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Second Ave. Sagas

News and Views on New York City Transportation

Abandoned Stations

A subway art project in the abandoned Underbelly

by Benjamin Kabak November 1, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on November 1, 2010

Works by Emile Souris and Jeff Soto are just two of the pieces that adorn an unused Brooklyn subway station. (Credit: Workhorse/New York Times)

Once upon a time, in the late 1970s, the subways were covered with graffiti that many considered art. This wasn’t the sloppy graffiti tags of today that involve a scrawled name or an uncreative expletive. These were full-car murals, sometimes with messages, that took time, skill and a certain willingness to spit in the face of authority. Today, even as we are commemorating early-1980s graffiti, we still debate whether these markings are art, vandalism or some mixture of the two.

Over the weekend, a story of subway graffiti and abandoned stations took the Internet by storm, and today’s Times Arts section has The Underbelly Project splashed across the front page. Per the project’s website, the concept is simple:

In early 2009, a project began four stories underneath the skin of New York. For nearly 100 years, a massive subway station sat unfinished, unused, and undiscovered. Over the course the last year, artists have been secretly escorted into this station to leave their creative mark. Unobstructed by the pressures of commercial sales, phone calls, or daily routines, each artist painted for one full night. The Underbelly Project is the result of the past year. At the close of the project, the entrance was removed and darkness reclaimed the space once again.

Jasper Rees’ piece in The Times goes more in depth. Workhorse and PAC, two street artists, came up with the idea a few years ago after seeing the abandoned subway stop, and the two took Rees on a secret tour recently. Rees can’t say where it is — more on that later — and he can’t say how they got into the station. The two artists, he says, are “seriously concerned about the threat of prosecution.” The two picked this station because, said PAC, they loved “the solitude of being underground.”

Rees talks more about the secret and hidden art show:

A vast new exhibition space opened in New York City this summer, with a show 18 months in the making. On view are works by 103 street artists from around the world, mostly big murals painted directly onto the gallery’s walls. It is one of the largest shows of such pieces ever mounted in one place, and many of the contributors are significant figures in both the street-art world and the commercial trade that now revolves around it. Its debut might have been expected to draw critics, art dealers and auction-house representatives, not to mention hordes of young fans. But none of them were invited.

In the weeks since, almost no one has seen the show. The gallery, whose existence has been a closely guarded secret, closed on the same night it opened. Known to its creators and participating artists as the Underbelly Project, the space, where all the show’s artworks remain, defies every norm of the gallery scene. Collectors can’t buy the art. The public can’t see it. And the only people with a chance of stumbling across it are the urban explorers who prowl the city’s hidden infrastructure or employees of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

That’s because the exhibition has been mounted, illegally, in a long-abandoned subway station. The dank, cavernous hall feels a lot farther than it actually is from the bright white rooms of Chelsea’s gallery district. Which is more or less the point: This is an art exhibition that goes to extremes to avoid being part of the art world, and even the world in general.

The piece goes on to talk about the artists who agreed to participate. Some came from as far as Europe while many were New Yorkers who jumped at the chance to explore this subway station. Rees also details, in broad strokes, how the artists accessed the spot, how they turned this dark and dank walls into a canvas and why Workhorse and PAC chose this site and had this image of it. Some time soon, the two curators will unleash on the world a list of the artists and pictures of the work. For now, we’re left with an extensive gallery on Luna Park’s blog and The Times’ own gallery. It’s quite a glimpse into a part of New York City few, if anyone, will ever seen, but it’s enough to tell those of us familiar with the subway system where it is.

One of the Underbelly Project's curators offered up this wide shot of the never-used shell station. (Credit: Workhorse/The New York Times)

Based on the visual evidence, it is in the never-used, once-built shell of a subway station at South 4th St. and Broadway in Brooklyn. I traced the unique origins of this long, lost part of the Second System two years ago, and Subway & Rail has a full gallery of this station online. Built in an age when the city built shell stations for cheap with an eye toward future expansion, this shell has set empty since the day the concrete was poured. Rumor has it that one can access the station via the G train stop at Broadway with the appropriate key.

The stories Rees tells bears out my guess:

The Metropolitan Transit Authority would occasionally shut down the nearby subway line. The artists, working through the night, would hear workers on the tracks and go silent, turning out any lights. The members of Faile were among several participants stuck that way for hours after their work (in their case, a woozy, zigzagging version of the Stars and Stripes) was done. “We were getting crazy,” Mr. McNeil recalled. “We were like, ‘We’ve got to get the hell out of this dusty blackness.’ You couldn’t see your hand in front of your face.”

Finally at 4 a.m., Mr. McNeil said, the coast seemed clear, and “we walked out there with our gear”; but the workers were still there. “We just walked by them and they’re like, ‘Where the hell did these guys come from?’ ”

The scariest moment came around 1:30 one morning, just after Workhorse had left the site with a Moscow-based Australian artist known as Strafe (who spoke on condition that her real name not be used). They heard workers nearby and sprinted back in the dark, but once back on their platform, Strafe said, “I swung round and stepped into thin air, and literally fell onto my back on the track bed.” Too stunned to move, she looked at Workhorse, who had jumped down to join her with a flashlight. She said she saw a look of horror that said, “ ‘What are we going to do if she’s seriously injured?’ ” Eventually she was able to sit up, but they still had to wait until after 5 a.m. to leave.

For its part, the MTA seems none too pleased with this revelation. Transit spokesman Charles Seaton said to The Times only that what the artists did constitutes trespassing, punishable by law. Anyone caught defacing M.T.A. property is subject to arrest and fine.”

The artists too understand both the insanity and inanity of what they’ve done. After taking Rees and a reporter from London’s Sunday Times on a tour, they destroyed the equipment they used to access the station. “We’re not under the illusion that no one will ever see it,” Workhorse said. “But what we are trying to do is to discourage it as much as possible… If you go in there and break your neck, nobody’s going to hear you scream. You’re just going to have to hope that someone is going to find you before you die.”

It is a dangerous thought about a morbid project that somehow captures both the recklessness of a bygone era, the foolhardiness of this undertaking and the mystery of an abandoned aspect of the New York City subway system. I don’t think Arts for Transit will approve.

November 1, 2010 18 comments
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Subway Maps

Map of the Day: A culinary subway ride

by Benjamin Kabak October 30, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 30, 2010

New York City is a culinary capital of the world, and nothing underscores that better than the subway. Take the Q from the Russian enclave of Brighton Beach to the Greek-influenced Astoria. Journey on the 7 from Flushing’s Chinatown past some of the best Thai restaurants, taquerias and Indian joints around.

Today’s map of the day celebrates that rich tradition. From illustrators Rick Meyerowitz and Maira Kalman comes “The New York City Sub Culinary Map.” Originally created in 2004 for The New York, the pair’s map is on display through November 6 at the Pratt Gallery as part of the exhibit “You Are Here ? Mapping the Psychogeography of New York City.” I visited the gallery last weekend, and as you can guess, it’s heavy on the subway.

But first, back to Meyerowitz and Kalman. Rick explains the impetus behind this creative re-imagining of the subway map:

September 2003: I was on an A train headed downtown. I was absentmindedly staring at the subway map and thinking about lunch, when all the station names on the map suddenly rearranged themselves in my mind to become food-related names. “That’s interesting,” I thought. “What if I redid the subway map to make it a food map?”

It seemed a daunting prospect; so many places to rename! So I went to Maira Kalman, my brilliant partner in wordplay and funny names. “I love it but I don’t know if it’s doable,” I told her. Maira knocked the doubt right out of my head with characteristic subtlety: “You’re an idiot!” She told me. “It’s brilliant! We’re doing it, Mister, and we’re doing it right away.”

…We spent months doing nothing but choosing the funniest names and moving them around a pencil sketch of the map. We renamed all 468 stations and added sixteen for the Second Avenue line, which may never even be built. We renamed all the neighborhoods, parks, cemeteries and waterways – 650 names in all.

You can click on the image atop this post to see the larger version, but it’s tough to capture the creativity and originality without taking in the entire wall-sized map. The exhibit runs at the Pratt Gallery at 144 W. 14th St. between 6th and 7th Aves. through next Saturday. The gallery is open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, and it gets the SAS seal of approval. Check it out.

* * *
As a bonus map of the day, check out Asma Ahmed Shikoh’s Van Wyck Boulevard. Also a part of the Pratt Gallery exhibit, Shikoh’s version of the subway map is hand-painted and in Urdu. He explains, “Painting the subway map and translating minute, tiresome details has been therapeutic for an estranged person who is trying to identify with a new city, its streets, its landmarks, its avenues. The subway map is an integral part of New York city life, a very familiar image, without which no one would have any sense of direction. I have chosen to make the translated subway map, a ‘painting’, so that its status of just being an object of functional value, can be elevated.”

October 30, 2010 6 comments
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Service Advisories

Weekend woes on the West Side

by Benjamin Kabak October 29, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 29, 2010

West Side travel is going to be headache-inducing this week and next as New York City Transit is planning extensive work along the IRT lines. This work is part of the station renewal project in Northern Manhattan and the Bronx, track work at 66th St. and work by the Port Authority at the World Trade Center site.

Here’s how it looks:

  • There will be no 1 service between 242nd Street and 168th Street due to the station construction work between 242nd Street and Dyckman Street. Free shuttle buses provide service between the 242nd Street (1) station and the 207th Street (A) station. Washington Heights customers may take the M 3 or free shuttle bus service stopping at 168th Street, 181st Street, and 191st Street along St. Nicholas Avenue.
  • Downtown 1 trains will run local between 168th Street and 34th Street, then express from 34th Street to 14th Street where it terminates. Uptown 1 trains run express from 14th Street to 72nd Street (skipping 50th, 59th, and 66th Streets), then local to 168th Street.
  • Downtown 2 and 3 trains will make local stops from 96th Street to Chambers Street. Uptown 2 and 3 trains will run local from Chambers Street to 42nd Street, then express, stopping at 72nd and 96th Streets. There is no uptown 1, 2, or 3 service at 50th, 59th or 66th Street.
  • Due to work by Port Authority at the WTC site, free shuttle buses will operate between Chambers Street and South Ferry.

The regular advisories follow. As always, these come to me via Transit and are subject to change without notice. Listen to on-board announcements and check the signs in your local station. Subway Weekender has the map.


At all times until August 2011, Bronx-bound 1 trains skip Dyckman Street due to station rehabilitation. Customers may ride to 207th Street, use free MetroCard transfer to downtown 1 and ride back to Dyckman Street.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, uptown 1 trains run express from 14th Street to 72nd Street due to track work south of 66th Street.


From 11:30 p.m. Friday, October 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, 1 service is suspended between 242nd Street and 168th Street due to rehab work between 242nd Street and Dyckman Street stations. The A trains, free shuttle buses and the M3 bus provide alternate service. Free shuttle buses operate:

  • On Broadway between 242nd Street and 215th Street stations, then connect to the 207th Street A station.
  • On St. Nicholas Avenue between 191st and 168th Street stations.


From 11:30 p.m. Friday, October 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, there is no 1 service between 14th Street and South Ferry due to Port Authority work at the WTC site. The 2, 3, and free shuttle buses provide alternate service. 1 trains run express between 34th and 14th Street. 2 and 3 trains run local between 34th Street and Chambers Street. Free shuttle buses operate between Chambers Street and South Ferry. Note: During the overnight hours, 3 trains run express between 148th Street and 42nd Street. Downtown 1 trains run local from 168th Street to 14th Street.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, downtown 2 trains run local from 96th Street to Chambers Street and uptown 2 trains run local from Chambers Street to 42nd Street, then express to 96th Street. These changes are due to Port Authority work at the WTC site and track work south of 66th Street.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, Manhattan-bound 2 and 4 trains skip Eastern Parkway, Grand Army Plaza and Bergen Street due to tunnel ceiling inspection.


From 6:30 a.m. to midnight, Saturday, October 30 and Sunday, October 31, downtown 3 trains run local from 96th Street to Chambers Street and uptown 3 trains run local from Chambers Street to 42nd Street, then express to 96th Street. These changes are due to Port Authority work at the WTC site and track work south of 66th Street.


From 6:30 a.m. to midnight, Saturday, October 30 and Sunday, October 31, Manhattan-bound 3 trains skip Eastern Parkway, Grand Army Plaza and Bergen Street due to tunnel ceiling inspections.


From 11 p.m. Friday, October 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, downtown 4 and 6 trains skip 33rd, 28th, and 23rd Streets due to track work south of 33rd Street and work on the Broadway-Lafayette to Bleecker Street transfer.


From 5:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Saturday, October 30, uptown 4 trains run local from Brooklyn Bridge to 125th Street due to track work south of 33rd Street.


From 5:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Saturday, October 30, 5 trains run every 20 minutes between Dyre Avenue and Grand Central due to track work south of 33rd Street. Customers should take the 4 instead.


From 7:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Sunday, October 31, 5 trains run every 20 minutes between Dyre Avenue and Bowling Green due to track work south of 33rd Street.


From 4 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 11 p.m. Sunday, October 31, Flushing-bound 7 trains skip 82nd, 90th, 103rd, and 111th Streets due to switch renewal work at 111th Street.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday. October 30 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, Manhattan-bound D trains run local from 36th Street to DeKalb Avenue due to cable installation.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, Coney Island-bound D trains run on the N line from 36th Street to Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue due to structural repair and station rehabilitations from 71st Street to Bay 50th Street and ADA work at Bay Parkway. There are no Coney Island-bound D trains at 9th Avenue, Ft. Hamilton Parkway, 50th, 55th, 71st, 79th Streets, 18th, 20th Avenues, Bay Parkway, 25th Avenue and Bay 50th Street. (Customers traveling to these stations must take the D or N to New Utrecht Avenue-62nd Street or Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue and transfer to a Manhattan-bound D train.)


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, E trains run on the F line between Roosevelt Avenue and West 4th Street due to switch renewal at Lexington Avenue. The platforms at 5th Avenue, Lexington Avenue-53rd Street and 23rd Street-Ely Avenue are closed. Customers should take the R, 6 or shuttle bus instead. Free shuttle buses connect Court Square (G)/23rd Street-Ely Avenue (E), Queens Plaza (R), and 21st Street-Queensbridge (F).


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, Manhattan-bound F trains run on the A line from Jay Street to West 4th Street due to work on the Broadway-Lafayette Street to Bleecker Street transfer.


From 11:30 p.m. Friday, October 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, free shuttle buses replace M service between Metropolitan Avenue and Myrtle Avenue-Broadway due to platform edge rehabilitation.


From 12:01 a.m. Saturday, October 30 to 4 a.m. Monday, November 1, Coney Island-bound N trains run local from Canal Street, Manhattan to 59th Street, Brooklyn and Manhattan-bound N trains run express from 59th Street, Brooklyn to Canal Street, Manhattan due to cable installation.


From 11:30 Friday, October 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, there are no R trains between Whitehall Street, Manhattan and 95th Street, Brooklyn due to station rehab work at 86th Street and cable installation. For service between Whitehall and 59th Streets, customers should take the N. For service between 59th Street and 95th Street, customers may use the free shuttle bus.

(Rockaway Park Shuttle)
From 10:30 p.m. Friday, October 29 to 5 a.m. Monday, November 1, free shuttle buses replace S trains between Rockaway Park and Beach 60th Street due to station rehabilitations.

October 29, 2010 2 comments
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ARC Tunnel

ARC Fallout: Finger-pointing and jockeying for dollars

by Benjamin Kabak October 29, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 29, 2010

Deep-cavern ARC station, we hardly knew ye. (Click to enlarge)

It’s now been over 48 hours since New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced the end of the ARC Tunnel project, and the reactions are still coming fast and furious. Let’s dive in.

New York pols put in call for unused billions for MTA support

We’ll start with the juicy stuff. Since Christie sacrificed $3 billion in federal financing when he torpedoed the tunnel, the feds have some money to spend. Not missing a beat, New York and the MTA are jumping into the fray. With a $10 billion hole in its capital budget and perennial operating deficits, the MTA is going to make a play for some of the money, and both Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer have called upon more federal contributions to both the Second Ave. Subway and the East Side Access project. “We will certainly stake our claim,” MTA CEO and Chair Jay Walder said.

Putting the Port Authority dollars to use

The other $3 billion contribution — this one from the Port Authority — is now sitting unused as well, and the Tri-State Transportation Campaign has a solution: Spend some of the money on improving cross-Hudson bus service. Here’s their thinking:

According to ARC’s final Environmental Impact Statement, the project would have shifted daily 11,530 trans-Hudson bus trips and 31,590 trans-Hudson car trips to rail by 2030. Assuming an average bus capacity of 35 passengers, more than 1,230 additional buses will be needed to meet that demand in the absence of ARC. Another 473 buses will be needed to accommodate the baseline projected increase of 16,538 bus trips that would occur even with the tunnel. That’s another 1,703 buses needed by 2030 to accommodate this growth in cross-Hudson trips.

Currently, NJ Transit has a total of 2,125 buses statewide. If half of new trips are on NJ Transit buses (with the other half on private carriers), the agency would have to increase its existing bus fleet by at least 850 buses, or 40%. That’s a major investment.

And with the Lincoln Tunnel’s Express Bus Lane and the Port Authority Bus Terminal (PABT) already at or near capacity, there’s just no way for the existing infrastructure to accommodate 1,703 more buses. As the ARC project’s final environmental impact statement points out, “bus service levels would remain the same as existing conditions… due to capacity limitations at PABT.” In other words, drastic improvements are necessary to allow more buses to enter Manhattan. Luckily, the Port Authority is already considering plans to increase bus capacity through the Lincoln Tunnel and at the PABT.

The real issue, as TSTC notes, is access through the tunnels. Since New Jersey isn’t expanding tunnel capacity any time soon, buses must have a true dedicated access lane into and out of the Lincoln Tunnel. Until that happens, buses will be slowed by the same traffic that makes crossing the Hudson River so infuriating.

Pointing a finger a Gov. Christie but also Ray LaHood

Meanwhile, as project supporters try to make sense of the politics behind Christie’s decision, many see inconsistencies in his insistence on toeing the line when it came to cost overruns. As Mobilizing the Region explores, Christie has been more than willing to eschew financial responsibility on road projects.

In fact, shortly before canceling the ARC Tunnel, his administration borrowed $2 billion to pay for a misguided turnpike-widening project. Similar to the ARC project, the turnpike-widening plan has seen its cost go from $1.4 billion in 2004 to $3.6 billion in 2009, but Christie has bee notably silent on those cost overruns and budgetary projections.

Mark J. Magyar expands on this finger-pointing and explores the ARC Tunnel’s demise on both a state and national level. The Rutgers professor is more than willing to blame many prominent state officials for the ARC debacle, and he lays out the case in exquisite detail.

Finally, Ray LaHood enters the picture too. On both the DOT Fastlane blog and in the opinion pages of The Star-Ledger, the Secretary of Transportation lays into Christie. He says:

Against the backdrop of these enduring legacies, Gov. Chris Christie’s decision to terminate America’s largest transportation project was particularly disappointing. Unfortunately, his choice comes with profound consequences for New Jersey, the New York metropolitan region and our nation as a whole.

Tens of thousands of jobs that the tunnel would have created will be lost. Future New Jerseyans will face shrinking property values, suffocating road traffic, interminable train delays and increasing air pollution. A $3.358 billion federal investment in the region’s economic future will move elsewhere.

Yet, as Andrea Bernstein writes at Transportation Nation, this call from LaHood is too little, too late. The feds too are complacent in the death of a project they touted. “There was,” she wrote, “a substantive debate to be had here [on the planning and impact of the tunnel], one that is now lost to the sands of time…because neither party released full details until after a decision had been made.”

October 29, 2010 27 comments
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AsidesBuses

From Transit, an initiative to quiet noisy buses

by Benjamin Kabak October 29, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 29, 2010

Noise is to New York City as ______ is to ______. Traffic, honking, music, the constant hum and chatter of the city. It’s all there. Yet, as someone with a second floor apartment overlooking an avenue with a bus route, I can certainly attest to the fact that New York City’s buses are loud. They sigh and beep and groan their ways around residential neighborhoods, and when they arrive late at night, they have a way of piercing the quiet calm of the dark.

The MTA recognizes that its buses are deafening, and now they’re prepared to act. As Samuel Goldsmith Pete Donohue reports today, the authority will spend $1 million to quite its 5900 buses by approximately 20 percent. The measures include installing a new muffler that will, as the Daily News says, “remove[] moisture from the air-braking system and automatically releases bursts of air every five minutes or so.” This will reduce the noise from the suspension systems that activate at every stop. The MTA also plans to turn down the volume on the alarm that “alert[s] riders that the floor is being lowered for easier boarding and exiting.” Beeping will no longer fill the air.

Transit are hopeful that these measures will restore a sense of peace along noisy bus routes. “This will improve the quality of life in the city by reducing noise pollution tremendously,” Joseph Smith, the head of Transit’s bus division, said. Sounds good — and quiet — to me.

October 29, 2010 6 comments
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CTA

Apple’s money renovates a Chicago subway station

by Benjamin Kabak October 29, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 29, 2010

The CTA's North/Clybourn station shown before and after the Apple renovation. (Photos by flickr users Audrey Leon and Kevin Zolkiewicz. Click the image to enlarge.)

The Chicago Transit Authority’s finances aren’t in much better shape than those of our beloved and hated MTA. The Windy City’s own transit system doesn’t have a fully funded capital plan, and the agency recently had to go hat in hand to Springfield for permission to issue bonds that will help balance the budget in the short term. Yet, it recently enjoyed a first of sorts. For a cost of $0 to the CTA, the North/Clybourn station in the city’s Near North Side area received a full overhaul. A private partner picked up the $4 million tab.

That private partner, you see, had an economic interest in sprucing up the neighborhood. To much fanfare, Apple recently opened a new store in the rapidly gentrifying neighborhood and hammered out a deal last year with the CTA that mirrored a sponsorship agreement. In exchange for the advertising space inside the station, a right of first refusal should the CTA sell the naming rights and use of a nearby bus depot, Apple paid for the station renovation.

Mary Schmich, news columnist for the Chicago Tribune, went underground on the day of the opening last week and explores what $4 million buys these days. She writes:

Outside, the station has clean new brick, big new windows and a sleek new look, partly 1940s and entirely 2010. The inside isn’t stylish, but it’s improved. Someone has scrubbed the red concrete floors, brushed red paint on the old railings, tried to wipe the grime from the escalator stairs. And the Apple name is everywhere, except out front.

From the moment you push through the turnstile, Apple ads beam at you, as bright as searchlights. Down in the tunnel, all the other ads are gone. Apple expressed interest in calling it the Apple Red Line stop. The CTA, which is exploring the possibility of selling naming rights to its stations, said Apple would get the right of first refusal for this one.

Even if you like Apple products, Apple’s master-of-the-universe attitude can be annoying. And the branding of everything can feel like mind control. But Apple has created a unique space in Chicago: handsome, communal, connected to the city, a space that makes public transportation attractive. The CTA may as well profit from the inevitable. Sell Apple the naming rights, for a big chunk of change. People are going to call it the Apple stop anyway.

As is obvious from the two photos atop this post, the station both needed and benefited from this rehab project. The outside — seen at the bottom of this IFOAppleStore.com post — appeared dilapidated with peeling paint and boarded-up windows. It now has a fresh interior, and the exterior has been completely overhauled. This is a subway station that screams for attention.

Now, not everyone is as in love with the station as Schmich is. Kevin O’Neill, a writer with Chicago Now’s CTA Tattler site, bemoans the bright lights that emanate from Apple’s advertising. But by and large, reviews have been favorable, and Chicago-based transit riders are urging the CTA to explore more public-private station-based partnerships.

All of this leads me to the same question I had when the project was first announced almost a year ago: When will the MTA hop on board with these types of partnerships? It’s true that the authority will append the Barclays Center name to the Atlantic/Pacific subway stop when the Nets’ new arena opens, and it’s true that Forest City Ratner is funding some transportation upgrades to that busy Brooklyn hub. But Ratner purchased the Vanderbilt Yards air rights well under market value. The least he could do is fund some transit upgrades.

For New York, a partnership of this magnitude would make sense along Manhattan’s Far West Side. As the 7 line extension inches forward — and crawls past 41st St. and 10th Ave. without a stop — real estate developers are going to benefit. Walking around the area reveals numerous new developments waiting for tenants, and easy transit access will only increase the value of these apartments. If the MTA can work out a deal with developers who stand to benefit from increased transit accessibility, our city’s cash-strapped authority could supply that better service.

As the authority struggles to stay afloat and struggles to realize new revenue streams, these partnerships may just be an integral part of transit development over the next few decades.

October 29, 2010 32 comments
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AsidesBuses

MTA bus division head calls it a career

by Benjamin Kabak October 28, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 28, 2010

Joseph Smith, Transit’s current senior vice president of the Department of Buses and the president of MTA Bus and Long Island Bus, will retire at the end of the year, the MTA announced in a press release this afternoon. Smith has been with the MTA for 33 years and started his career in 1977 as a bus operator out of the Amsterdam Depot. He was responsible for the consolidation of the MTA’s three bus divisions, a move credited with saving the authority $86 million in 2009.

“Joe exemplifies the hard work, dedication and innovation that exists throughout the MTA,” MTA Chairman and CEO Jay Walder said. “He learned the system from behind the wheel of a bus and took those lessons to create a more efficient, effective and environmentally friendly bus company. Joe has been the driving force behind continuing improvements in our bus system and he will be sorely missed.”

In the release noting Smith’s retirement, the MTA touts progress made on his watch. MTA buses are now fuel-efficient, environmentally friendly and, with the advent of Select Bus Service, faster. The authority will begin a search to fill the position, and the person they find should, among other tasks, be ready to bring real-time bus-tracking technology to the MTA’s bus fleet.

October 28, 2010 7 comments
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MTA Politics

City transit advocates issue Walder defense

by Benjamin Kabak October 28, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 28, 2010

Over the past few weeks, as the MTA has come under fire from New York’s gubernatorial candidates, I’ve been a staunch defender of MTA CEO and Chairman Jay Walder. Handed an impossible situation, Walder has made the most of it, and he’s moving the system forward as well. While Andrew Cuomo hasn’t made a public statement on the issue one way or another, Walder deserves to be kept on as head of the MTA.

Today, a group of transit advocates have issued a call to both GOP nominee Carl Paladino and Cuomo to support Walder. The executive staff and board of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign put out the call this morning. “We feel the attacks directed toward Mr. Walder during the gubernatorial campaign have been unwarranted,” the letter says. “Whoever is elected governor will inherit an agency with grave fiscal and management challenges. In order to overcome these, the MTA will require bold, innovative leadership and strong support from you and your staff. Mr. Walder’s impressive tenure proves he will be able to rise to the challenges ahead.”

Neither campaign has responded yet to the letter, but I have to hope that Cuomo, the likely winner who hasn’t said much of substance about the state’s transportation issue, is listening. Not only does Walder deserve to stay because of the merits, but he also would enjoy a significant payment in the form of a Golden Parachute if Cuomo tries to oust him. While not by itself a reason to keep an undeserving CEO around, Walder’s record should be allowed to speak for itself.

In a sense, it’s a sad commentary on transit that, one week before Election Day, the city’s leading advocates had to send this letter. We’ve seen the MTA openly mocked for spurious claims — “two sets of books,” for instance — and voters are either mislead by their elected officials or willfully ignorant of the true situation. “We can say it until we’re blue in the face, and people still repeat this nonsense,” MTA Board member Doreen Frasca said yesterday. “Maybe we should all wear T-shirts or something.”

Still, lies are repeated, initiatives scorned. Mass transit in New York needs the support of the next governor, and Jay Walder will be the MTA’s biggest defender and loudest fighter. His job security shouldn’t even be a campaign issue.

After the jump, the TSTC letter in full.

Continue Reading
October 28, 2010 5 comments
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ARC Tunnel

ARC Fallout: Christie’s excuses, pointing fingers

by Benjamin Kabak October 28, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 28, 2010

It’s barely been 24 hours since New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie killed the ARC Tunnel, and already the fallout is loud and divisive. New Jersey’s Democratic Senate representatives are slamming Christie for what they see as a national play for headlines while some New Jersey-based activists are blaming New York for its unwillingness to help fund an interstate project. Let’s dive in.

Christie defends his decision

After announcing his decision to kill ARC via a press release, Christie held forth for twenty minutes with members of the press. If you’d like to watch him dance around the issue, he’s made the videos available for all to see.

Basically, as I’ve mentioned before, Christie’s decision came down to the illusion of money. He wanted to, he said, find “a way to work around the unacceptable level of risk and cost that was being asked to be borne by the taxpayers of the state of New Jersey.” He still claims that the feds were putting forth total project costs as high as $13.8 billion even though Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood disputed that total last week, and he claimed that divorcing the Portal Bridge South from the ARC Tunnel funding scheme wasn’t possible.

Christie’s excuses ran deep. When discussing the cost-saving measure of connecting the tunnel to Penn Station instead of the deep cavern beneath 34th Street, he said that his idea didn’t address the real problem. “Even if that aspect of the project was successfully implemented,” he said, “it would not provide a means for covering current cost overruns nor the contingencies necessary to conclude a funding agreement with the FTA, and I’ll get back to that in a second. Simply put, it wouldn’t hold taxpayers harmless in New Jersey for cost increases and cost overruns that have already emerged, and could continue to be even greater as the project moved forward over the next eight years.”

Ultimately, Christie’s 20-minute statement was a national show of economic force designed to say all the right things in an appeal to voters looking for fiscal responsibility. “I cannot place upon the citizens of the State of New Jersey an open-ended letter of credit,” he said, later adding, “This is how we got ourselves into the third highest debt load in America. This is how we got ourselves in to the awful fiscal mess that we’re in, and often during the campaign, I would say that if I were elected I would make the hard decisions that were necessary in order to return our state to fiscal health.”

He didn’t make mention of any future plans to study cheaper alternatives or ways to improve transit access from New Jersey to New York City. We’ll just have to keep waiting for that.

LaHood, Lautenberg respond

Following Christie’s press conference, both New Jersey Sen. Frank Lautenberg and Secretary LaHood issued statements in response to the development. Lautenberg’s was more vehement than LaHood’s.

Says Lautenberg:

“The Governor was given a deal from the federal government on Sunday that put no extra imposition on the state of New Jersey for its obligation to the ARC Tunnel project, and the Governor refused it. It was clear from the beginning that Governor Christie planned to kill the ARC Tunnel no matter what. In doing so, the Governor has once again put politics over performance.

“This is a tragic day in New Jersey’s history. Two weeks ago, Governor Christie made the biggest public policy blunder in New Jersey’s history. Today he repeated it. Today he killed the prospect for improving New Jersey’s economy and creating thousands of new jobs. He increased the amount of toxic fumes that will be discharged from idling cars stuck in traffic, and he took away an opportunity for New Jersey housing values to go up.

“I was a CEO and I know you need to be at work to do your job, and Governor Christie is out stumping in other states and not doing his job at home. While the Governor is on political missions in Indiana, California, Ohio and other states, he is ducking the needs of people in New Jersey. In just nine months of being in office, the Governor has bungled the opportunity to score $400 million dollars for our students and now he has lost over $6 billion in transportation funding.

“New Jersey Transit is coming off one of the worst summers for delays in recent memory. 1,400 delays were recorded this summer, and just this week a minor derailment caused hour-long delays for thousands of commuters. Delays and derailments are only going to get worse on our aging infrastructure and thanks to the Governor, New Jersey commuters shouldn’t count on new rail service options for decades to come.

“The Governor has put politics before performance, and it is the people of New Jersey who will pay the high price.”

In a “Truths and Myths” section of the press release, Lautenberg starts to get a little sloppy with the facts. He disputes the idea that Christie is “killing the tunnel because the state cannot afford it” and instead claims thats Christie torpedoed the project only to “move $1.25 billion in New Jersey Turnpike Authority funds dedicated to the ARC Tunnel to the state’s Transportation Trust Fund.” The reality is a mix of the two.

LaHood chose a more diplomatic approach. “I am extremely disappointed in Gov. Christie’s decision to abandon the ARC tunnel project, which is a devastating blow to thousands of workers, millions of commuters and the state’s economic future,” he said. “The governor’s decision to stop work on this project means commuters — who would have saved 45 minutes each day thanks to the ARC tunnel — will instead see no end to traffic congestion and ever-longer wait times on train platforms. Our team has worked hard over the last several weeks to present Governor Christie with workable solutions to bring the ARC tunnel to life.”

Looking at New York

Meanwhile, Mary Forsberg points her finger at our side of the river. In an Op-Ed for The Times, Forsberg questions why New York wasn’t willing to help fund the ARC Tunnel. “Where, specifically, is New York’s contribution to the effort? Original estimates put the project’s cost at $8.7 billion, with New Jersey chipping in $2.7 billion and the federal government and Port Authority of New York and New Jersey each contributing $3 billion,” she writes. “In other words, New Jersey would have to shell out more than its fair share for the tunnel project, while New York, which stands to gain in a number of big ways, would pay nothing.”

Forsberg, the director of research at the New Jersey Policy Perspective, calls upon New Jersey to rais its gas tax, but she also cites the tax revenue disparities between New York and New Jersey due to the tax credits granted to commuters. Because New York is in a comparatively better tax position, she urges the Empire State to help out the Garden State in realizing a project that benefits both. “To match New Jersey’s contribution, New York should dedicate the billions of dollars of income taxes that it annually collects from New Jersey residents toward construction of the tunnel. That way each party would have a quarter in the kitty,” she writes.

The state though already fronts numerous costs borne by commuters. We do not enforce a commuter tax and pay for all of the services — police, fire, transportation, etc. — that accrue as a result of the numerous people who commute into the city each day. Some would argue that we already pay our fair share of costs, but Forsberg’s argument is not without merit.

October 28, 2010 22 comments
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Capital Program 2010-2014

Can the construction industry save the MTA’s capital plan?

by Benjamin Kabak October 28, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on October 28, 2010

Support from the construction industry could help the MTA's capital plan receive full funding from the state. (Photo by Benjamin Kabak)

When it comes to interest-group politics, the MTA’s likely allies often aren’t as supportive as they should be. The authority’s various labor groups spend more time fighting against the MTA than for it and seemingly refuse to recognize that a fully funded MTA would lead to more jobs for unionized workers. The construction industry too has been largely silent as project management and budgetary control have come under fire. Why would contractors, after all, want to attach their names publicly to infrastructure investments that aren’t on time and are routinely over budget?

Now, though, the slumbering giant could be waking up. The construction industry in New York City has always leaned heavily on public investment and the state’s authorities for much of its work, and as the real estate economy is slow to rebound, the New York Building Congress’ future may depend upon the fate of the MTA’s five-year capital plan. In its latest New York Construction Outlook report, the NYBC anticipates a rebound in construction spending — but only as long as the MTA keeps doling out the dollars.

The report is, unfortunately, available for NYBC members only, but the Congress has issued an extensive press release detailing its findings. This year, the NYBC anticipates just $23 billion in construction spending, a drop of 23 percent since 2008, but if the MTA remains economically healthy, that number could climb to $28.6 billion by 2012. “The 2012 projection, however,” the organization said, “is tenuous, given that most of the forecasted increase will not materialize unless the Metropolitan Transportation Authority is able to secure new funding for the capital projects it has proposed for 2012.”

The report stresses the importance of government spending with a special focus on the MTA. “All eyes are on the MTA,” NYBC President Richard T. Anderson said. “The cash-strapped agency accounts for approximately 25 percent of the 2012 forecast, yet its five-year capital program is only funded through next yea. While the MTA’s projected $3.5 billion in 2011 capital spending seems secure, it is uncertain how much of the $7.6 billion in planned 2012 spending will actually materialize.”

The organization’s chair echoed those comments. “The MTA’s financial woes are a cause of great concern for the region,” Peter Marchetto said. “A fully-funded capital program means greater regional mobility, a more robust economy and middle-class construction jobs. According to our estimates, more than 18,000 construction jobs would disappear from the 2012 forecast if the MTA is only able to maintain capital spending at 2011 levels, rather than fully funding its current five-year plan.”

What brightens my mood, though, is the New York Building Congress’ clear commitment to the MTA’s capital plan. The report recommends the following:

A concerted effort must be made among all stakeholders, including the City, State, transit advocates and the building industry, to secure additional funding for the MTA’s capital plan. Potential vehicles include the long-delayed reauthorization of the federal surface transportation program and adoption of new sources of dedicated revenue, such as congestion pricing or East River bridge tolls.

Hallelujah. Political support!

The New York Building Congress is, of course, a self-interested industry group, and its constituents want the MTA to have money because then they’ll get that money in return. We have to engage in the Faustian bargain of the supporting the people who are responsible for construction delays and engineering nightmares.

Yet, we also can’t and shouldn’t discount the influence of the construction industry. The New York Building Congress is a potentially powerful ally for the MTA and transit advocates in the region. If they can reach the right people in state government and convince the right politicians to support the right projects, the MTA and transit riders throughout the region will stand to benefit. Politics might make strange bedfellows sometimes, and while I’d want the construction industry to better budget and plan its transit projects, without it, we might not have any capital transit projects at all.

October 28, 2010 10 comments
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