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Grand Central

Several views of GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL.
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Welcome to our Grand Central Terminal WebSite

Here's a preview of some of the exciting projects we have put together for you:

Our feature articles on Grand Central Terminal signal stations and Grand Central buildings .

See other interesting articles on New York Central Railroad offices , Grand Central Terminal track plans , electrics into Grand Central , Grand Central in the movies , and Grand Central departure tracks .

Grand Central Terminal Track 61, which Franklin Delano Roosevelt used to sneak in and out of Grand Central and hide his disability (he had severe polio) from the public. Was it used other times by Presidents? Matt Lauer of NBC put on his best play clothes May 8 2008 to examine “The Mystery of Track 61? on the Today show. Lauer went 30 feet below the Waldorf to investigate the secret train track that has intrigued urban explorers for decades. Now they have included an armored baggage car too. This story gets taller and taller anytime someone tells it.

You must also see New York City freight , New York City passenger stations , catenary in New York City , all about the area around Grand Central , the Grand Central power department , and our collection of

New York City pictures

We have an Electric Division map and a Grand Central Terminal reference section .

Do you know who owns Grand Central now?

Take a quiz on Which One of These People Hurt New York City the Worst?

We hope you enjoy your visit to our WebSite. We offer a wide range of great sites. We have a great "Portal to the World", excellent weather, reference, golf and tourist sites. As well as great WebSites on trains run for the President of the United States (and for Royalty too). We are not "FLASHy" like many WebSites, but we offer you, among other things authentic railroad history material. Much of this material is not available elsewhere on the Internet. It was painstakingly collected over many years from such sources as Yale University. We never knowingly link you to any WebSites that contain a virus, collect your personal information, or are those machine-generated sites rampant with "Ads by Google". For some of our material, there is a small nominal charge. You can talk back to us on our BLOG and see our eBay Store too.
Interesting Stuff - Ecology and railroads
January 7, 1929 The New York Central Railroad's "20th Century Limited" runs a record seven identical sections. Eight hundred twenty two people pay the extra $10 fare to ride The Century. An automobile show in New York City gets the credit for this sudden increase in traffic. Combined with other special trains arriving for the show, a record 266 sleeping cars arrive at Grand Central Terminal between 5:00 am and 9:50 am. This is very interesting. It was a harbinger of things to come: the impact of the auto on passenger train travel. I bet Al Gore understands what a high speed rail system (plus good commuter rail systems) would do for the "fuel bill"! DO YOU?
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Grand Central was owned by the New York Central Railroad

Do you know who owns Grand Central now?
If you said Metro North Railroad, or its parent company, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, then you are wrong.
Nor is it Donald Trump, Disney or WalMart.
Click here to find the answer and find out a lot of interesting facts.

February 2, 1913 New York's partially completed palatial passenger station, Grand Central Terminal, opens in the center of Manhattan at 12:01 am. About 150,000 people will visit the new terminal today.
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Signal Station F

Signal Station "F" in Grand Central Terminal
This picture was from my grandfather

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Rail Site Crossreference
Grand Central Terminal and the New York City Subway
This page is our gateway to New York City. Find out about the New York Central Railroad's Grand Central Terminal. Explore the fabulous New York City Subway System. Learn who Robert Moses. was and his impact on New York City. Understand New York City transit planning, West Side Freight Line (the "High Line") and St Johns terminal. The New Haven Railroad and the Long Island Railroad reached into New York City. Did you know the Lehigh Valley Railroad even went into New York City (by ferry). Learn about the Jenney Plan to bring commuters into New York City and finally explore mysterious track 61 at Grand Central Terminal with its relationship to Presidents of the United States.

GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL WITHOUT SIGNAL TOWER B

On September 21, 1986, an electrical fire occurred in Signal Tower "B" in Grand Central Terminal. It happened on a Sunday when the lower level was deserted and caused extensive damage.

The fire severely limited access to the terminal's lower level. On Monday, delays averaged 30 minutes with some incoming trains almost 90 minutes late. Metro-North continued to run a full schedule with many commuters disembarking at 125th Street.
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BUILDINGS AROUND GRAND CENTRAL (AND OTHER CENTRAL STORIES)
In April of 1987 the former New York Central Office Building was designated a landmark. It is a pinnacle on New York City's skyline. The owner has maintained it as if it was already a landmark. Its peaked crown is sheathed in gold and copper. It is encrusted with dozens of oval windows and topped by a beacon 567 feet in the air. Encircling the 15th story is a herd of 78 heads of bison. It is the 34-story (sometimes referred to as a 35-story building because there is no 13th floor) gateway for Park Avenue traffic (Park Avenue runs on four lanes through the building itself). It is located between 45th and 46th Streets. It was designed by Warren and Wetmore and built between 1927 and 1929. It is now owned by real estate developer Harry B. Helmsley who regilded and illumunated the rooftop. He also fixed the clock over the North entrance and in general cleaned it up. The building always housed many other offices than just those of the New York Central. For instance, when the building opened, the Scripps-Howard News Service occupied the entire 22nd floor.

An earlier New York Central office building between 45th and 46th Streets was completed in 1921. It had 16 stories. The first three stories had been completed in 1914. The 16th story held offices for President Smith, William K. and Harold Vanderbilt and Chauncey Depew. The first two floors were devoted to Railway Express and a postal facility.
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Head End
Railway Express and Railway Post Office

REA RPO Header

On passenger trains, railroads operated lots of equipment other than sleepers, coaches, dining cars, etc. This equipment was generally called 'head-end' equipment, these 'freight' cars were at one time plentiful and highly profitable for the railroads. In the heyday of passenger service, these industries were a big part of the railroad's operations, and got serious attention.
We have text and pictures not found elsewhere on the Web.


What ever happened to my Penn Central stock?
Penn Central gobbled up the stock of New York Central, Pennsylvania and New Haven Railroads. But what ever happened to the company and the stock? Is it worth anything?

Ever hear of American Premier Underwriters?


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Grand Central Terminal Track Plans

Peter Samson and Jeff Birkner are responsible for some great track plans of Grand Central Terminal.

These drawings show the tracks, signals, and locking of Grand Central Terminal in its “Glory Years” — from 1931 into the 1960s. In this period it hosted long-distance trains, including streamliners like the Twentieth Century Limited, as well as intensive commuter services to suburbs in New York State and Connecticut. By late in 1931, a number of track changes were completed to accommodate longer trains; the layout changed very little from then until the advent of Amtrak in 1971. (Since then there have been considerable changes, and the interlockings were all replaced in the early 1990s.)
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Electrics into Grand Central

Folklore among railfans and New York City buffs is that the operation of steam and diesel railroad engines is prohibited in Manhattan. The law regarding Grand Central Terminal and steam locomotives is Chapter 425 of the 1903 legislative session, laws of New York State, titled "An Act to provide for further regulation of the terminals and approaches thereto of the New York and Harlem railroad at and north of Forty-second street in the city of New York. . .". This law was passed and effective May 7, 1903.

Its not a "GCT Rule", its a New York State law. For whatever reason (maybe because "them" (the RR) is now "us" (a city/state agency) the enforcement is now gone, since paying fines from one packet to the other is not useful). The original law was made as regards STEAM engines, which are a LOT worse than an FL9.... (yes, the law COULD be applied to diesels, and was). The restriction is not third rail related, but rather tunnel related.

The law generally provides the powers needed to close and regrade public streets, condemn property, and so on, to make possible the construction of Grand Central Terminal.

Section 3 requires plans for the reconstruction to be submitted within 30 days of the Act (i.e. by June 6, 1903) to the Board of Estimate and Apportionment of the city of New York. This board was until recently the legislative body of the city.

Section 4 states that, beginning 5 years after approval of the plans (i.e. by about June 1908 or slightly later), "it shall not be lawful, except only in case of necessity, arising from the temporary failure of such other motive power as may be lawfully adopted, for any railroad corporation to operate trains by steam locomotives in Park avenue in the city of New York south of the Harlem river. If trains shall be operated by steam locomotives in said Park avenue south of the Harlem river for a period of more than three days, the railroad corporation operating such trains shall pay to the city of New York a penalty of five hundred dollars for every day or part of day during which such trains are so operated, unless the mayor of the city of New York shall certify to the necessity for the use of steam locomotives arising from the temporary failure of other motive power." It goes on to detail how the mayor certifies the necessity and how the mayor may revoke the certificate at will.

It then states that the New York and Harlem Railroad, the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, and any successor companies using the railroad in Park Avenue, "are hereby authorized to run their trains by electricity, or by compressed air, or by any motive power other than steam and which does not involve combustion in the motors themselves, through the tunnel and over the improvements." The "improvements" refers to the terminal itself and the Park Avenue viaduct.

This law is still effective. The use of any internal combustion engines is clearly outlawed by the last section quoted, so operation of any diesel engines is a violation except in emergencies. The only penalty, however, is $500 dollars a day payable to the city, which, while effective for a for-profit railroad, makes little sense when government agencies are paying the railroad to operate. If that were taken from management personally, it might be different!

Note that the law does not limit steam operation in any other tunnels, and that it is not limited to the Park Avenue tunnel but also applies to the elevated viaduct from the portal at 97th St up to the Harlem River. Its application is not to tunnels as such but to the Grand Central Terminal approach on Manhattan Island.

Nothing here prohibits operation of steam and diesel engines elsewhere in Manhattan. Many railroads operated tracks from their piers to nearby yards along the waterfront using steam and diesel engines until the end of such service in 1975. The New York Central's West Side Freight Line was not electrified until the 1930's. Penn Station (opened 1910) and tunnels has always been electrically operated, but for practical reasons rather than legal requirements.

Some of the questions I have received on the New York City West Side line are:
(1) is the line electrified?
Yes and no


(2) If so, was it always,
Always is a long time. Steam ruled there, once.
Around 1930 or so, the New York Central added third rail
electrification, though not required to by law. (as not
being a tunnel). The bottom tip, having street running, was
steam dummy, then boxcab diesel. It was "derailed", then
"abandoned" in the late 70s.


(3) Was catenary added for the Amtrak connection?
Catenary extends just up out of Penn Station, for a block or
so but not all the way up to the bridge. The third rail also
extends out and would allow proforma compliance with local
law. Catenary is a bit of a puzzle, unless for rescue
missions.
REFERENCE SECTION

Grand Central Terminal Site

Grand Central History

World's Greatest Railway Terminal

Metro-North Railroad

Grand Central's Signal Station F

New York State Realty and Terminal Company

Dan Heller's Photos/Pictures of
Grand Central Terminal, New York City


Emporis Buildings description of
Grand Central Terminal, New York City


Railway Age talks about
Grand Central Terminal, New York City
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Gary R. Kazin has given us an update on the catenary on the Empire Connection track from the west side of Penn Station to 38th Street, CP Empire.
This section also has overrunning third rail.
Empire Service trains use the third rail for the dual mode Genesis II and prior FL9 locomotives, obviously.
When the connection was designed, there was concern about using FL9's, which were getting on in years. When the connection opened, it was common for some Empire trains to be made up in Sunnyside yard with the usual pair of FL9's (back-to-back, so they wouldn't have to be turned at Renssalaer) and an E60 or AEM-7 on the front. The electric locomotive would take trains to Penn Station, make the station stop, then out to CP Empire.
They cut off there and went into a short stub wye track which leads about two car lengths to the east. The train would continue; the electric locomotive would return to Penn Station or Sunnyside. Incoming trains were met at CP Empire by electrics as well, but not always: the tracks used by Empire trains (5-8) have ventilators to remove exhaust. These were originally provided for train heat boilers on electric locomotives!
Use of electric locomotives to tow the trains avoided possible FL9 failures (which became more common in later years) causing trains to be stuck in the East River Tunnels or Empire Connection, or getting 'gapped' between third rail sections when going through the complex switches on both sides of Penn Station. Interestingly, the FL9's last regular assignment was as weekend protect power at Penn Station, with a back-to-back pair idling away the days in the yard just south of the North River Tunnel entrance.
This use still occurs: on December 5, 2004 Metro-North's 'Farewell to the ACMU's' fan trip saw the inbound Lake Shore Limited arrive at Croton with a single-mode Genesis I engine, 134 IIRC. It was met at CP EMPIRE by an AEM7 for the trip to Penn Station and Sunnyside.
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Grand Central Terminal

Grand Central Terminal

See more historic photographs of Grand Central Terminal, New York's subway system, marine rail operations in New York Harbor and the New Haven Railroad.
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Fallen Flags Photos
Former New York Central Railroad Headquarters

This impressive building was the headquarters of the New York Central System. Read more about it below.
New York Central Offices

230 Park Ave. was the corporate headquarters.
In the "Godfather" movie, the meeting of the five families was filmed in the NYC Boardroom with the mural of the 999 "Empire State Express".

466 Lexington was the headquarters of the New York District and also housed various system operating departments. As built, 466 was a perimeter structure around an open central area which allowed all offices to have outside views.

There was also a third building, the Grand Central Office Bldg, which was demolished to make way for the Pan Am Bldg.

230 Park Ave. was sold during the Penn Central years to New York General Insurance and became the "New York General" Bldg. Easiest possible change to the carved stone lettering. The building was later sold to the Helmsley Corp. which did a restoration job on the gold leaf application. 466 Lexington remained as operating HQ for the Metropolitan Region through the 1970's and into the 1980's when it was sold to Olympia & York. It now houses part of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

(Story is an abstract from Railroad Net Forums)
The article on Signal Tower "B" was published in February 1987
in the CALLBOARD of the Mohawk and Hudson Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society.
The article on Grand Central buildings was published February 1988 in the CALLBOARD.
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Map of the Electric Division and New York Terminal District

Map of the Electric Division and New York Terminal District
From New York Central Employee Timetable
Click here or on map to enlarge
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www.ubuyvacations.com Around Grand Central

In addition to underground storage in the terminal, there was an important yard at Mott Haven. It was located in the area adjacent to the Harlem Division trackage, above MO Tower.

It is the former site of what used to be at one time the largest passenger car yard in the United States. When apartment buildings were constructed on "stilts" the idea was to leave room in the event things changed, and the space was required in the future, for parking trains.

Trains were taken to Highbridge for washing.
New York City Passenger Stations

One of the conditions of the construction of Grand Central was that the New Haven Railroad was granted right-of-way and access to the terminal "in perpetuity".

Grand Central Terminal is owned by the New York & Harlem Railroad Company (founded in 1831 and hasn't run its own trains since 1869). NY & Harlem RR is in turn owned by American Premier Underwriters. American Premier is where all the Penn Central stock went).

Grand Central was not the only major station in New York City.

NY Station (Pennsylvania Station to the public) was built wholly by the Pennsylvania Railroad; it, and the 2 North River and 4 East River tunnels, including Sunnyside Yard were operated by the Pennsylvania Terminal and Tunnel Company; a subsidiary of the PRR. The entire project which included NY Station, the 6 subaqueous tunnels, Sunnyside Yard, Greenville Yard, the NY Connecting RR and Hell Gate Bridge were all the brainchild of PRR President A.J. Cassatt. He unfortunately never lived to see his dream come true.

The original, monumental structure was torn down by the PRR between 1961 and 1964 and replaced by the Madison Square Garden travesty. The NY Times called the demolition "A monumental act of civic vandalism." It was however a "sacrificial lamb." It helped, along with Jackie O. to save Grand Central Terminal.

There are 3 good books about Penn Station; "Penn Station, Its Tunnels and Siderodders" by Frederick Westing; "The Late Great Pennsylvania Station" by Lorraine Diehl and "Manhattan Gateway" by Wm. Middleton.

The station is now owned by Amtrak with terminal fees shared by New Jersey Transit and the Long Island Railroad.

Manhattan used to have seven passenger rail stations (not counting subway or rail-ferry stations), now there are only three.

In history:
Penn Station
West 30th Street
Grand Central Terminal
72nd Street
86th Street
125th Street
155th Street (Polo Grounds)

Now:
Grand Central Terminal
Penn Station
Harlem-125th Street
New York City Freight

In 1965, from north to south, the NYC, PRR, Erie-Lackawanna, LV and B&O float bridges were all shown as operating. In the 1975 (PC) map, the only one shown as existing is the one between piers 66 and 68, which means 27th Street, the Erie/Lackawanna one, formerly Erie. In "Waterfront Terminals of the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad", published in 1976, it is stated that the EL facility was closed to revenue service as of 9/29/1975, and that it was "the very last railroad yard served solely by carfloat."

The B&O's original access to New York harbor was by the Staten Island Rapid Transit, which it owned, from Cranford Jct. to a coal dump facility at Howland Hook and a carfloat facility at St. George. During the Depression, the B&O turned its New York Harbor operations over to the CNJ, closing down the St. George operation and transferring coal dumping to the CNJ McMyler dumper at Pier 18, Jersey City. (The CNJ also served in a similar fashion for Reading non-coal traffic in New York Harbor.) However, the large B&O freight station complex at 25/26th Streets remained just that: a B&O location, even though the tugs and car floats were CNJ. However, in 1949,the B&O had built a new, not terribly large, coal unloading facility at Howland Hook, and, in 1964-65 had rebuilt the Arthur Kill Bridge to handle heavier cars, primarily coal. In 1973, the CNJ, in effect, pulled back from Jersey City to Elizabeth, thus effectively ending all carfloat and lighterage operations. At this point the B&O reopened its carfloat terminal at St. George Harwood, in "The Royal Blue Line", states that until 9/30/1976, when all surviving marine functions to New York Dock, the B&O did serve freight forwarder clients on piers at 23d and 26th Streets. But, this would have been via station floats, unloaded and loaded while on the floats, with no cars being moved on or off the floats to Manhattan tracks, so the Erie-Lackawanna claim is probably correct.

As far as the other Manhattan carfloat operations are concerned, the PRR one at 37th Street would have been made redundant by the merger. I also don't know the closing date of the Lehigh Valley station in the basement of the Starrett-Lehigh building, now the nightclub known as the "Tunnel". The LV's Harlem River station was closed in 1969.

The last three cars of frozen turkeys went below 30th Street in 1980 and the last traffic east of Spuyten Duyvil was paper for the New York Times printing plant located off West End Avenue around 67th Street in March, 1983. (Incidentally, how things have changed; the New York Times spur was originally installed in the 1930s to serve a Chrysler Corporation warehouse, at a time when Broadway from about 55th to 65th Streets was known as "Automobile Row", from the number of car dealers there.) Some of the car float interchanges handled by the 60th/68th/72nd street yard were eliminated by the PC merger, in particular the Selkirk Yard, LIRR ones. In any event, freight service ended in 1983, to be replaced by the "Empire Connector". One final point about the "Empire Connector"; this was not an Amtrak idea, but a PRR one. It appeared in the original planning done on the Pennsy side of the merger in the early 1960s, under which NYC through passenger serviced would be switched from GCT to Penn Station. As part of this plan, the "Broadway" would have been downgraded, and the "Twentieth Century" would have been a 15 1/2 hour schedule as an all-room train to Chicago.

The PRR 37th Street float bridge was active until at least mid-1970. The EL facility was sold to Con Ed for a service center and garage operation. There were about 4-6 steel EL boxcars left stranded when they shut down, and they were cut up on the site, when the RR buildings were demolished.

Those Manhattan (and Bronx) terminals of railroads terminating on the NJ side of the Hudson, used the early Ingersoll Rand/GE/Alco boxcab diesels (from about 1925-26). CNJ 1000 was first (in the Bronx), B&O had one that lasted till 1956 and then was sent to St. Louis Transportation Museum. Erie's yard and I think the LV yard all had them. The PRR used something small, four-wheeled, and of their own design, of course.
Grand Central Power Department

Engineers, conductors, rail traffic controllers, trackmen and others keep Metro-North Railroad running, but without power, the trains would not leave Grand Central Terminal.

The electricity that supplies power to third rails, overhead catenary wires, traffic signals and buildings, including Grand Central and its retail shops, are monitored from a site in the terminal.

The power center's primary tool is an electronic map projected on the front wall of the control center that details where electricity is functioning on the tracks of all three Metro-North commuter lines. The same map can be seen on computer monitors used by the power directors.

A red line on the map means the third rail or catenary wire is "alive or energized" and a green line means no power on that section of tracks.

Power directors must keep tabs on the red and green lines and alert the operations department or the utility company when there are outages.

Most railroad employees say the morning and evening rush hours -- when more than 100,000 commuters are using Grand Central -- are the busiest times of day. But the opposite is true for the power department. After the rush hour, the power center has to watch closely when they start doing maintenance work. Not every outage on the map is an emergency. It could mean that a stretch of overhead wires is undergoing maintenance. A green line extending past the South Norwalk station represents the Danbury branch, which uses diesel locomotives to power service, not electricity.

Read more on electric railroad power.
Grand Central Departure Tracks

Here's some of the platform lengths at Grand Central: 20&21.....780 feet
21&23.....930 feet
23&24.....910 feet
25&26.....1220 feet
27&28.....1350 feet
29&30.....1125 feet
30&32.....980 feet
32&33.....880 feet
34&35.....1525 feet
36&37.....1290 feet

The varying lengths are the result of the throat configuration and the various diagonal ladders.

Many high-profile outbound trains were assigned to 34 and 35, like the Empire, the Commodore and the Century. It also helps to understand why some of the other trains that regularly departed from shorter tracks would have to operate in sections during peak travel periods..... cars could not be added due to account platform limitations. About one hour minimum was required between operation of long distance trains from the same track.

Find out more about departure tracks and locomotives on the 20th Century Limited.

Read a study of capacity of the railroad between Woodlawn and Grand Central, including the terminal itself.

One more interesting sidelight on tracks in Grand Central, the siding at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
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