Quote:
Originally Posted by Eveningsong
MTA's Fulton Center Hub, 7 Train Extension Nearing Finish Line
By: Jose Martinez
February 26, 2014
10:34 AM
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority says some of its more expensive projects are making steady progress.
During a speech at St. Francis College Tuesday night, MTA Capital Construction Co. President Michael Horodniceanu discussed the agency's ongoing Megaprojects, including the Fulton Center in Lower Manhattan.
The $1.4 billion transit hub is expected to open in June.
The 7 train extension to Manhattan's West Side is set to finish up in October, and the MTA says the project will be a boon to Midtown's economy.
"Twenty-five million square feet of new office development, 20,000 residential units, two million square feet of new retail and three million square feet of new hotels. So, that would have not been possible without the extension of the number 7," Horodniceanu said.
The Second Avenue subway line, which will cost nearly $4.5 billion to complete, is scheduled to open with three stations in December 2016.
But Long Island Rail Road commuters will have to wait nearly 10 more years to stop at Grand Central.
The $11 billion East Side Access project is not expected to be ready until 2023.
http://www.ny1.com/content/news/tran...ng-finish-line
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Jesus F. Christ.. what on earth is this? Are we a super-power or are we freakin Nigeria (actually Nigeria would do a better job)? 2023 for that project? What a joke
I am now convinced the USA does infrastructure worse than any given 3rd world country. What a disgrace. The PATH train time-line was bad enough, but then this thing? You've got to be pulling me leg surely. Umm, DING DONG, paging "a kinder robert moses", "a kinder Robert Moses" to the White House please, and while we are on the subject, a whole bunch of them to congress too: feel free to turn up sometime soon before your country falls even further behind and actually ranks behind Nigeria, or Iran in infrastructure, and someday worse. Take a look at Crossrail over in that little small town called London as inspiration.