
Here we have a 6 track mainline subway tunnel – a great place for a game of Underground Frogger.
Author: Control@ltvsquad.com
-

Faber Pencil Factory
In 2007, 2 buildings which were once part of the Eberhard Faber Pencil company in Greenpoint were demolished, and a third was converted to condos. Here is a look into all 3 just as they were being demoed/renoed.
(more…) -

Nee How Ma? WoaHa!
I’ve always liked this subway tunnel spot. It’s just plain nice in a lot of weird ways. Lots of action, lots of legend, and lots of hobo bits…
But one thing I never noticed until now is the god damned weird ass asian looking graffiti. I’ve not noticed this in any other subway tunnel either. Who did this and what the hell does it say?
Or did I just make a wrong turn at Albuquerque and ended up digging all the way to china?
-

WhiteWashing What Was Real
Emergency exits are currently being fixed up and painted throughout the system ahead of enhanced security measure installations. This is a cold and ugly fact to those of that who enjoy tunnels like women: DIRTY.
It is, unfortunately, what it is. Much old historic exit graffiti has already been whitewashed away. How long will it be before every exit looks the same, with boring, lifeless gray paint replacing the tags and worker scrawled notes written on walls that next to no one would ever get to see.
It’s just another nail in the coffin of what was once a truly crazy city, where everything in the subways – including the emergency exits, were covered in graffiti.
-

No need to advertise. A tribute to Driggs Pizza
Many years ago I was walking down this subway tunnel under Manhattan on a solo mission and had a good laugh when I came across this ‘page’ by XSOUP. (‘Pages’ in the NYC subways are paragraphs of text painted high on the walls, exclusively done by Revs & his crew (Scope, Nuke, Espo, XSoup, et al)). They all date back between 1994 and 1999.
(more…) -

Tomb Ov The Unknown Tunnel

This is quite possibly the most unknown, undocumented section of subway tunnel currently available.
(more…) -

76th street – the puzzling evidence
For decades now there has been a mystery surrounding the ’76th street’ subway station. Some old timers claim that they actually saw the station, while others refute it as absolute fiction.
The layup
Between Euclid Ave and Grant ave on the A/C line, there is a set of ‘lay up tracks below the active A line. These tracks were built with the intention of building a new tunnel out to Cross Bay Blvd. The next stop past the solid concrete wall at the end was suppose to be 76th street.There are several signals installed facing this wall – this one is just a few dozen feet from the wall – where a signal would make no sense to be installed unless there was track beyond the wall to fit an actual train.
Another one is a ‘homeball’ set facing the wall, just beyond which a set of switches was intended to be placed.
In a nearby tower, the board that shows the various tracks through the area explicitly shows a 76th street station.
Plans are clearly marked that the signals in question would be controlled by a future tower at 76th street.
Pitkin Yard
The Pitkin subway yard is connected to this tunnel, and if you go to the yard and into the tunnel, you’ll find a yard lead was built pointing out towards the east – to connect to the 76th street station and Cross bay blvd route.Actual rail ties were installed at the switches.
Here, you’ll find more signals facing the wall.
The wall at the end is cinder block – and looks as if it were built as an afterthought – not an actual part of the concrete tunnel.
The bench wall here looks like it was chipped out after it was constructed.
And still more mysterious, when you shovel dirt from under the wall, an almost endless supply of clean soil can be scooped out.
Conclusion
So what is behind these walls?
I have it on good authority that a few years ago, the MTA did some inspecting. When they drilled a hole in the concrete wall at the end of the layup, water began to trickle out. The test droll hole was quickly re-sealed.
As for the cinder block wall and soil, I can tell you several people have spent a few man-hours digging out sand and not getting through.
Was the whole tunnel filled in, or just a small section? How was this soil placed here? Was it always here in the ground, or was it purposely piled here? Wouldn’t the soil have been more gradually if they simply stopped the tunnel construction here, instead of a wall with soil packed in behind it?
Do I personally think there is a 76th station and/or more tunnel beyond the wall?
There’s just not enough evidence to say either way. The tunnel was definitely planned, the provisions for it were definitely built – right down to the signals – but what lays behind these walls – particularly the yard lead wall – are a mystery we would love to see solved. -

Essex Street Trolley Terminal (Future Low Line Park)

If you take the J or M trains to Essex street, you’ll notice an unusual huge space next to the station. What is this, you might ask?
(more…) -

East Broadway Mezzanine
The NYC subway system is massive, and not too surprisingly there are large sections of this system that are not publicly accessible.
(more…) -

2nd System Blues
What we’ve got here is a short section of 4 track station. Untiled, unused and never finished, it was built in anticipation of an IND ‘Second System’ subway line running through here. The second system sadly never came to be, and this space sits unused yet relatively clean and well lit.

This long abandoned area seems to have once been used by workers to slack off while on the job… you don’t see a lot of nooks like this anymore





























































