Quantcast
Results tagged “thirdwatertunnel”
Excavation of Third Water Tunnel Complete

Excavation of Third Water Tunnel Complete

Yesterday, Mayor Bloomberg turned off a tunnel boring machine (so...many...jokes...) and announced that the excavation of the Third Water Tunnel was complete. Workers, called "sandhogs," had been clearing the way for "stage 2" of the project, the 8.5 mile water tunnel, since October 2003 (the first stage was started in 1970 and opened in 1998!). The project, which is expected to be complete by 2020, is important because Water Tunnels 1 and 2 have never been checked up on or had service inspections, so the Third Water Tunnel is an "insurance policy." The Mayor waxed about the project:

New York City has some of the best water in the nation and while clean drinking water is often taken for granted, the City continues to develop ways to ensure the delivery of quality drinking water for generations to come. The Third Water Tunnel is the single largest infrastructure project in the City's history and is exactly the kind of sound investment that we need to ensure our long-term growth and prosperity. The building of Water Tunnels One and Two were essential in New York City's evolution into a world business and cultural center and this third Tunnel will help keep our City thriving through 21st Century."
Stage 2 of the Third Water Tunnel serves Manhattan, with three sections that radiate from West 30th Street - one goes north to Central Park, one goes south and southeast to the Lower East Side, and one cuts crosstown and north to the Upper East Side. more ›

Extra, Extra

Extra, Extra

- Yet another great story about the building of the Third Water Tunnel - the NY Times also has a slideshow to go with the article more ›

Sandhogs at Grand Central

Sandhogs at Grand Central

At Grand Central Terminal, an exhibit of Gina LeVay's photographs of the "sandhogs" - the miners who are building the the city's Third Water Tunnel - will shown through Saturday. The Third Water Tunnel has been under construction in 1970, and it is not expected to be ready until 2020; the city's first and second tunnels actually leak in many places, thus necessitating the third water tunnel so repairs can be mad to the two others. LeVay has been taking photographs for the past two years, and the exhibit includes life-size photographs of the miners. more ›

1

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com
Follow gothamist on Twitter