I was under the impression (mistaken?) That the City Hall station exists but is closed off. With all of the Subway exploration that has happened in the past decade, has anyone gotten access to see it? Thanks.
Railroad Forums
Moderator: Otto Vondrak
Otto Vondrak wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2017 2:18 pm Electric freight operated by RTC continued one more year until 1957.I believe the last electric freight in NYS was SBK in Brooklyn into the 1970s?
The only private trolley operation in New York State is the trolley at New York Museum of Transportation, which had its first test run off live overhead wire in 2001, and has operated
regularly since 2008.
INSIDE THE RUINS OF THE ABANDONED ROCHESTER SUBWAY
Beneath the streets of downtown Rochester lies the remains of the seldom heard-of, but once bustling Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway; simply known to locals at the time as ‘the Subway.’ It operated for just under 30 years when poor planning and the incorporation of the interstate highway system prevented it from being used to its fullest potential. Today, nearly 70 years after it ceased passenger service, only a few traces of the subway remain.
Learn more about the remnants of the Rochester subway and other abandoned locations in the Finger Lakes region at an upcoming live virtual talk with photographer John Lazarro, author of A Vanishing New York: Ruins Across the Empire State, on July 12th! This talk is free for Untapped New York Insiders. Not an Insider yet? Become a member today and get your first month free with code JOINUS.
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RailKevin wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 1:23 pm I am surprised they were able to walk all the way through the subway. Many years ago (1990's), a friend and I explored from the west end along the freight track connection to R&S. The tunnel ended at a large overhead door near the Gannett Building. It's my understanding they got carloads of paper back then.The area around the former City Hall Station that Gannett had partitioned off as a newsprint paper warehouse has been reopened for many years. Once Gannett moved their printing operations to Greece their walls and overhead door were removed. The subway bed from beneath the former LVRR station to the ramp to the former R&S connection is now clear.
We also explored from the library end, but we could not go past the west end of the aquaduct near the Gannett Building.
Jeff Smith wrote: ↑Tue Jun 13, 2023 6:00 am https://untappedcities.com/2023/06/12/a ... er-subway/I wonder (which climate change drives people back north) if it would be possible to dig out, and resurrect the subway?
INSIDE THE RUINS OF THE ABANDONED ROCHESTER SUBWAY
Beneath the streets of downtown Rochester lies the remains of the seldom heard-of, but once bustling Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway; simply known to locals at the time as ‘the Subway.’ It operated for just under 30 years when poor planning and the incorporation of the interstate highway system prevented it from being used to its fullest potential. Today, nearly 70 years after it ceased passenger service, only a few traces of the subway remain.
Learn more about the remnants of the Rochester subway and other abandoned locations in the Finger Lakes region at an upcoming live virtual talk with photographer John Lazarro, author of A Vanishing New York: Ruins Across the Empire State, on July 12th! This talk is free for Untapped New York Insiders. Not an Insider yet? Become a member today and get your first month free with code JOINUS.
...
scratchyX1 wrote:What for?
I wonder (which climate change drives people back north) if it would be possible to dig out, and resurrect the subway?
scratchyX1 wrote:The region filling up with people, and thus gridlock.I disagree. People are leaving New York. People remaining near cities are moving outward. Remote work is much more common. We could overload the forum by listing the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of companies which have left Rochester since 1956. Center city is no longer a destination for work nor shopping. Remember Midtown Plaza? Kodak HQ? The Xerox offices? Some people are even unwilling to go into the city itself due to crime. And for those who DO go, we have expressways to get you in and out much easier than many cities. There is a bus system as well.
scratchyX1 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 21, 2023 12:53 pm The region filling up with people, and thus gridlock.I promise you this region is not filling up with people. People can't wait to leave this state for a variety of valid reasons.