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Oldest Subway Tunnel in the World
Browsing articles by Adam - [previous] :: [next]The Atlantic Avenue Tunnel is officially the world's oldest subway tunnel, built in 1844 by the cut-and-cover method under a City of Brooklyn Street. It is a half-mile long and accommodated two standard gauge tracks. The tunnel was built in only seven months, using only hand tools and primitive (by today's standards) equipment. It was built to provide grade separation for early Long Island Rail Road trains that lacked brakes good enough to operate on city streets, and to eliminate vehicular and pedestrian traffic conflicts and delays. This route allowed through trains to travel quickly between Brooklyn and Boston (via ferry service to Connecticut). The tunnel was supposedly filled in 1861 in a fraud scheme that apparently just seeled off the ends. Bob Diamond rediscovered the long forgotten Atlantic Avenue Tunnel in 1980. The Brooklyn Historic Railway Association (BHRA) was formed in 1982 to restore the historic tunnel. BHRA successfully filed and received designation for the tunnel on the National Register of Historic Places. More info about the tunnel and the tours can be found at:
This article has been viewed 4587 times in the last 27 months Peter: 5th Jan 2009 - 13:56 GMTim glad to see this place made so accessible to people... the lights and stairs/walkways are good additions. did you see the 110+ year old "remember the maine!" graffiti in there? adam: 5th Jan 2009 - 14:01 GMTThe city has screwed this guy more than once. Fortunately theres a new batch of politicians that gave him the green light to do tours again and a 10 year lease. I missed that graffiti but there were definitely some jokes made about cave paintings. :) Peter: 5th Jan 2009 - 14:12 GMTgood for him! yeah, what a dedicated guy. i can only imagine trying to petition nyc to get permission to take the general public into a cavernous subterranean abandoned tunnel, heh... here are some links for anyone not familiar: the-tech.mit.edu/~Subway/Tunnel/index.html
Rich: 7th Jan 2009 - 04:33 GMTGreat job Adam, thanks for the most informative tour and thanks Peter for the other links, I saw this on TV and was amazed at the thought: "ya never know what ya might be walking on, over, under, or past". Peter: 13th Jan 2009 - 04:30 GMTyo the hatch is the manhole in the first photo, hahaha. bring a crowbar! adam: 13th Jan 2009 - 13:56 GMTYo that'd be scary as hell going in there without a generator for the lights. tunnelelf: 14th Feb 2009 - 20:37 GMTGood thing you didn`t discover our hidden tunnels. We tunnelpeople have been living underneath your filthy human cities for Centuries. We will eat any human creatures who try to enter our tunnels. Whoaahhaahhaahh... Be afraid...Be very Afraid. Peace and love; Mister and Misses tunnelelf.
Joe in New Rochelle: 5th Apr 2009 - 20:54 GMTGreat finding where does this tunnel starts from and where does it end? is there any possibility of findind centuries long steam engines abandoned in there. What is the cities stake in this venture? who wouldapparently owns the tunnel now legally? The state or the feds? Urban Neighbourhood: 12th May 2009 - 00:02 GMTAbsolutely great! urbanneighbourhood.wordpress.com/2009/01/11/the-oldest-subway-tunnel-in-the-world steve saines: 19th May 2009 - 06:10 GMTAbsolutely fascinating stuff. Be aware that the chances of finding rolling stock or locos is next to zero. Worth too much. Even if defective, any contractor would have sold it for scrap. In the event, it would have seen out service on the rest of the railways' system. From the photos I've viewed, this tunnel appears to be in far, far better shape than many from that age. Whether it was deprived of oxygen is a good question, as that alone would have stopped a lot of deterioration over the years. Also the lack of running water would appear to have left it in close to pristine shape. I suspect it must also have remained above freezing point in the winte, and allowed the cut stone and bricks to not crumble. Just amazing.... Sanzay: 19th May 2009 - 16:05 GMTAmazing! Outstanding labor and legislative efforts to legalize urban exploration trips! Still can't pick my jaw from the table ;-) This place can be turned into the museum or theme park or several thematic bars/night clubs. BTW there is a system of tunnels called Odessa Catacombs During the WWII this labyrinth of tunnels hosted Soviet Union guerrilla teams that were fighting against Nazi forces. Right now isolated sub graph of this labyrinth hosts thematic museum about WWII history of catacombs. www.placestofeel.com/underground-world/catacombs/odessa.htm Back in nineties my dad and I visited one untreated opening somewhere in the suburbs of Odessa city. Are there City Noisers from cities of Rome and Paris that also have catacombs?
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