New York – New York’s 2nd Avenue Subway To Open Jan. 1, Fulfilling Decades-long Dream

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    New York – Three new subway stations along Manhattan’s Second Avenue will finally open on New Year’s Day, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Monday, 10 years after construction started and decades after the seemingly interminable project was first proposed.

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    The idea of a Second Avenue subway has fired up the imagination of New Yorkers for a century, as commuters along Manhattan’s transit-starved East Side dreamed of an easier way to travel up and down the densely populated borough.

    But over time, the line has achieved near-mythical status for the snail’s pace at which work has proceeded. First proposed in the 1920s and canceled three times for lack of funds, the line will replace elevated trains that ran down the East Side until they were torn down in the 1940s and 1950s.

    Construction of the initial section, which includes three stations, will wrap up on Jan. 1, about 10 years after it started. The opening is three years later than the estimate when work began in 2007.

    The initial extension will serve an estimated 200,000 people daily, though the opening may carry more significance as the end of a multi-generational wait.

    “It’s probably the most important thing that’s never been built in Manhattan, and now you can’t say that any more,” said Gene Russianoff, staff attorney for the Straphangers Campaign, a transit advocacy group.

    Cuomo has put an emphasis on big construction projects, including a replacement of the Tappan Zee Bridge across the Hudson River north of New York City and major renovations at LaGuardia Airport.

    The opening of the subway extension coincides with the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump, who has pledged to jump-start infrastructure projects through tax credits.

    Though the subway project’s first phase has a price tag of $4.5 billion, it is decidedly modest in scale. Three stations along Second Avenue will extend the existing Q line north by 2 miles (3.2 km).

    Later sections will complete Manhattan’s first new line since 1936. The new T line will run 8.5 miles (13.7 km) between the Harlem and Wall Street districts. Officials have not ventured an estimate for completion of the full T line.

    Last year, work crews finished a $2.4 billion extension of the subway’s 7 line to 11th Avenue, a project aimed at revitalizing a long-neglected neighborhood.

    Cuomo, an ambitious Democrat who has been mentioned as a possible presidential candidate, has taken on a visible role in pushing the subway project along. He has held weekly meetings with his aides and contractors.

    On Twitter, Cuomo vowed no further delays for the first phase: “We believe in the team, and that’s why we’re saying we’re going to open the 2nd Ave Subway Jan. 1.”

    A ceremonial ride is scheduled for Dec. 31, to be followed the next day by regular service. The standard fare is $2.75, although the Metropolitan Transportation Authority has proposed an increase to $3.


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    2 Comments
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    7 years ago

    There is still no subway service on the far west side of Manhattan; nor, is there subway service across Manhattan, from east to west, and vice-versa.

    ayoyo
    ayoyo
    7 years ago

    There were elevated trains running on every avenue in manhattan ,they were displaced with bus lines that only made more congestion on the streets We need to get rid of the MTA. as they are incapable of improving mass transit.We need a new type of elevated system to make mass transit better and get rid of all of the autos that are used only by the driver.