Deputy Mayor Allison Ladd and Acting Director James Adams told the City Council that the administration has separated from a prior architect and selected a new prime to advance design work for the long‑planned pedestrian bridge connecting Ironbound to downtown.
Ladd said earlier plans to demolish and rebuild the bridge were rejected by rail agencies, forcing the city to redesign. The administration secured bond proceeds and has been working to reuse the existing CNJ bridge after structural testing. "We did have to separate from the previous contractor... it was a decision that we made as the administration to separate from the previous contractor and start with a new one," Ladd said.
James Adams described the engineering work ahead: structural steel sampling, abutment and footing rehabilitation, and asbestos and lead remediation. He emphasized the critical need for track‑outage agreements from Amtrak, New Jersey Transit and PATH to enable investigative and construction work. "The critical path through this project runs through PATH, New Jersey Transit, and Amtrak allowing us to have outages on their track while we do our investigation work," Adams said.
Council members discussed drafting a joint motion to request partnership from the rail agencies and state and federal delegations. Ladd said the city had received a commitment letter from Amtrak's president offering assistance, but noted that Port Authority/PATH and NJ Transit participation remain necessary for scheduling and access.
Next steps: council moved to advance and adopt the added starter to select a new contractor; administration will share the consultant team's plan with the council and pursue formal partnership requests to rail agencies and legislative representatives.