NYC Subway Line Envisioned in 1919 Finally Opens

Ground was broken for 2nd Avenue Subway in 1972
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jan 2, 2017 1:35 AM CST
After 98-Year Wait, NYC Opens New Subway Line
MTA Chairman and CEO Thomas Prendergast , center left, and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, center right, enter the newly opened 96th Street station of the Second Ave. Subway along with riders in New York Sunday, Jan. 1, 2017. The opening of three new stations on the newly opened Second Ave. subway marks...   (Craig Ruttle)

New Yorkers' 98-year wait to take a subway under Manhattan's far Upper East Side ended Sunday when three new stations on the Second Avenue line opened to the public. The first train left the station at East 96th Street at noon after a speech by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who pushed to meet a New Year's Day deadline for the long-delayed project, the AP reports. "I hope when you go down there you really feel how much hard work and time and patience it's taken to get to this point," Cuomo said. "It's incredible. This is not your grandfather's station." The nearly 2-mile segment adds stations along Second Avenue at 96th, 86th, and 72nd streets and a new connection to an existing subway line at 63rd Street. The line was first envisioned in 1919.

Seen as crucial to alleviating congestion in the nation's biggest subway system, it is on a line expected to carry about 200,000 riders a day. The entire system transports about 5.6 million riders on an average weekday. The mood was festive on the first train, with many riders wearing hats that read Second Avenue Station. The city's transportation board was ready to award contracts for a Second Avenue subway in 1929, but the stock market crash and the Great Depression derailed the plan. Ground was broken in 1972, but a fiscal crisis in the city slammed the brakes on the project again. The project finally got into high gear when major tunneling work began in 2007. The $4.4 billion section opening was initially supposed to be completed in 2013. Delays stemmed partly from concerns about construction noise. (More New York City subway stories.)

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