Crash Count for Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 2,619
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 1,943
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 297
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 26
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 16
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 28, 2025
Carnage in Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville
Detailed breakdowns aren’t yet available for this year slice; totals below reflect the selected window.
Killed 16
+2
Crush Injuries 6
Neck 2
Back 1
Face 1
Head 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Amputation 2
Lower arm/hand 1
Whole body 1
Severe Bleeding 9
Head 6
+1
Face 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Whole body 1
Severe Lacerations 6
Whole body 2
Face 1
Head 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Concussion 8
Head 4
Whole body 2
Lower arm/hand 1
Neck 1
Whiplash 59
Neck 29
+24
Back 15
+10
Whole body 9
+4
Head 7
+2
Shoulder/upper arm 3
Face 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Contusion/Bruise 57
Lower leg/foot 14
+9
Head 11
+6
Back 8
+3
Shoulder/upper arm 7
+2
Lower arm/hand 6
+1
Whole body 5
Face 4
Chest 3
Hip/upper leg 2
Neck 2
Abrasion 21
Back 4
Face 4
Lower arm/hand 3
Lower leg/foot 3
Head 2
Neck 2
Eye 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Whole body 1
Pain/Nausea 18
Neck 5
Whole body 5
Shoulder/upper arm 4
Back 2
Chest 1
Head 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 28, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville?

Preventable Speeding in Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville School Zones

(since 2022)

Caught Speeding Recently in Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville

Vehicles – Caught Speeding in NYC (12 months)
  1. 2021 Me/Be Spor (9GM3735) – 114 times • 1 in last 90d here
  2. 2015 Gray Me/Be Sedan (LXJ6043) – 106 times • 2 in last 90d here
  3. 2024 Black Tesla Sedan (39DTPQ) – 92 times • 1 in last 90d here
  4. 2023 Black Audi Suburban (LEA6381) – 87 times • 1 in last 90d here
  5. 2012 Grey Me/Be Sedan (9242ZU) – 81 times • 1 in last 90d here

Belt Parkway at dawn. A man in the road. Two cars. No second chance.

Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville: Jan 1, 2022 - Sep 18, 2025

Just before 6 AM on Sep 12, 2025, on the Belt Parkway, a person walking was hit and killed by drivers heading west. Police logged three vehicles. He died in the roadway. Source.

He is one of 16 people killed here since Jan 1, 2022. Another 1,915 were hurt. Source.

This Week

  • Sep 12: A pedestrian was struck and killed on the westbound Belt Parkway. Source
  • Aug 25: A 29‑year‑old on a motorcycle was ejected and seriously injured on the Belt Parkway. Police cited driver distraction. Source
  • Aug 24: A 61‑year‑old man walking at 177 St and 145 Dr was hit and injured. Source
  • Aug 13: A 52‑year‑old man walking near South Conduit Ave and 155 St was struck and killed. Source

The pattern is the hours and the roads

Deaths pile up in the dark. The heaviest counts come around 1–6 AM and near 11 PM. Source.

The same corridors keep taking lives: Belt Parkway leads with the worst toll; South Conduit Avenue follows. Source.

Police records name specific driver actions here too: failure to yield shows up in death reports. Distraction appears in severe injuries. Source.

Neighbors and officials know these roads are wrong

Queens Borough President Donovan Richards said the Conduit “falls significantly short… it’s poorly designed,” and lacks safe space for people walking and biking. Source.

The city opened a redesign process for the Conduit after years of injuries and deaths. It shouldn’t take this long. Source.

What fixes this, right now

  • Harden the hotspots: concrete refuge islands and tighter turns on South Conduit Avenue; speed control and barrier upgrades along the Belt Parkway frontage where people still cross. Target the late‑night hours the numbers flag. Source
  • Enforce yield and distraction violations where pedestrians are hit, and back it with design that forces lower speeds. Source

Citywide levers exist. The State Senate moved a bill to force electronic speed limiters on repeat speeders; State Sen. James Sanders voted yes in committee on S 4045. Source. Albany also renewed 24‑hour school‑zone speed cameras through 2030; both Sanders and Assembly Member Khaleel Anderson voted yes on S 8344. Source.

Council Member Selvena N. Brooks‑Powers has backed safety‑adjacent measures, from a greenway master plan to stronger enforcement against unlicensed commuter vans. Those actions are on the record; the deaths on Belt and the Conduit are too. Source Source.

The next step is simple

Slow the cars and stop the repeat offenders. Demand it. Start here.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is this happening?
Springfield Gardens (South)–Brookville in southeast Queens. The worst harm clusters on the Belt Parkway and South Conduit Avenue, according to crash records from NYC Open Data.
What stood out in the recent data?
In the past month, a person walking was killed on the Belt Parkway. Earlier in August, a person on a motorcycle was ejected and seriously hurt, a 61‑year‑old pedestrian was injured at 177 St and 145 Dr, and a 52‑year‑old pedestrian was killed near South Conduit Ave and 155 St, all recorded by NYPD and published on NYC Open Data.
What are officials doing about repeat speeders?
The State Senate advanced bill S 4045 to require intelligent speed assistance for repeat violators; State Sen. James Sanders voted yes in committee. Albany also extended 24‑hour school‑zone speed cameras through 2030; Sen. Sanders and Assembly Member Khaleel Anderson voted yes on S 8344.
How were these numbers calculated?
We used NYC Open Data’s Motor Vehicle Collisions datasets (Crashes h9gi‑nx95, Persons f55k‑p6yu, Vehicles bm4k‑52h4). We filtered for incidents from 2022‑01‑01 to 2025‑09‑18 within the Springfield Gardens (South)–Brookville neighborhood and summarized deaths, injuries, times of day, and top corridors. Data were extracted Sep 17–18, 2025. You can view the base datasets here.
What is CrashCount?
We’re a tool for helping hold local politicians and other actors accountable for their failure to protect you when you’re walking or cycling in NYC. We update our site constantly to provide you with up to date information on what’s happening in your neighborhood.

Citations

Citations

Other Representatives

Assembly Member Khaleel Anderson

District 31

Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers

District 31

State Senator James Sanders

District 10

Help Fix the Problem.

This address sits in

Traffic Safety Timeline for Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville

27
Aggressive SUV driver injured on 177th Place

Sep 27 - Police cited road rage and unsafe lane changing. A driver in a 2019 Toyota SUV was hurt. Right-front impact, right-front damage. Another occupant was listed, injury unspecified. Queens, 177th Place.

According to the police report, a driver in a 2019 Toyota SUV traveling east and going straight ahead crashed near 145-74 177th Place in Queens. The report notes a right-front bumper impact and damage to the right-front quarter panel. The driver, a 26-year-old man, was injured, with an elbow and hand contusion recorded. Another female occupant was listed with injury status marked as unspecified. Police recorded driver errors: Aggressive Driving/Road Rage and Unsafe Lane Changing. No other vehicles or road users were identified in the report.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4845303 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
26
Motorcyclist killed in multiple collisions on Long Island Expressway, NYPD says
21
Woman killed after being pinned under car while crossing Queens intersection
20
Female construction worker killed on Queens job site, hit-and-run driver arrested
16
Man struck and killed by two vehicles while trying to cross Belt Parkway in South Ozone Park: NYPD
15
Suspect in deadly DWI crash sexually harassed teen before intentionally striking her with SUV, Queens DA says
13
16-year-old girl struck and killed in Queens

12
Westbound driver kills man on Belt Parkway

Sep 12 - A westbound driver on the Belt Parkway hit a man in the roadway at 5:47 a.m. He died. Three vehicles were involved. Police listed contributing factors as unspecified.

A driver hit a man on the Belt Parkway and killed him. According to the police report, it happened at 5:47 a.m. in westbound lanes. The report lists three vehicles: a 2023 Lincoln SUV and two sedans, all traveling west. Police documented right-front impacts and front-end damage. The pedestrian was recorded as "Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Not at Intersection" and "Other Actions in Roadway," with injury severity "Killed." Police recorded contributing factors as "Unspecified" for the drivers and the pedestrian. No driver errors were cited in the data.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4841886 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
28
Unlicensed left turn slams southbound SUV

Aug 28 - At 225 St and 144 Ave, a southbound SUV hit a sedan turning left. Metal buckled. A young driver bruised his leg. Airbags blew. Streets stayed open. The system shrugs.

A southbound SUV struck a sedan that was making a left turn at 225 St and 144 Ave in Queens. One 23-year-old driver was injured with a leg contusion; others were listed as unspecified. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling south, the SUV going straight and the sedan turning left. The report lists the sedan driver as unlicensed. Driver errors include an unlicensed driver and a hazardous left turn across traffic. Contributing factors for individuals are marked Unspecified. No helmet or signal issues are cited in the data.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4838376 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
25
Motorcyclist Ejected, Suffers Amputation on Belt Parkway

Aug 25 - A 29-year-old motorcyclist was ejected on the Belt Parkway. He suffered an amputation and remained unconscious. Police recorded Driver Inattention/Distraction. The motorcycle was demolished; another vehicle had front-end damage.

A 29-year-old man driving a motorcycle was ejected in a crash on the Belt Parkway and suffered an amputation and injuries to his entire body. According to the police report, the motorcycle’s center back end was demolished and another vehicle showed center front end damage. Police recorded Driver Inattention/Distraction as the contributing factor. The rider was listed unconscious and injured; the report notes he was the motorcycle driver and was ejected. No pedestrians were involved. The record lists the motorcyclist’s complaint as amputation and marks the injury severity as severe.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4837431 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
24
Sedan strikes man crossing 145 Drive

Aug 24 - A southbound sedan hit a 61-year-old man at 177 St and 145 Dr. Night. Impact to the car’s right rear. The pedestrian went down with arm injuries. Another quiet Queens corner turned hostile to feet.

A southbound 2020 sedan, entering a parked position, struck a 61-year-old man crossing at 177 Street and 145 Drive in Queens. The pedestrian suffered an elbow and lower-arm injury and was conscious. According to the police report, contributing factors are listed as “Unspecified.” No specific driver errors were recorded in the data. The pedestrian is noted as “Crossing, No Signal, or Crosswalk,” but this is listed after the absence of driver error in the report. The car showed damage at the right rear bumper.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4838214 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
14
Int 1347-2025 Brooks-Powers co-sponsors crackdown on unlicensed commuter vans, worsening overall street safety.

Aug 14 - Int 1347-2025 orders TLC, NYPD and DOT to use a compliance checklist and levy maximum fines on unlicensed commuter vans. Punitive enforcement may cut informal transit, push riders to cars and ride‑hail, and raise vehicle volumes that endanger pedestrians and cyclists.

Bill: Int 1347-2025. Status: Sponsorship; sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The matter: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to enforcing violations against unlicensed commuter vans." Primary sponsor Nantasha M. Williams; co-sponsors Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Mercedes Narcisse, and Chris Banks. The law orders TLC, with NYPD and DOT, to maintain a checklist and requires officers to issue maximum fines for each violation. It takes effect 120 days after enactment. A safety assessment warns this punitive approach may reduce informal transit in underserved areas, shift trips to private cars and ride‑hail, and increase traffic volumes that endanger pedestrians and cyclists; it adds policing without system-wide safety gains.


14
Int 1347-2025 Brooks-Powers co-sponsors unlicensed commuter van crackdown, worsening overall street safety.

Aug 14 - Int 1347-2025 orders TLC, NYPD and DOT to cite unlicensed commuter vans and levy maximum fines. It will likely shrink shared rides in transit deserts. Trips will shift to private cars and ride-hail. Pedestrians and cyclists face more exposure on the street.

Int 1347-2025 is at SPONSORSHIP and sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025. The matter is titled, "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to enforcing violations against unlicensed commuter vans." Primary sponsor Nantasha M. Williams introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Mercedes Narcisse, Chris Banks, and Farah N. Louis joined her. The bill orders TLC, with NYPD and DOT, to maintain a compliance checklist and requires officers to issue maximum penalties for every listed violation. Analysts warn punitive enforcement and steep fines will likely reduce shared transit options in transit deserts, push trips to private cars and ride-hail, and increase traffic exposure for pedestrians and cyclists, prioritizing policing over safer operations or street redesign without clear system-wide safety gains.


13
Driver hits and kills pedestrian on S Conduit

Aug 13 - A driver traveling east on S Conduit Avenue struck and killed a 52-year-old man in the roadway near 155th Street. The car's center front hit him. He died at the scene.

A driver traveling east on South Conduit Avenue struck a 52-year-old man who was in the roadway near 155th Street. The pedestrian suffered fatal, whole-body injuries and died at the scene. According to the police report, the vehicle was "Going Straight Ahead" and the "Center Front End" was damaged. The report records no driver citations or contributing factors. The crash data notes the pedestrian as "Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Not at Intersection" with ped_action listed as "Other Actions in Roadway." No other contributing factors are recorded in the provided data.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4834786 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
12
Speeding Car Slams Food Truck, Kills Two

Aug 12 - A car tore through an Astoria intersection. It struck a food truck. Two men died on the sidewalk. The driver died too. Metal, flesh, coffee, blood. The street swallowed them. It happened fast. No one stood a chance.

According to the New York Post (2025-08-12), an 84-year-old driver sped through 42nd Street and 19th Avenue in Astoria, Queens, crashing into a food truck and killing two customers and himself. Surveillance showed the car "going about 60 miles an hour" before impact. The article quotes a witness: "Someone screamed really loudly, and I just had stepped back, like right up to the sidewalk." The force severed a victim's foot. The crash highlights the lethal risk when drivers lose control at high speed in pedestrian zones. No charges were filed; the driver died at the scene.


11
Driver of SUV Backed Into Two Sedans

Aug 11 - The driver of a 2024 BMW SUV backed on 224th Street and struck two parked sedans. A 51‑year‑old woman driver suffered neck pain and abrasions. Police cited driver inattention and unsafe backing.

An SUV driver reversed and hit two parked sedans on 224th Street in Queens, injuring herself. A 51‑year‑old woman driver complained of neck pain and abrasions. According to the police report, contributing factors were Driver Inattention/Distraction and Backing Unsafely. The report lists a 2024 BMW SUV backing (damage to left rear bumper), a 2007 Toyota sedan (center back end damaged, parked) and a 2017 Nissan sedan (left front bumper damaged, parked). Police recorded the BMW driver as licensed and noted multiple occupants with unspecified injuries in the crash dossier.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4835041 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
11
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane

Aug 11 - Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.

NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.


8
SUV T-boned on 181st at 145th

Aug 8 - Eastbound Ford hit a northbound Nissan at 181st and 145th. Doors crushed. Two drivers hurt. Traffic control ignored, police say. Steel met flesh. Sirens followed.

Two vehicles collided at 181 St and 145 Ave in Queens. An eastbound Ford sedan struck the left side of a northbound Nissan SUV. Two female drivers were injured, with shoulder and upper‑arm pain reported. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Traffic Control Disregarded.” That driver error sits at the heart of this crash. Records list one driver on a permit and the other licensed; both were traveling straight. No pedestrians or cyclists were reported hurt. No other contributing factors are specified in the data.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4834805 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
8
Richards Calls Flood Signage Safety‑Boosting Low‑Hanging Fruit

Aug 8 - Flash floods swamped Cross Island Parkway. Leaders demanded flood signage and storm fixes. Signs may warn drivers but do little for pedestrians and cyclists. Only real infrastructure will cut the risks they face.

"signage as a 'small step' and 'low-hanging fruit,'" -- Donovan J. Richards

Action: infrastructure request (no bill number). Status: public call on August 8, 2025; not advanced to committee or vote. The matter was described as a "call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts." Queens Borough President Donovan J. Richards called signage a "small step" and "low-hanging fruit." Council Member Vickie Paladino urged signs to warn drivers unfamiliar with the area. State Sen. John Liu pressed city, state and federal agencies and criticized federal funding cuts. Safety analyst note: "Flood warning signage may help alert motorists but does little to address the underlying risks to pedestrians and cyclists... only comprehensive infrastructure improvements would yield significant safety benefits for vulnerable road users."


5
NYPD Cruiser Crash Injures Three In Queens

Aug 5 - Police car struck at Beach 35th and Rockaway. Three hurt. Sirens cut through Edgemere. Cause unknown. Streets stained. Investigation begins.

CBS New York reported on August 5, 2025, that an NYPD cruiser crashed at Beach 35th Street and Rockaway Freeway in Edgemere, Queens. Three people were injured. The article states, 'Police are now trying to determine the cause of the crash.' No details on driver actions or contributing factors were released. The incident highlights risks at busy intersections and the need for thorough investigation when emergency vehicles are involved.