Pennsylvania Station (1910–1963)

Pennsylvania Station
View from the northeast in the 1910s
General information
LocationNew York City
U.S.
Coordinates40°45′01″N 73°59′35″W / 40.7503°N 73.9931°W / 40.7503; -73.9931
Owned byPennsylvania Railroad
Penn Central
Construction
ArchitectMcKim, Mead, and White
Architectural styleBeaux-Arts
Other information
StatusDemolished (above ground)
History
OpenedSeptember 8, 1910 (LIRR)
November 27, 1910 (PRR)
Key dates
Construction1904–1910
Demolition1963–1966
Reopened1968 (as Penn Station)
Former services
Preceding station Pennsylvania Railroad Following station
Manhattan Transfer
toward Chicago
Main Line Terminus
Manhattan Transfer
New Brunswick Line
Preceding station Long Island
Rail Road
Following station
Terminus Main Line Woodside
toward Greenport
Preceding station New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Following station
Terminus Main Line
Express service
New Haven
Terminus
Preceding station Lehigh Valley Railroad Following station
Manhattan Transfer
toward Buffalo
Main Line Terminus
Preceding station Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Following station
Manhattan Transfer
toward Chicago
Main Line
Until 1926
Terminus

Pennsylvania Station (often abbreviated to Penn Station) was a historic railroad station in New York City that was built for, named after, and originally occupied by the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR). The station occupied an 8-acre (3.2 ha) plot bounded by Seventh and Eighth Avenues and 31st and 33rd Streets in Midtown Manhattan. Because the station shared its name with several stations in other cities, it was sometimes called New York Pennsylvania Station. Originally completed in 1910, the aboveground portions of the building were demolished between 1963 and 1966, and the underground concourses and platforms were heavily renovated to form the current Pennsylvania Station within the same footprint.

Designed by McKim, Mead, and White and completed in 1910, the station enabled direct rail access to New York City from the south for the first time. Its above ground head house and train shed were considered a masterpiece of the Beaux-Arts style and one of the great architectural works of New York City. Underground, the station contained 11 platforms serving 21 tracks, in approximately the same layout as the current Penn Station, which has had various intervening modifications. The original building was one of the first stations to include separate waiting rooms for arriving and departing passengers, and when built, these were among the city's largest public spaces.

Passenger traffic began to decline after World War II, and in the 1950s, the Pennsylvania Railroad sold the air rights to the property and shrank the railroad station. Starting in 1963, the above-ground head house and train shed were demolished, a loss that galvanized the modern historic preservation movement in the United States. Over the next six years, the below-ground concourses and waiting areas were heavily renovated, becoming the modern Penn Station, while Madison Square Garden and Pennsylvania Plaza were built above them. The sole remaining portions of the original station are the underground platforms and tracks, as well as scattered artifacts on the mezzanine level above it.