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New York Penn Station

Coordinates:40°45′02″N73°59′38″W / 40.750638°N 73.993899°W /40.750638; -73.993899
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromPennsylvania Station (New York City))
Major rail hub in New York City
This article is about the modern intercity rail station in New York City. For other uses, seePennsylvania Station (disambiguation).

Pennsylvania Station
New York, NY
Moynihan Train Hall
Main concourse under Madison Square Garden
Moynihan Train Hall (top) and the station's main concourse (below)
General information
LocationBounded by7th &9th Avenues and31st &33rd Streets
(underMadison Square Garden and inJames A. Farley Building)
Midtown Manhattan,New York City
United States
Owned byAmtrak
LinesNortheast Corridor (Hell Gate Line)
Empire Corridor (West Side Line)
Platforms11island platforms
Tracks21
Connections
Construction
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeAmtrak:NYP
Via Rail:NEWY
IATA codeZYP
Fare zoneZone 1 (LIRR)
Zone 1 (NJ Transit)
History
Opened1910; 116 years ago (1910)
Rebuilt1963–1968; 58 years ago (1968)
Passengers
201727,296,100annually[1][2] (NJT)
FY 202513,037,414annually[3] (Amtrak)
201769,722,560annually; based on average arrivals and departures[4] (LIRR)
Services
Preceding stationAmtrakFollowing station
Newark PennAcelaStamford
VermonterStamford
Newark PennNortheast RegionalNew Rochelle
Yonkers
towardMontreal
AdirondackTerminus
YonkersBerkshire Flyer
(seasonal)
Newark Penn
towardChicago
Cardinal
Newark Penn
towardCharlotte
Carolinian
Newark PennCrescent
YonkersEmpire Service
YonkersEthan Allen Express
Newark PennKeystone Service
Croton–Harmon
towardChicago
Lake Shore Limited
Yonkers
towardToronto
Maple Leaf
Newark Penn
towardSavannah
Palmetto
Newark PennPennsylvanian
Newark Penn
towardMiami
Silver Meteor
Preceding stationLong Island Rail RoadFollowing station
TerminusPort Washington BranchWoodside
Hempstead BranchWoodside
towardHempstead
Port Jefferson BranchWoodside
Oyster Bay Branch
limited service
Jamaica
Ronkonkoma BranchWoodside
Montauk BranchJamaica
towardMontauk
Cannonball
summers only
Westhampton
towardMontauk
Far Rockaway BranchWoodside
Babylon BranchWoodside
towardBabylon
West Hempstead BranchWoodside
Long Beach BranchWoodside
Belmont Park Branch
special events
Woodside
Preceding stationNJ TransitFollowing station
Secaucus Junction
towardTrenton
Northeast Corridor LineTerminus
Secaucus Junction
towardBay Head
North Jersey Coast Line
Secaucus JunctionMontclair–Boonton Line
Morristown Line
Secaucus JunctionRaritan Valley Line
Secaucus Junction
towardGladstone
Gladstone Branch
Former services
Preceding stationAmtrakFollowing station
TerminusCape Codder
1986–1996
Stamford
towardHyannis
Newark Penn
towardTri-State
Hilltopper
1978–1979
Stamford
Newark PennMetroliner
1971–2006
Terminus
Montrealer
1972–1995
Rye
towardMontreal
Newark PennNational Limited
1971–1979
Terminus
Newark Penn
towardChicago
Broadway Limited
1971–1995
Three Rivers
1995–2005
Newark Penn
towardMiami
Silver Star
1971–2024
Preceding stationNJ TransitFollowing station
Newark PennACES
2009–2011
Terminus
Future services
Preceding stationAmtrakFollowing station
Newark PennNortheast RegionalJamaica
Preceding stationMetro-North RailroadFollowing station
TerminusNew Haven LineHunts Point
towardStamford
Secaucus JunctionPort Jervis LineTerminus
Preceding stationNJ TransitFollowing station
Secaucus JunctionPascack Valley LineTerminus
Secaucus Junction
towardSuffern
Main Line
Bergen County Line
Interactive map
Map
Coordinates40°45′02″N73°59′38″W / 40.750638°N 73.993899°W /40.750638; -73.993899
Location
Map

Pennsylvania Station (also known asNew York Penn Station or simplyPenn Station) is the mainintercityrailroad station inNew York City and thebusiest transportation facility in theWestern Hemisphere, serving more than 600,000 passengers per weekday as of 2019[update].[5][6][a] The station is located beneathMadison Square Garden in the block bounded bySeventh andEighth Avenues and 31st and 33rd Streets and in theJames A. Farley Building, with additional exits to nearby streets, inMidtown Manhattan. It is close to several popular Manhattan locations, includingHerald Square, theEmpire State Building,Koreatown, andMacy's Herald Square.

Penn Station has 21 tracks fed by seven tunnels, including its twoNorth River Tunnels, fourEast River Tunnels, and oneEmpire Connection tunnel. It is at the center of theNortheast Corridor, a passenger rail line that connects New York City withBoston to its north andPhiladelphia,Baltimore, andWashington, D.C. to its south, along with various intermediate stations. Intercity trains are operated byAmtrak, which owns the station, whilecommuter rail services are operated by theLong Island Rail Road (LIRR) andNJ Transit (NJT). Connections are available within the complex to theNew York City Subway and buses.

Penn Station is named for thePennsylvania Railroad (PRR), its builder and original owner, and shares its name with several stations in other cities. Theoriginal Pennsylvania Station was an ornatestation building designed byMcKim, Mead, and White and considered a masterpiece of theBeaux-Arts style. Completed in 1910, it enabled direct rail access to New York City from the south for the first time. Itshead house andtrain shed were torn down in 1963 at a time of low train ridership, with the rail infrastructure reconstituted as the smaller underground station that survives today. TheNew York Times editorial board described the demolition of the original station as a "monumental act of vandalism",[7] and its destruction galvanized the modernhistoric preservation movement.[8]

The 2020s saw the opening ofMoynihan Train Hall, an expansion of Penn Station into theFarley Post Office building,[9] as well as expansion of the LIRR concourse and a new direct entrance from 33rd Street.[10]Prospective further plans call for reconstruction of the core of the station, which has seen competing proposals regarding the station's relationship to Madison Square Garden,[11] the potential reopening of theGimbels passageway to Herald Square,[12] and the construction of an annex one block south with new platforms to add capacity and connect to theGateway Program tunnels under the Hudson River.[13][14]

History

[edit]

Planning and construction

[edit]
Main article:New York Tunnel Extension
Pennsylvania Station Excavation, a painting byGeorge Bellows

Until the early 20th century, the PRR's rail network terminated on the western side of theHudson River (once known locally as theNorth River) atExchange Place inJersey City, New Jersey. Manhattan-bound passengers boardedferries to cross the Hudson River for the final stretch of their journey.[15]

The rivalNew York Central Railroad's line ran down Manhattan from the north underPark Avenue and terminated atGrand Central Depot (later replaced byGrand Central Terminal) at42nd Street.[16] Many proposals for a cross-Hudson connection were advanced in the late 19th century, but financial panics in the 1870s and 1890s scared off potential investors. In any event, none of the proposals advanced during this time were considered feasible.[17]

An early proposal for a bridge was considered but rejected.[18][19] The alternative was to tunnel under the river, but this was infeasible forsteam locomotive use.[20] The development of theelectric locomotive at the turn of the 20th century made a tunnel feasible. In 1901, PRR presidentAlexander Cassatt announced the railroad's plan to enter New York City by tunneling under the Hudson and building a grand station on the West Side of Manhattan south of34th Street.[21] The station would sit in Manhattan'sTenderloin district, a historicalred-light district known for its corruption and prostitution.[22]

Beginning in June 1903, the two single-trackNorth River Tunnels were bored from the west under the Hudson River.[23] A second set of four single-track tunnels, theEast River Tunnels, were bored from the east under theEast River, linking the new station toQueens, the PRR-owned Long Island Rail Road, andSunnyside Yard in Queens, where trains would be maintained and assembled.[24] Construction was completed on the Hudson River tunnels on October 9, 1906,[25] and on the East River tunnels on March 18, 1908.[26]

Original structure

[edit]
Main article:Pennsylvania Station (1910–1963)
The exterior of Penn Station in 1911
Penn Station's interior in the 1930s
One of few remnants of the original station still in use, a staircase between tracks 3 and 4

A small portion of Penn Station opened on September 8, 1910, in conjunction with the opening of theEast River Tunnels, andLIRR riders gained direct railroad service toManhattan.[27] On November 27, 1910, Penn Station was fully opened to the public.[28] With the station's full opening, the PRR became the only railroad to enter New York City from the south.[29]

During half a century of operation by the Pennsylvania Railroad (1910–1963), scores of intercity passenger trains arrived and departed daily toChicago andSt. Louis on "Pennsy" rails and beyond on connecting railroads toMiami and the west. Along withLong Island Rail Road trains, Penn Station saw trains of theNew Haven and theLehigh Valley railroads. A side effect of the tunneling project was to open the city up to the suburbs, and within 10 years of opening, two-thirds of the daily passengers coming through Penn Station were commuters.[22]

The station put the Pennsylvania Railroad at comparative advantage to its competitors offering direct service from Manhattan to the west and south. Other railroads began their routes at terminals inWeehawken,Hoboken,Pavonia andCommunipaw which required passengers from New York City to take the interstate Hudson Tubes (nowPATH) or ferries across the Hudson River before boarding their trains. By 1945, at its peak, more than 100 million passengers a year traveled through Penn Station.[22]

By the late 1950s, intercity rail passenger volumes had declined dramatically with the coming of theJet Age and theInterstate Highway System. The station's exterior had become somewhat grimy, and due to its vast scale, the station was expensive to maintain.[30][31] A renovation covered some of the grand columns with plastic and blocked off the spacious central hallway with a new ticket office. The Pennsylvania Railroad optioned the air rights, which called for the demolition of thehead house andtrain shed, to be replaced by an office complex and a new sports complex, while the tracks of the station would remain untouched.[b]

Plans for the newPenn Plaza and Madison Square Garden were announced in 1962. In exchange for the air rights to Penn Station, the PRR would receive a smaller underground station at no cost and a 25 percent stake in the new Madison Square Garden Complex. Modern architects rushed to save the ornate building, but to no avail;[32] demolition of the above-groundhead house began in October 1963.[33] A giant steel deck was placed over the tracks and platforms to allow rail service to continue during construction. Photographs of the day showed passengers waiting for trains even as the head house was demolished around them.[30] This was possible because most of the rail infrastructure (including the waiting room, concourses, and boarding platforms) was below street level.[34]

The demolition of the Penn Station head house was controversial and caused outrage internationally.[35][7] "One entered the city like a god. One scuttles in now like a rat," the architectural historianVincent Scully famously wrote of the original station.[36] The controversy over the demolition of such a well-known landmark, and its deplored replacement,[37] is often cited as a catalyst for the architectural preservation movement in the United States.[8] Within the decade, Grand Central Terminal was protected under the city's newlandmarks preservation act, a protectionupheld by the courts in 1978 after a challenge by Grand Central's owner,Penn Central (the corporate successor of the PRR, following its merger with the rival New York Central Railroad).[38]

Under Madison Square Garden

[edit]
See also:Madison Square Garden andPennsylvania Plaza
Amtrak concourse in 1974

Post-1968, the core Penn Station has been underground, sitting below Madison Square Garden, 33rd Street, and Two Penn Plaza. The core has three levels:concourses on the upper two levels andtrain platforms on the lowest. The two levels of concourses, while renovated and expanded during the construction of Madison Square Garden, are original to the 1910 station, as are the tracks and platforms.[39]

Over the following decades, various renovations attempted to add service and some concourse space. The West End Concourse under Eighth Avenue opened in 1986.[40] In 1987, a rail connection to theWest Side Rail Yard opened,[41] and in 1991, the opening of theEmpire Connection allowed Amtrak to consolidate all of its New York City trains at Penn Station;[42][43][44] previously, trains from theEmpire Corridor terminated atGrand Central Terminal, a legacy of the two stations' respective roots in separate railroads.

In 1994, the station was renovated to add the 34th Street LIRR entrance and central corridor, along with artwork and improved waiting and concession areas.[45] The new entrance consisted of a 90-foot-tall (27 m) structure with a glass and brick facade, a clock salvaged from the original station, and air-conditioning units for the terminal.[46] In 2002, the NJ Transit concourse was created in space previously occupied by retail and Amtrak office space,[47] although the concourse could only be accessed from the Amtrak entrance on 32nd Street.[48] Plans for a new entrance from 31st Street to the NJ Transit concourse were announced in 2006,[49][50] and the entrance opened in 2009.[48][51] In 2020, the ticketed waiting room on the main concourse was renovated by Amtrak and NJ Transit to include furniture with USB outlets, an additional entrance, and a lactation suite.[52]

After theSeptember 11 attacks, security was increased and passenger flow curtailed. In 2002, $100 million of work added security features such as lighting, cameras, and barricades.[53] The taxiway under Madison Square Garden, which ran from 31st Street to 33rd Street at mid-block, was permanently closed off with concreteJersey barriers. Escalators providing direct access to the lobby of Madison Square Garden were closed and later removed. The undergroundGimbels Passageway connecting pedestrians to34th Street–Herald Square has been sealed off since 1986,[54] after decades of safety concerns and sexual assaults.[55]

Despite the modest renovations, the underground Penn Station continued to be criticized as "reviled", "dysfunctional", and a low-ceilinged "catacomb" lacking charm, especially when compared to the much larger and more ornate Grand Central Terminal.[35] TheNew York Times, in an editorial supporting development of an enlarged terminal, said that "Amtrak's beleaguered customers...scurry through underground rooms bereft of light or character,"[56] andTimes transit reporter Michael M. Grynbaum called Penn Station "the ugly stepchild of the city's two great rail terminals."[31] After its nadir in the 1960s, ridership exploded in subsequent decades, a situation never contemplated by the structure's designers. By the 2010s, the station operated at almost three times its intended capacity; over 600,000 passengers used the station daily in 2019.[30]

Expansion and renovation

[edit]
See also:Moynihan Train Hall
Steel-glass roof in April 2023
The renovated Long Island Rail Road concourse in 2023

In the early 1990s, U.S. SenatorDaniel Patrick Moynihan proposed building a new station in theJames A. Farley Building, the city's former main post office across the street which was designed by the same firm as the original Penn Station; Moynihan had shined shoes in the original station as a boy.[57][58][59] Many redevelopment or expansion concepts were proposed over the 1990s and 2000s, but none reached fruition until funding from the 2009American Recovery and Reinvestment Act enabled the expansion of the West End Concourse of the LIRR under the Farley Building in 2016.[60]

In 2016 New York GovernorAndrew Cuomo announced plans for the renovation of Penn Station and redevelopment of the Farley Building to include a new train hall, calling his plan the Empire Station Complex.[61]Moynihan Train Hall opened in January 2021 and was named for the man who had conceived it.[62] The $1.6 billion, 255,000-square-foot (23,700 m2) renovation retained the landmarked Beaux Arts Farley Building, added a central atrium with a glass roof, and provided access to Amtrak and LIRR trains,[63][9] receiving the 2021Prix Versailles for passenger stations.[64][65] A new 33rd Street entrance to the LIRR concourse opened at the same time.[10]

Following the opening of the 33rd Street entrance, the LIRR concourse was doubled in width from 30 to 57 feet (9.1 to 17.4 m), and the ceilings were raised to a minimum height of 18 feet (5.5 m)[66] by removing seven "head knockers",[67] low-hanging steel beams only 6 feet 8 inches (2.03 m) above the concourse's floor which were part of the original Penn Station;[68][69] the expansion was completed in March 2023.[70] 33rd Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues was converted into a pedestrian plaza and permanently closed to vehicular traffic,[71] opening in June 2024[72][73] as part of a $65 million project funded by Vornado.[74][75]

Services

[edit]
Railways around New York City
Riverdale
New Rochelle
High Bridge
Grand Central Terminal
Pennsylvania Station
Sunnyside Yard
Legend

The station is served by 1,300 arrivals and departures per day, twice as many as there were during the 1970s.[76] There are more than 600,000 subway, commuter rail and Amtrak passengers who use the station on an average weekday,[77][78] or up to 1,000 every ninety seconds.[31][79]: 498, 891  It is the busiest passenger transportation facility in the United States[80] and in North America.[79]: 890–891 Beyond the subway entrances of the Penn Station, also the new iconic 7Av/33St entrance and the 7Av/34St entrance are open 24/7.[81]

Operations

[edit]

Penn Station currently operates in a hybrid mode, with some trains turning back at the station and others running through the station. Almost all Amtrak trains servicing the Northeast Corridor run through Penn Station in either revenue-to-revenue or revenue-to-non-revenue mode, while LIRR and NJT operate both turning trains and through-running trains.[82] This hybrid regime is optimized for the peak commuter demand between the suburbs and Manhattan, with a highly optimized operating plan for each railroad that results in unbalanced service.[82]

During the morning peak period, many commuter trains are "through-run" to storage yards after dropping off passengers, a mode of operation which requires the shortest station dwell times and helps achieve maximum throughput. Roughly one-third of LIRR trains arriving from the east between 6:00 AM and 10:00 AM continue on to theWest Side Yard, and a similar percentage of NJT trains arriving from the west continue on toSunnyside Yard in Queens. The afternoon peak operation is similar but in reverse. The balance of daily trains turn at the station, either running back in revenue service or "deadheading" back to outlying termini to return for another trip or to await the next peak period.[82]

The following table summarizes peak hour train movements:[82]

Current Train Movements in the Peak Hour at Penn Station
RailroadAM PeakPM Peak
LIRR
  • 64 LIRR trains arriving from Nassau and Suffolk counties and Queens turnaround in Penn Station
  • 36 trains "run-through" to West Side Yard for mid-day storage where they are serviced and made ready for a later return trip
  • 28 trains reverse direction in the station
  • 89 LIRR trains depart Penn Station
  • 35 trains run-through from West Side Yard
  • 54 trains reverse direction in the station
NJT
  • 39 NJT trains arriving from New Jersey reverse direction in Penn Station
  • 21 trains "run-through" to Sunnyside Yard for mid-day storage, servicing, and staging for the PM Peak service period
  • 55 NJT trains depart Penn Station
  • 19 trains run through from Sunnyside Yard
  • 36 trains reverse direction
Amtrak
  • 28 Amtrak trains operate through Penn Station including Northeast Corridor, Empire Corridor and Long-Haul inter-city services
  • All trains run through Penn Station, either as revenue trains or to and from Sunnyside Yard
  • 31 Amtrak trains operate through Penn Station including Northeast Corridor, Empire Corridor and Long-Haul inter-city services.
  • All trains run through Penn Station, either as revenue trains or to and from Sunnyside Yard

In summary, about 193 commuter trains turn around in Penn Station during the combined Peak service periods, and 111 commuter trains run-through to West Side or Sunnyside Yards. As both yards are at their practical capacity, any major increase in revenue-to-storage through-running would require major expansion of yard capacity.[82]

Intercity rail

[edit]

Amtrak

[edit]
An Amtrak platform at Penn Station

Amtrak owns the station and uses it for the following services:

All except theAcela,Northeast Regional andVermonter originate and terminate at Penn Station. Amtrak normally uses tracks 5–12 alongside New Jersey Transit and shares tracks 13–16 with the LIRR and NJ Transit.

Commuter rail

[edit]

Long Island Rail Road

[edit]

The following Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) services originate and terminate at Penn Station:

All branches connect atJamaica station except the Port Washington Branch. Jamaica station also connects toAirtrain JFK for service toJohn F. Kennedy International Airport.

Normally, the LIRR uses tracks 17 to 21 exclusively and shares tracks 13 to 16 with Amtrak and NJT. The LIRR uses tracks 11 and 12 on rare occasions.

NJ Transit

[edit]
NJ Transit ticket counter
A NJ Transit platform

The followingNJ Transit Rail Operations (NJT) branches originate and terminate at Penn Station:

NJT normally uses tracks 1 to 4 exclusively, as these four tracks end at bumper blocks to their east. NJT shares tracks 5 through 12 with Amtrak, and occasionally uses tracks 13 to 16, which are shared with Amtrak and the LIRR.

Rapid transit

[edit]

New York City Subway

[edit]

Connections are available to the following New York City Subway stations:[83]

PATH

[edit]

Connections are also available to thePATH system at33rd Street station, under Sixth Avenue on Herald Square. TheJSQ-33 andHOB-33 services terminate at 33rd Street on weekdays, and are combined into theJSQ-33 (via HOB) service on late nights, weekends and holidays.

Bus and coach

[edit]

New York City Bus

[edit]

The followingMTA Regional Bus Operations buses stop near Penn Station:[84]

Intercity coaches

[edit]

Intercity bus service to and from Penn Station is provided byVamoose Bus, Tripper Bus, andGo Buses.Vamoose Bus runs buses from a stop near Penn Station to Bethesda, Maryland; Arlington, Virginia; and Lorton, Virginia.[85] Tripper Bus runs buses from a stop near Penn Station to Bethesda, Maryland and Arlington, Virginia.[86]Go Buses runs buses from a stop near Penn Station to Newton, Massachusetts and Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Most intercity and commuter bus services to and from midtown Manhattan use thePort Authority Bus Terminal, located approximately 0.5 miles (0.8 kilometers) to the north of Penn Station.

Proposed Metro-North service

[edit]
Main article:Penn Station Access

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority plans to bringMetro-North Railroad commuter trains to Penn Station as part of itsPenn Station Access project. TheEast Side Access project, which was completed in 2023, has freed up track and platform space at Penn Station by redirecting some LIRR trains from Penn Station toGrand Central Madison. This new capacity, as well as track connections resulting from the East Side Access project, will allow Metro-North trains on theNew Haven Line to run to Penn Station via Amtrak'sHell Gate Bridge.[87]

Four new local Metro-North stations inthe Bronx are planned as part of this project, atCo-op City,Morris Park,Parkchester/VanNest, andHunts Point. The MTA also proposes a second service from the Metro-North'sHudson Line to Penn Station using Amtrak'sWest Side Line in Manhattan.[88] The Penn Station Access project would provide direct rides fromConnecticut,Westchester County, theLower Hudson Valley, and the Bronx to West Midtown; ease reverse-commuting from Manhattan and the Bronx to Westchester County, the Lower Hudson Valley, and Connecticut; and provide transportation service to areas of the Bronx without direct subway service.[89]

Station layout

[edit]
Long Island Rail Road concourse after renovation, 2023
The West End Concourse

Penn Station does not have a unified design or floor plan but rather is divided into separate Amtrak, LIRR and NJ Transit concourses with each concourse maintained and styled differently by its respective operator.[90] The Amtrak and NJ Transit concourses are located on the first level below the street level while the Long Island Rail Road concourse is two levels below street level.[91]

Platform widths vary, with eight of the 11 platforms in the range of 19–20 feet wide. Platform 6 is the narrowest, at 17 feet, while Platform 1 is slightly wider, at 22 feet. Platform 10 is the widest platform, used exclusively by LIRR and nominally 38 feet wide.[82]

The main concourse, now primarily used by NJ Transit which was principally used by Amtrak until the opening of theMoynihan Train Hall in 2021, is at the west end of the station directly beneath Madison Square Garden.[91][92] It was created out of the original station's waiting rooms and main concourse, though few remnants of the original still exist in the space. It was renovated in the early 2000s in anticipation ofAcela service and includes an enclosed waiting area for ticketed passengers with seats, outlets and Wi-Fi.[93] The ticketed waiting room underwent a $7.2 million renovation from 2019 to 2020 that was funded jointly between Amtrak and NJ Transit. The renovation included new furniture and fixtures that feature seats with electrical and USB outlets, an upgraded ceiling with new LED lighting, a new information desk, a second entrance in close proximity to the NJ Transit concourse that provides improved access towards the Seventh Avenue side of the Station, two new Passenger Information Display Systems boards that display NJ Transit departure information and a lactation suite for nursing mothers.[94]

The LIRR's connecting concourse runs below West 33rd Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, as it has since the original station opened in 1910.[95] Significant renovations were made to the LIRR areas over a three-year period ending in 1994,[96] including the opening of the Central Corridor passageway and the addition of a new entry pavilion on 34th Street.[97][98] The 34th Street entry pavilion measures 40 by 50 feet (12 by 15 m) across by 92 feet (28 m) tall and has a glass tower and two air-cooling shafts.[98] The West End Concourse, west of Eighth Avenue, opened in 1986,[40] and was widened and lengthened to cover tracks 5 through 21 in 2017.[99]

The NJ Transit concourse near Seventh Avenue opened in 2002 out of existing retail and Amtrak office space.[100] A new street-level entrance to this concourse at the corner of 31st Street and Seventh Avenue opened in September 2009.[101] Previously, NJ Transit used space in the Amtrak concourse.[102]

In December 2017, Amtrak andZyter released amobile app called FindYourWay to help commuters navigate around Penn Station, though Zyter also plans to roll out the app at other large Amtrak stations.[103]The station's three providers use different official addresses for the station.

  • Amtrak: 351 West 31st Street
  • LIRR: 34th Street at 7th and 8th Avenues
  • NJ Transit: 31st Street and 7th Avenue
  • LIRR concourse in 2015
    LIRR concourse in 2015
  • Amtrak concourse
    Amtrak concourse
  • East End Gateway at 7th Avenue
    East End Gateway at 7th Avenue
  • 8th Avenue entrance
    8th Avenue entrance
  • Entrance in the Farley Post Office Building
    Entrance in the Farley Post Office Building
Station layout
Above groundMadison Square Garden/Two Penn Plaza[104]
GStreet LevelExit/Entrance
UCAmtrak ConcourseAmtrak tickets, transfer to34th Street–Penn Station (IND Eighth Avenue Line) station; exit to 33rd Street, connection to Exit and Connecting concourses[104]
NJT ConcourseNJT tickets, exit to 31st Street, connect to LIRR and Hilton concourses[104]
LCWest End ConcourseAmtrak/LIRR tickets, transfer to34th Street–Penn Station (IND Eighth Avenue Line) station; exit to 33rd Street, connection to Exit and Connecting concourses[104]
Exit ConcourseExit to 31st Street, connection to Hilton, West End, and Connecting concourses[104]
Hilton CorridorExit to Seventh Avenue, connection to Exit, LIRR, Central, and NJT concourses[104]
Central ConcourseTickets, connection to Connecting and Hilton concourses[104]
Connecting ConcourseTransfer to34th Street–Penn Station (IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line) station, connection to West End, LIRR, Central, and Exit concourses, toOne Penn Plaza and34th Street at north end[104]
LIRR ConcourseLIRR tickets, connection to NJT and Hilton concourses[104]
P
Platform level
Track 21LIRR toward Long Island →
Island platform (Platform 11)
Track 20 LIRR toward Long Island →
Track 19 LIRR toward Long Island →
Island platform (Platform 10)
Track 18 LIRR toward Long Island →
Island platform (Platform 9); Track 17 only
Track 17 LIRR toward Long Island →
Track 16Amtrak/NJ Transit/LIRR →
Island platform (Platform 8)
Track 15← Amtrak/NJ Transit/LIRR →
Track 14← Amtrak/NJ Transit/LIRR →
Island platform (Platform 7)
Track 13← Amtrak/NJ Transit/LIRR →
Track 12← Amtrak/NJ Transit/LIRR →
Island platform (Platform 6)
Track 11← Amtrak/NJ Transit →
Track 10← Amtrak/NJ Transit →
Island platform (Platform 5)
Track 9← Amtrak/NJ Transit →
Track 8← Amtrak/NJ Transit →
Island platform (Platform 4)
Track 7← Amtrak/NJ Transit →
Track 6← Amtrak/NJ Transit →
Island platform (Platform 3)
Track 5← Amtrak/NJ Transit
Track 4← NJ Transit toward New Jersey
Island platform (Platform 2)
Track 3← NJ Transit toward New Jersey
Track 2← NJ Transit toward New Jersey
Island platform (Platform 1)
Track 1← NJ Transit toward New Jersey

Tracks and surrounding infrastructure

[edit]
Penn Station track layout
LD1
LD3
1A
3A
5A
2X
4X
6X
LD2
LD4
1E
3E
5E
2A
2
1X
3X
5X
2E
4E
1C
4C
6C
8C
10C
2C
5C
7C
9C
Mail platform
1D
4D
6D
7E
3D
5D
A Interlocking
F
M
I
G
U
KN Interlocking
Moynihan Train Hall
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
(Platform numbers)
1
3
5
7
9
11
13
15
17
20
(Track numbers)
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
19
21
(Track numbers)
C Interlocking
JO Interlocking
1
2
3
4
Legend
Passenger service tracks
Yard/storage tracks

Note: Interlocking towers A, KN, C, and JO have been deactivated.

Source:[105]

Penn Station is configured with 11 platforms, 21 tracks, and four interlockings.[82] The station's platforms and tracks are numbered from south to north.[82] Tracks 1–4 are stub-end tracks ending at the eastern end of the platform and are used exclusively by NJ Transit, as they do not connect to the East River Tunnels.[105][82] The remaining tracks 5 through 21 are through tracks with connections at both ends.[82] In normal operations, Amtrak and NJ Transit share tracks 5–12, all three railroads share tracks 13–16, and the LIRR has the exclusive use of tracks 17–21 on the north side of the station.[106][107]

The station is accessed via seven single-track tunnels: twoNorth River Tunnels under the Hudson River, fourEast River Tunnels under the East River, and one shorterEmpire Tunnel under the West Side of Manhattan. Each under-river tunnel is approximately 3 miles long, while the Empire Tunnel is approximately 0.3 miles long.[82] The interlockings that control the station complex are designated 'A', 'C', 'JO', and 'KN'. On the west side of the station, 'A' and 'KN' interlockings route trains to and from the North River Tunnels, the Empire Tunnel, and the West Side Yard. On the east side, two interlockings ('C' and 'JO') route trains to and from the four East River tunnels; each interlocking connects two of the tunnel tracks to only 17 of the 21 platform tracks, as tracks 1-4 do not connect to the east.[82]

From the east, the East River Tunnels' lines 1 and 2 (the more southerly tubes) can only access tracks 5–17 and are used by most Amtrak and NJ Transit trains, while the East River Tunnels' lines 3 and 4 (the more northerly tubes) can only access tracks 14–21 and are mostly used by LIRR. From the west, the North River Tunnels can access tracks 1–19, while the Empire Connection can only access tracks 1–9 and the LIRR'sWest Side Yard can only access tracks 10–21.[105]

All station tracks are powered by 12 kVoverhead wire. Tracks 5–21 also have 750VDCthird rail.[108][109] Due to the lack of proper ventilation in the tunnels and station, only electric locomotives anddual-mode locomotives are scheduled to enter Penn Station.[110] Diesel-only NJT trains terminate at Hoboken Terminal orNewark Penn Station, and diesel-only LIRR trains terminate at or prior toLong Island City. The established throughput capacity of the tunnels is 24-25 trains per hour in each direction for the North River Tunnels and 20-21 trains per hour in the peak direction for the East River Tunnels.[82]

Trains on track 18 open their doors only on the north side (platform 10).[107]

2017–2018 service disruptions and track improvements

[edit]

Since the early 2010s, Amtrak had planned to fix the deteriorating rails and infrastructure around Penn Station, but due to the prioritization of other projects, applied only minimal fixes.[111] In early 2017, this culminated in numerous power outages, derailments, and delays due to track maintenance delays. There were frequent service disruptions to train schedules caused by the deterioration of its tracks and their supporting infrastructure, as well as in those of the East River and North River tunnels that respectively connect the station to Long Island and New Jersey.[112]

A string of early 2017 service disruptions started on March 23, 2017, when anAcela train derailed, causing delays for the day.[113] On April 3, a NJ Transit train derailed at a known problem site, where repairs had been deferred.[112] This caused four days of reduced service along the Northeast Corridor for both Amtrak and NJ Transit, because the incident damaged the switch that connects Tracks 1–8 to the North River tunnels.[114] This closure caused acascading failure, delaying Amtrak and Long Island Rail Road trains on the unaffected tracks.[113][115]

On April 14, a New Jersey Transit train became stuck in the North River tunnels, causing the station to grow crowded with waiting passengers. After an Amtrak police officer used aTaser on a man who was acting disruptively, rumors of gunshots sparked a stampede that injured 16 people.[116][117] Following the stampede, U.S. SenatorChuck Schumer called on Amtrak to centralize law enforcement response.[118]

As a result of these incidents, the Long Island Rail Road had proposed taking over Penn Station from Amtrak to improve maintenance,[119] and New Jersey has suggested withholding state payments to Amtrak.[113] Amtrak has discussed accelerating major maintenance work, even at the cost of further disruptions, to more quickly stabilize infrastructure and decrease more future incidents that could potentially cause even greater disruption.[113]

On April 28, 2017, Amtrak announced that it would perform some track maintenance during the summer[118] over a period of one and a half months.[120] Five tracks were closed for repairs as part of the reconstruction work, severely reducing track capacity in a situation media outlets deemed "the summer of hell".[121][122] Many affected NJ Transit passengers were diverted to take the PATH instead.[123] Some Amtrak trains from the Empire Corridor were routed to Grand Central instead of Penn Station.[124] Regular service resumed on September 5, 2017.[125][126]

Amtrak made further improvements to Penn Station's trackage in summer 2018. As a result, some Empire Corridor trains were rerouted again to Grand Central.[127] TheLake Shore Limited andCardinal to Chicago were truncated or rerouted because of this work.[128]

33rd St to 34th St subway cross-section
11th Av10th &9th Avs
are skipped

Farley Building &
Moynihan Train Hall
8th AvMadison Square
Garden
7th AvStorefronts6th Av &
Broadway
5th &Madison Avs
are skipped
Park Av
mezzaninetrain hallA / C / Econcourse1 / 2 / 3Former Gimbel's
passageway
mezzPATH6 / <6>
mezzanineconcmezzanineconcoursemezzanineN / Q / R / W
7 / <7>Penn Station (platform level)B/D/F/<F>/M
This box:


Planning and redevelopment

[edit]
Passenger congestion in the LIRR concourse, 2016

Resurgence of train ridership in the 21st century has pushed the current Pennsylvania Station under Madison Square Garden to capacity, leading to several proposals to renovate or rebuild the station, often characterized as correcting for the 1960s demolition of the original facility.[129]

In 2013, theRegional Plan Association andMunicipal Art Society formed the Alliance for a New Penn Station, advocating for limiting the extension of Madison Square Garden's operating permit to ten years[130] and soliciting designs from architectural firms to move the arena.[131] Garden officials called the plans "pie-in-the-sky",[131] but on July 24, 2013, the New York City Council voted 47–1 to give the Garden a ten-year operating permit, after which the owners would have to move or seek permission anew.[132] In January 2016, at the same time he announced the development ofMoynihan Train Hall, New York governorAndrew Cuomo announced he would solicit proposals for the redevelopment of the station under the Garden as a public-private partnership called the Empire Station Complex.[133][134]

In June 2023, nearing the end of the ten-year permit granted in 2013, the MTA, Amtrak, and NJ Transit filed a report stating Madison Square Garden was no longer compatible with Penn Station, saying, "MSG's existing configuration and property boundaries impose severe constraints."[135] On September 14, 2023, the New York City Council voted 48–0 to renew the operating permit for Madison Square Garden for five years, the shortest-ever granted to the Garden by the city.[136]

Station reconstruction

[edit]

In April 2021, MTA officials under governorAndrew Cuomo proposed two options to reconstruct the Penn Station building under Madison Square Garden, to be financed by the development of 10 new office and residential towers in the surrounding neighborhood: one retained the existing two-level concourse, the other envisioned a taller single-level concourse with a glass atrium in the former midblock taxiway, and either could also demolish theHulu Theater for a new Eighth Avenue entrance.[137][138][11] Opponents alleged the tower development would disproportionately benefit real-estate firmVornado Realty Trust, which would develop several new towers without paying property taxes.[139][140]

In November 2021, after Cuomo resigned, governorKathy Hochul attempted to advance reconstruction by selecting the one-level plan and slightly reducing the size of the office tower development,[141][142] and in June 2022 she announced a call for architects and engineers to submit preliminary designs.[139][143]FXCollaborative was announced as designer that September with the assistance ofJohn McAslan.[144][145]

In February 2023, Vornado declared it would no longer invest in new office space due to lack of demand following theCOVID-19 pandemic,[146] and that June Hochul announced that Penn Station reconstruction would be "decoupled" from any office tower development.[147] Also in June, private developer ASTM North America unveiled an unsolicited private reconstruction plan, with both a 55-foot tall Eighth Avenue entrance and a 105-foot tall midblock atrium.[148]

After the second Trump administration took office, in March 2025 another outside interest group, Grand Penn Community Alliance, unveiled their own classical-style reconstruction proposal aimed at appealing to the new administration, which included moving Madison Square Garden across Seventh Avenue in a development deal.[149] In April 2025, transportation secretarySean Duffy announced the U.S. Department of Transportation would take over reconstruction from the MTA,[150][151] and in May he selected formerNew York City Transit Authority presidentAndy Byford to lead the reconstruction effort.[152][153] In response to the federal takeover, Hochul said that New York State would no longer pay $1.3 billion that it had previously expected to contribute to the project.[154] Duffy announced later that year that work would begin in 2027 and would cost $7 billion,[155][156] and Amtrak's solicitation for a master developer indicated it was open to proposals that would redevelop parts of the surrounding neighborhood as well.[157] Three finalist designs had been identified by January 2026.[158][159]

Gateway Program

[edit]
Main article:Gateway Program (Northeast Corridor)

The Gateway Program is the planned expansion and renovation of theNortheast Corridor betweenNewark, New Jersey, and New York City to alleviate thebottleneck under the Hudson River and allow for refurbishment of the existingNorth River Tunnels. Two new tunnels would add 25 cross-Hudson train slots duringrush hours and could connect to a 7-track, 4-platform terminal annex to Penn Station to its south.[160] Some previously planned improvements were also incorporated into the Gateway plan.[160][161]

The Gateway Program was unveiled in 2011, one year after the cancellation of the somewhat-similarAccess to the Region's Core (ARC) project, and was originally projected to cost $13.5 billion and take 14 years to build.[161] Construction of a "tunnel box" that would preserve right-of-way on Manhattan's West Side began in September 2013, using $185 million inrecovery and resilience funding awarded afterHurricane Sandy in 2012.[162] In 2015, Amtrak said that damage done to the existing trans-Hudson tunnels by Sandy had made their replacement urgent.[163][164] That year, Amtrak reported that environmental and design work was underway, estimated the project cost at $20 billion, and said construction would last four to five years.[165]

A draft environmental impact statement was released in July 2017,[166][167] but thefirst administration ofDonald Trump delayed consideration of it. Unblocking the project was a stated priority of theBiden administration,[168] and the project was approved in May 2021.[169] Federal funding was included in the Biden administration'sBipartisan Infrastructure Bill, which became law in November 2021,[170] and Biden announced in 2023 that the federal government was committing as much as $11 billion of the $16.1 billion price tag,[171][172] with the states of New York and New Jersey splitting therest.[173] Construction began in late 2023 and was underway as of 2025.[174]

Advocacy and funding controversy

[edit]

In August 2025, the editorial board of theNew York Daily News reported that theRegional Plan Association received support fromAmtrak to operate the Build Gateway Now coalition and contended that this compromised the group's independence in debates over Penn Station and the Gateway Program.[175] RPA's fiscal year 2023 Form 990 discloses that this coalition work was supported by Amtrak, noting a grant of $350,000 for 18 months beginning in January 2022 and a renewed grant of $500,000 for 18 months beginning in January 2024, and it describes activities that include research, communications, and advocacy such as testifying at Gateway Development Commission board meetings.[176][177] Amtrak documentation identifies RPA president Tom Wright as a co-chair of the Penn Station Working Advisory Group convened in 2024.[178] After Trumphalted funding for the Gateway Program in October 2025, he said he would release the funds if Penn Station andDulles Airport were renamed after him;[179] a judge later reversed the funding freeze.[180]

Southern expansion

[edit]

In January 2020, Governor Andrew Cuomo unveiled a proposed southern annex to Penn Station, part of his vision for the Empire Station Complex. The annex would include eight new tracks with four platforms and would involve demolishing the entire block bounded by 30th and 31st streets between Seventh and Eighth avenues, directly south of the existing station, as well as parts of the two blocks to the east and west.[181][182][13][183] The new tracks would connect to and take advantage of the new capacity provided by the Hudson River tunnels built as part of theGateway Program. The necessity of new tracks has been debated by regional advocacy groups who suggest that service improvements to enable regionalthrough-running could similarly boost capacity.[184] The southern terminal, which could cost as much as $16.7 billion, never proceeded;[185][186] in March 2025 Governor Kathy Hochul said she no longer supported demolition of the block,[187] and in August 2025 Amtrak said it was abandoning the expansion in favor of reconstructing the existing station and exploring other capacity improvements such as through-running.[155]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The breakdown of Penn Station's ridership:
    • Commuter and intercity rail comprise about 355,000 daily weekday passengers.
      • LIRR has an average of 233,340 daily weekday passengers.
      • NJ Transit has an average of 93,305 daily weekday passengers.
      • Amtrak has an average of 28,487 daily passengers, when annual totals are averaged.
    • The two subway stations have a combined average of approximately 200,000 daily weekday passengers. However, this only includes entries and not exits.
    • The remainder of the ridership, around 75,000 passengers, may use other transportation such as buses, taxis, or ride-sharing, and may include passengers exiting from the subway.
  2. ^The Railway and Engineering Review article says at their highest the station tracks were nine feet below sea level.

Citations

[edit]
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