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DESIGN OF THE
DIAGONAL
STATION AND
CONNECTION
PUBLIC SERVICE RECORD · VOL. V,
NO. 12, DECEMBER, 1918
By Olof A. Nilsson Designer, Division of
Designs
One of the most important of transportation centers of
New York, when the rapid transit systems now being built are
completed, will be what has become known as the Diagonal Station,
located diagonally across and beneath 42nd Street between Park and
Lexington Avenues, and extending approximately from the intersection
of Park Avenue and 41st Street to Lexington Avenue and 43d Street.
North of 42nd Street, facing Park Avenue, the New York
terminus of the New York Central and the New York, New Haven and
Hartford railroad systems, namely the Grand Central Terminal. On 42nd
Street just west of Park Avenue is located what was the Grand Central
Station of the First Subway, the route of the latter turning from Park
Avenue at this point and extending west under 42nd Street to Times
Square, thence continuing via Broadway and other thoroughfares through
the northerly end of Manhattan and on to Van Cortlandt Park by the
Broadway branch and into The Bronx by the Bronx Park branch. Two
blocks east runs the Third Avenue elevated railroad with a shuttle
service to and from the Grand Central Terminal. As to surface lines,
there are the cross-town line on 42nd Street, the Lexington Avenue line
to the east, and the Park Avenue-Madison Avenue line which, in Park
Avenue south of 41st Street, runs underground in a tunnel above the
level of the subway tubes.
| General plan of diagonal station at 42nd
Street and Grand Central Station. (Click image to enlarge.)
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Subway History. When, in 1913, the Dual System
Contracts were adopted, these were included in the portion of the
system assigned to the Interborough for operation, among other lines,
the Lexington Avenue subway, which was a part of the previously
planned Triborough route, and the Queensborough subway, which, originally
known as the Steinway tunnel, had been begun as early as 1892, and was
built as two single-track tunnels from Long Island City under the East
River and 42nd Street, ending in a loop under Park Avenue in front of
the Grand Central Terminal.
The Lexington Avenue line, branching north of the Harlem
River in a westerly line on Jerome Avenue leading to Woodlawn and an
easterly one extending to Pelham Bay Park, was, under the terms of the
contract, to connect with the original subway south of 42nd Street,
thus to form the easterly of the two north and south four-track main
lines of the Interborough system in Manhattan. The Queensborough subway
was to be extended west to Times Square and the Long Island City end,
after being extended to Queensborough Plaza, was laid out with two
branches, the Astoria line running north and the Woodside and Corona
line running east. With the completed system in operation, the
portion of the original subway in 42nd Street was abandoned for through
traffic. Two of its tracks were assigned for shuttle trains between
the Times Square station on the west and the Diagonal station on the
east main line. The two remaining tracks may be used for the extension
of the Queensborough subway.
It is the intention further that the uptown tunnels of
the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad, connecting New York with Jersey
City, Newark and other New Jersey communities, shall, in the future, be
extended to this point from the present terminal at 34th Street and
Sixth Avenue.
Plate 2 shows these various rapid transit lines meeting
and intersecting around 42nd Street and Park Avenue (the surface lines
being omitted in order to avoid confusion).
Problem at Focal Point. The problem to be solved
at this focal point of present and future transit lines was twofold:
First: To effect a physical connection between the old
subway in Park Avenue and the new one in Lexington Avenue without
interruption and danger to subway traffic during the period of
construction and in such a manner that at the end of this period the
traffic could be diverted without serious interruption.
Second: To locate and design a subway station which would
adequately serve the anticipated traffic. The proximity of the Grand
Central Terminal, a large proportion of whose incoming passengers will
continue their journey by the subway, the intersection of two subway
lines, and the shuttle service to a third one are conditions producing
a large transfer traffic, which, plus the traffic originating in this
rapidly developing neighborhood, tend to make the Diagonal station in
point of number of passengers passing through it one of the largest in
New York. It was, therefore, important to make the station large
enough to accommodate this enormous passenger flow and to locate it so
that the annoyances incident to effecting a transfer would be reduced
to a minimum.
Final Solution. The solution was accomplished by
making the Park Avenue-Lexington Avenue connection diagonally across
42nd Street and utilizing this diagonal connection for a large express
station. This location brings the station as close as possible to the
Grand Central Terminal and permits intercommunication of passengers by
means of comparatively short underground passages. It also gives a
convenient shuttle connection as well as another with the
Queensborough subway, the latter by placing the Queensborough station
directly below the Diagonal station. This is shown on Plate 1, which
gives a general outline of the station, the adjacent Grand Central
Terminal, the shuttle station and the Queensborough station below,
indicating also the connection to the old Park Avenue subway.
The latter is, north of 34th Street, built as two
double-track arch tunnels, 68 feet center to center, merging as they
approach 42nd Street into one structure built of steel bents and
concrete. The grade north is a rising one of about 1.15%. The
Diagonal station is placed at such an elevation that at the westerly
end the two express tracks in the middle, by a maximum downgrade of
3.5%, are carried under the old easterly (northbound) tunnel. Turning
south the new express tunnel continues between the two old tunnels on
a rising grade until, at the proper level, it divides and breaks right
and left into the latter, and a junction is effected between the new
and the old express tracks. In the same manner the new southbound
local track is carried under both the old tunnels and runs south on
the westerly side of the old line, connecting with the old southbound
local track near 38th Street. The new northbound local track,
connecting to the old track between 40th and 41st Streets, has a
downward grade as it runs north and turns into the Diagonal station,
so that by the time the platform ends are reached all four tracks are
at nearly the same level.
Solution at Junction Point. The design providing
for the difficult work of joining the old and the new tunnels in Park
Avenue is indicated in plan and section in Plates 3 and 4. As shown in
the cross-section, the structure was enlarged by removing one-half of
the old masonry arch and excavating the rock to the required
width. The crown thrust of the half arch left undisturbed is
transmitted through the new roof construction into the rock on the
opposite side, and the vertical load is taken up by a line of columns
in the center of the old tunnel between the tracks.
| | Plate IV. Section of connection of old
and new work.
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North of the portion described above, where the new track
is entirely outside the old tunnel, the new tunnel is built first in a
rectangular shape with steel roof beams and columns and further north
as a twin arch tunnel with a line of steel columns in the center.
Plates 5 and 6 show in plan the reconstruction of the old
northbound tunnel for a length of about 200 feet from the point where
the new northbound local track begins to deflect east to the point
where steel bent construction was used originally. 0n this portion of
the work the street was excavated until the old arch was uncovered.
The arch was then removed and replaced by a structure of steel bents
and concrete. This structure is carried over the new express tunnel
on plate girders spanning this latter and in turn supported by columns
which are carried to the new subgrade below.
| Plates V-VI. Upper: Plan at roof level
of old tunnel as reconstructed. Lower: Plan at roof level of new
express tunnel. (Click image to enlarge.)
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Plate 7 is a cross-section just south of 41st Street,
which shows all the tunnels old and new, in Park Avenue at this point
including the reconstructed old northbound tunnel described above and
shown in plan on Plates 5 and 6.
| Plate VII. Cross-section at point on
Park Avenue south of 42nd Street indicated by line B-B on
plan. (Click image to enlarge.)
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Design of Station. The Diagonal station proper, as
indicated on Plate 1, is of the ordinary type for four-track express
stations with twin island platforms, 480 feet long, one serving
northbound and one southbound traffic. Each platform has eight
stairways, six leading up and two down. The latter connect to a ramp
and passageway 12 feet wide by which passengers may transfer to and
from the Queensborough subway, directly below. The former, 10 feet wide,
lead up to two mezzanine floors above. The larger of these
mezzanines, extending under the full width of 42nd Street and under
part of the old Grand Union Hotel plot, covers about 25,000 square
feet. Its floor surface at elevation 128.4 feet is about 17 feet below
the street level at the principal entrances, which are located on 42nd
Street, one on the southerly and two on the northerly side of the
street. A fourth entrance is located in Park Avenue between 41st and
42nd Streets.
In addition to these direct street entrances, this
mezzanine is connected by means of underground ramps and passages to
incoming and outgoing trains of the Grand Central Terminal, to several
important buildings in the neighborhood and to other street entrances
on Lexington Avenue, on 45th Street and in 42nd Street west of
Vanderbilt Avenue. A ramp at the westerly side leads to an island
platform serving the shuttle trains to Times Square. Finally,
communication with the Queensborough Subway station below is provided by
three elevators and one emergency stairway.
The smaller mezzanine near the easterly or northerly end
of the station is entirely within the limits of the Hotel Commodore
and is about 44 feet wide and 90 feet long. It has two entrances,
both connected to the ground floor of the hotel. The one will
principally serve the hotel guests and railroad passengers, the other
will take care of street traffic east of and on Lexington Avenue. The
latter has two openings to the street, one on 42nd Street and the other
through a passageway under the sidewalk on Lexington Avenue north of
43rd Street.
Entrances through Buildings. Worthy of note is the
fact that all entrances built for this station are through adjacent
buildings. As the density of sidewalk traffic increases, a subway
entrance becomes either an increasingly serious obstruction, if placed
on the sidewalk, or, if placed through an adjacent building leaving
the sidewalk free, an asset of increasing value to the owners of the
building.
Except for the portion directly under 42nd Street the
Diagonal station is located almost entirely under private property.
It was, therefore, necessary to build a subway structure capable of
sustaining such loads as might be imposed by future buildings and also
to see that in the design no avoidable detrimental restrictions were
imposed on the architects of these future buildings. Owing to
different conditions this problem was solved differently for the two
properties involved.
On the property north of 42nd Street, belonging to the New
York Central Railroad Company, it had already been decided to erect a
large hotel, the Commodore, and plans for this hotel were carried on
ahead of or simultaneously with those for the subway structure. The
subway columns were located by the usual requirements for station
bents, 15 feet center to center, two column lines in the platform and
one between the express tracks. They were carried up through the
subway roof. The building columns rest on an irregular and somewhat
elaborate system of girders, which transmits the building loads into
the subway columns. The main roof of the subway forms the basement
floor of the hotel; between the basement ceiling and the ground floor
of the hotel there is a space of about 8 or 10 feet which is utilized
for this girder system.
The Grand Union Site. The use to which the plot
south of 42nd Street, originally occupied by the old Grand Union Hotel,
was to be put was unknown and it was thus not possible to provide for
any definite type of building. Efforts on the part of the Commission
for a voluntary agreement on reasonable terms with the original owners
having failed, the plot was acquired by the City under condemnation
proceedings with the end in view of reselling, subject to an easement,
when construction was completed and the market was favorable.
It was, therefore, necessary to assume the maximum height
and weight of a building that could and in all likelihood would be
erected on the plot, and provide for the loads of this imaginary
building. Two methods were possible: One to design the subway roof
for a uniform load per square foot, not less than the average weight
per square foot of the assumed building, the loads from the building
columns then to be distributed over the subway roof by means of
grillages; the other to decide on an economical and advantageous panel
division for such a building as might be anticipated for this plot and
to design the subway roof for building loads at the points thus
obtained. Any disadvantage that might be inherent in this second
method, in thus restricting the panel spacing of the building was
considered to be more than offset by the cheaper construction it
offered and by the saving of valuable basement space which under the
first mentioned method would have to be taken up by the grillages.
The plot was, therefore, divided up into a number of
equal spaces in both directions, resulting in a column spacing of 20
feet 7 inches in one direction and 21 feet 6 inches in the other. It
so happened that the diagonal lines drawn through the column centers
thus obtained were almost normal to the longitudinal axis of the
station and the distances between these diagonals were also nearly
equal to the standard column spacing of 15 feet for stations.
Assume 25-Story Building. Taking advantage of this
fact, the bents were located on the diagonal lines connecting the
columns, thus centering every column on a bent and escaping the
necessity of a double system of girders for the transmitting of
building loads from base of building column to subway columns. A
25-story building was assumed to be the highest likely to be erected
on this plot. Live and dead loads from such a building were computed
on the basis of the New York building code as in force in 1915, and
used in designing the subway bents.
Plate 8 shows a typical bent. The girders supporting the
building columns are double and of varying depth, according to the
magnitude of the moments and shears. A cast steel slab on the top
flange of the girders will serve as a base for the future building
columns. Similar slabs are used as caps and bases of the subway
columns, and between different tiers of grillage beams.
| Plate VIII. Typical cross section at
Grand Union Hotel site. (Click image to enlarge.)
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As has been shown in the general description of the
Diagonal station, the interchange of passengers between the Park
Avenue-Lexington Avenue lines and the Queensborough subway was one of
the important elements considered in its design and location. As
mentioned in the beginning of this article, the Queensborough subway
consisted originally of two single-track tubes ending in a loop under
Park Avenue. Its reconstruction at this point in order to make it fit
into the Dual System is shown in Plate 9.
| Plate IX. Cross-section of Queensborough
subway at Grand Central station. (Click image to enlarge.)
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Tunnel Replaces Tubes. The two original tubes have
been replaced for a length of about 475 feet by a large tunnel,
increasing in width of span from 41.5 feet at the easterly end to 55.1
feet at the westerly end. This reconstructed portion directly below
the Diagonal station forms the main part of the Grand Central Station
of the Queensborough subway. It is an island platform station 640 feet
long. At the westerly end of the platform are placed the three
elevators which as previously mentioned run to the mezzanine floor of
the Diagonal station. At about the middle of the platform are two
stairways which lead to the ramp by which the platforms of the
Diagonal station are reached. At the easterly end of the station an
escalator carries passengers to the street.
In general passengers transferring between the Queensborough
subway and the Lexington Avenue-Park Avenue lines use the ramps, the
elevators being utilized by people going to the street, the Grand
Central Terminal, or to the shuttle trains. When the Queensborough
subway has been extended to Times Square there should be no occasion
for transfer to the shuttle trains at this point by passengers from
the Queensborough subway and Queens lines.
The reader will understand that, if the problems
confronting the designers of the subway sections described in this
article were unusual and difficult, this was no less the case in the
carrying out, under most adverse conditions, of the actual
construction. While the old structure was being reconstructed, and
the masonry removed little by little and replaced by new steel and
concrete, the subway traffic in these tunnels went on uninterruptedly
day and night, 1500 trains carrying in round numbers 1,000,000
passengers every 24 hours past this point. Very little more
inconvenience was caused to the busy street traffic on the surface,
and the passengers in the surface railroad tunnel above the subway
were as little conscious as were the subway passengers that under and
around them rock was being blasted away and the network of tunnels
completely transformed. The men on whom rested the responsibility of
carrying out this work may well feel gratified that their task is
finished and that there has been no serious accident during the three
years of building.
The construction has been described in an article by
Mr. G. Perrine, published in the Proceedings of the American
Society of Civil Engineers, for November, 1917, with discussions in
subsequent numbers of the Proceedings by Messrs. Robert Ridgway, John
H. Myers, Henry H. Quimby and others. Brief illustrated articles,
dealing with special phases of this work, have been published in the
Engineering Record of August 28, 1915, and July 22, 1916, and
in the Scientific American of July 17, 1915.
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