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Staten Island Tunnel

Coordinates:40°38′26″N74°02′08″W / 40.64056°N 74.03556°W /40.64056; -74.03556
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Incomplete rail tunnel in New York City

This article is about the plan to build a subway tunnel from Brooklyn to Staten Island. For the plan to build a vehicular tunnel, seeVerrazzano-Narrows Bridge § Early plans.
Staten Island Tunnel
The 1912 plans of the Staten Island Tunnel to link the Staten Island Railroad to theBMT Fourth Avenue Line.
Overview
Official nameBrooklyn-Richmond Freight and Passenger Tunnel[1]
LineBMT Fourth Avenue Line
IND Culver Line
Staten Island Railway
LocationNew York City
Coordinates40°38′26″N74°02′08″W / 40.64056°N 74.03556°W /40.64056; -74.03556
StatusUnfinished
SystemNew York City Subway
StartBay Ridge, Brooklyn
EndSt. George orTompkinsville,Staten Island
Operation
Constructed1923–1925
TrafficRapid Transit
Technical
Design engineerArthur S. Tuttle[1]
Length10,400 feet (3,169.9 m) (planned)
Width24 feet (7.3 m)

TheStaten Island Tunnel is an abandoned, incompleterailway andsubway tunnel inStaten Island,New York City. It was intended to connect railways onStaten Island (precursors to the modern-dayStaten Island Railway) to theBMT Fourth Avenue Line of theNew York City Subway, inBrooklyn, via a new crossing underthe Narrows. Planned to extend 10,400 feet (3,200 m), the tunnel would have been among the world's longest at the time of its planning, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Construction began in 1923, and the tunnel was excavated 150 feet (46 m) into the Narrows before New York City MayorJohn Hylan, a formerBrooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) employee and initial proponent of the tunnel, canceled the project in 1925. The tunnel lies dormant under Owl's Head Park inBay Ridge, Brooklyn. Later proposals to complete the tunnel, including the 1939 plans for theIndependent Subway System's ambitiousSecond System, were never funded.

Modern proposals for completion of the tunnel have come from New York City CouncilmanLewis Fidler, who in 2007 proposed a 0.33% tax forthe tri-state region to pay for the construction. The tunnel was listed as one of many projects that could receive federal funds that were to have been allocated to theAccess to the Region's Core tunnel, which was canceled in October 2010. State SenatorDiane Savino was among the supporters of the tunnel; Savino stated that if built, the tunnel would cost $3 billion and would improve quality of life for Staten Islanders, reduce traffic, and increase the attractiveness of the borough for investment.

Other names

[edit]

Officially called theBrooklyn-Richmond Freight and Passenger Tunnel,[1] the Staten Island Tunnel was also to be referred to by four other names:

Original plans

[edit]

In 1888, subsequent to building theArthur Kill swing bridge between New Jersey and northwestern Staten Island,[4] theBaltimore & Ohio Railroad (the owners of the Staten Island Railway until 1971) proposed a tunnel between Staten Island and Brooklyn.[5] In 1890, Staten Island developerErastus Wiman, who controlled the railway, sponsored a plan by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to construct a tunnel under the Narrows to connect Staten Island with Brooklyn for both passenger and freight service.[5][6][7] The proposal never made it through the approval process when financial challenges stopped the plan at the drawing board.[5] The tunnel would have gone near the foot of Vanderbilt Avenue on Staten Island to Bay Ridge in Brooklyn, traveling1+14 miles (2.0 km) at a depth of 35 feet (11 m) below the narrows.[7] There would have been two lines of tunneling, parallel and close together.[7] Wiman believed that the tunneling would cost $5 million and that with the connecting road, the total cost was estimated at $6 million.[7]

A rapid transit route to connect Staten Island to the remainder ofNew York City was proposed in 1912, in conjunction with theDual Contracts of the New York City Subway.[8][9] At the time, there were no vehicular or rail connections between Staten Island and the other four boroughs; the only connection was by ferry.[10] Although not funded by the city, the tunnel was expected to help expand the then-sparsely populated borough in a similar manner to the population and development explosions seen in Brooklyn andthe Bronx.[1][10][11][12][13]

Under the Dual Contracts, three routes were proposed—two toBrooklyn and one to Manhattan—which would connect theStaten Island Railway's rapid transit service (SIRT) to existing subway lines.[6][8][13]

Manhattan route

[edit]

The Manhattan proposal, often called the "direct route," would have connected with theInterborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT)'s lines underBattery Park, near the currentBrooklyn–Battery Tunnel. "Direct Route A" would have utilized a five-section tunnel under theNew York Harbor, while "Direct Route B" would have used a partially-elevated route running along the eastern coastline ofNew Jersey (nearGreenville andBayonne). Both Manhattan plans would have required connections to various points, includingEllis Island orGovernors Island, and would have traveled around 5 miles (8.0 km) without any stops. Because of this, the high costs of the potential tunnel, and the relatively small population of Staten Island, the Manhattan route was considered impractical.[6][8][11][13][14][15] Another 5-mile tunnel to Battery Park was proposed by the city in the 1950s, but the plan was scrapped due to a lack of funding.[9]

Brooklyn routes

[edit]

Both of the shorter, Brooklyn proposals would have connected to theBrooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT)'sFourth Avenue subway, constructed in 1914 during the Dual Contracts.[9]

The first route would have originated inBay Ridge, Brooklyn at a point between 65th and 67th Streets (just south of59th Street Station), running to Arrietta Street inTompkinsville, Staten Island near theTompkinsville Station and one stop away from theSaint George Terminal. This plan, referred to as "Route No. 51" under the Dual Contracts, would have had connections going north towards St. George and along theNorth Shore Branch towardsArlington, and south towardsTottenville on the Main Line andWentworth Avenue along theSouth Beach Branch.[6][16][17][18][19][20] This proposal was estimated to cost $12 million in the year 1912, with half of it to be paid by railroads, such as thePennsylvania Railroad (which operated the Long Island Rail Road) and theBaltimore and Ohio Railroad (which operated the SIRT).[16][21][22] A major part of the 1912 proposal was the inclusion of two 40-inch water mains, which were to be side by side and were to be installed by the Department of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity alongside the tubes. These mains were intended to carry water from the main New York City supply to Staten Island.[16][21]

The second route would have originated inFort Hamilton at the south end of the line. Similar to the 1890 proposal, it would have followed the routing of the currentVerrazzano-Narrows Bridge (constructed from 1959 to 1964). The Fort Hamilton proposal was the shortest route of the two, though it would require tunneling through deeper waters.[6][8][14][23] As part of the proposal, it was suggested that the Fourth Avenue Line be extended past its original terminal at86th Street in Bay Ridge to a temporary ferry terminal at 95th Street (now the95th Street Station).[6][23]

In anticipation of the northern tunnel route, trackways were constructed diverging from both Fourth Avenue local tracks towards the tunnel site south of the 59th Street Station.[6][18][20] An additional portal was built in the SIRT tunnel betweenSt. George Terminal and Tompkinsville to facilitate the northern wye from the tunnel to theNorth Shore Branch.[2] As a provision for the southern route, the Fourth Avenue line south of 59th Street (built with only two tracks) was placed on the west side of Fourth Avenue, which would allow two additional tracks to be added on the east side of the street to facilitate a future express service from Staten Island.[23][24]

Groundbreaking and stoppage of construction

[edit]

Selection of Bay Ridge-based plan

[edit]

The Bay Ridge-based plan was ultimately selected, running between 65th Street/Shore Road in Brooklyn and theSt. George Ferry Terminal in Staten Island. The two tubes would have been 10,400 feet (3,200 m) long, longer than any tunnel in theUnited States at that time.[11] Portions of the Bay Ridge tunnel would be constructed using atunnelling shield, while the remainder would be placed in a trench at the bottom of the Narrows.[25] In the final plans, each tunnel was designed to be 24 feet (7.3 m) wide to accommodate freight cars in addition to passenger service, with freight trains coming from theLong Island Rail Road (LIRR)'sBay Ridge Branch (terminating just north of the tunnel site) and the Staten Island Railway's connection with rail lines fromNew Jersey.[11][19][25]

Alternate plans included constructing two sets of two tubes, one for commuter and freight service from the LIRR and the other for rapid transit, or two tunnels each with individual tubes for freight and subway service.[11][19][25] The freight service would have occurred during off-peak hours only, but simultaneous with subway service, with passenger trains running in 30-minute or one-hour headways during these times. A 1912 proposal had freight running at night between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m., while the 1925 plans called for joint freight and passenger service during early mornings (5 a.m. to 6 a.m.), middays (10 a.m. to 4 p.m.), and overnights (8 p.m. to 5 a.m.).[2][11][16][25][26]

At the time of the tunnel's groundbreaking,Jamaica Bay and thePaerdegat Basin were slated to become industrial complexes, which would have been facilitated by freight service from the tunnel.[6][27][28] The tunnel plan was amended in 1919.[8] In April 1921, a bill was passed in the state senate requiring the city to begin construction of the 24-foot-wide (7.3 m) tunnel within two years.[11][29]

1922 plan

[edit]

In May 1922, John Hylan launched a new plan for the freight and passenger tunnel, and the Board of Estimate recommended that $4.08 million be initially appropriated for the project. The Transit Commission and the Port Authority refused to accept the plan, as they each had their own plans.[30] This plan was much less extensive than the original plan. The original plan would have had the tunnel from Owl's Head Park under the Narrows to Staten Island, and then continuing to a freight yard to be built in the center of Staten Island, from which a trunk line would run across the Arthur Kill to New Jersey as far asPaterson, before merging with theWest Shore Railroad. The new revised plan would only cover the Narrows Tunnel, and a three-mile spur toArlington Yard.[30]

Under the new plan, freight would still only operate at night through the tunnel. Spurs connecting the tunnel in Brooklyn to the Long Island freight belt line, to the B&O freight sidings on Staten Island, and to the new city piers on Staten Island would have all been built. The project was projected to cost $60 million and if the job was done quickly, it could have been done by 1929.[30] The route would help develop the waterfront areas in Staten Island and Jamaica Bay. Provisions would be made for connections with the subway system's Fourth Avenue Line, even though the Transit Commission refused to be involved with the plans.[30]

Since the plan would benefit the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, the Pennsylvania Railroad opposed it, and the railroad, cooperating with the Port Authority, proposed a tunnel from Brooklyn to Greenville, New Jersey, with a spur to Staten Island.[30] The situation become complicated, as the Port Authority plan was approved by the State Legislatures in both New Jersey and New York. In addition, the Transit Commission proposed its own subway tunnel branching from the Fourth Avenue Line to be operated as part of the city's subway system.[30]

Groundbreaking and preparations

[edit]

A groundbreaking ceremony was held byNew York City MayorJohn Hylan on April 14, 1923 in Bay Ridge[1][26][31] and in Staten Island on July 19.[6][32] Headings were dug and tunneling shafts were sunk at 68th Street and Shore Road in Brooklyn (the Shore Road Shaft), and underneath theSaint George Terminal in Staten Island (the South Street Shaft), costing a total of $1 million.[2][11][25][29] On March 4, 1924, one of the caissons for the tunnel was sunk.[33] In addition, in preparation for the tunnel, the SIRT purchased one hundredME-1 subway cars built to BMT specifications and electrified its three passenger branches.[2][18][34] The impending completion of the tunnel also sparked real estate interests in Staten Island.[6][35]

Construction halted

[edit]

In 1925, however—the year bids from contractors were to be entertained by the city—the project was halted and the project's engineering staff laid off.[6] Officially, the plan was delayed due to lack of funding,[2][18] but Hylan andNew York City Board of Transportation (BOT) Chairman John Delaney also wanted to secure freight service for the tunnel.[6][11] The status of the tunnel as mixed-use created tension and deadlock between Hylan, Delaney and the New York State Transit Commission; the latter emphasized passenger service for the tunnel.[6] After an investigation issued by GovernorAl Smith, planners eliminated freight service from the plan, as per the Nicoll-Hofstadter Act signed into law by the governor; this then led to lack of interest from contractors.[1][6][11][31]

With the tunnel now designated exclusively for subway service, Mayor Hylan, a formerBrooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) employee who was a known opponent of both the BMT and theIRT, supposedly stopped the project as part of an overall effort to cripple the two private subway companies and promote the plans for the city-operatedIndependent Subway System (IND).[3][9][18][36] It was also reported that Governor Smith, who had a financial stake in the Pennsylvania Railroad company, tried to stall the project in order to prevent the expansion of Baltimore and Ohio Railroad operations farther into the city.[2][18] The stoppage was also attributed to the political rivalry between Hylan and Smith, who were both members ofTammany Hall'sDemocratic Party.[6]

Nonetheless, on October 2, 1925,[37] the95th Street subway station, which was built mainly in anticipation for the Staten Island Tunnel, was opened.[38] The station was built with a false wall at its south end, intended for either a planned extension to 100th or 101st Streets[39] or a line leading to a future Fort Hamilton-based tunnel.[23]

Completion proposals

[edit]
The 1939IND Second System plan, showing the proposed Staten Island Tunnel connection with theIND Culver Line.

The tunnel had gone only 150 feet (46 m) into the Narrows before it was halted; multiple proposals have resurfaced to complete the tunnel.[18][31][40] The tunnel and the Shore Road tunneling shafts currently lie dormant underOwl's Head Park inBay Ridge.[1][6][9][31] The South Street Shaft in Staten Island was filled in 1946 during post-World War II renovations ofSaint George Terminal.[1][13]

TheIND Second System proposal from 1929 estimated that the cost of the southern tunnel route fromFort Wadsworth, Staten Island, to Fort Hamilton would cost upward of $75 million, though the tunnel was not officially part of the subway plans and was illustrated as a vehicular tunnel on the map of the plans.[6][10][41][42][43] Many of the proposals were part of this ambitious expansion plan, which would have connected the tunnel to theIND South Brooklyn Line (today's IND Culver Line).[9][12][29][44] An updated proposal in 1931 had the connection to the IND at the currentSmith-Ninth Streets station, with the tunnel traveling north from Staten Island throughRed Hook andGowanus.[6][12][45] Yet another update, from 1933, was projected to cost $45 million, running the original route betweenSaint George and 67th Street in Bay Ridge. The line would then run on Second Avenue north through the Bay Ridge Flats on Brooklyn's western shore, meeting up with the Culver Line near Hamilton Avenue (the currentGowanus Expressway) between the Smith-Ninth Streets andFourth Avenue stations;[46][47][48][49] it was suggested that the Hylan tunnel shafts be used.[47] An application for a $47 million loan for this extension was approved by theBoard of Estimate in 1937.[6]

A revised Second System plan, drawn up in 1939 after the completion of the South Brooklyn line, followed the original Bay Ridge plan, and would have also extended the IND down Fort Hamilton Parkway and/or 10th Avenue to meet up with the tunnel route.[6][9][10][49][50] The IND connection would be located at either theFort Hamilton Parkway station (where the express tracks of the line run on a separate level)[10][51] or theChurch Avenue express station, the former terminus of the line.[10] The Church Avenue connection would have utilized thelower level yard just south of the station, currently used to relay terminatingG trains.[9] None of these plans were ever funded, due to the onset of theGreat Depression and, subsequently,World War II.[6][9][10]

In 1945, the tunnel between New Brighton and the BMT Fourth Avenue Line in Brooklyn was submitted by the Board of Transportation to the City Planning Commission as part of the 1946 budget, this time costing $50.61 million.[52][53] Later in 1945, according to a report by MayorFiorello H. La Guardia's special committee on transportation requirements of the Borough of Richmond, it was deemed that a tunnel to Staten Island from Manhattan was "unthinkable" and that a tunnel between Brooklyn and Staten Island was "not feasible now but must wait ten years".Robert Moses, who was the chairman of the committee and a known mass transit opponent, said that the best hope for improved transportation between Staten Island and Brooklyn and Manhattan was the reconstruction of the Saint George Terminal, the placing of more and better boats between Staten Island and Manhattan, resumption of 24-hour ferry service between 39th Street in Brooklyn and Staten Island, and the construction of ramps to the Gowanus elevated improvement at 39th Street.[54]

More recently, theVerrazzano–Narrows Bridge, built from 1959 to 1964, had been proposed to serve as the rail link. The 95th Street station was slated to be connected to the bridge, one of the world's longest suspension bridges, because it followed the route of the planned tunnel. However, no space for any tracks was ever built because of Moses's opposition to the expansion of New York City public transportation.[6][9][18][23][40]

Modern proposals for completion of the tunnel have come from New York City CouncilmanLewis A. Fidler, who in 2007 proposed a one-third of one percent tax for thetri-state region to pay for the construction.[55] The tunnel was one of several projects that could have competed for $3 billion of federal funds that were to have been allocated to theARC tunnel, which was canceled by New Jersey governorChris Christie in October 2010.State Senator Diane Savino, whose district includes parts of Staten Island and Brooklyn, supported such a plan, saying, "The MTA should complete a 1912 plan that would have rail and freight access from the terminus ofVictory Boulevard to Brooklyn, along 67th Street, then utilize theR train along Fourth Avenue." The plan's projected cost would be $3 billion, "the same as a proposedextension of the 7 line under theHudson River".[56] Supporters stated that a rail tunnel would improve quality of life for Staten Islanders, reduce traffic, and increase the attractiveness of the borough for investment.[57]

Similar proposals

[edit]

Cross-Harbor Rail Tunnel

[edit]
Map of the plans for the Cross-Harbor Rail Tunnel

The nearbyCross-Harbor Rail Tunnel is being planned to connectnortheastern New Jersey andLong Island, with portals inBrooklyn and inJersey City, New Jersey. The tunnel is being planned as a result of passenger and commuter traffic frequencies being at capacity and precluding freight movements.[58] As early as the 1920s, this tunnel had been planned to cross the entireNew York Harbor rather than just the Narrows.[6][11][59] As a precursor to the planned project, which could cost up to $11 billion to build, thePort Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ) compiled a Tier 1 DraftEnvironmental Impact Statement (DEIS) in November 2014.[60]

Tunnels from Brooklyn to New Jersey via Staten Island

[edit]

The formerPennsylvania Railroad (PRR) also planned a railroad tunnel, for freight use, betweenBrooklyn andStaten Island in 1893. The PRR also proposed a tunnel from Brooklyn to Jersey City, approximately following the planned path of the Cross-Harbor Rail Tunnel, ten years later. The project was never started, despite efforts by government planners to start the project from the 1920s through the 1940s.[61]

In January 1935, New York City MayorFiorello LaGuardia solicited the PANYNJ's help to create a report, called the "Summary of Cross Bays Freight TunnelStudy (Routes via Staten Island)," detailing four routes for a freight tunnel running to New Jersey via a tunnel to Staten Island. However, the only option that was deemed feasible was one that went from the end of theBay Ridge Branch in Brooklyn toGreenville Yard inGreenville, New Jersey, which could either go through Staten Island or directly under the New York Bay. While the route via Staten Island, estimated at $35 million, could potentially accommodate a passenger line at a cost of another $28 million, other costs made the direct route cheaper.[61]

In 1978,Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Quade and Douglas studied four options for a tunnel from Brooklyn to New Jersey, some involving a tunnel to Staten Island. These included an option for a tunnel directly from Greenville Yard to the Bay Ridge Branch, and a link from New Jersey to Manhattan. Also under consideration was a single-tube tunnel with accommodations for electric units only. The Greenville–Brooklyn tunnel would be about $331 million, which was cheaper than the approximately $405 million tunnel from Staten Island to Brooklyn.[61][62]

Boulevard Subway plan

[edit]

In 1912, Wood, Harmon & Co proposed a new subway fromBayonne, New Jersey, to Staten Island. This was called theBoulevard Subway. In their advertisements, the company stated, "Five or ten years from now—when the subway to Staten Island is built—… some Doubting Thomases of New Yorkers who don't buy will be shedding tears at their lack of foresight."[63]

The plan resurfaced in 1929, when meetings took place betweenJersey City MayorFrank Hague and officials from New York City MayorJimmy Walker's office. This plan proposed a subway line running along the SIRT North Shore Branch andJohn F. Kennedy Boulevard in New Jersey, before connecting with theHudson and Manhattan Railroad (today's PATH train) atExchange Place. The service would have provided access toLower Manhattan via the H&M'sDowntown Hudson Tubes toHudson Terminal (now the site of theWorld Trade Center station). There were also plans to extend the line to theGeorge Washington Bridge inFort Lee.[6]

Vehicular tunnels under the Narrows

[edit]

In 1929, after the cancellation of the plan to build a subway tunnel from Staten Island to Brooklyn, engineers proposed a set of vehicular tunnels fromFort Wadsworth, Staten Island, to 97th Street, Brooklyn.[64] The tubes were being planned in conjunction with theTriborough Tunnel (the modern-day Queens Midtown Tunnel), which would connect Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens.[65] The city appropriated $5 million for the tunnels in July 1929.[66] Boring work for the vehicular tunnels started in November 1930,[67] but in January 1932, construction was delayed indefinitely due to a lack of money.[68] The construction work did not go beyond an examination of shoreline on the Brooklyn side.[69]

In 1936, the plan for a vehicular tunnel under the Narrows was brought up again when Mayor La Guardia gained authorization to petition Congress for a bridge across the strait.[70] LaGuardia preferred a tunnel instead, and so the next year he requested theNew York City Tunnel Authority to review the feasibility of such a crossing.[71] In 1943, theNew York City Board of Estimate allocated $50,000 toward a feasibility study of the tubes.[72] AfterWorld War II ended in 1945, theNew York City Planning Commission estimated that construction of the Narrows Tunnel would cost $73.5 million.[73] However, by then, La Guardia had turned against the tunnel, saying that "it is not my time" to construct the tunnel.[73] This prompted Robert Moses to propose the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge,[74] which opened in 1964 and only carries vehicles.[75]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijkNiebuhr, Robert E. (November 27, 1964)."They Called The 1923 Narrows Tunnel: 'Hope And A Hole In The Ground'".brooklynrail.net. Home Reporter and Sunset News,Brooklyn Historic Railway Association. RetrievedJune 27, 2015.
  2. ^abcdefgPitanza, Marc (2015).Staten Island Rapid Transit Images of Rail. Arcadia Publishing.ISBN 978-1-4671-2338-9.
  3. ^abBoys, Bowery (April 30, 2008)."KNOW YOUR MAYORS: JOHN F. HYLAN".The Bowery Boys: New York City History. RetrievedAugust 27, 2015.
  4. ^Matteo, Thomas (April 22, 2015)."B&O Railroad had strong presence on Staten Island for 100 years".Staten Island Advance.Staten Island,New York. RetrievedAugust 1, 2015.
  5. ^abc"From Transportation Asset to Barrier".College of Staten Island Library Website. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2016. RetrievedJuly 5, 2016.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxRaskin, Joseph B. (2013).The Routes Not Taken: A Trip Through New York City's Unbuilt Subway System. New York, New York: Fordham University Press.doi:10.5422/fordham/9780823253692.001.0001.ISBN 978-0-82325-369-2.
  7. ^abcd"To Tunnel The Narrows And Thus Improve New York's Commercial Facilities: Mr. Erastus Wiman's Latest Plan Upon Which He and Others Have Long Been Mediating"(PDF).The New York Times. August 5, 1890. RetrievedJuly 27, 2015.
  8. ^abcde"To Act This Year on the Richmond Tube: Route Approved in 1912 Still Alive-May Soon Be Adopted Anew or Amended"(PDF).The New York Times. February 13, 1919. RetrievedJune 27, 2015.
  9. ^abcdefghij"DC: A Tunnel from SI to Brooklyn?". Daniel Convissor. RetrievedDecember 16, 2010.
  10. ^abcdefgRoger P. Roess; Gene Sansone (August 23, 2012).The Wheels That Drove New York: A History of the New York City Transit System. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 416–417.ISBN 978-3-642-30484-2.
  11. ^abcdefghijkYoung, James C. (May 10, 1925)."Staten Island Waits for Narrows Tunnel"(PDF).The New York Times. RetrievedJune 27, 2015.
  12. ^abc"Transit Progress on Staten Island"(PDF).The New York Times. April 19, 1931. RetrievedJune 27, 2015.
  13. ^abcd"The Subway that was Never Built".brooklynrail.net.Westerleigh Improvement Society. November 1981. RetrievedAugust 21, 2015.
  14. ^ab"Maps Out Tunnel to Staten Island: Commissioner Delaney Now Has Engineers at Work on the Surveys and Plans"(PDF).The New York Times. November 9, 1919. RetrievedJune 27, 2015.
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  21. ^ab"Subway Agreement Receives Approval Among Officials".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. May 15, 1912. RetrievedJune 29, 2015 – viaNewspapers.com.
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  41. ^Duffus, R.L. (September 22, 1929)."OUR GREAT SUBWAY NETWORK SPREADS WIDER; New Plans of Board of Transportation Involve the Building of More Than One Hundred Miles of Additional Rapid Transit Routes for New York".The New York Times. RetrievedAugust 19, 2015.
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  44. ^"New Yorkers Urge Loan For Tunnel"(PDF).The New York Times.Washington, D.C. September 22, 1932. RetrievedJune 27, 2015.
  45. ^"Suggested Rapid Transit Lines in Richmond Borough".historicrichmondtown.org.Historic Richmond Town. 1930. Archived fromthe original on July 17, 2015. RetrievedJuly 31, 2015.
  46. ^"The New Plan for a Tunnel".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. August 18, 1933. RetrievedJuly 19, 2015 – viaNewspapers.com.
  47. ^ab"Tunnel Prospects Bright".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. July 19, 1933. RetrievedJune 29, 2015 – viaNewspapers.com.
  48. ^"Richmond Tube Report by Board Due Next Week".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. September 8, 1933. RetrievedJuly 19, 2015 – viaNewspapers.com.
  49. ^ab"Bay Ridge Tube's Fate Rests with Meeting Today: Staten Island Tunnel O.K. May Be Reversed If M'Aneny Attends".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. December 29, 1933. RetrievedJuly 19, 2015 – viaNewspapers.com.
  50. ^Project for Expanded Rapid Transit Facilities, New York City Transit System, dated July 5, 1939
  51. ^"MTA Neighborhood Maps: neighborhood".Metropolitan Transportation Authority. 2018. RetrievedOctober 1, 2018.
  52. ^"City Rapid Transit Urged in Richmond"(PDF).The New York Times. August 24, 1945. RetrievedJuly 5, 2015.
  53. ^Jaffe, Alfred (December 6, 1946)."Borough Subway Relief Still 2 or 3 Years Off".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. pp. 1, 5. RetrievedOctober 9, 2015 – viaNewspapers.com.
  54. ^"Tunnel Plan Out For Staten Island: Mayor's Special Group Reports That Tubes to Manhattan are "Unthinkable"".The New York Times. November 17, 1945. RetrievedJuly 5, 2015.
  55. ^Kuntzman, Gersh (November 10, 2007)."Fidler's folly: Let's tunnel to SI!".The Brooklyn Paper. RetrievedDecember 16, 2010.
  56. ^Randall, Judy L. (November 20, 2010)."Savino calls for subway, rail links for Staten Island with floating $3B in federal funding".Staten Island Advance. RetrievedOctober 20, 2011.
  57. ^Schwartz, Sam (October 14, 2010)."Staten Island needs N.J. tunnel money: The borough, plagued by traffic, deserves better transit".Daily News. New York. RetrievedDecember 16, 2010.
  58. ^Christopher T. Baer, Ed. (June 2004)."PRR Chronology"(PDF). Pennsylvania Railroad Technical & Historical Society.
  59. ^"SAYS ROADS BLOCK PORT UNIFICATION; Van Buskirk Discusses Authority's Project Before Jersey City Kiwanians. EXPLAINS BELT LINE PLAN: Commissioner Indicates That No Particular Rall Line Can Long Prevent the Work"(PDF).The New York Times. November 24, 1922.
  60. ^"CHFP draft Tier 1 EIS". Archived fromthe original on September 6, 2018. RetrievedJune 30, 2015.
  61. ^abcGareth Mainwaring (2002)."The development of the New York Cross Harbor Freight Movement Project"(PDF). Hatch Mott Macdonald (Toronto, ON). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on April 13, 2005.
  62. ^Cross Bay Tunnel Alternatives; Intermodal Study; Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Quade & Douglas; April 1978.
  63. ^Williams, Keith (May 22, 2014)."The Planned Subway Lines That Never Got Built—And Why".Curbed NY. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2015.
  64. ^"NARROWS TUBE COST PUT AT $78,000,000; Engineers Favor Vehicle Tunnel From 97th St., Brooklyn, to Fort Wadsworth. PROJECT TO TAKE 5 YEARS Twin Tubes to Go 4,700 Feet Under Water--Accessible to Principal Highways. PLAN COMES UP THURSDAY Estimate Board Likely to Make an Additional Appropriation for Preliminary Expenses. Reject Bay Ridge Location. 4,700 Feet Under Water".The New York Times. June 11, 1929.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 13, 2018.
  65. ^"WORK IS STARTED ON PLANS FOR TUBES; Board of Transportation Takes Charge and City Will Seek Law to Give It Authority. BILL TO GO TO LEGISLATURE Plant and Structures Bureau Has Jurisdiction, but Already Is Burdened, Walker Believes. Board Experienced With Tunnels. Work Assigned to Engineers".The New York Times. July 27, 1929.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 13, 2018.
  66. ^"CITY VOTES $5,000,000 ASSURING MIDTOWN AND NARROWS TUBES; Estimate Board Appropriates Funds to Begin Preliminary Work at Once. BRIDGE ADVOCATES LOSE Plea to Substitute Span for Triborough Tunnel at 38th Street Is Defeated. WALKER FIGHTS ANY DELAY Representatives of 160 Civic Groups Speak in Support of Traffic Relief Projects".The New York Times. July 26, 1929.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 13, 2018.
  67. ^"THE NARROWS TUNNEL IS A VAST PROJECT; Engineers Are Making Borings for the Tube To Join Staten Island and Brooklyn The Ventilation Problem. Two Methods Probable".The New York Times. November 23, 1930.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 13, 2018.
  68. ^"Economy Plan Hits Bay Ridge Improvements".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. January 22, 1932. p. 37. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018 – viaBrooklyn Public Library;newspapers.com.
  69. ^"Private Group Studying Plans for Vehicular and Transit Narrows Tunnel".Brooklyn Daily Eagle. May 11, 1934. p. 41. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018 – viaBrooklyn Public Library;newspapers.com.
  70. ^"MAYOR WILL URGE NARROWS BRIDGE; Estimate Board Authorizes Reopening of the Project With War Department".The New York Times. April 18, 1936.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 13, 2018.
  71. ^"MAYOR URGES TUBE TO STATEN ISLAND; Asks Tunnel Authority to Study Such a Link to City's Arterial Road System".The New York Times. February 9, 1937.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 13, 2018.
  72. ^"$50,000 PLANS APPROVED; Fund for Narrows Tunnel Study Is Authorized by Board".The New York Times. April 16, 1943.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018.
  73. ^ab"NARROWS TUNNEL OPPOSED BY MAYOR; He Agrees It Is Coming but Not in My Time' or That of Immediate Successor's A BLOW TO STATEN ISLAND Ferry Company Head Praises Stand, Saying He Can Give Adequate Service".The New York Times. August 1, 1945.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018.
  74. ^Pierce, Bert (September 24, 1947)."CITY PLANS TO BUILD SPAN AT NARROWS; Moses Says He Expects Early Approval of Bridge Project by War Department CITY PLANS TO BUILD SPAN AT NARROWS".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 14, 2018.
  75. ^Talese, Gay (November 22, 1964)."Verrazano Bridge Opened to Traffic".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMarch 16, 2018.
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