World Trade Center (PATH station)

World Trade Center Transportation Hub

The WTC Transportation Hub in February 2016
Location World Trade Center
New York City, NY, USA
Coordinates 40°42′42″N 74°00′38″W / 40.711787°N 74.010525°W / 40.711787; -74.010525Coordinates: 40°42′42″N 74°00′38″W / 40.711787°N 74.010525°W / 40.711787; -74.010525
Owned by Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
Line(s)
Platforms 4 island platforms
Tracks 6
Connections New York City Subway:
at Park Place
at Chambers Street – World Trade Center
at Cortlandt Street
NYCT Bus: M5
Construction
Disabled access Yes
History
Opened 1903, 2016 (as WTC transportation hub)
Rebuilt 1971, 2003 (temporary station)
Electrified 600V (DC) Third Rail
Traffic
Passengers (2006) 12.1 millionIncrease 9%
Services
Preceding station   PATH   Following station
  Regular service  
toward Newark
NWK–WTCTerminus
  Weekdays only  
toward Hoboken
HOB–WTCTerminus

World Trade Center is a terminal station in Lower Manhattan for PATH rail service. It was originally opened on July 19, 1909, as Hudson Terminal, but was torn down and rebuilt as World Trade Center, which opened in 1971. Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, a temporary station opened in 2003. This station serves as the terminus for the Newark – World Trade Center and Hoboken – World Trade Center routes. The station house opened on March 4, 2016, as the World Trade Center Transportation Hub.

Station layout

G Street level Entrance/Exit to Vesey Street and West Broadway/Greenwich Street
Entrance/Exit to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum
Escalators and elevator to mezzanine, (Shops, ATMs, under construction)
At-grade connection to Cortlandt Street subway station ( trains, under construction)
B1
Upper Concourse
[1]
North mezzanine Ticket machines, one-way faregates, concourse, ramps and staircases to West and East mezzanines
West mezzanine Elevators and stairs to tracks 4, 5, and 6
West Concourse to Brookfield Place
East mezzanine Elevators, escalators, and stairs to tracks 1, 2, and 3
Cortlandt Street platforms Transfer to New York City Subway  trains (under construction)
B2
Lower Concourse
[1]
Passageways (under construction) Transfer to New York City Subway (  trains at World Trade Center and  trains at Fulton Street; under construction)
B3[1] Mezzanine Transfer between platforms
B4
Platforms
[1]
Track 1      HOB–WTC toward Hoboken (Exchange Place)
Island platform (Platform A), doors will open on the left, right
Track 2      NWK–WTC toward Newark (Exchange Place)
Island platform (Platform B), doors will open on the left, right
Track 3      NWK–WTC toward Newark (Exchange Place)
Temporary wall
Track 4 No regular service
Island platform (Platform C), under construction
Track 5 No regular service
Island platform (Platform D), under construction
Track 6 No regular service

The station currently has four island platforms in a basement four stories underground, with two under construction.[1] Tracks 1 2 & 3 are in use. The new Platform A, next to New Tracks 1 and 2, opened as part of the Transportation Hub on February 25, 2014.[2][3][4] Track 1 on Platform A only serves HOB-WTC trains on weekdays, while full-time NWK-WTC trains use Platform B and part of Platform A between tracks 2 and 3, which opened on May 7, 2015.[5]

Hudson Terminal

Main article: Hudson Terminal
Hudson Terminal (right) and the Singer Building (left)

Hudson Terminal was built by the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad at the turn of the twentieth century and was located between Greenwich, Cortlandt, Church, and Fulton Streets. The Hudson Terminal included two 22-story office buildings located above the station.

The terminal was an architectural and engineering marvel of its time, designed with ramps to allow pedestrian traffic to flow in and out of the station quickly and easily.[6] The station was served by two single-track tubes connected by a loop to speed train movements. The loop included five tracks and 3 platforms (2 center island and one side) and is somewhat similar to the current arrangement.[7] By 1914, passenger volume at the Hudson Terminal had reached 30,535,500 annually.[6] Volume nearly doubled by 1922; with 59,221,354 passengers that year at the Hudson Terminal.[8]

Overall ridership on New Jersey's Hudson and Manhattan Railroad (H&M) declined substantially from a high of 113 million riders in 1927 to 26 million in 1958, after new automobile tunnels and bridges opened across the Hudson River.[9] The State of New Jersey was interested in getting the Port Authority to take over the railroad, but the Port Authority long viewed it as something unprofitable that they were never interested in. In the late 1950s, the Port Authority proposed to build a "world trade center" in New York City, on the east side of Lower Manhattan along the East River.

As a bi-state agency, Port Authority projects require approval from both the states of New Jersey and New York. Toward the end of 1961, negotiations with outgoing New Jersey Governor Robert B. Meyner regarding the World Trade Center project reached a stalemate. In December 1961, Port Authority executive director Austin J. Tobin met with newly elected New Jersey Governor Richard J. Hughes, and made a proposal to shift the World Trade Center project to a west side site where the Hudson Terminal was located.[10]

In acquiring the Hudson & Manhattan Railroad, the Port Authority would also acquire the Hudson Terminal and other buildings which were deemed obsolete.[10] On January 22, 1962, the two states reached an agreement to allow the Port Authority to take over the railroad and to build the World Trade Center on Manhattan's lower west side.[11] The shift in location for the World Trade Center to a site more convenient to New Jersey, together with Port Authority acquisition of the H&M Railroad, brought New Jersey to agreement in support of the World Trade Center project.

Old PATH stations

Original PATH station

Photos of the original WTC bathtub from Liberty Street (1969)
Looking northeast. The frame of the South Tower is on the left. PATH eastbound tunnel F can be seen in the center, penetrating the slurry wall on its way up Cortlandt Street to Hudson Terminal. The slurry wall runs along the west side of Greenwich Street. The IRT subway tunnel runs below the street (behind the slurry wall).
Looking northwest. PATH eastbound tunnel F supported on a temporary trestle in foreground. Slurry wall with tie-backs can be seen on the left, and the frame of the North Tower in the background. Also note the since-removed West Side Elevated Highway, which ran above West Street (today's West Side Highway).

Groundbreaking on the World Trade Center took place in 1966. The site of the World Trade Center was located on landfill, with the bedrock located 65 metres (213 ft) below.[12] A new method was used to construct a slurry wall that would keep water from the Hudson River out. During excavation of the site and construction of the towers, the original Hudson Tubes remained in service as elevated tunnels. The Hudson Terminal was shut down in 1971 when a new PATH station was completed.[13] The new WTC PATH station cost $35 million to build. At the time, the station had a passenger volume of 85,000 daily.[14]

The new PATH station opened on July 6, 1971, and was sited at a different location from the original Hudson Terminal.[15] Larger balloon loops in the PATH station platform allowed 10-car trains to be utilized, as the previous station could handle 6-car trains due to tight loops.[13] While construction of the World Trade Center neared completion, a temporary corridor was provided to take passengers between the station and a temporary entrance on Church Street. When it opened, the station had nine high-speed escalators between the platform level and the mezzanine level.[14] The WTC PATH station was served by Newark – World Trade Center and Hoboken – World Trade Center trains. The PATH station was connected to the World Trade Center towers, via an underground concourse and a shopping center. There were also underground connections to the New York City Subway (A C E trains at World Trade Center, and N R trains at Cortlandt Street). By 2001, the volume of passengers using the WTC PATH station was approximately 25,000 daily.[16]

The station did not sustain significant damage during the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, although a section of ceiling in the station collapsed and trapped dozens.[17][18] Within a week, the Port Authority was able to resume PATH service to the World Trade Center.[19] On September 11, 2001, the station was shut down by the Port Authority after the first attack. A train from Newark that came into the terminal at 8:55 am stopped only to pick up passengers. A second train, from Hoboken, came through at 9:00 am but did not stop and returned to New Jersey. PATH sent an empty train to the station at 9:10 am to pick up a dozen PATH employees and a homeless individual leaving the PATH station empty.[20]

Temporary PATH station

Platform of temporary station
Inaugural train arrives from Newark at PATH's temporary WTC station at 2:08 p.m. (November 23, 2003)

With the station destroyed, service to Lower Manhattan was suspended for over two years. Exchange Place, the next station on the Newark – World Trade Center line, also had to be closed because it could not operate as a terminal station. Instead, two uptown services (Newark – 33rd Street, red on the official PATH map; and Hoboken – 33rd Street, blue on the map) and one intrastate New Jersey service (Hoboken – Journal Square, green on the map) were put into operation.[21]

Cleanup of the Exchange Place station was needed after the attacks. In addition, the downtown Hudson tubes had been flooded, which destroyed the track infrastructure.[22] Modifications to the tracks were also required since the Exchange Place station was never designed as a terminal station.[21] The Exchange Place station re-opened in June 2003. PATH service to Lower Manhattan was restored when a temporary station opened on November 23, 2003. The inaugural train was the same one that had been used for the evacuation.

The temporary PATH station was designed by Port Authority chief architect Robert I. Davidson[23] and constructed at a cost of $323 million.[24] The station features a canopy entrance along Church Street and a 118-by-12 foot mosaic mural, "Iridescent Lightning," by Giulio Candussio[23] of the Scuola Mosaicisti del Friuli in Spilimbergo, Italy. The station is also adorned with opaque panel walls inscribed with inspirational quotes attesting to the greatness and resilience of New York City. These panels partially shield the World Trade Center site from view.

In the 9/11 attacks, some sections of the station, including the floor and the signage on the northeast corner, were only lightly damaged in the collapse of the World Trade Center. These sections of the station were retained in the temporary station, and will remain in the new station, where it connects with the platforms for the 2 3 A C E trains. Following its reopening and the resumption of Newark – World Trade Center and Hoboken – World Trade Center services, the station quickly reclaimed its status as the busiest station in the PATH system.

The station was also home to a Storycorps booth, which opened in 2005. Through this program, visitors could arrange to give oral recorded histories of the disaster. The booth closed in Spring 2007 to make way for construction at the World Trade Center site.[25] In June 2007, the street entrance to the temporary station was closed and demolished as part of the ongoing site construction. A set of new staircases was constructed several feet to the south, and a "tent" structure was added to provide cover from the elements. The tent structure, by Voorsanger Architects and installed at a cost of $275,000, was designed to have an "aspiring quality" according to architect Bartholomew Voorsanger.[26] That entrance on Church Street was closed in April 2008 when the entrance was relocated once again. On April 1, 2008, the third new temporary entrance to the PATH station opened for commuters. The entrance is located on Vesey Street, adjacent to 7 World Trade Center. It will serve as the entrance until the opening of the permanent station, designed by Calatrava,[27] and also to make way for a Performing Arts Center if the proposed building finds approval.

World Trade Center Transportation Hub

The completed station at night in May 2016
Preliminary site plans for the new World Trade Center

The World Trade Center Transportation Hub is the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey's name for the new PATH station and the associated transit and retail complex which opened on March 3, 2016. The station's renaming took place when the station reopened.[28][29] Designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, the Transportation Hub is composed of a train station with a large and open mezzanine under the National September 11 Memorial plaza.[30] This mezzanine is connected to an aboveground head house structure, called the Oculus, located between 2 World Trade Center and 3 World Trade Center, as well as public concourses under the various towers in the World Trade Center complex.[29][31][32]

In addition, the station was designed to connect the PATH to the New York City Subway system, and to facilitate a below ground east-west passageway that connects to the various modes of transportation in Lower Manhattan, from the Fulton Center to the Battery Park City Ferry Terminal. Furthermore, to replace the lost retail space from the original Mall at the World Trade Center, significant portions of the Hub will be devoted to the new 365,000 square foot Westfield World Trade Center mall.[33]

Background

A large transit station was not part of the 2003 Memory Foundations master plan for the site by Daniel Libeskind, which called for a smaller station along the lines of the original subterranean station that existed beneath the World Trade Center. Libeskind's design called for the Oculus space to be left open, forming a "Wedge of Light" so that sun rays around the autumnal equinox would hit the World Trade Center footprints each September. In early 2004, the Port Authority, which owns the land, modified the Libeskind plan to include a large transportation station downtown, intended to rival Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal. In a nod to the Libeskind concept, the Oculus was built to maximize the effect of the autumnal equinox rays.

Design

Platform level

Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, designer of the station, said the Oculus resembles a bird being released from a child's hand. The roof was originally designed to mechanically open to increase light and ventilation to the enclosed space. Herbert Muschamp, architecture critic of The New York Times, compared the design to the Bethesda Terrace and Fountain in Central Park, and wrote in 2004:

Santiago Calatrava's design for the World Trade Center PATH station should satisfy those who believe that buildings planned for ground zero must aspire to a spiritual dimension. Over the years, many people have discerned a metaphysical element in Mr. Calatrava's work. I hope New Yorkers will detect its presence, too. With deep appreciation, I congratulate the Port Authority for commissioning Mr. Calatrava, the great Spanish architect and engineer, to design a building with the power to shape the future of New York. It is a pleasure to report, for once, that public officials are not overstating the case when they describe a design as breathtaking.[34]

Another New York Times' critic Michael Kimmelman wrote later in 2004:

The World Trade Center PATH Terminal by Santiago Calatrava, the renowned Spanish architect and engineer, is what we should have at ground zero. Not modified suburban malls with water fountains, but a major cultural contribution to our city.[35]

However, Calatrava's original soaring spike design was scaled back because of security issues. The New York Times observed in 2005:

In the name of security, Santiago Calatrava's bird has grown a beak. Its ribs have doubled in number and its wings have lost their interstices of glass.... [T]he main transit hall, between Church and Greenwich Streets, will almost certainly lose some of its delicate quality, while gaining structural expressiveness. It may now evoke a slender stegosaurus more than it does a bird.[36]

The design was further modified in 2008 to eliminate the opening and closing roof mechanism because of budget and space constraints.[37]

In 2014 The Atlantic's CityLab criticized the emphasis placed on form over function, citing design flaws driven by aesthetic choices that detract from the station's usability as a transit hub:

...the Port Authority's new hub fails its customers, the PATH-riding public. One platform is already completed, and its design flaws are obvious. Staircases are too narrow to accommodate the morning crowds who come streaming out of the trains from Hoboken, Jersey City, and beyond, while the narrow platforms quickly fill with irate commuters. Anyone trying to catch a train back to the Garden State risks a stampede. The marble, bright and sterile, picks up any spill, and a drop of water creates dangerously slippery conditions until a Port Authority janitor scurries out of some unseen door, mop in hand. Passenger flow and comfort, two of the most important elements of terminal design, seem to be an afterthought. The PATH Hub is shaping up to be an example of design divorced from purpose.
Benjamin Kabak, "Why Can't Transportation Mega-Projects Be Both Beautiful and Practical?", CityLab[38]

Steve Cuozzo of the New York Post described the station in 2014 as it was being built as "a self-indulgent monstrosity" and "a hideous waste of public money".[39] Michael Kimmelman, architecture critic for The New York Times, referred to the structure as "a kitsch stegosaurus".[40] New York magazine referred to it in 2015 as it neared completion as a "Glorious Boondoggle" and, while withholding final judgement on the unfinished structure, did note the "Jurassic" appearance.[41] The New York Post editorial board also described the station when it opened in 2016 as the "world's most obscenely overpriced commuter rail station — and possibly its ugliest", deeming the transit hub a "white elephant" and "monstrosity", comparing the Oculus to a "giant gray-white space insect".[42]

The station has also stirred problems with developer Larry Silverstein, who owns the lease for the World Trade Center site, since it took away available space for his proposed buildings.

West Concourse

The West Concourse

The new West Street pedestrian underpass (the West Concourse, formerly the "east-west connector") links the WTC station mezzanine with a new transit pavilion at Battery Park City's Brookfield Place (formerly World Financial Center) on the west side of the World Trade Center site just south of 1 WTC and across West Street. It opened on the afternoon of October 23, 2013. Access to 1 World Trade Center from the West Concourse was also possible for employees when the tower opened on November 3, 2014. On May 29, the same day the tower's observatory opened, the entrance to the observation deck opened.[43][44]

Cost and delays

The Transportation Hub has been dubbed "the world's most expensive transportation hub" due to its massive cost for reconstruction—$3.74 billion dollars.[39][45] By contrast, the proposed two-mile PATH extension connecting Newark Liberty International Airport to the NWK-WTC service is projected to cost $1.5 billion.[46] The hub has also been criticized for being delayed almost 10 years.[47]

Originally, the reconstruction was to be funded by the Federal Transit Administration, which gave approximately $1.9 billion to the project. The costs of the hub were still expensive, but it was to be finished at budget in 2009. In 2014 dollars, the cost of the hub and the adjacent Fulton Center, combined, is $5.1 billion.[48] The hub cost twice as much in 2014 as it should have originally cost in 2004.[47] A single hallway in the elegantly constructed hub cost $225 million and was billed as the "world's most expensive hallway",[49] while construction, maintenance, and management alone cost $635 million; the Port Authority awarded several subcontracts, most of them costly.[47] In addition, over $500 million in cost savings was overlooked.[47] The price of the station was further driven up by Calatrava's architectural decisions.[a 1] He wanted to import custom-made steel from a northern Italian factory, which cost $474 million, and have a columnless, aesthetically based design; skylights in the ground, instead of trees;[a 2] and large, soaring "wings", or rafters.[47] Another $335 million was added to the cost overrun due to the fact that the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey had to build around the New York City Subway's IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line (carrying the 1 trains), since the Metropolitan Transportation Authority had refused to close the line due to fears of inconveniencing commuters from Staten Island taking the Staten Island Ferry. The line had to be supported on a bridge over the station instead of on columns through the station.[47] In 2012, Hurricane Sandy damaged several hundred million dollars worth of materials.[47]

The hub's skyrocketing costs also attracted much controversy, with an editor at The New York Times saying that "Mr. Calatrava is amassing an unusually long list of projects marred by cost overruns, delays and litigation", referring to other projects around the world designed by Calatrava that have been over-budgeted.[50] Especially given the fact that the current station has a ridership of only 46,000 daily passengers (compared to 250,000 at Grand Central Terminal), some think that the renovation is overpriced and overstylized.[47]

On November 5, 2015, the transportation hub was delayed to early 2016, due to a leaking roof.[51]

The outgoing director of the Port Authority, Pat Foye, declined to hold an event to celebrate the opening of the Hub, describing it as "symbol of excess" and noting he was "troubled with the huge cost" of the construction project.[52]

Construction timeline

Concourse above PATH tracks

Adjacent transit connections

The current temporary PATH station does not have a direct connection to any adjacent subway stations, unlike previous incarnations of the terminal. Vesey Street has been pedestrianized to allow as a passageway between the World Trade Center subway station and the PATH station entrance. The PATH station was previously connected to the Cortlandt Street IRT station, but that station was severely damaged by the September 11 attacks and is being rebuilt as part of the Transportation Hub.[60]

Since the Hudson Terminal was demolished, Lower Manhattan has not had an ambitious transit or railroad center, as the former complex at the World Trade Center was built beneath the buildings. The new station is designed to connect the PATH to the New York City Subway system. The 1 services, which runs through the Transportation Hub, was reconstructed under this project to run above the PATH mezzanine, and the rebuilt Cortlandt Street IRT station will have direct access into the Hub. There will also be direct access to the Chambers Street – World Trade Center / Park Place station complex, and the Cortlandt Street BMT station.[61] In addition, the Dey Street Passageway along Dey Street connects the Transportation Hub east to the Fulton Center, providing access to the 2 3 4 5 A C J Z N R services. A passageway, known as the West Concourse, connects west to Brookfield Place and the Battery Park City Ferry Terminal. A proposal for a connection to the Long Island Rail Road and John F. Kennedy International Airport via a new tunnel under the East River, the Lower Manhattan-Jamaica/JFK Transportation Project, was studied starting in 2004, but as of 2009 was a lower priority than other projects competing for funding.[62]

Current services include:

Station service legend
Stops all times
Stops all times except late nights
Stops late nights only
Stops weekdays only
Stops rush hours in the peak direction only
Time period details
Services Line Station
      2 
      3 
IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line Park Place
      A 
      C 
IND Eighth Avenue Line Chambers Street
      E  IND Eighth Avenue Line World Trade Center
      N 
      R 
BMT Broadway Line Cortlandt Street (currently not connected to the complex)

The Fulton Street station complex (where the Fulton Center opened in November 2014) is two blocks away to the east and features the following services:

Services Line
      2 
      3 
IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line
      4 
      5 
IRT Lexington Avenue Line
      A 
      C 
IND Eighth Avenue Line
      J 
      Z 
BMT Nassau Street Line

Also, the M5 New York City Bus route runs northbound on Church Street and southbound to South Ferry on Broadway.

Notes

  1. According to The New York Times:
    Suggestions from independent engineers and architects that the Oculus be even smaller [were rebuffed.] ... Calatrava and his partners said that the impact and utility of the Oculus would be diminished if it were shrunken further, that the temporary station did not meet requirements for circulation of air and pedestrians, and that columns would interrupt visitors’ movement and provide a potential target for bombers.[47]
  2. The Bloomberg administration later chose to add trees instead of skylights, since the station was close to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. This required the mezzanine's roof to be redesigned to hold a heavier weight, which was also costly.[47]

References

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  60. Work at Cortlandt Street station #1 train continues above ground at WTC Transportation Hub
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External links

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