Tough times ahead for the Big Apple
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/07/25/busy-new-york-subway-tunnel-close-18-months/87525942/
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
The Authority did not give NYers a choice between shutting down one tunnel at a time for three years of both tunnels for half the time as they said they would, because the one-tunnel solution had total shut-down between Berverly and Lorimer with bus shuttles, entirely unnecessary. Also, there is a controversy between two groups of Brooklyn F-line riders regarding Jay St. Church Avenue express service, easily solved by restoring Bergan lower-level platfomrs and timed connections to and from the G. I suspect I will have to mail the following to the Mayor, the Governor. and the Borough Presidents of Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens.
Appropriate letters base don the above sent tothe Borough Presidents of Brooklyn, Queens, and Manahttam with copes of all three to Mr. Cafiero, his boss at NYCTA, her boss at MTA, and his boss in Albany.
Dave,
Obviously a well thought out approach. Hopefully, the collection of authority figures you addressed won't simply say, "What does dis guy know dat our teams of x-spurts don't? Besides, he ain't even a Noo Yawka." (Even though you were born there, as was I.)
Chuck (Native Noo Yawka, 3000 miles removed)
PATH is solving a similar problem, with a considerably longer and older pair of tunnels, by weekend-only closings for an eight-year period. Hopefully, the TA will reconsider their still current rather commuter-unfriendly scheme.
With new measures, much more user friendly -- but cost effective, any long-term improvements resulting?
http://mta.info/LTunnelReconstruction.
Previous post edited to allow deleting this one. Thank you.
Say it with us, "In April 2019, the L will run Brooklyn-only." We've been out at key stations the past two weeks with a short survey to see what people know—and unfortunately more than 50 percent don't know the L train will still run when the tunnel is closed, making its last west-bound stop at Bedford Av Station.
News update as of Wednesday 01/02. Tunnels will not be shut down, all contingency plans are cancelled.
During the flooding caused by Superstorm Sandy, the conduits in the tunnels carring numerous wires were filled with muck that subsequently hardened. These conduits are encased in concrete benches along the tunnel walls. Initial plans were to demolish the concrete benches, replace the conduits, and reinstall the concrete benches. Now, the plan is to abandon the conduits in place and install new conduits on the tunnel side walls. This apparently was never considered in the original planning.
Yesterday, the information in my previous post was presented as accomplished fact; today, it's now a recommendation by the Governer's office that must be acted on by the MTA Board. Seems someone in the Governer's office was a little too quick to claim glory for their boss. Tomorrow may bring another version of the truth.
There was an interesting comment on the news about the large number of people who have moved out of the L train service area to avoid the commuting hassle.
Fun fact: the average number of people using the Marcy Av Station on weekdays has more than doubled between 2003 (6,041) and today (13,969). So L Project aside, we had some work to do. We already added a new turnstile, are working to expand part of the platform, and we're getting closer to completing the stairs. Here's the latest:
As we're doing our due diligence to ensure the safety and longevity of the project, we will be doing an inspection that will impact parts of the L line during the overnights next week. Jan 14 – Jan 18 Approx. 11:30 PM to 5 AM, Mon to Fri (for example, Mon late night into Tue morning) All stations will be open, just with less frequent trains For more details on the work we're doing, and recommendations on how to get around, click the button below.
Q: How come under the "old" plan there was no consideration given to using the one tube nightly and weekend service? - H. Pollock A: The new recommendation and approach includes a method of racking the cables, in concert with other advanced techniques such as fiber-reinforced polymer and laser-based monitoring. This approach would mean we wouldn't have to fully remove the old bench wall, which was the most time-consuming part of the process and the reason it wasn't previously possible to just do the job with night and weekend closures.
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