Flintlock76Personally, I think Penn Station had to die so Grand Central could live. Penn Station's demolition was a hell of a wake-up call! If one went, so could the other.
It is credited - correctly or incorrectly - with sparking the historic preservation movement in the US.
charlie hebdo You flatter yourself.
You flatter yourself.
Thank you. It makes me happy to know that you care.
Be kind.
How about a compromise? A full-size Pennsylvania Station reconstruction wouldn't be practical, nor possibly even necessary. Say a half-size or even quarter-size, just enough to get the job done but not taking up as much block space? Good enough to give everyone a taste of what was?
I see some are referring to the old Penn Station as a "smelly white elephant." If that was the case why the outrage at the time (and lingering still) of its destruction?
Personally, I think Penn Station had to die so Grand Central could live. Penn Station's demolition was a hell of a wake-up call! If one went, so could the other.
charlie hebdo You miss the point. As I and OM and others have said, the old Penn Station was nothing special architecturally and hardly worth restoring, unless you are one of those who likes all the faux architecture as in Las Vegas.
You miss the point. As I and OM and others have said, the old Penn Station was nothing special architecturally and hardly worth restoring, unless you are one of those who likes all the faux architecture as in Las Vegas.
I am flattered that you think my opinion is that important, but this may be a good time to remind everyone that I did not come up with the idea of rebuilding Penn Station. I simply asked about the status of the movement, which, by the way, includes the backing of architects.
charlie hebdo You seem to have no real knowledge of that.
You seem to have no real knowledge of that.
An architectural design is like an orchestral score. It exists on paper, and the execution of the idea comes later. We can argue about how well or poorly the idea is executed.
If a symphony can be played twice, a structure can be built twice.
charlie hebdo Shock Control charlie hebdo Someplace else? Such as? Stop trying to recreate the past. Build a modern, light, airy structure that has good access and egress. Sorry, but I love architecture at least as much as I love trains, if not moreso. If Europe can rebuild structures destroyed by the Nazis, then the US should be able to rebuild an architectural marvel destroyed by ignorance and short-sightedness. Rebuilding an unpleasant descent into the bowels of (?) which was topped by a lame attempt at copying the Theme Di Caracalla seems like a silly idea unless your notion of an architectural marvel is analogous to an exhibition of paint-by-the-numbers Rembrandt knockoffs. BTW, I think you would find a good deal of the architecture destroyed in WWII Europe was by the Allies.
Shock Control charlie hebdo Someplace else? Such as? Stop trying to recreate the past. Build a modern, light, airy structure that has good access and egress. Sorry, but I love architecture at least as much as I love trains, if not moreso. If Europe can rebuild structures destroyed by the Nazis, then the US should be able to rebuild an architectural marvel destroyed by ignorance and short-sightedness.
charlie hebdo Someplace else? Such as? Stop trying to recreate the past. Build a modern, light, airy structure that has good access and egress.
Someplace else? Such as?
Stop trying to recreate the past. Build a modern, light, airy structure that has good access and egress.
Sorry, but I love architecture at least as much as I love trains, if not moreso. If Europe can rebuild structures destroyed by the Nazis, then the US should be able to rebuild an architectural marvel destroyed by ignorance and short-sightedness.
Rebuilding an unpleasant descent into the bowels of (?) which was topped by a lame attempt at copying the Theme Di Caracalla seems like a silly idea unless your notion of an architectural marvel is analogous to an exhibition of paint-by-the-numbers Rembrandt knockoffs.
BTW, I think you would find a good deal of the architecture destroyed in WWII Europe was by the Allies.
That is why blueprints exist.
My problem with the Penn Station part of the 5.6 billion is that it leaves you still scuttling a large part of the way like a rat, albeit a more brightly lit one.
I see from the Governor's office that New York is going to pay for Gateway out of their $100 billion infrastructure plan. Can't believe I missed it, and so glad I can trust Cuomo to do the right thing regarding railroads. (I understood that New York was also going to pay for renovating the ex-PRR tunnels once Gateway is done! What selfless and generous people!
Penn Station, one of the busiest transportation hubs in the U.S., is undergoing a massive transformation from its easternmost edge at 7th Avenue with East End Gateway to its westernmost edge at 9th Avenue with Moynihan Train Hall.
Work on the new East End Gateway has been underway since September. When completed, customers will enjoy a new entrance pavilion that will dramatically improve customer flow and introduce natural light into the station environment. While work is underway, a protective construction shield has been installed above the LIRR Concourse so overhead work can be done safely while customers traverse the concourse; and columns have been wrapped with information signage and track numbers have been demarcated with new signs so customer information continues to be widely available.
On top of that, even more work is going on behind the scenes to prepare for major construction starting in early 2020. Outside on 33rd Street, utilities were relocated to clear the way for the new entrance. Later this month, the northern wall (where the Duane Reade used to be), will be pushed back 27 feet! This move will open up more pedestrian space as work moves out into the concourse area to build new escalators and stairs. Construction of a Public Information Center (PIC) is underway to provide information to LIRR customers and anyone interested in the project. When it’s done, stop by for a look at the history of the LIRR at Penn Station — and where we’re headed in the future!
The new East End Gateway will change the landscape of 7th Avenue and 33rd Street. Mechanical and structural work for the new East End Gateway entrance is underway – work on the platform level will support the escalator above on the Entry Hall level.
The overall Penn Station redevelopment master plan continues to move forward and will fully transform the LIRR Concourse into a modern, world-class transportation hub. For more information and construction photos, please visit the East End Gateway and LIRR Concourse project page on AModernLI.com.
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Overmod Shock Control The decisionmakers in our current dystopian society probably lack the intelligence and taste to rebuild the old station. But it doesn't go that far. Whether or not the majority of the electorate is mouth-breathing, they (and the decision-makers they elect or can influence) will almost certainly find money spent on a fancy building for the rich pointless while there are social justice causes to be served with those funds. Regardless of how much funding can be arranged. Now, if you could get a consortium of the rich together to build a replacement station ... and I know of several in the New York area who, together, could arrange for it ... you might get somewhere. Good luck again using an 'intelligence and taste' argument to get them to allocate their money to that, though -- although I suspect Ira Rennert at his Fairfield peak could have set it up if you gave him naming rights on it.
Shock Control The decisionmakers in our current dystopian society probably lack the intelligence and taste to rebuild the old station.
But it doesn't go that far. Whether or not the majority of the electorate is mouth-breathing, they (and the decision-makers they elect or can influence) will almost certainly find money spent on a fancy building for the rich pointless while there are social justice causes to be served with those funds. Regardless of how much funding can be arranged.
Now, if you could get a consortium of the rich together to build a replacement station ... and I know of several in the New York area who, together, could arrange for it ... you might get somewhere. Good luck again using an 'intelligence and taste' argument to get them to allocate their money to that, though -- although I suspect Ira Rennert at his Fairfield peak could have set it up if you gave him naming rights on it.
A gal can dream...
Shock ControlThe decisionmakers in our current dystopian society probably lack the intelligence and taste to rebuild the old station.
Overmod Shock Control If Europe can rebuild structures destroyed by the Nazis, then the US should be able to rebuild an architectural marvel destroyed by ignorance and short-sightedness. The issue is not about ability; it's about money, opportunity cost, and appreciation. To most New Yorkers alive to remember it, I suspect Penn Station was a large, somewhat smelly, white elephant of a building sitting on a prime real-estate location, and they would be to put it bluntly disinterested in paying billions to get it back even in 1910 condition. Change their minds and you might get somewhere. I can probably put a design team together in no more than a few weeks from Hudson River Heritage-accessible sources alone to plan and supervise the work, if you arrange to have the dedicated construction funds in escrow. Let me know when you do. (That is, if you don't mind people from 'historically green-team area' contexts doing the work... )
Shock Control If Europe can rebuild structures destroyed by the Nazis, then the US should be able to rebuild an architectural marvel destroyed by ignorance and short-sightedness.
The issue is not about ability; it's about money, opportunity cost, and appreciation. To most New Yorkers alive to remember it, I suspect Penn Station was a large, somewhat smelly, white elephant of a building sitting on a prime real-estate location, and they would be to put it bluntly disinterested in paying billions to get it back even in 1910 condition. Change their minds and you might get somewhere.
I can probably put a design team together in no more than a few weeks from Hudson River Heritage-accessible sources alone to plan and supervise the work, if you arrange to have the dedicated construction funds in escrow. Let me know when you do. (That is, if you don't mind people from 'historically green-team area' contexts doing the work... )
I admittedly am not holding my breath. The decisionmakers in our current dystopian society probably lack the intelligence and taste to rebuild the old station.
Shock ControlIf Europe can rebuild structures destroyed by the Nazis, then the US should be able to rebuild an architectural marvel destroyed by ignorance and short-sightedness.
Shock ControlThanks. Then I think that they should rebuild it someplace else where the air space is not that valuable.
The initial problem with this is that it implies 'not on Manhattan'.
You could always try building it in Vegas, or perhaps Lake Havasu City to complement the 'historic preservation' already there. Good luck raising the money!
I'd again note that the roof over the revised Moynihan Train Hall is explicitly intended as a historical reference to the 'experience' of the old Penn Station.
All you really need to know about the net profitability of a new MSG vs. residential and commercial occupied space can be seen in how Hudson Yards is being developed. (Personally I don't see the point in having a "Madison Square Garden" so far away from Madison Square in the first place, but it isn't that much different from St. Louis San Francisco when you look at it purely as a brand...)
That area is now the site of the new Hudson Yards development, which includes a number of new buildings and has dramatically changed the look of that part of Manhattan.
Too bad a new MSG wasn't part of Hudson Yards; it's a lost opportunity.
Wasn't there a plan to build a new MSG over top of the LIRR storage yards on the West side?
Overmod Shock Control Thanks. Would you happen to know if the movement to re-build the old Penn Station is officially belly-up? There's little point in even considering a 'historic re-creation' of Penn Station with the air rights over the site being so valuable. Note in very specific particular that the rebuilt roof in the Moynihan Train Hall is intended to 'recreate the experience' of the old building -- arguably a much better experience than the original, with its wacky interior layout, would likely do. There are certainly some improvements to the existing station layout, but they are largely 'peripheral' or internal, and the effective scuttling from the street to any point in the station's actual rail infrastructure other than at Moynihan is likely to continue in that sense. I had been laboring under the impression that the actual track access to Amtrak arrival and departure platforms would be provided through MTH by the time it has been completed. I certainly haven't found any evidence that that has changed. I was briefly active in a design proposal to re-create something like the Penn Station space "under" a new air-rights building to replace MSG. This would involve considerable expense which, again, is provided via MTH considerably more cost-effectively even if there were to be no effective re-use of the MSG internal structure in any new construction in the air rights. It was given a pretty definitive kibosh back in the day when MSG started doing the extensive renovations on their spaces ... whether you think they were cost-effectively justified or not, they made them, and would expect to be paid for them in any station rebuilding project.
Shock Control Thanks. Would you happen to know if the movement to re-build the old Penn Station is officially belly-up?
There's little point in even considering a 'historic re-creation' of Penn Station with the air rights over the site being so valuable. Note in very specific particular that the rebuilt roof in the Moynihan Train Hall is intended to 'recreate the experience' of the old building -- arguably a much better experience than the original, with its wacky interior layout, would likely do.
There are certainly some improvements to the existing station layout, but they are largely 'peripheral' or internal, and the effective scuttling from the street to any point in the station's actual rail infrastructure other than at Moynihan is likely to continue in that sense.
I had been laboring under the impression that the actual track access to Amtrak arrival and departure platforms would be provided through MTH by the time it has been completed. I certainly haven't found any evidence that that has changed.
I was briefly active in a design proposal to re-create something like the Penn Station space "under" a new air-rights building to replace MSG. This would involve considerable expense which, again, is provided via MTH considerably more cost-effectively even if there were to be no effective re-use of the MSG internal structure in any new construction in the air rights. It was given a pretty definitive kibosh back in the day when MSG started doing the extensive renovations on their spaces ... whether you think they were cost-effectively justified or not, they made them, and would expect to be paid for them in any station rebuilding project.
NKP guy Shock Control Thanks. Would you happen to know if the movement to re-build the old Penn Station is officially belly-up? No, sorry. I haven't seen it proclaimed as "officially belly-up" anywhere. But neither have I seen it discussed anywhere since it was first proposed (by no one with any clout). The other two proposals, yes, but not a re-build. Check the New York Times archive (or Google it) for complete and accurate information and status on this subject.
No, sorry. I haven't seen it proclaimed as "officially belly-up" anywhere. But neither have I seen it discussed anywhere since it was first proposed (by no one with any clout). The other two proposals, yes, but not a re-build.
Check the New York Times archive (or Google it) for complete and accurate information and status on this subject.
Thanks. I couldn't tell if the newer developments effectively superceded the rebuild proposal. I hadn't heard much about it recently, which is why I asked.
Shock ControlThanks. Would you happen to know if the movement to re-build the old Penn Station is officially belly-up?
NKP guy Madison Square Garden will be demolished...in about 18 or 20 years or so. As I recall from the New York Times, the owners of MSG were just finishing expensive renovations there a few years ago when the City started agitating again for them to leave the site. As a compromise, and because the plans for the station weren't/haven't been finalized, and because funding wasn't/isn't solved, the owners of MSG were given a further 20 years' lease on the site. The MSG needs time to find another location and the City needs time to plan for a new station. No one is seriously considering rebuilding the old station for a host of reasons. Instead, there are plans to either: 1. design and build an all-new station, or 2. strip off the walls of MSG and re-use the steel structure for a new station. The second proposal not only would be less expensive and more innovative, it is visually more interesting. Maybe someone here can post those two proposals. The tunnels situation is by far the more imperative project at this time. As for the demolished station, it wasn't that lovely, anyway. It was impressive, yes, but really it was just a great heap of stones. It didn't charm users as GCT did/does and was not particularly loved by New Yorkers the way GCT was from the start. And no one then or now ever enjoyed the two-floors thing at Penn Station. In the meantime: Keep on scuttling.
Madison Square Garden will be demolished...in about 18 or 20 years or so.
As I recall from the New York Times, the owners of MSG were just finishing expensive renovations there a few years ago when the City started agitating again for them to leave the site. As a compromise, and because the plans for the station weren't/haven't been finalized, and because funding wasn't/isn't solved, the owners of MSG were given a further 20 years' lease on the site. The MSG needs time to find another location and the City needs time to plan for a new station.
No one is seriously considering rebuilding the old station for a host of reasons. Instead, there are plans to either: 1. design and build an all-new station, or 2. strip off the walls of MSG and re-use the steel structure for a new station. The second proposal not only would be less expensive and more innovative, it is visually more interesting. Maybe someone here can post those two proposals.
The tunnels situation is by far the more imperative project at this time.
As for the demolished station, it wasn't that lovely, anyway. It was impressive, yes, but really it was just a great heap of stones. It didn't charm users as GCT did/does and was not particularly loved by New Yorkers the way GCT was from the start. And no one then or now ever enjoyed the two-floors thing at Penn Station.
In the meantime: Keep on scuttling.
Thanks. Would you happen to know if the movement to re-build the old Penn Station is officially belly-up?
NKP guy If I understand your question correctly, at the present time MTH is for the use of Long Island Railroad trains and passengers; Amtrak uses Penn Station.
If I understand your question correctly, at the present time MTH is for the use of Long Island Railroad trains and passengers; Amtrak uses Penn Station.
That's depressing.
Thanks for answering, though.
runnerdude48 Lithonia Operator I guess I'm asking this: how will the MTH and the existing Penn Station relate to each other? If you can answer that question I think they will make you project manager
Lithonia Operator I guess I'm asking this: how will the MTH and the existing Penn Station relate to each other?
If you can answer that question I think they will make you project manager
Lithonia OperatorI guess I'm asking this: how will the MTH and the existing Penn Station relate to each other?
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