Last week was a good one for our transportation future, on several fronts.
First, of course, was Congress
finally passing the massive infrastructure bill. This once-in-a-generation, trillion-dollar
package will bring a massive rebuilding of our crumbling bridges and highways
as well as expansion of the nation’s power grid and internet
infrastructure. It will also invest in
the ways we must prepare for the impact of global warming.
The bill will also mean
thousands of construction jobs over the next decade, what the White House
called a “blue collar blueprint” for
decades-delayed repair and enhancement of the nation’s infrastructure.
For rail riders there will be $66
billion invested in expansion and upgrades, the biggest federal investment
since the creation of Amtrak in the early 70’s.
Almost half of that amount will be pumped into the Northeast Corridor
from DC to Boston, which already sees some 2200 trains each day.
All of this we will benefit from in the years to come. But in our more immediate future is the project that’s been happening right under our feet at Grand Central since 2006… a new rail station.
Yes, the MTA’s much delayed,
terribly-over-budget East Side Access project to bring the LIRR into GCT is all
but done and should be opened late next year.
Though this $11 billion subterranean behemoth won’t be home to any trains
from Connecticut it will have a profound effect on our train service.
The new station in Grand
Central’s lower, lower, lower level is built hundreds of feet below Vanderbilt
Avenue just to the west of GCT itself.
It was literally carved out of solid rock and connects to a tunnel built
under the Park Avenue line served by Metro-North, another tunnel under the East
River and ends up in Queens.
The station will measure 350,000 sq ft serving 24 LIRR trains an hour on eight tracks. To access the station, you’ll take several escalators from GCT’s lower level, deep down into the bedrock, served by dozens of shops. The MTA says the new station will save LIRR commuters 40 minutes travel time from Queens if they’re heading to Manhattan’s east side.
What’s in it for Connecticut
commuters? Actually, a faster ride to
the West Side.
By moving some LIRR trains out
of Penn Station and sending them to GCT, some Metro-North trains will be able
to travel from Connecticut directly to Penn Station by way of the Bronx, the
Hells Gate Bridge and the East River tunnels, a route now exclusively used by
Amtrak.
That new routing will actually be a faster route to midtown Manhattan than the current Grand Central routing. It will also mean Penn Station connections to Amtrak to the north and west and NJ Transit deep into the Garden State.
As Manhattan’s West Side
expands with more offices, many of them built over the LIRR yards, Connecticut
commuters will see this new Penn Station service as an attraction.
More spending on rail nationwide
and a new train station at GCT and service to the West Side… as I say, it was a
good week for transportation.
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