jis
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It's not a question of rewarding or punishing MSG, it is what makes the most sense from a transit standpoint. Like it or not MSG is (or should be) a major traffic generator when there are events scheduled there and it is better to make handling those events easier rather than pushing the arena out to the Meadowlands and having everyone drive to it.At this point NYP has been a dingy dump longer than it was a grand station so rewarding MSG with another half-century of uninterrupted residence in exchange for an extravagant new entrance makes sense to me. If we fail to protect mediocrity now when will we save it?
Fair enough but a lot can happen over the course of a half-century. Is a shiny new retail-focused entrance for the same old transit dungeon worth granting a lease so long it will outlive most of the forum and tie the hands of those who come after us? Only New Yorkers can say for sure.It's not a question of rewarding or punishing MSG, it is what makes the most sense from a transit standpoint. Like it or not MSG is (or should be) a major traffic generator when there are events scheduled there and it is better to make handling those events easier rather than pushing the arena out to the Meadowlands and having everyone drive to it.
You may wish to visit the evolving new facility before passing harsh judgements based on out of date experience.Fair enough but a lot can happen over the course of a half-century. Is a shiny new retail-focused entrance for the same old transit dungeon worth granting a lease so long it will outlive most of the forum and tie the hands of those who come after us? Only New Yorkers can say for sure.
I don't have memories of the old Penn Station, but when I first visited the replacement in 1968, I thought it was pretty cool in a science-fiction-y sort of way. The escalator ride down from the old taxi entrance on Pennsylvania Plaza (now closed to vehicles) I thought was pretty impressive. Of course, over the decades it got a little grungy, er, I should say a "patina of age" made it look a bit rundown. I passed through there a month ago, and it seems that the old station has been cleaned up a good deal. In fact, if you don't need passenger services, you might find it more convenient to use the ticketed passenger waiting area in the old station and board trains from the old escalators, all of which are still in use, and may also take you down closer to the part of the train you're riding in.
MSG is not moving to the Meadowlands. There's locations nearby to the present site in Manhattan that have been mentioned as possibilities if they move.It's not a question of rewarding or punishing MSG, it is what makes the most sense from a transit standpoint. Like it or not MSG is (or should be) a major traffic generator when there are events scheduled there and it is better to make handling those events easier rather than pushing the arena out to the Meadowlands and having everyone drive to it.
All that this starts to indicate is that the whole thing will be delayed by a decade or two while people argue with each other some more. This is quite normal for New YorkThen there's this....sorry it may be behind the paywall...
NYTimes: Private Firm Announces Competing Vision for Penn Station Redesign
The comments are, um, interesting.Here is a very detailed look at the competing redevelopment plans for Penn Station from the New York Times' architecture critic. I think this is a free link.
Thank you for posting this. I was there last week and can confirm this is what it looks like, and better from other angles. For background, I commuted on the LIRR for a decade; now I use Penn/Moynihan for my long distance travel on Amtrak, so I have some familiarity with what it was and what it is. The Penn-Moynihan complex can still be maze-like to some -- although there is pretty good signage that one can follow. No-one would describe the place today as dingy or grungy --that is a complete anachronism. Moynihan is a visual delight. It's spotless, bright, modern, inviting, and well-lit, and the elimination of seating except for ticketed passengers and in the food court (and Metro Lounge, of course), has pretty much eliminated loiterers. The old Penn Station is quite improved as shown in the photo and accompanying article. And I don't think they're done by any means, nor are all the shops and restaurants tenanted at this point, so there's more to come.
NY Penn Station Renovation Opens Up LIRR Concourse - Railway Age
The approximately $400 million project to modernize and widen New York Penn Station’s Long Island Railroad (LIRR) 33rd Street concourse is now complete, AECOM, Skanska and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM) reportedwww.railwayage.com
The plan that included demolishing the MSG arena over Penn Station included natural light to the platforms, see the picture here: Kathy Hochul is preparing to relocate Madison Square Garden But that was January 2022, ancient history! The governor no longer supports it.From a European perspective, I'm surprised that all the plans seem to take it as given that the platforms will remain totally underground. Is there no way to squeeze a bit of natural light into them?
Not without razing MSG, probably Moynihan hall and a few other buildings. Old Penn Station intentionally put the Railroad platforms under street level. When they committed the crime of demolishing old Pen the platform’s were converted into the basis of the modern Penn and the modern development closed in.From a European perspective, I'm surprised that all the plans seem to take it as given that the platforms will remain totally underground. Is there no way to squeeze a bit of natural light into them?
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