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| Cut
and Cover. Most of the initial route was built
using the method favored by Parsons. |
Late 19th century
commuters in New York City relied on horsepower, steam engines
and ferries. Horse-drawn streetcars averaged 6 mph, killed
a pedestrian a week and left large quantities of manure. Four
elevated rail lines offered somewhat faster service. But the
noise, soot, cinders and blasts of steam from locomotives
made them difficult neighbors. The city desperately needed
a better way of moving large numbers of people around quickly.
Until 1883, the big money in New York flowed to the elevated
rail lines because of politics and necessity. Trolleys, popular
in neighboring Brooklyn and elsewhere, were not allowed in
the city due to safety concerns about the tangle of overhead
electric wires. An 1883 court decision that the elevateds
were depriving adjacent property owners of "light, air
and access" halted further construction and led to more
rush-hour crowding.
Some cities were moving in new
directions. Boston put some of its trolley lines underground
and created Americas first subway in 1897. London had
opened the worlds first subway in 1863, a 3.7-mile route,
followed by Budapest and Glasgow in 1896, Paris in 1900 and
Berlin in 1902.
The need for better transit in
New York was great by the end of the century. By the early
1890s, "well over a million people poured into New York
each day and flowed back home each night," according
to Gotham, a book on the history of the city. In 1891, the
city created the Board of Rapid Transit to come up with a
solution. But huge questions loomed. Should the system be
steam powered or electrical? Should it be built by deep tunneling
or cut-and-cover? How would it be financed?
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| Parsons |
In 1894, William Barclay Parsons,
a consulting engineer who had worked for railroads, was appointed
chief engineer of a reorganized commission. He was an advocate
for cut-and-cover construction and had been consulted by the
city as early as 1887, when he was 28 years old.
Parsons designed a 22-mile Y-shaped
route running north from City Hall to the Bronx. Unlike its
predecessors, this "was a high-performance and high-capacity
subway system, even when judged by the standards of a later
era," said subway historian Brian J. Cudahy. A four-track
system offered local and express service.
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| McDonald |
The citys previous attempts
to sell a subway franchise had failed to attract bidders.
The scale and the degree of risk involved were daunting. Only
two contractors bid on Parsons design, and the winner
was John B. McDonald, who had worked on New York Citys
Park Avenue rail cut. His winning bid was $35 million for
the right to build the system and operate it for 50 years.
The terms of the contract were
demanding. Open cuts had to be covered with timber to carry
street traffic and spoil had to be removed quickly. The contract
also called for McDonald to make a $1-million security deposit,
post a $5-million surety bond and another $1-million performance
bond. But he could not find a financial backer, despite a
frantic search.
McDonald was rescued by August
Belmont Jr., whose father represented the Rothschilds, the
European merchant bankers. Belmont and McDonald became partners
in Interborough Rapid Transit Co., IRT, by which the line
still is known.
Groundbreaking was in March 1900.
McDonald divided his contract into 15 subcontracts for various
segments, plus additional ones for utility relocation.
The geology varied. The City Hall
area was soft soil, but three stretches further uptown called
for hard-rock tunneling. Most of the work was by pick and
shovel, wielded by Italian and Irish immigrant laborers, typically
paid $2 for a 10-hour day. Carpenters, ironworkers and plumbers
mostly were union members. The work force averaged 4,000.
A variety of pneumatic tools were
usedriveters, drills, concrete mixers and Lidgerwood
hoisting engines. Temporary powerplants supplied the compressed
air, with boilers feeding Ingersoll-Rand air compressors.
The shoring of structures along
the route was challenging, particularly the elevated structures
of the Manhattan Railway. "Along Elm St. the excavation
passed close to the buildings, and from 10 to 15 ft below
the foundation of many of them. A 36-in. water main and a
30-in. gas main formerly in the street had to be relaid outside
of the subway walls, generally under the sidewalks,"
Engineering News reported in 1902 (EN 4/17/02 p. 320). "Other
pipes, especially at street crossings, had to be relaid in
the much-diminished space between the street surface and the
roof of the subway. These pipes all had to be supported by
timbering or hung by chains from the trench timbers during
excavation."
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| Victory
Spoils. Excavated material had to be removed quickly
under contract terms. |
"The excavated earth was handled
by derricks and cableways. Along Park Row, narrow-gauge tracks
were laid in the cross galleries. The earth from the center
of the excavation was carried in push cars on these tracks
to the side trenches and there lifted by the derricks or cableways
and dumped into wagons," said EN, now ENR. In all, 3.2
million cu yd of material was excavated.
A typical four-track tunnel section
was 55 ft wide and 13 ft high. At the bottom of the timbered
trench, a concrete slab was poured and then waterproofed with
several alternating layers of felt and bitumen. Between each
set of tracks and along the outside walls, rows of steel I
beams were erected on 5-ft centers and riveted to cross beams.
The side walls were carried up in forms and the exterior waterproofed.
Concrete arches were formed above the bents.
A dynamite accident in 1902 killed
six and injured 125. A later tunnel cave-in led Belmont to
buy out an entire block rather than settle with property owners
individually. In 1903, 300 tons of rock fell at 195th St.,
killing 10 workers and seriously injuring four. Fifty died
over 41Ú2 years.
Carnegie Steel fabricated 74,326
tons of structural steel and 4,000 tons of steel rails and
the United Building Material Co. of New York supplied 300,000
tons of cement. Both contracts were believed to be the largest
ever for a single project. To provide power, the worlds
largest coal-fired plant was built on W. 59th St.
The system opened on Oct.
27, 1904, with the nine-mile, 28-station section north to
145th St. completed. Daily ridership reached 400,000 within
a year. The remaining sections opened by 1906.
(Photos courtesy of Parsons Brinkerhoff)
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