Long Island Press Long Island Press
Serving the opinion leaders of Long Island
Long Island Press Long Island Press
Long Island Press Long Island Press
  • Home
  • Long Island News
  • Columns
  • Entertainment News
  • Living
  • Special Series
  • CURRENT LONGISLANDPRESS.COM
  • SECTIONS
    • Home
    • Long Island News
    • Columns
    • Entertainment News
    • Living
    • Special Series
    • CURRENT LONGISLANDPRESS.COM

Work to Begin on Massive Penn Station Expansion

by Timothy Bolger on May 9, 2012
LIRR riders wait in Penn Station (AP)

LIRR riders wait in Penn Station (AP)

After years of starts, stops and half-starts, the long-delayed expansion of New York’s Penn Station is set to begin.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey announced Tuesday the $270 million first phase of the project that will expand a concourse and add entryways on the western end of the station. Work is scheduled to start by the middle of 2012 and be finished in 2016.

“After 20 years of press conferences and press releases, there is good news,” Port Authority executive director Patrick Foye said in front of the Farley post office building on 8th Avenue across from Penn Station, the planned site of Amtrak’s new terminal when the second phase of the project is completed.

The new terminal will be named after late U.S. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who championed the project beginning in the 1990s.

The project’s first phase, which is being funded largely by federal transportation and stimulus dollars, will expand the concourse on the west end of the Long Island Rail Road tracks, beneath the post office building. Currently, riders arriving at Penn Station on LIRR or NJ Transit trains on the western end of some of the tracks have to walk the equivalent of nearly two crosstown blocks before they can ascend to the station.

The expanded concourse will relieve congestion by giving them new escalators and elevators to get upstairs as well as additional street-level entrances from 8th Avenue at 31st and 33rd streets.

“From the point of view of NJ Transit riders, this is going to be a significant enhancement,” Foye said.

Penn Station serves about half a million travelers per day and is the busiest train station in the U.S. It was built in 1910 and demolished in the 1960s to make way for the current station on the same site. Moynihan, who died in 2003, envisioned a station that would recreate some of the original’s Neoclassical look.

Over the years, plans to rebuild, renovate or expand the station fell victim to politics and economics; in late 2010 New Yorkers were even treated to the sight of elected officials using sledgehammers on a fake brick wall in a symbolic groundbreaking.

The second phase of the current project is planned to turn the basement of the post office into Amtrak’s new terminal. It will cost about $500 million, not including $200 million paid for the property by the Moynihan Station Development Corp., according to MSDC deputy director Michael Evans. It is still in the development stage, he said.

The aging post office will still have windows open to serve customers in its main lobby, Evans said, but most of the rest of the building will be turned into a massive concourse with a six-story-high atrium. That part of the project is dependent on the completion of the first phase, MSDC president Timothy Gilchrist said Tuesday.

“By getting that going, now Phase II can catch up to it,” he said.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Long Island News, News
featured
featured
About the Author
Timothy Bolger
You might also dig
 

NY Plaintiff: Gay Benefits ‘Bigger Than Marriage’

by Timothy Bolger on December 31, 2012
At age 83, Edith Windsor gets plenty of compliments for her courage to take on the federal government in a landmark case that has put attitudes about gay America squarely before the Supreme Court. But the Philadelphia-born former IBM executive scoffs at [...]
 

Cuomo Takes High Midterm Grades Into Critical Year

by Timothy Bolger on December 31, 2012
Gov. Andrew Cuomo spent most of 2012 in what can often be a shaky second act for politicians following rave reviews of his first year — he was searching for the next big thing. It turns out, the next big thing found him: Superstorm Sandy and the Sandy [...]
 

Hillary Clinton Hospitalized With Blood Clot

by Timothy Bolger on December 31, 2012
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is under observation at a New York hospital after being treated for a blood clot stemming from the concussion she sustained earlier this month. Clinton’s doctors discovered the clot Sunday while performing a [...]

 
Wedding & Event FAQ
Q- Does the flower girl have to wear white or ivory to match the bride?

A-Your flower girl can wear any colored dress, which of course coordinates with the rest of your wedding party. If you choose for her to wear white or ivory, you can accent the dress with the bridal party color sash or appliqué. She can also wear the color of the bridal party and to differentiate her, you can add a white or ivory sash. Choose something that you feel will coordinate best with the rest of your bridal party.

Click here for more FAQs

Long Island Press is a registered trademark of Schneps Communications. © 2017. All rights reserved.