The Oklahoman

Grand Central annex in New York now open

Project faced years of delays, cost overruns

- Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK – For decades, work on a massive rail project has been grinding 15 stories below the shuffling footsteps of millions of New Yorkers and beneath the East Hudson River and Manhattan skyscraper­s.

After years of delays and massive cost overruns, the enormously expensive railway project shuttled its first passengers Wednesday from Long Island to a new annex in New York City’s iconic Grand Central Terminal.

The new transit center, built inside a massive man-made cavern and served by rail tunnels carved through bedrock, is being heralded as an important addition to the nation’s busiest railway network.

“We got the job done,” Gov. Kathy Hochul said, the ninth governor to oversee the project that had its genesis six decades ago. “There were so many roadblocks and challenges and detours along the way.”

The new 700,000-square-foot terminal, dubbed Grand Central Madison, was conceived and constructe­d at a time when New York City’s transporta­tion system was bursting with passengers. It opens in a different era, with ridership still significantly down from where it was before the COVID-19 pandemic ushered in a new era of remote work.

The new terminal, adorned with public art and replete with storefront­s and restaurant­s – most still empty – is the country’s largest new railway station in nearly seven decades and the most significant expansion over the last century of the Long Island Rail Road, the busiest commuter railroad in North America. The two-level concourse supports four platforms and eight tracks.

Much of the constructi­on of the terminal has been complete for months, though some finishing touches won’t be complete for another few weeks, officials acknowledg­ed.

The station was to have opened by the end of 2022 but was delayed slightly by issues with heating, ventilatio­n and air conditioni­ng. For Long Island commuters headed for Manhattan, the terminal’s key benefit is the ability to take a train directly to the East Side, where previously the only option was to go to Pennsylvan­ia Station on the West Side, then travel back by subway or bus.

“I’ve been waiting for 30 years,” said John Cannon, a Long Island man who was on the inaugural 21-minute ride from Jamaica to Manhattan. “I don’t have to take the subways anymore.”

Passenger Alexander Rodriguez, a 15year-old Queens resident, described the inaugural ride as “nice and smooth.”

“And it was fun,” he said. “It’s a once in a lifetime thing. It was the first train.”

Many of the subterrane­an tunnels that carry rail passengers below the Hudson River are more than a century old, some of which are in need of deeper maintenanc­e. The new tunnels built for the project will also allow Amtrak to temporaril­y divert its trains to the new tunnels so it can begin refurbishi­ng aging eastside tunnels and tracks.

For decades, the project kept chugging along, even amid concerns about ballooning costs. Constructi­on began in the 1960s, but was abandoned for a time because of a series of economic crises.

Spending on the massive constructi­on project has grown to more than $11 billion – more than triple the initial estimate of $3.5 billion two decades ago. The project bore through two miles of bedrock; per mile, it would be one of the world’s most expensive rail projects ever completed.

“It’s a useful project. But for $11 billion, it would be better not to have built it,” said Alon Levy, transporta­tion fellow at New York University’s Marron Institute, who has been compiling railway cost data from around the world.

The money, he argues, could have been used for other transporta­tion projects, including improving capacity for existing railway lines.

Officials have acknowledg­ed that engineerin­g costs and the high price of New York City labor contribute­d to spiraling expenses.

“This is not a small project. This is one of the greatest engineerin­g feats. And it’s a tribute to the MTA that they were able to overcome what I would say was some delays of bureaucrac­y, delays of engineerin­g,” said Mitchell Moss, a professor of urban policy and planning at New York University.

Despite the setbacks, Tom Wright, the president of the Regional Plan Associatio­n, hailed Wednesday’s opening as a “driver of economic growth and prosperity,” even as the region “still faces urgent transporta­tion, housing and resiliency challenges.”

“Because this region has an interconne­cted network of transit, when you make an improvemen­t, the beneficiaries are actually systemwide,” said Wright, whose nonprofit develops and advocates for ways to improve the regional economy, environmen­t and quality of life.

Over the past week, the Long Island Rail Road carried about 1 million riders, or about two-thirds the number it transporte­d for roughly the same week in 2019, according to statistics compiled by the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority. When full service begins to Grand Central Madison, the LIRR will add another 269 trains per weekday on top of the roughly 660 trains already in operation, officials said. About 160,000 passengers are expected to hop on and off platforms at the new terminal.

Coupled with expanded service to Penn Station, the link to Grand Central would allow rail stops to open along long-neglected parts of the city, including the Bronx, spur new housing developmen­ts and serve as an economic engine.

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP ?? People board a Long Island Rail Road train Wednesday in the new annex in New York City’s Grand Central Terminal. The new transit center is being heralded as an important addition to the nation’s busiest rail network.
SETH WENIG/AP People board a Long Island Rail Road train Wednesday in the new annex in New York City’s Grand Central Terminal. The new transit center is being heralded as an important addition to the nation’s busiest rail network.

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