Murray Hill Tunnel

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The north end of the tunnel
The north end of the tunnel

The Murray Hill Tunnel passes under Park Avenue in the New York City borough of Manhattan, USA, leading up towards Grand Central Terminal. It once carried the New York and Harlem Railroad and later that company's streetcar line; it now carries two lanes of car traffic from East 33rd Street to East 41st Street. Due to the construction of Grand Central Terminal and the removal of tracks, the north end has been reconstructed for a steeper approach.

Looking out the north end towards Grand Central Depot in 1880
Looking out the north end towards Grand Central Depot in 1880

The tunnel was originally built as an open rock cut, completed in 1834, after which the NY&H Railroad was opened as far as Yorkville, to 85th Street. In the 1850s the cut was roofed over, using granite stringers from the original railroad bed south of 14th Street, thus creating the present tunnel. The vertical clearance is 8 feet 11 inches (2.71 m).

The New York City Subway runs beneath the tunnel. Only the two center express tracks of the Lexington Avenue Line are directly below and thus are a few feet lower than the two outer tracks.

[edit] See also

Park Avenue Tunnel, carries railroad tracks under a different part of Park Avenue

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