Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Santa Ana River Hydroelectric System, Flumes and Tunnels below Sandbox 1898 1991 Redlands: San Bernardino: CA-130-R: Santa Ana River Hydroelectric System, Abandoned Tunnel Abandoned 1898 1991 Santa Ana Canal Redlands: San Bernardino: CA-139: Forts Baker–Barry Tunnel: Extant 1918 1993 Bunker Road Lime Point Ridge Sausalito: Marin
New York City Subway tunnels: Fort George Tunnel, IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line (1 train), 2 miles of rock tunnel from 157th Street to Dyckman Street, the second-longest two-track tunnel in the country (after the Hoosac Tunnel) when completed in 1906. 14th Street Tunnel, BMT Canarsie Line (L train) under East River between Manhattan and ...
Jennifer Toth's 1993 book The Mole People: Life in the Tunnels Beneath New York City, [4] written while she was an intern at the Los Angeles Times, was promoted as a true account of travels in the tunnels and interviews with tunnel dwellers. The book helped canonize the image of the mole people as an ordered society living literally under ...
Traveling through the Holland Tunnel, from Manhattan to Jersey City, New Jersey: Uptown Hudson Tubes: 1908: 1,700 m (5,500 ft) Hoboken-Morton Tunnels Port Authority Trans-Hudson: North River Tunnels: 1910: 1,900 m (6,100 ft) part of New York Tunnel Extension Amtrak and New Jersey Transit (Northeast Corridor) Lincoln Tunnel: north tube: 1945 ...
Summit Tunnel (Tunnel No. 6), abandoned rail tunnel, Central Pacific Railroad, one of a number through the Donner Pass area of the Sierra Nevada [4] The Big Hole, Tunnel No. 41, built to replace Tunnel No. 6 through the Donner Pass and carrying the Union Pacific Railroad (34) Feather River Route, including: Chilcoot Tunnel; Spring Garden Tunnel
The Cobble Hill Tunnel (also known as the Atlantic Avenue Tunnel) is an abandoned Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) tunnel beneath Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn, New York City, running through the neighborhoods of Downtown Brooklyn and Cobble Hill. When open, it ran for about 2,517 feet (767 m) between Columbia Street and Boerum Place. [2]
The Staten Island Tunnel is an abandoned, incomplete railway and subway tunnel in Staten Island, New York City. It was intended to connect railways on Staten Island (precursors to the modern-day Staten Island Railway) to the BMT Fourth Avenue Line of the New York City Subway, in Brooklyn, via a new crossing under the Narrows. Planned to extend ...
The tunnel was the world's first mechanically ventilated tunnel. Subterranean New York City relates to the area beneath the surface level of New York City; the natural features, man-made structures, spaces, objects, and cultural creation and experience. Like other subterranea, the underground world of New York City has been the basis of TV ...