Only if NJT ended service entirely to Hoboken, something that wasn't in the plan, and then only for those actually working in lower Manhattan. And even then it’s debatable, depending on where the actually work in lower Manhattan. The PATH train is hardly a speed demon.The project didn't have any good in it at all. Its potential for increased capacity was more puffery than reality, for one thing. For another, believe it or not as you will, it really, really would have increase commute times for certain types of passengers. Pascack/Main/Bergen commuters, for one, would have found their commute times increased as service to Hoboken ended.
I can't imagine how cutting out the stop and dwell at Secaucus Junction would increase running times for those coming off the M&E. Please explain.The project would have increased commute times for M&E and M-B riders by several minutes as far as actually arriving into the city goes.
I don't who worked on those estimates or how they could arrive at such a ridiculous conclusion. I can get from the platform to the street in less than 3 minutes at the 168th Street subway stop, a station that is far deeper than NJT's would have been.Beyond that, the time needed to leave a station set up like that would have been impressive. NJT, in their unbridled optimism, said it would take only 7 minutes for passengers to reach the streets. It presently takes me 3 minutes to reach the street from the platforms if the train isn't too crowded.
Utter nonsense!But beyond that, Joe Clift told me he figured 7 minutes was an off peak estimate, and the nearest he could figure for actual track-to-street times would have been more along the lines of 10 minutes to 15 minutes. That would be double the longest I've ever spent getting to the street on an SRO NJT train. And I tend to wait for other people to depart, too, and get the back of the line. The project was flawed, at its very core, on the basis of a workable transportation improvement.
I can get from the ground floor of Macy’s to the top floor during Christmas on their old slow wooden escalators in 4 to 5 minutes.
And Penn Station handles probably 3 to 4 times the number of people that the new station would have handled. While I haven't actually done the math, I suspect that Penn has more people per exit than the new station would have had.Penn Station has many more exits than 34th street would ever have.But a station that would have had more escalators and elevators than Penn station does, and fewer passengers at any given time than Penn does, is certainly not going to be more unsafe than Penn. And several fires at Penn have already proved just how unsafe it is. And I was there for one of the small fires too and I saw how quickly things smoked up. And that was just a fire on top of an AEM-7.
The fact that only NJ was building this doesn't mean that they didn't have to meet the very strict standards of the NYC's fire department for evacuations.
With all due respect, Joe should stick to other things than escalators. I quote from two stories:As a mechanism for actually moving people, escalators leave much to be desired. Which, as Joe explained to me, is why LIRRs concourse has a very limited number of them on platforms. Escalators move people slower than stairs do.
My linkhttp://reconshmigurable.wordpress.com/page/2/The escalators provide a smoothing function, delivering people in an orderly manner to the lines at the counters, and at a much higher effective rate, more people per minute than could possibly be provided by elevators or stairs.
http://greatergreaterwashington.org/post/6863/mapping-metros-escalators/While stairs can't move as many people per minute as an escalator, they also don't break or have to be closed for repairs very often.
While having less distance to go up, the mob would be much, much bigger at Penn. And with fewer exits per person.34th street, in a fire, would be a panicked mob of people attempting to go up escalators for 174 feet, or approximately 15 stories.
So are you saying that all the down escalators would have suddenly reversed to the up direction in a fire?And beyond that very simple item, there would be no way for firefighting crews to get into that station until it was fully evacuated- a time period that could have taken up to 45 minutes.
You can come up with all sorts of reasons to hate that final plan simply because it didn't go where you wanted and thought it should have gone to, GCT, but that doesn't change the fact that the plan wasn't an unmitigated disaster. Yes, I remain firmly convinced that killing the connecting tracks to the existing Penn was a major mistake, but that was probably the biggest stupidity contained within the final plan.34th street was an ill planned death trap and a memorial to the ego of a very vain and very stupid man.
But now we're left with nothing. There is no plan and there is nothing on the horizon. And there is little hope of ever getting funding even if someone does come up with a plan. I know that I have little hope of being alive, much less able to ride a train, when a new tunnel finally does get built under the Hudson.