Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Benza, J.), entered February 2, 2005 in Albany County, which, inter alia, granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint.
On March 10, 2002, plaintiff Harry Kushner (hereinafter plaintiff) was injured while riding his bicycle on Whitehall Road in the City of Albany when he struck a pothole in the street and was ejected from the bike. He and his wife, derivatively, filed this action against defendant seeking recovery for his injuries. Defendant answered, claiming, among other things, that plaintiffs failed to comply with its prior written notice requirement (see Albany City Code § 24-1). Plaintiffs proceeded to trial *852contending that no prior written notice was required of this defective condition because defendant affirmatively created the defect in the roadway. At the close of plaintiffs’ proof, defendant moved for a directed verdict. Supreme Court granted the motion finding that the alleged affirmative negligence of defendant in repairing the pothole did not result in an “immediate” defective condition but, rather, the condition evolved over a period of time, citing the recent First Department case of Bielecki v City of New York (14 AD3d 301 [2005]). This appeal ensued. We affirm. While we do not adopt the precise rationale of the First Department in Bielecki v City of New York (supra), we find that an ineffectual pothole repair job which does not make the condition any worse is not an affirmative act of negligence.
The gist of plaintiffs’ proof at trial* was that defendant’s use of a cold patch (an admittedly temporary cold weather remedy) to fill the subject pothole without first excavating it resulted in the patch being dissipated prior to the date of the accident. In other words, what was once a pothole gradually became a pothole again. Countenancing plaintiffs’ logic, defendant would have no liability if it had done nothing (see Bryant v City of Newburgh, 193 AD2d 773, 774 [1993]), but is now liable because it made an imperfect repair that clearly did not make the matter any worse. Such an illogical result compels the conclusion that an attempted repair which does not exacerbate the defective condition cannot constitute an affirmative act of negligence such that defendant is precluded from relying on its prior notice law (see Cardinale v Watervliet Hous. Auth., 302 AD2d 666, 667 [2003] [conduct which does not exacérbate a hazardous condition not negligence]). Accordingly, Supreme Court properly dismissed the complaint.
Cardona, P.J., and Spain, J., concur.
Plaintiffs’ alternative theories of failure to abide by the 1967 paving specifications or negligent drainage design were nothing more than sheer speculation as plaintiffs’ expert admitted on cross-examination that he was unfamiliar with the base of the road and conducted his drainage analysis after the roadway had been repaved.