Rochester Subway
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Rochester Subway | |
---|---|
Reporting marks | RSB |
Locale | Rochester, NY |
Dates of operation | 1928 – 1957 |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8½ in (1435 mm) (standard gauge) |
Headquarters | Rochester, NY |
The Rochester Subway (AAR reporting marks RSB) or Rochester Industrial and Rapid Transit Railway was an underground rapid transit system of the city of Rochester, New York during 1928-1956. Contemporary photos show, however, that like Boston's Green Line, it used single streetcar vehicles, and so using today's terms would likely be described as a light rail system, even though a large portion of it ran underground.
In 1900 the Erie Canal was re-routed to by-pass downtown Rochester, and in 1919 the abandoned canal was bought to serve as the core of the subway. The subway was built below, and the subway's roof was turned into Broad Street. Only two miles of the Rochester Subway were actually located in the tunnel. The rest of the route was located in an open cut. The term "subway" did not refer to the tunnel, but to the fact that the route was grade-separated and operated as rapid transit. Connecting interurban lines were routed into the Subway connection, and off city streets, further helping the surface traffic congestion situation that was developing in Rochester.
When the Utica streetcar system was abandoned in the late 1930s, New York State Railways transferred the relatively newer steel cars to Rochester to replace the 2000-series center-door cars that had been in service since the opening of the Subway. The Utica cars served until the end of passenger service on June 30, 1956. Car #60 was saved for preservation, and is currently undergoing restoration by the Rochester Chapter, NRHS.
The subway from Court Street to Rowlands was replaced by the Eastern Expressway in 1956. Limited freight service operated by connecting railroads lasted on the subway route from Court Street to General Motors until 1976, when the City of Rochester elected to fill the cut to eliminate the numerous bridges. Rail freight deliveries in the actual subway tunnel continued until 1996, when Gannett Newspapers moved their printing operations to another location.
Stations on subway consisted of:
- General Motors (loop and shops location)
- Driving Park
- Lexington Avenue
- Glenwood
- Emerson Street
- Edgerton Park
- Lyell Avenue
- West Main Street
- City Hall
- Court Street
- Clinton Avenue
- Meigs-Goodman
- Monroe Avenue
- Culver Road
- Colby
- Winton Road (former shops location)
- East Avenue
- Halfway
- Highland
- Ashbourne
- Elmwood Avenue
- Sunset
- Rowlands (loop)
- Kodak Park (via Dewey Ave surface route)
[edit] Fleet
- L1 locomotive - electric locomotive
- L2 locomotive - Plymouth Locomotive Works of Plymouth, Ohio - 1937
- 0205 locomotive - Jewett Car Company of Newark, Ohio - 1903
[edit] Current rapid transit proposals
There are proposals to build a new rapid transit system in Rochester, some of which might use some of the old tunnels. Another proposal is to transform the Broad Street Aqueduct into an underground walkway with a Rochester Transportation Museum. The city may also simply fill in the tunnels with dirt or with water, re-routing the Erie Canal and restoring the Aqueduct to its original purpose.
As of June 15th, 2006, the city has promised to form a committee that will investigate all of the proposals and reach a decision by 2008.
[edit] External links
- "The End of the Line" on DVD - a documentary about the Rochester Subway.
- Railroad.net's page devoted to the Rochester Subway.
- Rochester Wiki - Abandoned Subway
- A modern-day tour of the Rochester Subway at Infiltration.org.
- A slideshow from Urban infiltrators who explored the Rochester Subway.
- 1928 map of the Rochester Subway.
- 1955 map of the Rochester Subway.
- Site of the Rochester Rail Transit Committee.
- Pictures from the construction of the tunnels.