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Amtrak Tries Picking Up the ARC Pieces With “Gateway Project”

This morning, NJ’s Senators Frank Lautenberg and Robert Menendez joined Amtrak President Joseph Boardman to make the exciting announcement that Amtrak will try to take the lead on a new trans-Hudson rail project, the “Gateway Project.” The agency has proposed a $50 million engineering study that will take advantage of the work done for the ARC Tunnel. It says the project can be completed as early as 2020, at an estimated cost of $13.5 billion (which includes the cost of replacing the Portal Bridge).

The project includes two new tunnels that would accommodate an additional 13 NJ Transit trains and 8 Amtrak trains into New York City per hour, compared to the 25 NJ Transit trains/hour ARC would have. Its new tracks would go into the planned Moynihan Station and a new Penn Station South in shallower tunnels than those planned for ARC. As currently proposed, the project does not include ARC’s Secaucus “loop tracks” that would have created one-seat rides for riders of the Pascack Valley, Port Jervis, and Main/Bergen County Lines. However, it would allow for one-seat rides from the southern end of the North Jersey Coast Line and other places which currently face a two-seat ride because of limited NJ-NYC tunnel capacity. The project also includes improvements which are part of Amtrak’s plan to eventually run high-speed rail in the Northeast Corridor.

In a statement, Tri-State, Environment New Jersey, and the Sierra Club’s NJ chapter called the new study “exciting news” and applauded NJ’s Senate delegation for “stepping into the breach and standing up for transit riders and the transportation needs of our region.” They also said improved bus service across the Hudson was needed now, and called on Gov. Christie to get behind both near-term bus improvements and the new Gateway Tunnel.

An increased federal role has jump-started transportation projects in the past. Connecticut’s New Haven-Springfield Rail Line was boosted after ConnDOT reworked the project so it could be positioned to take advantage of federal high-speed rail funds.

Whether an Amtrak-led trans-Hudson tunnel project will fare any better than ARC may come down to Congressional politics. On the one hand, Republicans in the House Transportation & Infrastructure Committee are pushing high-speed rail in the Northeast Corridor. But those Republicans are no friend of Amtrak, having previously said the agency should get out of the fast train business and leave it to private firms. Meanwhile, the GOP’s deficit hawks have taken direct aim at transportation spending.

If the tunnel is to open to trains by 2020, as Amtrak suggests, funding commitments would need to be lined up in the next few years. The federal agency will reportedly “take a lead in finding ways to pay the cost and will look for contributions from local, regional and state governments including New Jersey, New York State, New York City,” the Port Authority, the MTA, and private investors.

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[…] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Tri-State, AV. AV said: RT @Tri_State: Amtrak's "Gateway Project" is exciting news http://bit.ly/edyUdI @FrankLautenberg and @SenatorMenendez stepped up to the … […]

Clark Morris
Clark Morris
13 years ago

Amtrak can save money by reusing the work NJT did for the tunnel and Portal Bridge excluding the fiasco of the deep level station. Since more than 276 million was spent on this work (EIS, preliminary design work and some drilling), this could bee used to both repay the federal government and be New Jersey’s contribution to the new tunnels.

R Troy
R Troy
13 years ago

I like this idea a lot better then digging a tunnel to Macy’s! But instead, this still involves the Pat M Taj Mahal Food Court building, far from most of the subway lines, and it involves adding to Penn to the South, which could take decades to do and doesn’t seem justified in any way. And given the price tag, I’d guess that this is just as gold and graft plated as I’m guessing the Macy’s proposal was.

clever-title
clever-title
13 years ago

What I have never understood is that the PRR expected to build a 3rd and 4th tunnel under the Hudson. Why don’t they re-use the plans the Pennsy developed?
http://books.google.com/books?id=qUB4gRby940C&pg=PA66&dq=conquering+gotham+additional+tunnels&hl=en&ei=x1lXTYizI4uDtgfRws2nDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAA#v=snippet&q=third%20and%20fourth%20tunnel&f=false

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[…] focus on the Northeast Corridor. But he’s also said that Amtrak, whose Gateway Project would add needed rail capacity between New Jersey and New York City, will “never be capable of developing the corridor to […]

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[…] on life support. The bill also includes $15 million for study of Amtrak’s Gateway Tunnel, a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River that would increase rail capacity on the Northeast Corridor for both Amtrak […]

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[…] the cancellation of Access to the Region’s Core (ARC) in late 2010, the “Gateway” tunnel proposal has emerged as the leading alternative project to expand tunnel capacity and has […]

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[…] 2008, expires in October. Congress needs to act to extend funding for rail, so projects like the Gateway Tunnel between New York and New Jersey and the second phase of the New Haven-Springfield Rail […]

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[…] sustainable cross-Hudson transit infrastructure. Amtrak’s proposed Gateway project would significantly expand and improve NJ Transit service as well as provide additional one-seat rides to Penn Station. So far, the right-of-way has […]

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[…] long-term solution is to try again, and that’s exactly what Amtrak is doing with the Gateway Tunnel, a plan that took an important step forward last week when the MTA resolved to preserve a […]

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