Hudson Line | |
Type: | Commuter rail |
System: | Metro-North Railroad |
Status: | Operating |
Locale: | New York City, Westchester, Putnam, and Dutchess counties |
Start: | Grand Central |
End: | Croton–Harmon (short-turn) Poughkeepsie |
Stations: | 29 |
Daily Ridership: | 28,828 (2022) |
Ridership2: | 12,106,303 (annual ridership, 2023)[1] |
Owner: | Metropolitan Transportation Authority[2] |
Operator: | Metro-North Railroad |
Character: | Commuter rail |
Electrification: | (south of) |
Tracklength: | 74miles |
The Hudson Line is a commuter rail line owned and operated by the Metro-North Railroad in the U.S. state of New York. It runs north from New York City along the east shore of the Hudson River, terminating at Poughkeepsie. The line was originally the Hudson River Railroad (and the Spuyten Duyvil and Port Morris Railroad south of Spuyten Duyvil), and eventually became the Hudson Division of the New York Central Railroad. It runs along what was the far southern leg of the Central's famed "Water Level Route" to Chicago.
Croton–Harmon station divides the line into two distinct segments. South of there, the line is electrified with third rail, serving suburban stations located relatively close together. Most of the electrified zone has four tracks, usually two express and local tracks in each direction. For a few miles in the Bronx there are only two or three tracks. Local service is usually provided by electric trains, while diesel trains run express. North of Croton–Harmon, the line is not electrified and is mostly double-tracked (with a few triple track areas); the stations are also spaced further apart. Service between Croton–Harmon and Poughkeepsie is provided by diesel trains; these generally run express and skip most of the lower stations. From just north of Spuyten Duyvil to the end of the line, the Hudson Line forms the southern portion of Amtrak's Empire Corridor, the former main line of the Central. The planned Penn Station Access project would send some Hudson Line trains to Penn Station along the Empire Connection, with two new intermediate stops along the west side of Manhattan.
The Hudson Line is colored green on Metro-North timetables and system maps, and stations on the line have green trim. The New York Central used green color-coding for the Hudson Division as early as 1965.[3]
The Hudson River Railroad was chartered on May 12, 1846 to extend the Troy and Greenbush Railroad, which connected Troy and Albany, south to New York City along the east bank of the Hudson River. Service began on the first 41miles of the line from Chambers Street and Hudson Street in Lower Manhattan to Peekskill on September 29, 1849. Service was extended to New Hamburg on December 6 and to Poughkeepsie on December 31. A separate section opened between East Albany and Hudson on June 16, 1851. This section was extended to Oakhill on July 7 and to Tivoli on August 4. The full line opened on October 8, 1851 with the completion of the final segment between Tivoli and Poughkeepsie, linking the two pieces of the line together.[4] Prior to completion, on June 1, the Hudson River leased the Troy and Greenbush.[5]
Cornelius Vanderbilt purchased the Hudson River Railroad in 1864, soon after he bought the parallel New York and Harlem Railroad, which is today's Harlem Line.[6] He merged these and other short line railroads to form the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, which was renamed the New York Central Railroad in 1914.
One of the properties owned by the New York and Harlem was the Spuyten Duyvil and Port Morris Railroad. This railroad was built in 1842,[7] and bought in 1853 by the New York and Harlem as part of a proposal by NY&H Vice President Gouverneur Morris Jr. to integrate it into a new industrial section of the waterfront. After this railroad became property of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, by 1871, the line was extended through the West Bronx, along the Harlem River to connect with the Hudson River Railroad. The segment north of Mott Haven Junction became part of the Hudson Division, while the portion to the south remained part of the Harlem Division. With the opening of the line, most passenger trains were rerouted into the new Grand Central Depot via that line along the northeast bank of the Harlem River and the New York and Harlem Rail Road, also part of the New York Central system.
In 1893, a third track was added along the line between Spuyten Duyvil and Sing Sing.
This line was rebuilt and realigned in 1905–1906 when the Harlem River Ship Canal was built. The line was realigned along the north side of the canal in Marble Hill, Manhattan. Part of the original segment around Marble Hill became a freight spur leading to the Kingsbridge Freight Station, but the track around the northern and western sides of Marble Hill was later removed and no trace of it exists.[8] Today, the realigned line serves as the segment of the Metro-North Railroad Hudson Line between Mott Haven Junction and the West Side Line.[9] The former Kingsbridge Freight Spur and station has been occupied by the grounds of the John F. Kennedy High School since the 1970s.[10] The New York and Putnam Railroad spur remained until 1999.[11]
As part of the construction of Grand Central Terminal in the early 1900s, all of New York Central's lines that ran into the terminal were electrified. Third rail was installed on the Hudson and Harlem Divisions, while the New Haven Division received overhead wires on the segments that were not shared with the Harlem and Hudson Division.[12] The first electric train departed for the temporary Grand Central Station, from the Harlem Division's Highbridge station in the Bronx, on September 30, 1906. Electrification would eventually extend to Croton–Harmon station.[13] [14]
The former main line south of Spuyten Duyvil remained for freight to the docks along Manhattan's west side and minimal passenger service to the West Side Station on Chambers Street (used until 1916). Passenger service on this line, which became known as the 30th Street Branch, continued until late 1929 or early 1930.
The New York Central operated many intercity and commuter trains over this line for many years. It was a key route in connecting Grand Central Terminal in New York to LaSalle Street Station in Chicago. Commuter service was always concentrated south of Poughkeepsie: by 1940, only three daily round trips – none of them timed for commuting to New York City – made local stops between Albany and Poughkeepsie.[15] By 1960, only a single daily round trip (timed for commuting to Albany) made local stops.[16] It was cut to a Hudson–Albany round trip with four intermediate stops by 1964, and discontinued around 1965; some intercity trains continued to stop at Rhinecliff and Hudson.[17] [18] [19]
At the end of World War II, private rail service began a sharp decline with the start of the Jet Age and the construction of the Interstate Highway System.[20] NYC, facing declining year-over-year profits, merged in 1968 with its former rival, the Pennsylvania Railroad, forming the Penn Central Transportation Company.[21] Penn Central continued to lose money and attempted several maneuvers to delay bankruptcy, including auctioning off the air rights of Grand Central Terminal;[22] the Pennsylvania Railroad had done the same thing to Penn Station.[23] However, this approval was denied, and the denial was affirmed in Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City, a 1978 decision by the United States Supreme Court.[24] [25]
On May 1, 1971, the National Railroad Passenger Corporation took over all intercity passenger service in the US. Penn Central continued to operate freight and commuter service along the Hudson line until it was folded into Conrail on April 1, 1976. Conrail continued to operate commuter service to Poughkeepsie & freight service north of Poughkeepsie (while, Amtrak's Empire Service continued to Albany and beyond). On July 1, 1973, along with several other stations in Penn Central's Metropolitan Region, the 138th Street, Oscawana and Manitou stops were closed. Manitou reopened in 1983.[26]
On September 10, 1974, the MTA announced that work would start on the construction of high-level platforms at eleven stations in the Bronx and Manhattan including at the Marble Hill, Spuyten Duyvil, University Heights, Morris Heights and Riverdale stations on the Hudson Line. The entire project cost $2.8 million. The work was expected to be completed in the late summer of 1975. As part of the work, the University Heights, Morris Heights and Marble Hill stations had island platforms installed, while side platforms were installed at Riverdale and Spuyten Duyvil. All of the platforms on the Hudson Line were 340feet-long with the exception of a 170feet-long side platform at Spuyten Duyvil and a 170feet-long platform at Morris Heights, which was set to be lengthened at a later date. The abandoned station building at University Heights was removed as part of the project.[27] High-level platforms at Spuyten Duyvil and Riverdale were completed in early 1975. On May 2, 1975, the new platforms on the Hudson Line were formally put into service. The completion was marked with a ceremony with the head of the MTA, David Yunich present. The completion of these five stations marked the completion of a $22.8 million project to install high-level platforms at 43 Penn Central stations. The high-level platforms allowed the new Metropolitan and Cosmopolitan to use the stations.[28]
During the late 1970s, the Hudson Line's former northbound express track between Spuyten Duyvil and its merger with the Harlem Line was removed. The stations along the line between Spuyten Duyvil and Yankees–East 153rd Street were rebuilt on top of this track's roadbed.[29]
In 1983, the MTA Metro-North Railroad took control of all commuter operations in the Hudson Valley. As part of the MTA's five-year capital program in 1982, the MTA planned to remove one of the four tracks on the line. The MTA expected that the change would provide more flexible train service as the line would have received a computerized system capable of running trains in either direction on the three tracks. As part of the plan, trains would have received cab signalling. The change was expected to be completed in three to four years. The New York State DOT and Amtrak were strongly opposed to the proposal as the plan did not take into account future growth of passenger and freight traffic, and reduced the ability to move around stalled trains. Converting the then-existing four tracks to reversible cab signaling would have cost $15 million, which the MTA did not have.[30]
On May 23, 2009, a new station was opened at East 153rd Street in the Bronx to serve Yankee Stadium. It sees regular service on the Hudson Line, plus special service from the Hudson, Harlem, and New Haven Lines for New York Yankees games.[31]
On December 1, 2013, a southbound train derailed near the Spuyten Duyvil station in the Bronx. Four people were killed and more than 60 passengers were injured in the crash.[32] Federal investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board determined that the train was traveling at, a speed nearly three times the maximum allowable speed of . The train's brakes were apparently operating normally and area tracks in proper condition.[33]
On November 13, 2018, the MTA announced its intent to purchase the Hudson and Harlem Lines as well as the Grand Central Terminal for up to $35.065 million, plus a discount rate of 6.25%.[2] The purchase would include all inventory, operations, improvements, and maintenance associated with each asset, except for the air rights over Grand Central. At the time, the Hudson and Harlem Lines were owned by Argent Ventures, a holding company that had taken possession of Penn Central's assets upon its bankruptcy, while the Grand Central Terminal was owned by Midtown TDR Ventures. Under the terms of the leases for each asset, the MTA would only be able to exercise an option to purchase the three assets before October 2019.[34] The MTA's finance committee approved the proposed purchase on November 13, 2018, and the purchase was approved by the full board two days later.[35] [36] The deal finally closed in March 2020, with the MTA taking ownership of the terminal and rail lines.[37]
The MTA purchased the segment of the Hudson Line from Grand Central to a point 2miles north of Poughkeepsie.[2] [38] North of this point, milepost 75.8, the CSX Transportation-owned and Amtrak-operated Hudson Subdivision rail line continues north to Albany.
The southernmost 11miles of the Hudson Line, south of Spuyten Duyvil, is not parallel to the Hudson River. Much of the line in the Bronx parallels the Harlem River, while the entirety of the line in Manhattan follows Park Avenue. North of Spuyten Duyvil, the Hudson Line travels mostly parallel to the river (viewable on the left side northbound and the right side southbound) until the line terminates in Poughkeepsie.
Once past 125th Street and over the Harlem River, the Hudson Line departs from the track shared with the Harlem and New Haven Lines, passing first Yankees–East 153rd Street, which offers access to the lower Bronx and Yankee Stadium. After it is the employee-only Highbridge stop as it follows the river northward and, at first, the Major Deegan Expressway.
Marble Hill, technically in Manhattan despite being on the mainland, offers a transfer to the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line of the New York City Subway at the 225th Street station. A short curve away brings the trains to Spuyten Duyvil and its stairs to the street. Just past the station, the track rejoins the original Hudson River Railroad, shared with Amtrak, and after one more stop at Riverdale is out of New York City.
The Palisades present themselves across the river as trains pass through the city of Yonkers and its four stops, mostly local. A few express trains do stop at the recently renovated Yonkers station, the first where a transfer to Amtrak is possible.
Smaller, local-only suburban stations are passed as the Tappan Zee Bridge appears to the north and the river widens. Finally, between Irvington and Tarrytown, it passes overhead, as does the inevitable replacement known as the Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge. Rockland County fades to almost 3miles away across Haverstraw Bay. But after passing through Sing Sing prison, the train reaches Ossining, where a ferry brings travelers across the wide river to Haverstraw.
Electric trains end their runs one stop beyond, at Croton–Harmon, a terminal shared again with Amtrak just south of Harmon Yard and east of Croton Point. The tracks veer inland, closely following US 9, to the next and newest stop, Cortlandt, the only non-New York City station on the line where the Hudson River cannot be seen.
The Hudson River reappears at Peekskill, the last stop in the county, where the Bear Mountain Bridge can be seen to the north.
North of Peekskill the river narrows as the Hudson Highlands begin. Dunderberg and Bear mountains can be seen across the river. The train passes through two short tunnels, one under the Bear Mountain Bridge abutment. Putnam County's first station, Manitou, serves a small hamlet. Just north of Garrison, there is another tunnel and then a view of the stone buildings of West Point; the riverside village of Cold Spring is the next stop, last in the county.
The Dutchess County line is crossed in a pair of 842feet tunnels under Breakneck Ridge at Breakneck Point; across the river Storm King Mountain is seen. The Breakneck Ridge flag stop marks the end of the Highlands as the river once again broadens around Newburgh Bay. At Beacon, ferry service is available during peak hours to Newburgh, whose skyline is visible across the river, and shortly after leaving the train passes under the Newburgh-Beacon Bridge.
Just upriver is New Hamburg, a hamlet of the Town of Poughkeepsie and a station closed in the NYCRR days but eventually reopened. The last to Poughkeepsie's recently renovated station, including the vast Tilcon quarry, is the longest distance between any two stations on a Metro-North main line.
Electric service from and to Croton–Harmon uses the standard M3A and M7A multiple units also seen on the Metro-North Harlem Line. Diesel trains are headed by Genesis P32AC-DMs. These electro-diesels run off third-rail through the Park Avenue Tunnel. Turning the locomotives around at either end of the line would be cumbersome and time-consuming, so trains use push-pull operation with the locomotive usually on the north end of the train. They usually pull/push six or seven Shoreliner passenger cars with a cab car at the south end of the train.
The Genesis locomotives are mostly in Metro-North's silver-and-blue livery, but sometimes the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad's red-black-white palette can be seen as equipment on the line is pooled with ConnDOT, whose red-striped passenger coaches are also in wide use on the Hudson Line. The Metro-North-owned Genesis units received a new paint scheme in 2007.
See main article: Penn Station Access. As part of the Penn Station Access project, the MTA has proposed to send some Hudson Line trains to Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan. Hudson Line trains would access Penn Station via the Empire Connection, a segment of track owned by Amtrak.[39] This segment currently used by Amtrak's Empire Corridor trains to access Penn Station, diverges from the Hudson Line between Riverdale and Spuyten Duyvil stations. The proposal includes the construction of two new Hudson Line stations along the Empire Connection in Manhattan; one near 125th Street in Manhattanville and the other near 62nd Street on the Upper West Side.[40] The project would give Hudson Line riders a direct ride to destinations on the West Side.
Since the tracks continue north of Poughkeepsie, there have been various proposals over the years from both the MTA (Metro-North's parent agency) and Amtrak, to extend service northwards. New York Central and Penn Central operated rail service north of Poughkeepsie to Albany-Rensselaer until April 30, 1971; since then, only Amtrak's intercity trains continue beyond Poughkeepsie. Most proposals have been scratched after strong opposition from residents of northern Dutchess County, who fear the effect that an easy rail commute to midtown Manhattan would have on their still largely rural communities. In 1999, Metro-North proposed to extend the line 25miles to Tivoli or just 15miles to Rhinecliff.[41] Three new stops would have been built: at Tivoli, Staatsburg and Hyde Park. Service would have also stopped at Rhinecliff, which is served by Amtrak. Parking facilities would have been built at the stations, and a yard would have been built.[42] The Draft Environmental Impact Study for the extension, which would have cost $3 million, was deemed as necessary as ridership on the northern part of the Hudson Line was growing faster than that of any other part of the system.[43] [44] The Federal Transit Administration provided some funding for the study.[45] The Towns of Stanford,[46] Milan, Red Hook and Rhinebeck and the Villages of Tivoli and Rhinebeck passed resolutions against the study.[47] The study was not done because of significant opposition.[48] However, Poughkeepsie-area commuters have supported such plans since they would ease pressure on that station. As recently as January 2007, supervisors of some towns north of Poughkeepsie have expressed new interest in extending rail service.[49]
Milepost Zero on the Hudson Line is at the north property line of 42nd St (which is 200–300 feet south of the ends of the tracks). The Marble Hill Cutoff shortened the line by 0.73miles circa 1906, so Yonkers station (for example) is at milepost 15.24 but is about 14.46miles from the end of the tracks at GCT. The Hudson Line did not serve the stations in the Park Avenue tunnel.
Zone | Location | Station | Miles (km) | Date opened | Date closed | Connections / notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Manhattan | 0miles | October 6, 1871[50] | Metro-North Railroad Harlem Line, New Haven Line | ||
Built during the late 1870s, although trains never stopped here.[51] | ||||||
June 23, 1901[52] | ||||||
2.2miles | May 15, 1876[53] | June 23, 1901 | ||||
3.4miles | May 15, 1876 | June 17, 1906[54] | ||||
4.2miles | October 25, 1897 | Metro-North Railroad: Harlem Line, New Haven Line New York City Subway: (at 125th Street) New York City Bus: | ||||
2 | The Bronx | |||||
5miles | July 2, 1972[55] | |||||
5.9miles | May 23, 2009[56] | Metro-North Railroad (game days only): Harlem Line, New Haven Line New York City Subway: (at 161st Street–Yankee Stadium) New York City Bus: SeaStreak to Highlands Terminal (game days only) | ||||
6.7miles | June 3, 1975 | Highbridge station currently is a Metro-North employee-only stop. | ||||
8.1miles | New York City Bus: | |||||
8.7miles | New York City Bus: | |||||
Before 1920 | Station merged into University Heights. | |||||
Manhattan | 9.8miles | 1906[57] | New York City Subway: (at Marble Hill–225th Street) New York City Bus: MTA Bus: | |||
The Bronx | ||||||
Removed during 1905–06 realignment of Hudson Branch along the Harlem River Ship Canal[58] | ||||||
(ADA accessible on northbound platform only) | 11.1miles | Hudson Rail Link J, K, L, M | ||||
13miles | Hudson Rail Link: A, B, C, D | |||||
On or before 1897 | June 3, 1975[59] | |||||
3 | Yonkers | 14.3miles | Bee-Line Bus | |||
15.1miles | 1911 | Amtrak Adirondack, Berkshire Flyer (seasonal), Empire Service, Ethan Allen Express, Maple Leaf | ||||
16.2miles | Bee-Line Bus: 1C, 1T, 1W | |||||
17.8miles | 1899 | Bee-Line Bus: 1C, 1T, 1W | ||||
4 | Hastings-on-Hudson | 19.5miles | September 29, 1849[60] | Bee-Line Bus: 1C, 1T, 1W, 6 | ||
Dobbs Ferry | 20.7miles | September 29, 1849 | Bee-Line Bus: 1C, 1T, 1W, 6, 66 | |||
Irvington | 21.7miles | |||||
22.7miles | ADA-accessible only northbound | |||||
5 | Tarrytown | 25.2miles | September 29, 1849 | Bee-Line Bus: 1T, 13 Lower Hudson Transit Link: H03, H07, H07X | ||
Sleepy Hollow | 26.5miles | January 30, 1911[61] | ||||
Briarcliff Manor | 29.5miles | Before 1860[62] | ||||
Ossining | 30.8miles | 1848 | Bee-Line Bus: 13, 19 NY Waterway: Haverstraw–Ossining Ferry | |||
Croton-on-Hudson | 33.2miles | Amtrak: Adirondack, Empire Service, Berkshire Flyer (seasonal), Ethan Allen Express, Lake Shore Limited, Maple Leaf Bee-Line Bus: 10, 11; northern terminus of electrification. | ||||
September 29, 1849[63] 1983[64] | 1984 | |||||
6 | Cortlandt | |||||
July 2, 1973[65] | ||||||
1996 | Replaced by Cortlandt station in 1996. | |||||
38.4miles | April 1996[66] | Bee-Line Bus: 14 | ||||
1996 | Replaced by Cortlandt station in 1996. | |||||
Peekskill | 41.2miles | September 29, 1849 | Bee-Line Bus: 16, 18, 31 | |||
Philipstown | ||||||
7 | 46miles | Limited-service stop. | ||||
49.9miles | ||||||
Cold Spring | 52.5miles | Putnam Transit Cold Spring Trolley (seasonal) | ||||
Philipstown | Located at the south end of the Breakneck Ridge Tunnels | |||||
Fishkill | 55miles | Limited-service stop. | ||||
8 | ||||||
1950s | Former junction with Newburgh, Dutchess and Connecticut Railroad (eliminated in 1916) | |||||
Beacon | 59miles | Dutchess County Public Transit Beacon RailLink | ||||
Chelsea | 1901 | July 2, 1973 | ||||
New Hamburg | 65miles | December 6, 1849[67] October 17, 1981[68] | July 2, 1973 | Dutchess County Public Transit: New Hamburg RailLink | ||
9 | ||||||
Crown Heights | ||||||
Poughkeepsie | 73.5miles | January 4, 1850 | Amtrak: Adirondack, Berkshire Flyer (seasonal), Empire Service, Ethan Allen Express, Lake Shore Limited, Maple Leaf Dutchess County Public Transit: A, B, C, D, E, Poughkeepsie RailLink City of Poughkeepsie Transit: Main Street, Shoppers' Special Ulster County Area Transit: Ulster-Poughkeepsie LINK Short Line Bus: X32N Trailways of New York: Newburgh-Kingston service | |||