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Rochester subway

The Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway (reporting mark RSB), more commonly known as the Rochester subway, was a light rail rapid transit line in the city of Rochester, New York, from 1927 to 1956. The subway was constructed in the bed of the old Erie Canal, which allowed the route to be grade-separated for its entire length. Two miles (3.2 km) of the route through downtown were constructed in a cut-and-cover tunnel that became Broad Street, and the only underground portion of the subway. The Rochester Subway was designed to reduce interurban traffic on city streets, and to facilitate freight interchange between the railroads. The line was operated on a contract basis by New York State Railways until Rochester Transit Corporation (RTC) took over in 1938. The last day of passenger service was June 30, 1956. Portions of the right-of-way were used for expressway construction, while the rest was abandoned and filled in over the years. The largest remaining section is a stretch of tunnel under Broad Street from Exchange Street to the intersection of Court Street and South Avenue.

Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway (Rochester subway)
Former subway bed under Broad Street
Overview
HeadquartersRochester, New York
Reporting markRSB
LocaleCity of Rochester and Brighton, New York
Dates of operationDecember 1, 1927; 95 years ago (1927-12-01)[1]–June 30, 1956; 67 years ago (1956-06-30)[1]
PredecessorErie Canal
SuccessorInterstate 490
Interstate 590
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification600v DC
LengthAbout 7 miles (11 km)
Rochester subway
General Motors
shops
 
Driving Park
Lexington
Glenwood
Emerson
Kodak Park
Dewey Ave surface connection
Edgerton Park
originally Felix Street
Lyell Avenue
NYC / RL&B connection
tunnel portal
Oak Street Loop
B&O connection
Main & Oak
storage tracks
City Hall
tunnel portal
Court Street
LV connection
South Ave
Loop
Clinton
(proposed)
Meigs–Goodman
Monroe
Culver
Colby
Winton
former shops
East Avenue
R&S connection
Halfway
Highland
Ashbourne
NYC connection
Elmwood
Sunset
Rowlands
R&E connection

History Edit

Construction Edit

Planning for the construction of a subway in Rochester began around 1910 as the Erie Canal was re-routed from downtown Rochester to pass south of the city. The plans were supported by a feasibility study from engineer George F. Swain and promoted by Mayor Hiram Edgerton and other civic leaders. In 1918, the new canal route was completed, and in 1919 the abandoned portion of the canal was bought by the city to serve as the route of the subway.[2] It was believed the subway would provide several benefits to the city. In addition to providing a cross-town commute to residents in the northwest and southeast of the city, the railroad would double as a belt line connecting the five freight railroads that then ran through Rochester, which were previously disconnected. Interurban trolleys would also be routed into the subway to reduce traffic congestion on the surface streets.[3] Construction was approved by the city council on November 22, 1921, and began in May 1922.[4]: 11  The project had universal approval from Rochester's newspapers, chamber of commerce, and labor unions.[3]

 
Excavation of the subway bed in 1925

In the city center, a tunnel was dug with a new street, Broad Street, located above. Only 2 miles (3.2 km) were in the tunnel, with the rest of the route in open cut. The term "subway" did not refer to the tunnel, but to the route being grade-separated and operated as rapid transit. The segment over the Genesee River utilized the former Second Genesee Aqueduct.[5] The subway's construction encountered several delays as more rock needed to be excavated than anticipated, and it was not completed until 1927. The construction bonds would not be paid off until 1960, after the subway had closed, at a cost of over $19 million to the city.[6]

New York State Railways (1927–1938) Edit

 
Rochester subway entrance Court Street postcard

Operations began on December 1, 1927 under contract with New York State Railways.[4]: 40 [7] Ten former Utica and Mohawk Valley Railway 2000-series cars were transferred from the Utica Lines to provide dedicated service in the Rochester subway. Freight service was provided by an electric locomotive purchased from General Electric.[4]: 90 

Interurban railways began using the new subway almost immediately, and were later joined by freight railroads. Starting on the first day of operations in 1927, the Rochester and Eastern Rapid Railway connected at Rowlands and terminated at City Hall station. The Rochester and Syracuse Railroad began using the subway in 1928, using a new connection established just east of Winton Road station. The Rochester, Lockport and Buffalo Railroad entered from the west side starting in 1928 using a ramp constructed at Lyell Avenue.[4]: 41–44  These latter two ramps were also used by the New York Central Railroad for freight traffic. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad connected to the subway with a ramp along Broad Street, and the Lehigh Valley Railroad connected at the Court Street Station.[4]: 89 

In 1929, a special subway–surface operation began using a ramp at Emerson station to connect with the Dewey Avenue line to provide rush-hour service to Kodak Park, a major employer in the city. On June 1, 1929, local service on the Rochester subway was extended from Winton Road to Rowlands loop.[4]: 45 

In the aftermath of the Great Depression, New York State Railways fell into bankruptcy along with other railroads that operated interurban lines in the area. By 1931, all of the connecting interurban railways had ceased operation leaving the subway as an east–west line with no rail connections outside the line.[6] While the company was in receivership, New York State Railways continued to operate the subway on a contract basis with the city of Rochester. Public opinion of the subway turned negative due to low ridership.[6]

Rochester Transit Corp. (1938–1956) Edit

The former Rochester Lines of New York State Railways were reorganized as the Rochester Transit Corporation on August 2, 1938, and operation of the subway was transferred to the new company. On the same day, the 2000-series cars were replaced with newer and faster 46-series steel cars acquired from the abandoned Utica & Mohawk Valley Railway in 1937.[4]: 47–50  Harold S. W. MacFarlin, the city commerce commissioner, believed that the subway could be saved by faster and expanded service and promoted plans to extend the subway line.[4]: 48, 61 

During World War II, wartime rationing made the subway popular once again, and annual ridership peaked at over 5 million in 1946 and 1947. Proposals to extend the line were briefly considered in the press, but ridership began declining again in 1948, and the city council made plans to abandon the subway and use its route for a connecting highway to the New York State Thruway instead.[8]

In an effort to cut costs, weekday service was reduced and Sunday service was eliminated in 1952.[4]: 76  The service contract was awarded on a month-to-month basis until the city council voted in 1955 to end all subway service on June 30, 1956.[4]: 83–87  Freight service was operated by RTC until September 1, 1957, when the remaining rail operations were turned over to the connecting New York Central (NYC) and Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) railroads.[4]: 94 

Expressways and freight (1956–1996) Edit

The subway bed from Court Street to Winton Road was used for the construction of a portion of the Eastern Expressway (I-490) in 1959, with the section from Winton Road to Rowlands used for I-590. Limited freight service operated by connecting railroads lasted on the western portion of the subway route from Court Street to General Motors until 1976, when the city of Rochester elected to fill the cut to eliminate maintenance on the numerous bridges. Rail freight deliveries in the subway tunnel continued until 1996, when Gannett Newspapers moved its printing operations from the Gannett Building which the subway ran under to another location. Capelli Sport Stadium was constructed on a portion of the filled-in cut in 2006.[citation needed]

Salvage and preservation Edit

 
The aqueduct in 2015

In 1976, after the announcement of the fill, the City of Rochester allowed the New York Museum of Transportation to collect the rail from the portion of the line being filled. The former rail is still in use by the museum. In 2010, when the city decided to fill the portion of the tunnel between Brown and the B&O ramp, the museum was allowed to collect the remaining rail, surviving switches and other railroad fixtures from the tunnel.[citation needed]

Rochester subway car 60 is at the Rochester and Genesee Valley Railroad Museum, where it has been undergoing restoration since 2016. Built in 1916 for Utica Railways and moved to Rochester in 1936, it is the only surviving example from the 12-car fleet that served the subway.[9][10] Car 60 was set aside for preservation in 1956, and was donated to the Rochester Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. The trolley car was loaned to other organizations and returned to the Rochester & Genesee Valley Railroad Museum in 1998, prior to restoration.[11] Locomotive L-2 was rescued from a Rochester scrap yard in the 1970s, and has been set aside for a potential future restoration by the New York Museum of Transportation.[12][better source needed]

Rolling stock Edit

Revenue equipment Edit

* Even numbers only.

Work fleet Edit

  • 014 Single-truck rotary plow
  • 0105 Jackson & Sharp Line car
  • 0200 Single-cab motor Differential flat-car
  • 0205 locomotive – Jewett Car Company of Newark, Ohio – 1903
  • 0214 Single-cab flat motor car
  • 0220 Single-cab Differential dump car
  • 0330 Differential dump car trailer
  • 0331 Differential dump car trailer
  • 0343 Work and tool car
  • 2002 Flatcar trailer
  • 2006 Flatcar trailer

Facilities Edit

  • Main Street Shops (until 1941)
  • General Motors Carbarn (built 1941)

Future of the tunnel Edit

 
Rochester NY Broad Street Bridge 2002

The property of the abandoned subway tunnel belongs to the city of Rochester. In recent decades, city officials have considered several plans to fill or renovate the tunnel. Maintenance of the tunnel cost the city $1.2 million in 2007.[13]

There were proposals to use some of the tunnels in a new rapid transit system. Another proposal was to transform the Broad Street Aqueduct into an underground walkway connecting the Rochester Riverside Convention Center with the Blue Cross Arena. A component of this walkway would include a Rochester Transportation Museum. Some suggested filling the remaining subway tunnel with water, re-routing the Erie Canal and restoring the aqueduct to its original purpose.[citation needed]

In 2004, Rochester city officials decided to fill the remaining subway tunnel with earth. This decision caused public outcry, since residents regard the subway as part of their history.[13]

On June 15, 2006, the city promised to form a committee to investigate all possible options. In July 2008, the city voted to fill in a portion of the tunnel, citing safety concerns. The westernmost end of the tunnel was filled as part of the Broad Street Tunnel Improvement project. Work began in spring 2010 at a cost between $14 and $16 million. The city removed the Broad Street section from East Main to Brown Street and filled that section of the subway tunnel, but rebuilt the former B&O ramp into what remains of the subway, making that ramp the western access point into the subway.[14] The remains of the Rochester Subway run from the B&O ramp just east of East Main Street to Court Street.

In 2009, The City released a comprehensive community based study entitled "Masterplan for the Broad Street Corridor and the Historic Erie Canal Aqueduct. The $1.2M Federally sponsored study was the result of extensive meetings with the community, business, planners, advocacy groups and downtown developers. At the heart of the study was a desire to develop the Aqueduct and surrounding district in such a manner that supports downtown development and serves as a source of community pride. After over a hundred meetings, the consensus was to re-water the Aqueduct and create Rochester's Historic Canal District.[citation needed]

The plan was endorsed by elected officials, a majority of Rochester citizens (73%), and numerous business leaders. The plan received the highest award (platinum)by the American Planning Association along with numerous distinguished accolades from AIA, ACEC and was voted "Rochester's Best Idea" by the readers of City Newspaper.[citation needed]

In 2017, the site of Court Street station was demolished to make way for a mixed-use commercial and luxury residential highrise eliminating the Court Street tunnel entrance. The city maintains a maintenance doorway underneath the Gannett Building. This entrance is not open to the public.[citation needed]

In 2018, a plan dubbed ROC the Riverway was unveiled that proposes removing the Broad Street level of the aqueduct and partially re-flooding the former canal and subway bed on the aqueduct with water similar to what was done with the historic canals at Canalside in Buffalo, NY and incorporate walkways to connect the nearby Blue Cross Arena with the nearby convention center.[15] The project moved to the planning and construction phase in 2022.[16]

Also in 2018, the city solicited bids to turn a remaining segment of tunnel between Main Street and Exchange Street into underground parking. There were no interested buyers.[17]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Passenger Runs End on Subway After 29 Years". The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. July 1, 1956. p. 5. Retrieved August 3, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.  
  2. ^ Lipman, Andrew David (April 1974). "The Rochester Subway: Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit" (PDF). Rochester History. XXXVI (2): 1–3.
  3. ^ a b Lipman, Andrew David (April 1974). "The Rochester Subway: Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit" (PDF). Rochester History. XXXVI (2): 5–11.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Amberger, Ron; Barrett, Dick; Marling, Greg (1985). Canal Boats, Interurbans & Trolleys. Rochester: National Railway Historical Society. ISBN 0-9605296-1-6.
  5. ^ Cornelia E. Brooke (May 1975). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Erie Canal: Second Genesee Aqueduct". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2009-11-01. See also: "Accompanying three photos".
  6. ^ a b c Lipman, Andrew David (April 1974). "The Rochester Subway: Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit" (PDF). Rochester History. XXXVI (2): 11–15.
  7. ^ Middleton, William (2003). Metropolitan Railways: Rapid Transit in America. p. 90. ISBN 0-253-34179-5. Retrieved 2008-12-08.
  8. ^ Lipman, Andrew David (April 1974). "The Rochester Subway: Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit" (PDF). Rochester History. XXXVI (2): 18–20.
  9. ^ Fuss, Breanna (2016-07-30). "Restoration Underway For Rochester's Sole Surviving Subway Car". Spectrum Local News. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  10. ^ "Rochester & Genesee Valley Railroad Museum shows off phase one of subway car restoration". Rochester First. 2016-06-19. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  11. ^ "Rochester Transit Corp. No. 60".
  12. ^ "NYMT Archive Pictures". Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  13. ^ a b Mercer, Laurie (October 31, 2007). "Rochester Ponders Future of Once Vibrant Subway". Construction Equipment Guide. Retrieved January 8, 2008.
  14. ^ "Subway Tunnel To Be Filled. This time they mean it. Probably". RochesterSubway.com. 2009-10-10. Retrieved 2010-01-24.
  15. ^ "ROC the Riverway". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-04-02.
  16. ^ WHAM (2022-04-12). ""Aqueduct Reimagined" project underway in downtown Rochester". WHAM. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  17. ^ "City eyes parking in Rochester's old subway tunnel". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-06-30.

Further reading Edit

  • Gordon, William Reed (1975). Ninety Four Years of Rochester Railways: Volume Two. Rochester, NY: William Reed Gordon. ISBN 9780910662123.
  • Amberger, Ron; Barrett, Dick; Marling, Greg (1985). Canal Boats, Interurbans & Trolleys: The Story of the Rochester Subway. Rochester, NY: Rochester Chapter, National Railway Historical Society. ISBN 0-9605296-1-6.

External links Edit

  • "The End of the Line" – a documentary about the Rochester Subway.
  • Car 60 at the Rochester & Genesee Valley Railroad Museum
  • RocWiki: Abandoned Subway

rochester, subway, rochester, industrial, rapid, transit, railway, reporting, mark, more, commonly, known, light, rail, rapid, transit, line, city, rochester, york, from, 1927, 1956, subway, constructed, erie, canal, which, allowed, route, grade, separated, en. The Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway reporting mark RSB more commonly known as the Rochester subway was a light rail rapid transit line in the city of Rochester New York from 1927 to 1956 The subway was constructed in the bed of the old Erie Canal which allowed the route to be grade separated for its entire length Two miles 3 2 km of the route through downtown were constructed in a cut and cover tunnel that became Broad Street and the only underground portion of the subway The Rochester Subway was designed to reduce interurban traffic on city streets and to facilitate freight interchange between the railroads The line was operated on a contract basis by New York State Railways until Rochester Transit Corporation RTC took over in 1938 The last day of passenger service was June 30 1956 Portions of the right of way were used for expressway construction while the rest was abandoned and filled in over the years The largest remaining section is a stretch of tunnel under Broad Street from Exchange Street to the intersection of Court Street and South Avenue Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway Rochester subway Former subway bed under Broad StreetOverviewHeadquartersRochester New YorkReporting markRSBLocaleCity of Rochester and Brighton New YorkDates of operationDecember 1 1927 95 years ago 1927 12 01 1 June 30 1956 67 years ago 1956 06 30 1 PredecessorErie CanalSuccessorInterstate 490Interstate 590TechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeElectrification600v DCLengthAbout 7 miles 11 km vteRochester subwayLegendGeneral Motorsshops Driving ParkB amp O to CharlotteNYC to CharlotteLexingtonGlenwoodEmersonKodak ParkDewey Ave surface connectionEdgerton Parkoriginally Felix StreetLyell AvenueNYC RL amp B connectiontunnel portalOak Street LoopB amp O connectionMain amp Oakstorage tracksCity HallBroad Street Bridgeover Genesee Rivertunnel portalCourt StreetLV connection South AveLoopClinton proposed Meigs GoodmanMonroeCulverColbyWintonformer shopsEast AvenueR amp S connectionHalfwayHighlandRochesterBrightonAshbourneNYC connectionElmwoodSunsetRowlandsR amp E connection Contents 1 History 1 1 Construction 1 2 New York State Railways 1927 1938 1 3 Rochester Transit Corp 1938 1956 1 4 Expressways and freight 1956 1996 2 Salvage and preservation 3 Rolling stock 3 1 Revenue equipment 3 2 Work fleet 4 Facilities 5 Future of the tunnel 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditConstruction Edit Planning for the construction of a subway in Rochester began around 1910 as the Erie Canal was re routed from downtown Rochester to pass south of the city The plans were supported by a feasibility study from engineer George F Swain and promoted by Mayor Hiram Edgerton and other civic leaders In 1918 the new canal route was completed and in 1919 the abandoned portion of the canal was bought by the city to serve as the route of the subway 2 It was believed the subway would provide several benefits to the city In addition to providing a cross town commute to residents in the northwest and southeast of the city the railroad would double as a belt line connecting the five freight railroads that then ran through Rochester which were previously disconnected Interurban trolleys would also be routed into the subway to reduce traffic congestion on the surface streets 3 Construction was approved by the city council on November 22 1921 and began in May 1922 4 11 The project had universal approval from Rochester s newspapers chamber of commerce and labor unions 3 Excavation of the subway bed in 1925In the city center a tunnel was dug with a new street Broad Street located above Only 2 miles 3 2 km were in the tunnel with the rest of the route in open cut The term subway did not refer to the tunnel but to the route being grade separated and operated as rapid transit The segment over the Genesee River utilized the former Second Genesee Aqueduct 5 The subway s construction encountered several delays as more rock needed to be excavated than anticipated and it was not completed until 1927 The construction bonds would not be paid off until 1960 after the subway had closed at a cost of over 19 million to the city 6 New York State Railways 1927 1938 Edit Rochester subway entrance Court Street postcardOperations began on December 1 1927 under contract with New York State Railways 4 40 7 Ten former Utica and Mohawk Valley Railway 2000 series cars were transferred from the Utica Lines to provide dedicated service in the Rochester subway Freight service was provided by an electric locomotive purchased from General Electric 4 90 Interurban railways began using the new subway almost immediately and were later joined by freight railroads Starting on the first day of operations in 1927 the Rochester and Eastern Rapid Railway connected at Rowlands and terminated at City Hall station The Rochester and Syracuse Railroad began using the subway in 1928 using a new connection established just east of Winton Road station The Rochester Lockport and Buffalo Railroad entered from the west side starting in 1928 using a ramp constructed at Lyell Avenue 4 41 44 These latter two ramps were also used by the New York Central Railroad for freight traffic The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad connected to the subway with a ramp along Broad Street and the Lehigh Valley Railroad connected at the Court Street Station 4 89 In 1929 a special subway surface operation began using a ramp at Emerson station to connect with the Dewey Avenue line to provide rush hour service to Kodak Park a major employer in the city On June 1 1929 local service on the Rochester subway was extended from Winton Road to Rowlands loop 4 45 In the aftermath of the Great Depression New York State Railways fell into bankruptcy along with other railroads that operated interurban lines in the area By 1931 all of the connecting interurban railways had ceased operation leaving the subway as an east west line with no rail connections outside the line 6 While the company was in receivership New York State Railways continued to operate the subway on a contract basis with the city of Rochester Public opinion of the subway turned negative due to low ridership 6 Rochester Transit Corp 1938 1956 Edit The former Rochester Lines of New York State Railways were reorganized as the Rochester Transit Corporation on August 2 1938 and operation of the subway was transferred to the new company On the same day the 2000 series cars were replaced with newer and faster 46 series steel cars acquired from the abandoned Utica amp Mohawk Valley Railway in 1937 4 47 50 Harold S W MacFarlin the city commerce commissioner believed that the subway could be saved by faster and expanded service and promoted plans to extend the subway line 4 48 61 During World War II wartime rationing made the subway popular once again and annual ridership peaked at over 5 million in 1946 and 1947 Proposals to extend the line were briefly considered in the press but ridership began declining again in 1948 and the city council made plans to abandon the subway and use its route for a connecting highway to the New York State Thruway instead 8 In an effort to cut costs weekday service was reduced and Sunday service was eliminated in 1952 4 76 The service contract was awarded on a month to month basis until the city council voted in 1955 to end all subway service on June 30 1956 4 83 87 Freight service was operated by RTC until September 1 1957 when the remaining rail operations were turned over to the connecting New York Central NYC and Baltimore and Ohio B amp O railroads 4 94 Expressways and freight 1956 1996 Edit The subway bed from Court Street to Winton Road was used for the construction of a portion of the Eastern Expressway I 490 in 1959 with the section from Winton Road to Rowlands used for I 590 Limited freight service operated by connecting railroads lasted on the western portion of the subway route from Court Street to General Motors until 1976 when the city of Rochester elected to fill the cut to eliminate maintenance on the numerous bridges Rail freight deliveries in the subway tunnel continued until 1996 when Gannett Newspapers moved its printing operations from the Gannett Building which the subway ran under to another location Capelli Sport Stadium was constructed on a portion of the filled in cut in 2006 citation needed Salvage and preservation Edit The aqueduct in 2015In 1976 after the announcement of the fill the City of Rochester allowed the New York Museum of Transportation to collect the rail from the portion of the line being filled The former rail is still in use by the museum In 2010 when the city decided to fill the portion of the tunnel between Brown and the B amp O ramp the museum was allowed to collect the remaining rail surviving switches and other railroad fixtures from the tunnel citation needed Rochester subway car 60 is at the Rochester and Genesee Valley Railroad Museum where it has been undergoing restoration since 2016 Built in 1916 for Utica Railways and moved to Rochester in 1936 it is the only surviving example from the 12 car fleet that served the subway 9 10 Car 60 was set aside for preservation in 1956 and was donated to the Rochester Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society The trolley car was loaned to other organizations and returned to the Rochester amp Genesee Valley Railroad Museum in 1998 prior to restoration 11 Locomotive L 2 was rescued from a Rochester scrap yard in the 1970s and has been set aside for a potential future restoration by the New York Museum of Transportation 12 better source needed Rolling stock EditRevenue equipment Edit L 1 locomotive 1200V General Electric electric locomotive 1928 L 2 locomotive Plymouth Locomotive Works of Plymouth Ohio 1937 46 70 Cincinnati Car Company SE Interurban Cars 1916 all steel cars acquired 1937 2000 2018 J G Brill SE Interurban Cars 1902 wood cars built as trailers and converted to motors acquired 1927 Even numbers only Work fleet Edit 014 Single truck rotary plow 0105 Jackson amp Sharp Line car 0200 Single cab motor Differential flat car 0205 locomotive Jewett Car Company of Newark Ohio 1903 0214 Single cab flat motor car 0220 Single cab Differential dump car 0330 Differential dump car trailer 0331 Differential dump car trailer 0343 Work and tool car 2002 Flatcar trailer 2006 Flatcar trailerFacilities EditMain Street Shops until 1941 General Motors Carbarn built 1941 Future of the tunnel Edit Rochester NY Broad Street Bridge 2002The property of the abandoned subway tunnel belongs to the city of Rochester In recent decades city officials have considered several plans to fill or renovate the tunnel Maintenance of the tunnel cost the city 1 2 million in 2007 13 There were proposals to use some of the tunnels in a new rapid transit system Another proposal was to transform the Broad Street Aqueduct into an underground walkway connecting the Rochester Riverside Convention Center with the Blue Cross Arena A component of this walkway would include a Rochester Transportation Museum Some suggested filling the remaining subway tunnel with water re routing the Erie Canal and restoring the aqueduct to its original purpose citation needed In 2004 Rochester city officials decided to fill the remaining subway tunnel with earth This decision caused public outcry since residents regard the subway as part of their history 13 On June 15 2006 the city promised to form a committee to investigate all possible options In July 2008 the city voted to fill in a portion of the tunnel citing safety concerns The westernmost end of the tunnel was filled as part of the Broad Street Tunnel Improvement project Work began in spring 2010 at a cost between 14 and 16 million The city removed the Broad Street section from East Main to Brown Street and filled that section of the subway tunnel but rebuilt the former B amp O ramp into what remains of the subway making that ramp the western access point into the subway 14 The remains of the Rochester Subway run from the B amp O ramp just east of East Main Street to Court Street In 2009 The City released a comprehensive community based study entitled Masterplan for the Broad Street Corridor and the Historic Erie Canal Aqueduct The 1 2M Federally sponsored study was the result of extensive meetings with the community business planners advocacy groups and downtown developers At the heart of the study was a desire to develop the Aqueduct and surrounding district in such a manner that supports downtown development and serves as a source of community pride After over a hundred meetings the consensus was to re water the Aqueduct and create Rochester s Historic Canal District citation needed The plan was endorsed by elected officials a majority of Rochester citizens 73 and numerous business leaders The plan received the highest award platinum by the American Planning Association along with numerous distinguished accolades from AIA ACEC and was voted Rochester s Best Idea by the readers of City Newspaper citation needed In 2017 the site of Court Street station was demolished to make way for a mixed use commercial and luxury residential highrise eliminating the Court Street tunnel entrance The city maintains a maintenance doorway underneath the Gannett Building This entrance is not open to the public citation needed In 2018 a plan dubbed ROC the Riverway was unveiled that proposes removing the Broad Street level of the aqueduct and partially re flooding the former canal and subway bed on the aqueduct with water similar to what was done with the historic canals at Canalside in Buffalo NY and incorporate walkways to connect the nearby Blue Cross Arena with the nearby convention center 15 The project moved to the planning and construction phase in 2022 16 Also in 2018 the city solicited bids to turn a remaining segment of tunnel between Main Street and Exchange Street into underground parking There were no interested buyers 17 Court Street station 2007 View of the Court Street Station 2013 East end being filled in January 2017 mixed use commercial and luxury residential low rise erected on the site July 2018See also EditCincinnati Subway Detroit Superior underground subway in ClevelandReferences Edit a b Passenger Runs End on Subway After 29 Years The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle July 1 1956 p 5 Retrieved August 3 2018 via Newspapers com Lipman Andrew David April 1974 The Rochester Subway Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit PDF Rochester History XXXVI 2 1 3 a b Lipman Andrew David April 1974 The Rochester Subway Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit PDF Rochester History XXXVI 2 5 11 a b c d e f g h i j k Amberger Ron Barrett Dick Marling Greg 1985 Canal Boats Interurbans amp Trolleys Rochester National Railway Historical Society ISBN 0 9605296 1 6 Cornelia E Brooke May 1975 National Register of Historic Places Registration Erie Canal Second Genesee Aqueduct New York State Office of Parks Recreation and Historic Preservation Retrieved 2009 11 01 See also Accompanying three photos a b c Lipman Andrew David April 1974 The Rochester Subway Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit PDF Rochester History XXXVI 2 11 15 Middleton William 2003 Metropolitan Railways Rapid Transit in America p 90 ISBN 0 253 34179 5 Retrieved 2008 12 08 Lipman Andrew David April 1974 The Rochester Subway Experiment in Municipal Rapid Transit PDF Rochester History XXXVI 2 18 20 Fuss Breanna 2016 07 30 Restoration Underway For Rochester s Sole Surviving Subway Car Spectrum Local News Retrieved 2023 02 10 Rochester amp Genesee Valley Railroad Museum shows off phase one of subway car restoration Rochester First 2016 06 19 Retrieved 2023 02 10 Rochester Transit Corp No 60 NYMT Archive Pictures Retrieved 6 May 2016 a b Mercer Laurie October 31 2007 Rochester Ponders Future of Once Vibrant Subway Construction Equipment Guide Retrieved January 8 2008 Subway Tunnel To Be Filled This time they mean it Probably RochesterSubway com 2009 10 10 Retrieved 2010 01 24 ROC the Riverway Rochester Democrat and Chronicle Retrieved 2018 04 02 WHAM 2022 04 12 Aqueduct Reimagined project underway in downtown Rochester WHAM Retrieved 2022 04 17 City eyes parking in Rochester s old subway tunnel Rochester Democrat and Chronicle Retrieved 2018 06 30 Further reading EditGordon William Reed 1975 Ninety Four Years of Rochester Railways Volume Two Rochester NY William Reed Gordon ISBN 9780910662123 Amberger Ron Barrett Dick Marling Greg 1985 Canal Boats Interurbans amp Trolleys The Story of the Rochester Subway Rochester NY Rochester Chapter National Railway Historical Society ISBN 0 9605296 1 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rochester Subway The End of the Line a documentary about the Rochester Subway Car 60 at the Rochester amp Genesee Valley Railroad Museum RocWiki Abandoned Subway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rochester subway amp oldid 1167290763, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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