| East River Tunnels | |
|---|---|
Construction of the East River Tunnels, 1909. |
|
| Carries | Amtrak Northeast Corridor and Long Island Rail Road |
| Crosses | East River |
| Locale | Manhattan and Queens in New York City |
| Maintained by | Amtrak |
| Total length | 3,949 feet (1,204 m)[1] |
| Width | 23 feet (7.0 m)[1] |
| Opened | September 8, 1910[1] |
The East River Tunnels are 4 single-track railroad tunnels that extend from the eastern end of Pennsylvania Station under 32nd and 33rd Streets in Manhattan and cross the East River to Long Island City in Queens. The tracks carry Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) and Amtrak trains travelling to and from Penn Station and points to the north and east. The tracks also carry New Jersey Transit trains deadheading to Sunnyside Yard. They are part of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. Trains travelling between New York City and Boston, among other destinations, use the tunnels on their way to and from the Hell Gate Bridge.
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The tunnels were built in the first decade of the 20th century as part of the Pennsylvania Tunnel and Terminal Railroad, providing a connection between the Pennsylvania Railroad's train station in New York City, Pennsylvania Station, and the railroad's Sunnyside Yard. At that time the LIRR was a subsidiary of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and the tunnels allowed the LIRR its first (and to date, only) direct access to Manhattan.
Construction began in 1904.[2]:111 The four tunnels were built simultaneously, digging east from Penn Station, west from Long Island City, and east and west from shafts just east of First Avenue; they opened along with Pennsylvania Station in 1910. (Until 1910, LIRR trains ran to Long Island City, where passengers took ferries across the East River to 34th St. in Manhattan.)
The East River Tunnels are currently owned by Amtrak and are electrified by both third rail and overhead catenary. Diesel-powered locomotives are not allowed in the tunnels except in emergency because of ventilation concerns, so the LIRR uses DM30AC dual-mode locomotives to power a few trains from non-electrified lines into and out of Penn Station during rush hours.
The four lines under the river are numbered south to north, Lines 1 and 2 running beneath 32nd St and Lines 3 and 4 under 33rd St. Eastward trains tend to use Lines 1 and 3, so to bring the two eastward lines together Line 3 crosses beneath Line 2 underground a few hundred feet west of the east end of the Line 2 tunnel.
East portal Lines 1-3: 40°44′34″N 73°56′42″W / 40.7429°N 73.9450°W
East portal Line 2:40°44′32″N 73°56′54″W / 40.7421°N 73.9483°W
East portal Line 4: 40°44′35″N 73°56′45″W / 40.74305°N 73.94585°W
Approaching Harold Interlocking from the west, the four tracks are Lines 1-3-2-4 south to north (with three LIRR tracks between Lines 2 and 3, and Sunnyside Yard approach tracks here and there). East of Harold, Lines 1-3 become LIRR Main Line Tracks 4-2 south to north, while Lines 2-4 become LIRR Main Line Track 3 and the westward Port Washington main. (Harold was rearranged in 1990; until then Lines 2-4 became the westward Port Washington and the westward Hell Gate track.)
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