News & Reviews News Wire Amtrak awards preliminary design contract for Penn Station expansion

Amtrak awards preliminary design contract for Penn Station expansion

By Trains Staff | June 24, 2022

| Last updated on February 26, 2024

Engineering and design firm Arup will prepare concepts for new tracks, platforms, concourses

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Train arrives in underground station as people stand on platform
An Amtrak train arrives at New York’s Penn Station. Amtrak

NEW YORK — Amtrak has awarded a contract to engineering, design, and consulting firm Arup to begin preliminary design for expansion of New York’s Penn Station.

The contract, announced Thursday and awarded in partnership with NJ Transit and coordination with New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority, will allow design work to begin for new tracks, platforms, and concourses. This is part of the larger Gateway project, which seeks to roughly double capacity into Penn Station from the west and relieve a bottleneck on the Northeast Corridor.

NJ.com reports four options are being considered for the expansion, including a track-level addition north and south of the existing station; a deep cavern station underneath the existing station, and an option to run through trains between commuter operators where technology allows it.

“New York Penn Station is tremendously important to Amtrak, and as owners of the facility we are committed to ensuring its future for a new generation of intercity rail travelers and daily commuters,” Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner said in a press release. “We are eager to begin this important work with our partners that will help unlock service increases under the Gateway Program.”

Arup’s work will produce concepts to be analyzed as part of a federal environmental review for the Penn Station project. Design work is expected to take two years and cost about $73 million.

NJ Transit CEO Kevin Corbett said ridership from the station has grown from 200,000 in 1968 to 600,000 today. “The existing station, even when fully renovated, will still be woefully inadequate to meet current demand much less the anticipated growth for the coming decades,” Corbett said. “This design work is the foundation upon which this vital expansion project will be built, and sets the stage to realizing the full benefits the Gateway Program will deliver to this region.”

7 thoughts on “Amtrak awards preliminary design contract for Penn Station expansion

  1. Through running commuter services seems like such a practical idea. What are the costs of implementing that as compared with the other options?

  2. I just hope the existing two Hudson River tubes continue to function until the new ones become operational. The new ones should have been in service before now. Political dithering has delayed them and nothing has really begun on there construction.

  3. They should not build another stub terminal station in Manhattan. Need to get through running to happen with the different commuter agencies. The extra tunnels under the Hudson are worthwhile doing though.

  4. I prefer calling the arena “Madison Round Garden.” Just look at it. When it was built the so-called Madison Square Garden hadn’t been at Madison Square for decades ( MSG I and MSG II were at the real Madison Square, 23 St & 5th Ave; MSG III was at 49 St & 8th Ave)

    The 8 new Gateway stub tracks from NJ, South of the existing PSNY, will help. They can be reached from the new Gateway Tubes and from the existing North River Tubes, but not from any of the East River Tubes. 1-4 tracks of the existing PSNY can’t be reached from any of the East River Tubes either.

  5. Let’s try again: Back to the future. Raise Alexander Cassatt and Samuel Rea from their graves, demolish Madison Square Garden and the surrounding blocks, re-erect Penn Station with more platforms, keep Moynihan, add the new tunnels, and do it all in about ten years. Voila!

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