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Transactions of the American 
Society of Civil Engineers, vol. 
LXVIII, Sept. 1910 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Transactions of the American Society 
of 
Civil Engineers, vol. LXVIII, Sept. 1910, by B.F. Cresson, Jr This 
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Title: Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers, vol. 
LXVIII, Sept. 1910 The New York Tunnel Extension of the 
Pennsylvania Railroad The Terminal Station - West 
Author: B.F. Cresson, Jr 
Release Date: December 13, 2005 [EBook #17302] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOCIETY 
OF CIVIL ENGINEERS ***
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sigal Alon and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS 
INSTITUTED 1852 
TRANSACTIONS 
Paper No. 1156 
THE NEW YORK TUNNEL EXTENSION OF THE 
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. 
THE TERMINAL STATION-WEST.[A] 
BY B.F. CRESSON, JR., M. AM. SOC. C.E. 
 
_Location of Work._--The area covered by the work of the Terminal 
Station-West is bounded as follows: By the east line of Ninth Avenue; 
by the south side of 31st Street to a point about 200 ft. west of Ninth 
Avenue; by a line running parallel to Ninth Avenue and about 200 ft. 
therefrom, from the south side of 31st Street to the boundary line 
between the 31st and 32d Street properties; by this line to the east line 
of Tenth Avenue; by the east line of Tenth Avenue to the boundary line 
between the 32d and 33d Street properties; by this line to the east line 
of Ninth Avenue. The area is approximately 6.3 acres. 
_House-Wrecking._--The property between Ninth and Tenth Avenues 
was covered with buildings, 94 in number, used as dwelling and 
apartment houses and church properties, and it was necessary to 
remove these before starting the construction. Most of the property was 
bought outright by the Railroad Company, but in some cases 
condemnation proceedings had to be instituted in order to acquire
possession. In the case of the property of the Church of St. Michael, 
fronting on Ninth Avenue, 31st and 32d Streets, the Railroad Company 
agreed to purchase a plot of land on the south side of 34th Street, west 
of Ninth Avenue, and to erect thereon a church, rectory, convent, and 
school, to the satisfaction of the Church of St. Michael, to hand over 
these buildings in a completed condition, and to pay the cost of moving 
from the old to the new buildings, before the old properties would be 
turned over to the Railroad Company. 
The house-wrecking was done by well-known companies under 
contract with the Railroad Company. These companies took down the 
buildings and removed all the materials as far as to the level of the 
adjacent sidewalks. The building materials became the property of the 
contractors, who usually paid the Railroad Company for the privilege 
of doing the house-wrecking. The work was done between April and 
August, 1906, but the buildings of the Church of St. Michael were torn 
down between June and August, 1907. 
The bricks were cleaned and sold directly from the site, as were 
practically all the fixtures in the buildings. The stone fronts were 
broken up and left on the premises. Some of the beams were sold on 
the premises, but most of them were sent to the storage yards. Some of 
the lath and smaller timber was sold for firewood, but most of it was 
given away or burned on the premises. 
_Contracts and Agreements._--The main contract, awarded to the New 
York Contracting Company-Pennsylvania Terminal on April 28th, 
1906, included about 502,000 cu. yd. of excavation (about 90% being 
rock), 17,820 cu. yd. of concrete walls, 1,320,000 lb. of structural steel, 
638,000 ft., B.M., of framed timber, etc., etc. 
This contract was divided into two parts: "Work In and Under Ninth 
Avenue" and "Work Between Ninth and Tenth Avenues," and unit 
prices were quoted for the various classes of work in each of these 
divisions. The prices quoted for excavation included placing the 
material on scows supplied by the Railroad Company at the pier at the 
foot of West 32d Street, on the North River; there was a clause in the 
contract, however, by which the contractor could be required to make
complete disposal of all excavated material at an additional unit price, 
and this clause was enforced on January 1st, 1909, when about 94% of 
the excavation had been done. 
For the purpose of disposing of the excavated material in the easterly 
portion of the Terminal, the New York Contracting 
Company-Pennsylvania Terminal had excavated under Ninth    
    
		
	
	
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