...

Grand Central Terminal

bronx-little-italy

Currently owned by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the Grand Central Terminal is a suburban rail station that has served the citizens of New York since 1913. This colossal station is one of the greatest marvels of American engineering and architecture. Located at 42nd Street and Park Avenue in Midtown, Manhattan, spanning over 48 acres and housing 44 platforms, it is the driving force behind the hustle and bustle of Midtown Manhattan.

It is the biggest train station in the world, both in terms of area occupied and the number of platforms. It serves over 67 million passengers annually, more than any other train station.

Station statistics reveal that morning rush hour; requires trains arrive at the station just 58 seconds apart. Grand Central Terminal is more than just a regular old train station; along with its predecessors, it was instrumental in the growth of New York City as a center for commerce and finance.

History

Grand Central Station is an icon of American history and is the third station operated from this site. The first ever station located in this area was the Harlem Railroad, a steam railroad that started from Fourth Avenue and rode across Harlem. 

The second station at the site was Grand Central Depot in 1871, owned by Cornelius Vanderbilt, a railroad tycoon. It served the Hudson River, the New York Central Railroad, and Harlem. This L-shaped depot station soon became overwhelmed by the rapidly growing railroad requirements of the city and was demolished in 1899 to be replaced by a much bigger building named Grand Central Station. The construction of the new station building started in 1903 and lasted over ten years.

The new station construction practices and methods were a turning point in real estate building projects across New York City. Construction was carefully carried out to protect the air rights of the streets in Midtown Manhattan by building the new station entirely underground. The station used top-notch engineering practices that used electricity instead of steam to generate power. The 70-acre compound used to construct the new building for Grand Central Station was the biggest construction project in history. It was the first completely electric building in the world. In 2008, six full-time workers were needed to replace more than 4,000 traditional electric bulbs in the building with energy-efficient fluorescent ones.

The new terminal had an immense impact on the overall economic growth of New York City. In particular, Terminal City, a business and office district built above where the tracks were covered, benefited from the terminal’s influence on the surrounding area’s development.

template-poza
bronx-little-italy

Initiatives For Passenger Safety

Grand Central’s innovative transit-hub design served as a model for others worldwide. The use of ramps to replace staircases and move passengers and luggage through the facility was also an innovative architectural move initiated by Grand Central. The trains intentionally depart one minute later than scheduled. The extra minute is designed to urge people frantically trying to catch trains to slow down. As a result of this practice, the statistics reveal that Grand Central Terminal has the lowest number of slips, trips, and falls compared to all other U.S. terminals with similar flooring. Although Grand Central Terminal is designed to accommodate 200 trains per hour, actual traffic has yet to reach that level.