
Lincoln Tunnel Weehawken helix and
entrance 1955, with the south tube under construction
The
Lincoln Tunnel is a 1.5 mile (2.4 km) long
tunnel under the Hudson River, connecting Weehawken
, New
Jersey
and the borough of Manhattan
in New York
City
.
History
The tunnel was designed by
Ole
Singstad. The project was funded by the New Deal's
Public Works Administration.
Construction began on the first tube in 1934. It opened to traffic
in December 1937, charging $0.50 per passenger car. The cost of
construction was $75,000,000.
The original design called for two tubes. Work on the second was
halted in 1938 but resumed in 1941. Due to war material shortages
of metal, completion was delayed for two years. It opened on
February 1, 1945 at a cost of $80 million, with
Michael Catan, brother of
Omero Catan (known as Mr. First, attending over
526 opening day events), selected to be the first to lead the
public through the tube.
A third tube was proposed by the Port Authority due to increased
traffic demand, but initially opposed by the City of New York,
which was trying to get the Port Authority to help pay for the road
improvements that the City would need to handle the additional
traffic. Eventually, a compromise was worked out, and the third
tube opened in May 1957 to the south of the original two tunnels.
Although the three portals are side by side in New Jersey, in New
York City the north tube portal is some two blocks away from the
other two, which are side by side.
Crime
Shortly
after noon on September 8, 1953, two armed men, Peter Simon and
John Metcalf, attempted to rob a home in South Orange,
New Jersey
. The men were driven off by the residents,
one of whom reported the license plate on their car to the police,
who put out an alert. A patrolman, Nicholas Falabella, noticed the
car just as it passed the toll booth and ordered the driver to stop
the vehicle. The driver sped off into the tunnel, firing at the
police. A Port Authority policeman, Donald Lackmun, was hit in the
leg. The police commandeered a delivery truck and gave chase,
exchanging gun fire with the renegade car while weaving in and out
of traffic. In all 28 shots were fired, ten by the gunmen and 18 by
the police. The vehicle came to a stop about three fourths of the
way through the tunnel. Simon was hit in the head.
Traffic
The three tubes carry six traffic lanes in total. During the
morning rush hour one traffic lane in the center tube called the
XBL (Exclusive Bus Lane) and is only used by
buses. The New Jersey approach roadway, locally known as
"the Helix" or "the Corkscrew", spirals in a full circle before
arriving at the toll booths in front of the tunnel portals. In
Manhattan,
Dyer Avenue and
the
Lincoln Tunnel
Expressway serve as the primary egress roadways for the Lincoln
Tunnel.
Each of the travel lanes in the tunnel's center tube is reversible.
In general, both of the lanes serve Manhattan-bound traffic during
the weekday morning rush hour, both of the lanes serve New
Jersey-bound traffic during the weekday evening rush hour, and one
lane is provided in each direction during other time periods.
The tunnel carries almost 120,000 vehicles per day, making it one
of the busiest vehicular tunnels in the world.
The XBL is by
far the busiest and most productive bus
lane in the United
States
. The lane operates weekday mornings between
6:15 and 10:00 a.m., accommodating approximately 1,700 buses and 62,000 commuters,
mainly to the Port Authority Bus Terminal
. The high ridership on the XBL is
about the same as all New Jersey
Transit's commuter rail into
Penn Station
.
Normally only motor traffic uses the tunnel, but every year a few
bicycle tours and foot races pass through by special
arrangement.
Route numbers
With the
cancellation of the Mid-Manhattan Expressway, intended
to carry Interstate 495
through New York City to the Queens-Midtown Tunnel
and onto the Long
Island Expressway, the NYDOT
and NJDOT demoted the
Lincoln Tunnel, Queens-Midtown Tunnel, and the freeway link to
NJ 3 as state routes.
Some signs still list the tunnels as I-495. Although the
Federal Highway
Administration still considers the Midtown Tunnel to be an
Interstate, the Lincoln Tunnel is no longer on the Interstate
system. In New Jersey, the freeway was officially demoted to
NJ 495 and very few signs
still read "I-495".
34th
Street links the disjointed segments of I-495.

Manhattan ventilation tower
Culture
- In Stephen King's book The Stand, two characters escape the dead New
York through a Lincoln Tunnel clogged with cars and corpses.
- In the novel Terrorist by John Updike, main character Ahmad is going to
blow up the tunnel with a truck full of chemicals.
- In the 2005 book The Lightning
Thief, the main characters end up getting attacked by the
Furies (Hades's minions) on a Greyhound bus in the Lincoln
Tunnel.
- In the video game Grand Theft
Auto IV, the tunnel connecting the fictional equivalents of
Manhattan and New Jersey is called the Booth Tunnel, after John
Wilkes Booth.
References
- "NJ Transit riders to get new entrance at NY Penn
Station" Transit Hell; November 8, 2006
External links