Top 5 WORST places to drive/ride motorcycle in New York City.
5. Gotta agree with you JCViper. Both Flushing and Corono are pretty rough areas of Queens to ride in. Though Brooklyn's got a few areas that would rival them quite evenly.
4. Long Island Expressway (LIE) on any major holiday or weekend there is something going on worth going out to Long Island. Simply stated: Try transporting a quarter of each borough's population to one destination using only one road to get there. Have fun working out that clutch hand.
3. The Village and lower New York. By far the worst city streets known to man. I'm sure many New Yorkers have their own notoriously crappy streets they avoid at all costs, but the village, especially the closer you get to the West Side Highway have craters as big as 3 feet in diameter. If the MSF ever wanted to practice intermediate evasive manuevers, all they would need is to drop the students dead center of West 4th street and tell them to make it uptown. Start softening up those suspensions.
2. Cross Bronx Expressway (portion of I-95 that runs through the Bronx and leads to the George Washington Bridge). Even at 3 in the morning, this sections is backed up from trucks and an endless flow of cars traveling to and from New Jersey. While you can easily lane split and get away with it here, the over abundance of trucks and frustrated/azzhole drivers can make your ride a living hell.
1. Times Square and surrounding avenues/streets. Add awed and amazed tourists (all with heads back and looking up while the cross the streets mind you) to frenzied midtown business execs, throw in a few thousand cars, cabs, and buses per mile, and top it off with a little bit of "Welcome to NY, now get the #@$%! out" NYC attitude and you've got yourself the worst spot to be in on two wheels. You'll sit at red lights so long you're bike will shed pounds its so overheated. You'll have to hold your breath everytime you attempt to lane split, as cabs, buses, and people will have no problem cutting you off....of course without ever looking to see if you were coming. It's the worst for sure. I honestly don't think I've gone over 20mph when down in this part of the city.
Best of all, after braving any of these routes, you've now got to play roulette with the meter maids, traffic violation police, and elderly drivers who don't care about hitting a parked bike in order to fit into a space obviously too small. Fair warning: Just be prepared to come out to a bike with a few more beauty marks on it, a bike that decided to lay down and take a nap while waiting for you, or a nice bright orange "Welcome to NYC" keepsake.

Man, do I love New York!

[b]"Do not go where the path leads you...Go where there is no path and leave a trail."[/b]
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