Taking shape on Manhattan's far west side is a USD 185 million, federally funded tunnel that leads to nowhere, for now.
The 800-foot (243-meter)-long, 35-foot (10-meter)-deep concrete trench could someday lead to two new commuter rail tunnels under the Hudson River to New Jersey, if the billions needed to build them ever materialize.
The access tunnel is being built now because of what will soon be built on top of it: the massive Hudson Yards development with six skyscrapers, the tallest being 80 stories. Trying to dig such a huge trench through the bedrock after those buildings are completed, officials say, would be an engineering and financial nightmare.
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But he argued it would have to be built now because the skyscraper developers could not be delayed indefinitely.
"We asked them to delay months, but if we asked them to delay years, they may have said no," said Schumer, referring to The Related Cos., the main Hudson Yards developers.
"Sandy relief funding was there, available, the criteria fit, and the money was getting through quickly and fit the timetable."
The access tunnel is expected to be completed in autumn 2015.
Two tunnels, opened in 1910, exist now between New York's Penn Station and Newark, New Jersey, and they are unable to accommodate any more trains. They also flooded during Sandy in 2012.
Any kind of breakdown or glitch in the tunnels can lead to huge delays for the 250,000 people who use Penn Station every day to ride NJ Transit and Amtrak.
"There's an urgent need to expand capacity between New York and New Jersey," said Craig Schulz, spokesman for Amtrak, whose trains serving the Northeast corridor between Washington and Boston are often packed, with ridership growing.