What if the IND Second System was Built?

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
  • This video is the result of me going down a rabbit hole of the IND Second System. So, what will happen if the IND Second System gets built?
    Sources
    www.vanshnookenraggen.com/_in...
    www.vanshnookenraggen.com/_in...
    www.vanshnookenraggen.com/_in...
    www.nycsubway.org/wiki/IND_Se...
    www.nycsubway.org/wiki/Histor...
    www.columbia.edu/~brennan/aban...
    www.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/...
    www.nytimes.com/2018/01/03/ma...
    Pictures
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propose...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_D...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/72nd_St...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signali...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propose...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astoria...
    www.pexels.com/photo/bird-s-e...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staten_...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenpo...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowery_...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMT_Jam...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Houston...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frankli...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Yor...
    www.pexels.com/video/traffic-...

Komentáře • 151

  • @StoriesNY
    @StoriesNY Před měsícem +67

    Damn those southeastern Brooklyn lines would've been so useful throughout my 20+ years of living 😭

  • @boguette_
    @boguette_ Před měsícem +38

    Uhh how did I just see this instantly. Anyways, if the IND Second System was built, then less people would use those overcrowded buses, and more people would use the subway. It would allow outer neighborhoods of Queens and the Bronx to be well connected to the rest of the city. Just so you know the reason why boroughs other than Manhattan were able to grow so rapidly was thanks to the subway.
    I am your first view for this video :)

  • @jaimerosado3896
    @jaimerosado3896 Před měsícem +11

    Unfortunately there’s one big problem with the NYC subway today (and the Chicago L I might add) that due to a lack of foresight would still persist even the second system had been completed. And that problem is that while the subway is excellent for getting people to and from Manhattan, it does a horrible job at getting people from outer borough to outer borough, especially from the Bronx to Queens. It’s the classic bicycle wheel pattern, with axle and spokes, but no rim.
    I would also to add that another map was presented ten years later on July 5, 1939 (source: “The Subway,” Stan Fischler). This map had the Utica Avenue subway ending in Floyd Bennet Field instead of at Nostrand Avenue. It had a subway under Fort Hamilton Parkway, branching off what is now the Culver Line, and continuing into Staten Island. And it also shows the acquisition of the Bronx portion of the New York, Westchester, and Boston Railway (Dyre Avenue Line) and has it merging with the Pelham Bay Line instead of White Plains Road.
    And please stop praising gentrification. There’s nothing positive about longtime residents being priced out of their neighborhoods, especially those that went to Hell and back with those neighborhoods.

    • @israelrodriguez2167
      @israelrodriguez2167 Před 14 dny +3

      There was one good thing about gentrification, it forced the city to improve services to those communities, the bad thing about that is that we should not have had to have gentrification in the first place to improve those services.

    • @jaimerosado3896
      @jaimerosado3896 Před 13 dny

      @@israelrodriguez2167That’s the ONLY good thing.

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +17

    we do have to deal with more merging conflicts with more extentions

    • @ianhardy9375
      @ianhardy9375 Před měsícem +1

      That depends on how the lines are built

    • @qjtvaddict
      @qjtvaddict Před měsícem +1

      Laughing in 2nd ave

  • @stickynorth
    @stickynorth Před měsícem +9

    All of these uncompleted projects should be pitched and built as a huge investment in the future scheme and as a partnership between the city, the state and the feds, along with possible private developers who might benefit along the way too! In other cities like Montreal they are building entire automated networks like the REM while NYC stagnates... And speaking of automation... That is something that definitely need to happen in the MTA network to improve efficiency and economy of service...

  • @BMTEnjoyer160
    @BMTEnjoyer160 Před měsícem +12

    I wish the Second System happened things like the Second Avenue Subway And The Eastern Queens Extensions Would Be A Big Help

    • @leecornwell5632
      @leecornwell5632 Před měsícem +1

      The 3 trains 🚃 could definitely be extended to gateway mall in Brooklyn. The 2 5 trains could be extended to Flatlands Ave Brooklyn.

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +8

    @Tech Transit Association mabye u should talk about what will happen to existing structures in nyc that are in the way of the second system like the NYC transit musem and I-278

  • @j.t.5178
    @j.t.5178 Před 23 dny +4

    If the either the 1929 or 1939 plans were built, so much of the city would be much more accessible. The city would be a little more dense in Eastern sections of the outer boroughs, but it'll most likely be more like Corona or Richmond Hill, where it's more a mix of 2-4 family homes, with a random smattering of apartment buildings instead of the suburbanization that actually happened after World War II.
    Honestly, the biggest mistake was the demolition of the Third Avenue El in Manhattan in the 1950s. I could understand demolishing the portion between Chatham Sq and South Ferry as the Brooklyn Bridge was reconfigured to connect to FDR Drive. However, they didn't need to demolish the portion from City Hall to Chatham Sq (closed in 1953) then the rest of the line in 1955. The line could have been upgraded to carry regular subway cars and the platforms lengthened, which would have required some reconfiguring of stations. It would have alleviated the overcrowding on the Lex Ave Line. The Upper East Side and Midtown East would still be gentrified regardless of the El being there or not.

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +6

    thw windfeild spur or whatever u call it will also fill a transit desert in queens and help reduce overcrowding buses there

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 Před měsícem

      They would be better off replacing the rest of the former LIRR Rockaway Beach Branch with the IND Rego Park Line. As part of that, revive the old Woodhaven Junction LIRR station with the new Woodhaven Transfer LIRR-IND station, replace the bridge at Whitepot Junction with a new Rego Park Transfer LIRR-IND station, and end the line at the Queens Boulevard Line somewhere around Grand Avenue.

  • @collectivelyimprovingtrans2460
    @collectivelyimprovingtrans2460 Před měsícem +10

    He enlisted the help of the Alternate Universe Transit Authority (AUTA) to explain what would happen. The diverging point was 1929 when the city decided building new lines was a top priority and not just survival

  • @Reformperson
    @Reformperson Před měsícem +9

    The S 4 St line would have served as a replacement of the Nassau Line and that would have kept the B and D lines to serve the S 4 Line and with deinterling it would be the A line going on that line too. The C and E lines would have been fully deinterlined and allowed to both be Express on Fulton. They would have been evened out by having the C serving Far Rockaway and the E to Lefferts.
    For the Manhattan Bridge the SAS would have been the line to serve Sea Beach and Bay Ridge with Deinterlining. This would have meant that the repurposed J and Z would have served West End and Bay Ridge. The F and M would have ran together via Culver Express to Coney Island while the other serving Staten Island. This would have meant that the M would have served Staten Island to St George converting the SIR ROW to a line the M would have used. The T using Fulton and the J via Sea Beach allows for both lines to have a turquoise bullet and the Z going to Bay Ridge extended to Staten Island via 4th Ave. The J R and Z lines would be the lines running via 4th Ave with the Nassau line gone and the S 4 St line in its place.

    • @ianhardy9375
      @ianhardy9375 Před měsícem +1

      The south 4th street junction is design to be mixed since the idea is to emerge two connectors from the trunk lines of the first phase both proposals would take in both services

    • @Reformperson
      @Reformperson Před měsícem +1

      @@ianhardy9375 yeah but under the plan I had the 6th Ave services which are the deinterlined B and D, go via Utica to Kings Plaza, and the other line takes the branch to Jamaica Center via Jamaica Ave. The deinterlined A on the other hand would take the IND Worth St line to access the S 4 St line up to Metropolitan Ave.
      With all that this means the F and M go via Culver allowing for more frequent service. This meant that the S 4 St line would have been mixed with 6th and 8th Ave services.

    • @CR1Creative
      @CR1Creative Před měsícem

      ​@@Reformperson
      Under my plan I would make the Bushwick Trunk 4 tracks terminating at Broadway Junction from there it would go superexpress along the LIRR Atlantic Branch and merge with the lower level of the Archer Avenue Subway to Jamaica Center while the Myrtle Avenue Trunk would be a two level subway via Myrtle and Gates Avenues to Fresh Pond Road where It would either connect with the existing terminal at Metropolitan Avenue or go via the Glendale RR to Woodhaven Glen Oaks as for the SAS via Fulton I had two services go there with one going to Jamaica Center via Jamaica Avenue and the other going to Euclid Aveune while another service would go take the Utica Avenue Branch with two tracks. with that the Nassau Street line would be abandoned repurposing the (J) and (Z) on the SAS.

    • @Reformperson
      @Reformperson Před měsícem

      @@CR1Creative yup and so with that I have
      A: 168th St to Middle Village Metropolitan Ave
      B: Inwood 207th St to Kings Plaza
      C: Queens Village Springfield Blvd to Far Rockaway
      D: Co-op City to Jamaica Center
      E: Rosedale F. Lewis to Cambria Heights (Loop)
      F: Jamaica 179th St to Tottenville
      G: Jamaica 179th St to Church Ave
      M: Rockaway Pk to Coney Island
      N: Throgs Neck to Coney Island
      Q: Pelham Bay Pk to Ocean Pkwy
      R: Cross Island Pkwy to Coney Island (West End)
      W: 125th St to Euclid Ave
      J: Wakefield 241st St to Coney Island (Sea Beach)
      Z: Eastchester Dyre Ave to Richmond Ave.

    • @CR1Creative
      @CR1Creative Před měsícem

      @@Reformperson
      Also I'll take it up a notch by adding an additional tunnel to Queens with that I had the (T) serve Northern Blvd up to Willets Point Blvd from there the line would shift along the Whitestone Expwy to as far as 14th Avenue while the (T) can serve Fulton and the Jamaica Avenue Subway and I'll also extend the Archer Avenue Subway one stop to a more efficient terminal at Merrick Blvd to handle two services with an underground yard at 93rd Avenue along with provisions for future extensions to Springfield Blvd and as for extension past Inwood to Co-op via Fordham you could cut across street grid and deep bore in the western bronx portion (while extremely expensive) this could bring great investment in return since Cross Bronx Service along Fordham and Pelham Pkwy is extremely heavily used also repurposing the Bx12-SBS as for the (1) it can be rerouted along the MNR and the ROW of Putnam to 240th Street to replace the Broadway-7th Avenue Line
      So In short we have this
      (B): Co-op City to Kings Plaza
      (Fordham) (Utica)
      (D): Co-op City to Merrick Blvd
      (Burke Avenue) (LIRR Atlantic)
      (T): College Pt Blvd to Merrick Blvd
      (Northern) (Fulton) (Jamaica Avenue)
      (W): 125th to Euclid Aveune
      (Fulton)
      IRT:
      (1): 240th Street to Red Hook
      (Putnam ROW)
      (2): E 180th St to Kingsbourough CC or Crown Hts
      (Nostrand) or (Eastern Pkwy Lcl)
      (3): Discontinued
      (4): Woodlawn to Flatlands Ave
      (Eastern Pkwy Exp) (New Lots)
      (5): Bklyn Bridge to Hunts Pt Ave
      (Lexington Ave Lcl) (Pelham)
      (6): Discontinued
      (7): Secaucus to Port Washington

  • @user-uo7fw5bo1o
    @user-uo7fw5bo1o Před měsícem +1

    If this system got built it would have been a game changer not only for New York City but also for other cities in the United States. The cuties that have subway systems now would have much bigger ststems and cities that don't have any subway systems would have them.

  • @tubegirl1013
    @tubegirl1013 Před měsícem +1

    I would have liked to have seen some of these lines be built but you're right at the end; if they'd been built and made the upkeep of the system untenable, new york could have ended up with a collapsed system and the reduced subway would have been a transit nerd's roman empire on par with LA's interurbans

  • @VinceHere98
    @VinceHere98 Před měsícem +2

    Alternatively, I think the IND second system would’ve been too ambitious to be fully constructed. I think in an alternate timeline, only a few lines would be built.
    The Second Avenue Subway, I believe, would’ve been built shortly after the end of World War II, around 1947-48, whilst the Nostrand Avenue line would be extended in the 1950’s. As the city gets bigger and bigger, and both Lexington and Second suddenly begin to overcrowd, a new line along 5th Avenue would’ve been studied, and it would’ve been constructed by the end of the 50’s.
    Utica Avenue would’ve been part of another line that doesn’t go into Manhattan, running from somewhere in the Bronx to Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn, via 21st Street in Queens. It would be an A Division line with 4 tracks, and it would’ve been constructed in the mid-60’s.
    South 4th Street I don’t think would’ve served much of a purpose as that was built for trains running via Utica. It likely would’ve been reused for another purpose, like a nightclub or a large restaurant. It’s still possible it could be repurposed for such uses, or it could serve as part of a project to connect the G at Broadway to a brand new station on the Jamaica line at Union Avenue, resulting in the demolition of both Hewes and Lorimer Street. This would’ve likely occurred in the early 1970’s, before the fiscal crisis.
    The 63rd Street connection would still be built, as well as the Archer Avenue branch in the late 1980’s. In the early 90’s the Archer Avenue branch on the E would be extended along the LIRR right-of-way (currently used by the Long Beach and Far Rockaway branches today) towards Valley Stream, ending at the Green Acres Mall. This extension would’ve been fully completed around 1998-99.
    As for the other branches, there would also be one for the G along Northern Boulevard (built in the 1960’s with 4 tracks, with a connection to Second Avenue trains running express), an extra branch for the Flushing line to College Point (served by the 11 train, completed in the late 1960’s), an extension of the L to New Jersey (constructed 1999), and so much more.

  • @jr.gaming2205
    @jr.gaming2205 Před měsícem +1

    I just wished we would’ve got the Bed Stuy, Utica Subway that’s the most major one missing 😢

  • @45Steamer
    @45Steamer Před měsícem +1

    I would like to see what if the program for action lines were built

  • @Moon_Dasher
    @Moon_Dasher Před měsícem +4

    Also, dont forget Robert Moses prioritized Highways over Subway

    • @leecornwell5632
      @leecornwell5632 Před měsícem

      Speaking 🗣️ about the subways over the highways. The 8 Thrid Ave Elevated line once ran above the cross Bronx express highways and they had to messured the Thrid Avenue Elevated beams so the trucks 🚛 and cars could pass without hitting the Thrid Avenue Elevated steel structures. The biggest problem was Governor LaGuardia and Robert mosses and the real estates could not stand for no extra elevated lines to be the way they are right now. Robert mosses and governor LaGuardia and the real estate's could not stand for no extra elevated lines at all.

    • @Moon_Dasher
      @Moon_Dasher Před měsícem

      @@leecornwell5632 oh, interesting. There were also plans for a line to run over the Long Island Expwy into the Nassau Co. Border.
      I think if there were to be funding for any new lines, they would have to be underground

    • @tonymanzo3766
      @tonymanzo3766 Před měsícem +1

      The 3 rd ave line had to have a 14’ clearance between the el and the expressway being built underneath, the el was as actually raised to make this happen, it was the last improvement to the el. The el might have still been operating into Manhattan when proposed but as the Manhattan part was cut back it was probably not worth the expense to raise it. The central Bronx where the el ran is a transit desert with buses serving where the el was. It probably could have been extended along gun hill road to co op city.

    • @leecornwell5632
      @leecornwell5632 Před měsícem

      @@tonymanzo3766 The 8 Thrid Ave Elevated shouldn't have been never taken down at all. They had let it get it to rusted and not taking care of the elevated metal steel structures. All they really had to do is to have the BX 55 buses running until they do a complete inspections over haul trestles track frames and girldles and beams and then continueing running the 8 Thrid Ave Elevated line back and forth between Gun hill and and 149 street and then digging under ground on Thrid Avenue to Battery park place or chatmam Square or south Ferry. Chances are Rebuilding the brand new Thrid Avenue Elevated line in the Bronx only. Never rebuild another elevated line in Manhattan again. Right now they are studying how they are gonna have the Thrid Avenue Elevated line back in the south Bronx Clearmount Webster Boston road Bronx and then digging under ground on Thrid Avenue. That was a terrible thing to do is tairing down the 8 Thrid Ave Elevated line down in the south Bronx. They are still processing about it non-stop every sense they have torn down the 8 Thrid Ave Elevated line down.

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 Před měsícem +1

      @@leecornwell5632 The original plan for the remainder of the Third Avenue Line was simply to replace it with a new subway line. Unfortunately, the fiscal crisis of the mid-1970's made sure that would never happen.
      Also, I'd like to point out that not a single subway line or railroad line in the Bronx was eliminated when Moses built the roads. The IRT Jerome Avenue Line, the IND Concourse Line, the IRT Third Avenue, White Plains Road and Pelham Lines all remained intact. The New York Central Hudson and Harlem Divisions still existed as well as the New Haven Railroad's Harlem River Branch, all of which survived the Penn Central merger and later bankruptcy, followed by the acquisition by Metro-North and Amtrak.

  • @R262SubwayTrain
    @R262SubwayTrain Před měsícem

    Nice

  • @durece100
    @durece100 Před měsícem +1

    If the second avenue subway extension to brooklyn, where does the New York Transit Museum relocated to? 10:36

  • @harrykatsos
    @harrykatsos Před měsícem

    They shoulda planned a 34th St tunnel to connect with the Crosstown line before Court Street Station.

  • @AnujaShah-jo2wt
    @AnujaShah-jo2wt Před 12 dny

    Quick fact: The 86 St crosstown or whatever branches off 6 Av not Bway

  • @alexisdespland4939
    @alexisdespland4939 Před měsícem

    which cross town linee would the 79th steet tunnel comnnected to in manhatten.

  • @sonic2batt
    @sonic2batt Před 18 dny

    3:58 Cross Island Blvd was renamed Francis Lewis Blvd in 1939. The Cross Island Parkway is unrelated.

  • @ianhardy9375
    @ianhardy9375 Před měsícem

    The only error that you made tech transit is that the south 4th street junction was originally four tracks including the transfer at Broadway union station. East of Union, the line expands to 8 tracks forming two lines in a bilevel, each with four tracks to Myrtle Ave where they go their separate ways. The junction was replanned to include more tracks and connections with Broadway Union expand to six tracks and four island platforms, much like Hoyt Schmerhorn but as many connections as Queens Plaza. Its uncertain if there was a plan to accommodate four lines with rhe first two being built as part of the second phase with the other two come later where one would replace the Jamaica el. There's only two revision plans to the South 4th Street junction, one plan was incorporating the same tracks from the sixth and eighth avenue lines but also included the second avenue subway forming a six track line where the Utica Ave subway retains four tracks but the Myrtle Central Rockaway line maintains two tracks to Knickerbocker avenue where another pair of tracks would come from the crosstown line forming a four track line. Plan 2 is an alternative and more complex and if built, it would have present some interesting service. It takes in the same set of tracks from the sixth and eighth avenue lines and the other six are unknown, one comes from Delancey Street parallel the two at Havemeyers street, the other two pair of tracks, one of them are positioned in between the two island platforms on each side, they look like they were intended for terminal tracks as the tracks continue to create tail tracks with a crossover switch for relaying trains west of the station and the laat pair of tracks are located on the third level under the crosstown line. These tracks end in bumper blocks at the west end point of the station and aligned in the same position but below the outer tracks on the top level and the platform on the third level is one massive island platform. This was done to create a complex level of transfer and crossover to navigate the configuration of this station since they revision with not only routes through but also add terminal complexity mirroring the eighth avenue and Fulton Street line which have this kind of pattern. The tracks from the third level become the local tracks of the Utica Ave subway which was retain while meeting the tracks from the sixth avenue line which become the express tracks. The terminal tracks from the six track configuration split into two pairs of tracks creating four tracks to serve the other two branches providing local services to both of those branches, one to Broadway where it would the tracks from Delancey street emerge from the top level forming another four track line while the other pair would meet the tracks from the eighth avenue line forming a third line with four tracks to serve Queens along Flushing Avenue and horace harding blvd ( today's LIE ). Its uncertain if this line will connect with the Astoria line or serve as alternative to it or the Myrtle Central line since the line was not intergraded into this plan and it is unsure if the second avenue subway is included in the plan as there are three pairs of tracks connecting between Manhattan and Brooklyn the two IND lines and BMT Nassau street line. Aside from the swithes being use for terminal, two more are use to provide a connection between the local tracks of the Utica and LIE southbound while the other is use to connect the two tracks to access one of the two levels to terminate at either location

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Před měsícem

    Queens never got built out like the other boroughs. Brooklyn was it own city at one time. And any extensions was worked out with Queens later on.
    The Bronx was the extension of Manhattan. And Staten Island had an extension commuter sustem at one time.
    Anyway, just imagine Queens getting all these lines.
    Not only would it be the largest borough in size, it very possible that Queens couldve been a city onto itself.

  • @diegoyanesholtz212
    @diegoyanesholtz212 Před 27 dny

    With the IND second system, there would be very little to improve the line, May there would be a need for a Staten Island Subway and a Line connecting the Bronx, Queens, and Brooklyn. If that is done the NYC subway would be perfect and a European level of transit.

  • @ThatcrazyAK
    @ThatcrazyAK Před měsícem +3

    Should the second system be built today?

    • @EndIessProductions
      @EndIessProductions Před měsícem +1

      not enough money they do have enough actually but it would take super duper long time

    • @ThatcrazyAK
      @ThatcrazyAK Před 29 dny +1

      ⁠@@EndIessProductionsI know they don’t have that much money, what I’m saying is, should it be built, ( ignoring the absurd cost that would be needed for the Second System ) will it help reduce overcrowding in some major subway lines and increase development. ( Also, change some of the lines in the Second System, and you have your lucky bet!. And ignoring the amount of time it would need to take to build the second system.)

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 7 dny

      Not all of them.

  • @Jayjaycurlss01
    @Jayjaycurlss01 Před měsícem

    It’s amazing how if this were to happen there would be no connection between Broadway Junction and Myrtle Ave if the Jamaica EL got demolished

  • @harrykatsos
    @harrykatsos Před měsícem

    I think if the MTA is to get an IND Utica line, they would need a 4 track stacked TBM tunnel for a few segments of the line, like sumwhere deep when it passes under Crowns Heights Station or the stretch between IND Utica Ave station and the South 4th St line cuz Stuyvesant Ave can't b widened since that would get opposition.

    • @j.t.5178
      @j.t.5178 Před 23 dny +2

      Actually, the Utica Av Station on the Fulton St Line (A,C) has a secret mezzanine and express station platform and track bed above the A&C platforms. I agree the Stuyvesant Av portion would be Two-level, two-track, but would become 4-tracks at around Halsey St or so. Then it can continue as a 4-track subway until after Kings Hwy, where the express tracks continue to Kings Plaza (and maybe Nostrand Av via Avenue U), as the area is prone to flooding.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 13 dny +2

      There is no need for a full length IND Utica Avenue when an IRT branch from Eastern Parkway would suffice. This is also considering that Crown Heights-Utica is a garbage place to turn around trains with trains being delayed as a result, so having the Utica Subway start there would allow for local trains to use the Utica Avenue Line and express trains to continue to New Lots Avenue. I guess you won’t have to worry about your train being delayed due to terminating trains at Utica Avenue since there won’t be any trains terminating at Utica Avenue.

    • @AaronB474
      @AaronB474 Před 12 dny

      @@TheRailLeaguer
      But what about Northern Utica that is still a transit desert.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 12 dny

      @@AaronB474 While ridership levels don’t warrant the full length subway, a compromise would be to have a separate pair of tracks for north of Eastern Pkwy. As originally planned, starting at Empire, it would continue north on Utica Avenue and Malcom X Blvd into Bed-Stuy, from there, rather than turn northwest towards Manhattan, it would actually turn the other way, as in Northeast towards Queens along DeKalb Avenue towards Wyckoff Avenue, connecting with the Canarsie Line. There will be a cross-platform transfer between the Utica IRT and the “Utica Avenue shuttle” at Empire Blvd.

    • @harrykatsos
      @harrykatsos Před 10 dny

      @@TheRailLeaguer Ik it won't ever happen, I'm just stating what I think should happen if they were ever to consider the IND extension on Utica.

  • @omarfaruq9233
    @omarfaruq9233 Před měsícem +1

    LETS GO W VID

    • @Raving_Shapes
      @Raving_Shapes Před měsícem

      -You’ve only watched it for 2 minutes(?) and commented this just to be first-
      -Wow-

    • @omarfaruq9233
      @omarfaruq9233 Před měsícem

      @@Raving_Shapes if its tta about the ind second system its gonna be good

    • @Raving_Shapes
      @Raving_Shapes Před měsícem

      @@omarfaruq9233 oh nvm then
      Ok

  • @CastleWolf17
    @CastleWolf17 Před 26 dny +1

    While some subway extensions could have been nice, this was extremely overdone. The Morningside line made absolutely no sense. The South 4th Street subway as 10 tracks was a big waste of resources. Proposals like the SAS, Rockaway Beach branch, and Nostrand Avenue extension were nice, but even these were overdone. SAS only needs 2-4 tracks, not 6.

  • @hairypotter259
    @hairypotter259 Před měsícem +1

    Why cant we have nice things like this 😭

    • @EndIessProductions
      @EndIessProductions Před měsícem

      bc u selfish people keep trying mta to do something ITS PREASURING THEM ALSO THEY DONT HAVE THAT MUCH MONEY BC U KEEP JUMPING OVER THE TURN STILES AND NOT PAYING HOW DO U EXOECT THEM TO DO SOMETHING?

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +4

    with the queens extentions they will fill up these 4 transit deserts and help many commuters get to manhatten

    • @boguette_
      @boguette_ Před měsícem

      Not only Manahttan, but also many other neighborhoods in their boroughs that nearby bus lines might not take them to

    • @sumabanik9464
      @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem

      @@boguette_ that is true

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +2

    but there will be merging conflicts in the flushing and staten island extentions

    • @leecornwell5632
      @leecornwell5632 Před měsícem +3

      The 7 Flushing line could definitely be extended to Bayside and the 11 trains could definitely be extended to 20 college point.

    • @gourobsarker7524
      @gourobsarker7524 Před měsícem

      But she is right this will create another merging conflict

  • @ikelom
    @ikelom Před měsícem

    0:51 Did you say John Mulaney??

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +4

    these new lines would be very useful for different neighborhoods to have a direct connection to manhatten and its finance districts

  • @Hypestrike1
    @Hypestrike1 Před měsícem

    This is not exactly relevant to this video, but as many with an ear to the ground (literally and figuratively) will be watching this video too, does anyone know if any serious construction has started on SAS Phase 2 ? There were a lot of news stories in January reporting the MTA had awarded the first contract for utility relocation on Second Avenue in East Harlem, with work planned to begin in March. It's now May, and does anyone know if anything has happened?

  • @ianhardy9375
    @ianhardy9375 Před měsícem

    The areas where the lines would would have been serve but it is uncertain as the areas back then are different than today and even if they get built, it still wouldn't be enough given the comments and criticism from politics and the IND is three phases not two

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +4

    also having a connection to staten island will help because the people there can get to manhattan

  • @alexisdespland4939
    @alexisdespland4939 Před měsícem

    in the prsent day the future woodhaven boulevard line should go up queens boulvard and intio a new 79th a strret crosstown tunnel that migh gain a juction with the seconf avnue line but m or maybe a new madison avune lin but also go under centeral park with a new 9th avune runnel endind at either penn station or the quiter path connection statio of christpher steet and ultamately down inti brookly via either utica or nortstrand avune maybe even both.

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Před měsícem +2

    They did not really need an IND. The IND was built to replace the IRT and BMT. So it was a waste of Money. Everything you said about the second system, already existed somewhat. The city tore down lines that served even better than the current system.
    The 9th Ave EL and 6th.Avenue. And in it place, we got an over built subway on 6th Avenue.
    Just the cost of underpinning the PATH and BMT is unspeakable. And it was a crime.of public funds that coulld have went to building the Second Avenue Subway.
    So whenever i hear, they did not have money, its a laughing joke!
    We did not need a Fulton Street subway, even though it is one of the best subways ever built by far. There is not a slow section anywhere, except maybe bwy east ny.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 13 dny +1

      That joke of yours is getting way too old and you need to stop with those conspiracy theories.

    • @qolspony
      @qolspony Před 13 dny

      @TheRailLeaguer it's no conspiracy. It is public information that the IND was built to replace the BMT and IRT. Because the same guy who became mayor, was a motorman with the BMT. And when they fired him, he held a vendetta against them and ran and won as Mayor to.get rid of them. The problem is he used public funds to do just that!

    • @AaronB474
      @AaronB474 Před 12 dny

      ​@@TheRailLeaguer
      I've read your maps before some of your replacement subways for the elevated lines in the Bronx are indirect it's better to build replacement subways directly below the els instead also does your plan include replacing the Brighton and Culver lines.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 12 dny +1

      ⁠@@qolsponyThat’s not true as it is a conspiracy, and you’re not seeing the big picture. Besides, there really wasn’t anything wrong with replacing the BMT and IRT elevated with subways. It was going to happen anyway.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 12 dny +1

      @@AaronB474Some of them are built directly under elevated structure, though replacing multiple lines. Not all of them since that would mean too much construction work to underpin the structures. However I did have a strategic few, mainly in the Bronx. Here, my Pelham Line replacement Subway on Westchester Avenue replaces both the Westchester Avenue portion of the White Plains Road elevated and the easternmost portion of the Pelham Line. The four track subway would be served by the 2 and 5 train, local and express respectively. The White Plains Road replacement subway travels under the rest of the WPR elevated.

  • @zayxyrn
    @zayxyrn Před měsícem

    bro js made ppl life extremely hard💀

  • @odemata87
    @odemata87 Před měsícem

    Would be no supposed need for the IBX if this was built

    • @techtransitassociation
      @techtransitassociation  Před měsícem

      There probably will be. Especially there is no Cross Brooklyn service, even under the Second System.

  • @jaytep5647
    @jaytep5647 Před měsícem +1

    8:25 what made the environment hostile towards public transit in 1945? was it just roads/highways?

    • @user-uo7fw5bo1o
      @user-uo7fw5bo1o Před 29 dny

      Redlining, too, and bad old fashioned racism imo.

  • @Urban_Man
    @Urban_Man Před měsícem +1

    Imagine the money spent for Interstate highway was used for transit,at least the highways could have left a medium for transit.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 12 dny

      Robert Moses left no room in the LIE for a subway extension. Sad since there are two major universities along the route and many people have been begging for this expansion.

  • @bapples
    @bapples Před měsícem +1

    3:18 pronounced “sheep’s head”

  • @nasifsiddiquey8867
    @nasifsiddiquey8867 Před měsícem +4

    The Good Ending (NYC Urbanism Edition):
    - The IND Second System was built
    - Robert Moses never came to power
    - The 1961 Zoning Resolution never passed

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 Před měsícem

      Even if the Second System were built, Robert Moses would still need to build the roads.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 12 dny

      ⁠@@DTD110865 But not to the degree that they were built to today. Remember, Moses built many of his highways and bridges without provisions for any mass transit, leaving us with the same old buses (which are often slow). That may be overlooked so long as they had some sort of transit priority for the buses to speed past the usual bumper to bumper traffic. [they don’t].
      You’re kidding. Remember when the subway was the best of them all in 1934. Yeah those were good times. Car development sadly took over leaving most of NYC with a bundle of nothing to add to their collection. Someone once said this: hope springs eternal. That hope was lost to the summer wind, and the city continues to fall.

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 Před 12 dny

      @@TheRailLeaguer Buses moved slow for the same reason other vehicles moved slow. Insufficient roads. Moses built roads that were better able to handle them, and tried to build more. He shouldn't have been stopped. And subway expansion could've still been carried out simultaneously... in fact it was, even if it wasn't at the level that the NYC Board of Transportation wanted.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 7 dny

      ⁠@@DTD110865Insufficient roads are not the reason why the buses move slow. Rather, lack of bus priority. Take a look at what other cities do: Bus Rapid Transit in South America moves quick despite the “insufficient roads”. Convert some car lanes (or ideally, whole highways) into busways and you won’t need to build more roads. After all, “just one more lane” doesn’t help traffic at all, and a bi-directional busway moves more people and commerce effectively than six highway lanes.

  • @DemonQueen1975
    @DemonQueen1975 Před měsícem

    That would have been awesome, especially for southeastern Queens, which is a transit desert. And Staten Island wouldn't have been ignored.
    Based on everything I've read so far about Robert Moses, he was a bit of a dick.

  • @ChuckConnNYC
    @ChuckConnNYC Před měsícem

    Sheep’s head , not sheep shed , fyi

  • @KalebIsBack-go2qh
    @KalebIsBack-go2qh Před měsícem +1

    am I the third comment?

  • @sumabanik9464
    @sumabanik9464 Před měsícem +2

    with the 2 beanches there

  • @BK_718
    @BK_718 Před 28 dny

    We need a circle ⭕️ line like Moscow. Unfortunately with the labor unions and corrupt mismanagement from the democrats and republicans that hold weight in the MTA this will never get completed in my lifetime. The circle line should be at least 50 miles with 50 stations. That would cost like half a trillion dollars and would most likely take at least 50 years to get done. Every single household within the New York City limits should be no further than half a mile to a mile from a subway station.

  • @rdbarne
    @rdbarne Před měsícem

    Though a second system would’ve helped, just imagine how high the rents would be in those transit deserts today if hose lines were in operation. The city would’ve been even more unaffordable.

    • @techtransitassociation
      @techtransitassociation  Před měsícem +1

      Well, not really. The 1961 rezoning resolution had to do more with it, as it constricted the housing supply.

  • @aqua2poweros699
    @aqua2poweros699 Před měsícem +1

    Our government should invest in the second system instead of foreign aid.

  • @frankiecrocker
    @frankiecrocker Před měsícem

    Speaking for most residents in Eastern Queens: "We don't want anymore subways!" We love how sparse and uncluttered it is out here.

    • @techtransitassociation
      @techtransitassociation  Před měsícem +3

      You might want to talk to some people in Eastern Queens.

    • @frankiecrocker
      @frankiecrocker Před měsícem +1

      @@techtransitassociation those are the very ones who can't foresee the explosion in population and development. They're shortsighted. Besides, I work and live in Eastern Queens. Nice video, by the way!

    • @techtransitassociation
      @techtransitassociation  Před měsícem +4

      @@frankiecrocker Thanks, but a younger generation is taking over in Queens, and wants the train. This is coming from someone who worked in advocacy in Eastern Queens.

    • @frankiecrocker
      @frankiecrocker Před měsícem +1

      @@techtransitassociation as a man in his early 60s, I won't be around to see this abomination! I thought like you once, then I got older, but you enjoy, youngster. I'll still watch your videos til the end of my time. 😇

    • @frankiecrocker
      @frankiecrocker Před měsícem +1

      @@techtransitassociation afterall, I was 13 when they initially started the 2nd avenue subway but finished it when I was in my 50s🤣

  • @CompositesNG
    @CompositesNG Před měsícem +1

    Money for Endless Wars and Migrant Issues and Nothing for New Yorkers and Americans.