PATH service to Exchange Place, on the
Jersey City waterfront, will resume June 29
when the refurbished Exchange Place station
will begin functioning as a temporary PATH
system terminus point. PATH service to the
World Trade Center site will resume at the
end of the year when a temporary station
will be ready for passenger operation.
When the Exchange Place station reopens
and added ferry service to Lower Manhattan
is initiated from the Colgate Pier, PATH
commuters will be able to save approximately
10-15 minutes on their trip to lower
Manhattan, compared to other transportation
options.
The re-opening of Exchange Place station
will come 21 months after the terrorist-
attacks that destroyed the World Trade
Center (WTC). The attacks also destroyed the
WTC PATH station, and flooded the tunnels
under the Hudson River. Flooding -from
broken water and sewer lines and the vast
amounts of water used to fight the fires at
the World Trade Center-reached Exchange
Place, and necessitated huge concrete plugs
to be constructed within the tunnels to
prevent the disruption of the entire PATH
system. In 1906, the Exchange Place station
had been built as a "through
station", en route to downtown New
York, where the trains would turn around to
go back to New Jersey. There was no way, at
Exchange Place, to switch trains from the
eastbound to the westbound track and trains
could no longer use the station.
Converting Exchange Place station into a terminal
where trains could be switched back
required new tunnels for crossover tracks
and new large radius switches. That
operation meant mining new tunnels through
11,000 cubic yards of solid rock just west
of the station, between Hudson and
Washington Streets, extending beneath the
35-story building at 10 Exchange Place and
the buildings at 2 and 30 Montgomery Street.
The tunneling work was done in a manner
to avoid inconveniencing or disrupting
neighborhood businesses, and all
construction debris was removed from the
site below ground during off hours.
As this Herculean task proceeded, eight
turnouts were built for trains to switch
tracks. The existing ballasted track system
had to be removed and replaced in its
entirety down to the concrete tunnel invert
along with damaged ductbanks, cables,
conduits and other equipment.
To prepare the system for the future,
engineers lengthened the station platform
and specified upgrades to state of the art
technology. The new Exchange Place Signal
Relay Room alone boasts some 150 cables
connected to 2200 wires, each of which has
another three connections plus 4400 other
wires and equipment. It will take only a
point and click with a mouse for a PATH
operator to align a train with a platform.
On April 3, the system was powered up for a
test of the new terminal. A test train
operated all the new crossovers into the
Exchange Place station from 7:30 PM until
10:00 PM without so much as a hiccup.
"It was so smooth… unbelievably
perfect," says Port Authority
Construction Manager Tom Groark. While work
still needs to be completed before the
station will be ready, it is mostly
refurbishment of passenger areas at the
station and testing of the signal and
communications systems.
Once Exchange Place reopens, some 8000
daily passenger trips are initially expected
from the station. That usage is bound to
grow as riders experience the greater
convenience in reaching Lower Manhattan by
transferring to the enhanced ferry services
to the World Financial Center, on the Hudson
River, and Pier 11 at Wall Street, on the
East River.