Category Archives: Travel

Weekend Explorations in NYC

Friday I stayed at home all day, but now I’m regretting it after seeing some other people’s photos of the dense fog that evening. It would have been interesting to head out to Broadway Junction, or perhaps take a ride on the Staten Island Ferry.

I did discover, however, that there’s a rather loud foghorn located somewhere near my neighborhood. Guess that’s what I get for living three blocks from the harbor. It adds a nice sense of atmosphere and isn’t particularly loud inside my apartment, but the frequency is so low it can be heard just about everywhere. I guess that’s the idea… If it couldn’t be heard over long distances, it wouldn’t be much of a foghorn. Just out of curiousity, does anybody know exactly where this thing is located?

Saturday, I took the subway into the city and did some walking around. On the (N) express from 59th Street, we passed a major construction site in the tunnel just north of 36th Street. Looks like the entire track and trackbed is being dug up and replaced, and there’s a couple work trains parked on the track north and south of the site, and some debris and equipment piled up on the north end of the platform at 36th. Anybody know exactly what all is being done here, and how long it’s supposed to last? Needless to say, all southbound (N) trains are running on the local track along the 4th Avenue line while this is going on. Also, northbound express trains are running very slow while passing the site; The (R) local actually passed us and got to Pacific Street before us. For any of those who like to check out work trains and equipment, though, I highly reccomend a trip to 36th Street.

I got off at Union Square, walked around a bit, and headed up towards Herald Square. Along the way I stopped to explore the ABC store just north of Union Square, which is an incredible place. Six floors of interesting and overpriced furniture and light fixtures. I especially liked the funky 1970’s stuff on the second floor. Once up at Herald Square, I spent some time wandering around Macy’s and riding the ancient wooden escalators.

From there, I took an (F) train to Roosevelt Island and rode the Tram back into Manhattan. The Roosevelt Island subway station was impressively deep, although I was somewhat disappointed to see that the escalators had been broken into two seperate runs with a landing in the middle. It would have been much more cool to have a single bank of incredibly long escalators, but I can understand the pragmatic reasons for having a landing.

I took advantage of my newfound ability to use my unlimited-ride Metrocard on the Tram, and it was very cool. Incredible views of the city and of the Queensboro Bridge, although the Tram seems to have been made redundant by the subway station.

From the Manhattan end of the Tram, I walked over to Times Square via Fifth Avenue and Rockefeller Center, and then took the subway home.

On Sunday (yesterday), I went to mass up at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine and went out to brunch with some friends from the congregation afterwards. After that, I decided to walk up to the northern tip of Manhattan Island. I’ve previously walked from the Cathedral all the way down to Battery Park, so now I can say I’ve covered the entire length of Manhattan on foot.

I pretty much stayed on Broadway with only a couple exceptions. Around 125th Street I took a short detour to check out the Fairway store under the Hudson Parkway viaduct. What an incredible cornucopia for the senses! I also love their store on the Upper West Side (and Zabar’s. *drool*…) One day soon I hope to return with some money in my wallet. I remember readong somewhere that Fairway is also getting ready to open a third store in the Red Hook area of Brooklyn. Anybody know if there’s any truth to that, and when it’s supposed to happen?

I was also very impressed by the 12th Avenue viaduct in that area… Pretty incredible hunk of steelwork. I’ll have to return with my camera at some point.

Back on Broadway, I continued northward up to the Washington Heights area. The topography begins to get very interesting north of the George Washington Bridge, and I made my second detour a few blocks north of there. I noticed that Broadway was becoming rather dull while the row of apartment buildings at the top of the ridge along Ft. Washington Avenue looked far more interesting, so around 187th Street I headed up a very steep hill in that direction. It was interesting to see the backs of these buildings, with the “ground” floor actually a good 5-6 floors above the street behind them. I glimpsed an interesting subway entrance for the 181st Street station on the IND, and climbed a massive flight of stairs to get up to Ft. Washington Avenue (pant, pant). Once up there, I was treated to some incredible views. Again, I’ll need to return with my camera.

The neighborhood itself also seemed very cool… I love the Art Deco apartment buildings, and I’ve seen a lot of rentals advertized up there that are actually reasonably priced. I may look at the possibility of getting my own apartment within the next year or two, once I have a job and get some money saved up. (My current place isn’t bad for now, but my roommate is an annoying “daddy’s little princess” type from the suburbs and a total slob, and her boyfriend has slept over every night for the past two weeks. Don’t get me started.)

I continued walking north along Ft. Washington Avenue and found myself at the entrance to Ft. Tryon Park, along with another interesting IND subway entrance. The park itself was very nice, and I love the network of roadways connecting to/from Henry Hudson Parkway. I had to stand on a good vantage point for a bit and figure out where each roadway was coming and going. I also walked past the Cloisters (but didn’t go inside), and then climbed the steep trail back down into the neighborhood below. I found myself in Inwood and back on Broadway, and before long, walking across the Broadway Bridge into the Bronx. Nice view of the Harlem River and the tall bridge that carries Henry Hudson Parkway, and it was like a little taste of Chicago listening to the IRT subway cross the drawbridge on the tracks above me.

Now with very sore feet, I climbed the stairs at the 225th Street station and boarded the (1) train. I made it back to the Cathedral just in time for Evensong at 6:00, and came staright home from there.

I had another good walk last weekend, going from the Cathedral down to Union Square. I’ve walked that distance before down Broadway, but this time, due to the beautiful spring-like weather, I went all the way through Central Park from the northwest corner at 110th and CPW to the southeast corner at 59th and Fifth Ave. That is one huge park, and the crowds were out in full force… Great for people-watching.

By the way, I had a job interview on Thursday that went pretty well, and the guy has e-mailed me back asking for references. I’ll interpret that as a good sign. The office is in the Chelsea area, just off the 8th Avenue IND line (making Washington Heights even more attractive if I get this job). Wish me luck.

(originally posted on the SubTalk forum at nycsubway.org)

NYC Trip

Just thought I’d give a quick rundown of when I spent yesterday in NYC. With a nice long holiday weekend, it was only natural that I spend a day in the city.

I drove up the NJ Turnpike to Jersey City, where I parked in a garage next to the Pavonia/Newport PATH station and took PATH the rest of the way into Manhattan. Arriving at 33rd Street, I walked down Seventh Avenue to around 14th Street to look around in some furniture stores in that area. I then walked east until I found myself at Union Square, where I browsed around the farmer’s market and some of the holiday-themed booths that are set up near the subway entrance.

Feeling a few raindrops on my head, I decided to head into the subway, and took the (R) train up to 5th Avenue/59th Street and check out the holiday shopping crowds. I walked around a bit up there, poking my head into St. Thomas Church and St. Patrick’s Cathedral before crossing the street and checking out the ice skating rink and Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center. Down in the concourse level of the RCA Building, I was very pleased to find one of those cool Pret A Manger shops that I saw all over London. Here’s hoping that more of those open up in the US.

From Rockefeller Center, I boarded a (D) train of R-68’s up to Columbus Circle, where I transferred to a northbound (1) train of R-62’s. I got off at 110th Street and grabbed a burger at The West End before heading over to the Cathedral of St. John the Divine for Evening Prayer. St. John the Divine, of course, was as magnificent as always, and it was hard for me to pull myself away from there. But I couldn’t stick around forever, and being in a somewhat ponderous and brooding mood at the moment, decided to take a walk down Broadway.

How far down Broadway from 111th Street? Well, at first I decided to try to make it down to my old high school friend’s neighborhood around 86th Street, which would make a nice healthy walk. Once there, I decided to continue on to Columbus Circle. Once at Columbus Circle, I figured Times Square wasn’t too far away, so what the hell…

About two hours later, I finally found myself down at Canal Street with two very sore feet. That’s right, a non-stop walk down Broadway from 111th to Canal Street. I parted Broadway and walked east on Canal over into Chinatown, and walked around some of the narrow side steets of Chinatown for a while. What a cool neighborhood at night, with all the shops facing the sidewalk and all the neon and colors… It was like something straight out of the movie Blade Runner. The coolest thing about New York City, I’ve found, is that no matter how many times I go there, on each visit I always come across something new and interesting.

By this point, as you can imagine, my feet are killing me, and I decided I wouldn’t mind riding around on the subway for a while before I head back home. I realized that I had still never seen the infamous Chambers Street station on the BMT, so I naturally headed down in that direction.

Finally, in front of City Hall and nearly at the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge, I ducked into the subway station and ended one incredibly long walk: From the Cathedral of St. John the Divine to City Hall, with only one stop at a Starbucks in SoHo to use the restroom and grab a latte. This was probably at least as long as the walk I took on my first-ever visit to NYC, from the High Street station in Brooklyn across the Brooklyn Bridge, to the World Trade Center, and then up the East Side of Manhattan to around 86th Street and across Central Park to my friend’s place on Amsterdam Avenue. Damn, there have certainly been a ton of changes since there: The WTC is gone, my friend now lives back in Florida, and I’ve been through about a million changes in my own life.

Once inside the Chambers Street station, all I can say is: Wow. I was very impressed to find that it was all it’s been cracked up to be here on SubTalk. If Detroit had a real subway, I’m sure it would look something like Chambers. After a short wait, I grabbed a (J) train of R-40M’s headed toward Jamaica. This was my first time on this area of the NYC subway, so I decided to do some exploring, nevermind the fact that it was now pushing 10:00 PM.

We went through the Canal Street station, which I see is now the topic of discussion on another thread, and also the Essex Street Station. It was only this evening, after looking around on this site, that I found out what it was I saw off to the right-hand side of the train as we passed through: the old trolley terminal.

We then headed across the Williamsburg Bridge, which made the first time I had been across the Willy-B. It seems to have a very interesting configuration, with each of the two roadways divided down the middle by the bridge structure.

Once on the Brooklyn Side, we passed some cool old loft buildings as we slowly made our way down the line. At Myrtle Avenue, I saw a train of R-143’s for the first time ever, waiting on the other track as an (M) shuttle. I decided to take the (J) to Broadway Junction, where I would take the (L) back into Manhattan and transfer to PATH at 14th Street.

Out at Broadway Junction, I went upstairs to wait for the inbound (L) train, and was very pleased when a train of R-143’s pulled in. My impressions: This must have been a very new trainset, as it still had that “new car smell”. The interior didn’t seem as harsh as that on the R-142’s, and the sounds reminded me a lot of the M4’s on Philly’s Market-Frankfort Line. The only real negative was that stupid Mr. Ed voice that announces when the doors are closing. Somehere around Lorimer Street, I was cursed at by a drunken wino.

I got off at 6th Avenue and transferred to the PATH train, and drove home from Pavonia/Newport without incident.

This was hopefully the last major trip in my infamous 1986 Trans Am, as I’m currently shopping for a new car and hope to have one sometime this coming week. I’ll let everybody know what I end up with.

(originally posted on the SubTalk forum at nycsubway.org)

PATH / HBLR / Hoboken Trip Report

Just thought I’d chime in with my own rundown of my Sunday in New York City…

I left Collingswood, NJ at about 8:30 AM in order to attend the 11:00 AM Eucharist at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Morningside Heights. My original plan was to park at Pavonia/Newport on the PATH line and then take PATH and the subway to the cathedral, but since I was running a bit late, I decided to take my chances and drive all the way into Manhattan via the George Washington Bridge. Amazingly enough, I found plenty of street parking on Amsterdam Avenue just a few blocks north of the cathedral. Being a Sunday, I didn’t even have to feed the meter. Certainly something to keep in mind for future visits.

This is going a bit off-topic, but the worship service at the Cathedral was incredible. That’s two worship services I’ve attended there so far, and both of them were incredibly beautiful and sprit-filled. I’m not sure if it’s the building or the music or whatever, but the only other place I’ve felt the same “vibe” was at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. For you Episcopalians out there — or anybody else from any other faith tradition — I highly recommend it. The Cathedral takes very seriously its charter of being a “house of prayer for all people”… The liturgy included a passage in Hebrew — “Sh’ma Yisrael Adonai Elohaynu Adonai echad” (“Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord”) — and there’s a large Menorah on either side of the High Altar… Unusual for a Christian church, and very nice touches. If I lived just a little bit closer to NYC, I’d be at the Cathedral every Sunday morning in a heartbeat. (I’ve actually become somewhat involved with the Canterbury Club, the Episcopal student organization at UPenn, which meets at St. Mary’s Church on the UPenn campus.)

Anyway, back to my trip… After the service, I got back in my car, and attempted to find my was to the Holland Tunnel. I got over to Riverside Drive without any trouble, but I attempted to get onto Henry Hudson Parkway with no success. I actually found my on once, but I was going in the northbound direction. Not good. So I eventually circled around and simply took 11th Avenue all the way down to the tunnel. I had to stop for gas along the way, as running out of gas in the Holland Tunnel would have ruined my day very quickly. Full-service gasoline in Manhattan is almost as expensive as self-serve in Chicago.

I finally made my way to the Holland Tunnel, and it was stop-and-go traffic all the way to the New Jersey side. However, while in the tunnel, I saw something very interesting: There’s a little tram that goes along the left-hand side of the tunnel, presumably to transport PA employees from one end to the other. It actually runs on rails, and is just big enough for one person. I saw a guy using it to head back to NY as I was sitting in traffic. Very cool! Do any of the other NYC-area tunnels have similar features?

Once in New Jersey, I found the Pavonia/Newport PATH station without too much trouble, and parked my car in a nearby garage. This was the first time I’ve ever ridden PATH. My impressions? The stations were incredibly cramped and claustrophobic, and the trains were unremarkable. Not surprisingly, they’re very similar to the Orange Line and Blue Line trains on the MBTA. As has been mentioned elsewhere here, the side platform at Pavonia/Newport was off-limits due to construction.

Emerging at Hoboken Terminal, I soon found Doug “BMT Man” and Pelham Bay Dave, and hung out with them most of the rest of the day. We checked out the new ALP locomotive on display, as well as the new Comet coach before hitting the new segment of the HBLR line. The ALP locomotive was very sharp-looking, and the Comet coach looked pretty much like your standard-issue NJT coach with a few modern touches.

On to my first-ever ride on the HBLR. Not bad for me to explore two new transit systems in one day. My impressions: A very nice, clean system with very cool LRV railcars. My only complaint is that it seemed exceptionally slow in many areas. But then, I’m more used to rapid transit. As others have mentioned here, the new extension offers and incredible view of the NYC skyline and the rail yards leading into Hoboken Terminal. This was the first time I had gotten a real good view of the lower Manhattan skyline since 9/11, and it just doesn’t look right. Without the WTC, it actually doesn’t look much different than the bland Jersey City skyline. What a shame… How many more words can be said about that day?

Dave got off at Exchange Place, while Doug and I got off at Liberty State Park and transferred to another train and got off at MLK Drive. Doug showed me around a bit before we grabbed the next train back to Hoboken. Once back in Hoboken, we headed down to the PATH station. Being unfamiliar with PATH, I naturally followed Dough into the next outbound train, which happened to be going to 33rd Street. For some reason the distance between stops seemed much longer than it had been on the way in. I finally realized my mistake at Christopher Street, and got off there for a train bound for Journal Square. I finally got off at Pavonia/Newport, and jumped back onto the New Jersey Turnpike for an uneventful drive home.

It was nice meeting up with Doug and Dave, and I’m sorry I missed the rest of you who were there. Hopefully I’ll see you all up at Branford on October 13th.

(originally posted on the SubTalk forum at nycsubway.org)

Back from NYC and Philly: Full Report

Just letting everybody know that I’m back home safely in Chicago.

My week in Philly was very productive. As I’ve already announced here, I’ve accepted a nice job offer from Kitchen & Associates (how’s that for a name?), a 50-person architecture firm located in a converted schoolhouse in Collingswood, New Jersey. I also got registered for classes at Drexel; I’ll be taking two classes per quarter for the next four years or so to finish my undergrad degree in architecture.

I’ve also settled on a place to live. There’s an apartment complex called the Village of Stoney Run in Maple Shade, NJ located on highway 73 between highway 41 and I-295. The apartment complex, while located in the midst of suburbia, is secluded back off the highway amongst a heavily-wooded area. If figure if I can’t live in the city, then my next choice would be to live in the woods. The apartments are very spacious, and have most of the amenities that I was looking for. My paperwork is still being processed, so we’ll see whether or not I get approved. (I also have backup plans in place if I don’t get approved.)

On Friday, I met up with Jersey Mike at 30th Street Station, where he had just arrived from Connecticut for a weekend home from school. We didn’t do much railfanning, but we rode the Regional Rail from 30th Street to Market East, and then transferred to PATCO to Haddonfield, NJ. I gave him a ride home from Haddonfield and met his parents before we parted ways.

Saturday, I headed up to New York City. I drove up I-295 to Hamilton, NJ where I parked my rental car (a nice 2002 Pontiac Grand Prix) and waited for the New Jersey Transit train to Penn Station. During my wait on the platform, a couple Amtrak trains pulled by AEM-7’s roared through the station at 125 MPH. Impressive.

Once in New York, I wandred around a bit on my own before meeting up with the SubTalk crowd for lunch. While wandering around on my own, I took a (3) express from Penn to 72nd on a train of R-62’s, where I grabbed some breakfast at a nice little bagel place at 77th and Amsterdam. From there I walked to 86th, where I waited in sweltering heat about 20 minutes for a (1) local to Times Square. By the grace of God, the R-62 I eventually boarded was as cold as a meat locker and not as crowded as I feared. At Times Square, I transferred to the Shuttle to GCT, where I wandered around a bit and browsed through the Transit Museum gift shop. After grabbing an iced coffee at a nearby Starbucks, I boarded a train of Kawasaki R-142’s to Bleeker Street. My first impressions of the R-142’s are generally favorable, although I think the R-62’s have a much cooler sound, and that stupid “Mr. Ed” voice is annoying as hell. Due to some sort of delay, it was announced that my train would be skipping Bleeker and a couple other stops, so I had to get off at Union Square and wait for the next train. This was my first time at Union Square, and those platform extenders are by far the coolest I’ve seen! After a short wait, I boarded another train of Kawasaki R-142’s to Bleeker.

I walked eastward down Houston Street hoping to browse through the cool surplus store near Broadway-LaFayette, but for some reason it was closed. (Their posted hours indicated that they should have been open.) Having about 30 minutes to kill before lunch at Katz’s, so I browsed around a bit in the local shops before heading over to Katz’s. After a short wait, I met up with Kevin Walsh and Francis Sibilla. After spending an eternity in line, we finally grabbed a table near the back and chowed down. I barely made a dent in my sandwich, and to be honest, I’ve had better reubens here in Chicago. My meal seemed to be more about quantity than quality, and several flies buzzing around didn’t help my impression. Katz’s was okay for just one visit as a tourist, but I wouldn’t make it part of my regular rotation of favorite restaurants.

After lunch, Francis parted ways, leaving Kevin and I to our own devices. During intermittent periods between downpours, Kevin led me on a marathon walking tour of lower Manhattan. We covered the Lower East Side, parts of Chinatown, South Street Seaport (where we took a much-needed rest), the financial district, Ground Zero, TriBeCa, and SoHo. I feel like I walked about 30 miles, but it was well worth it. I saw plenty of cool things that I had never seen before, and of course one can’t have a better tour guide than Kevin Walsh. Back up at Houston Street and having walked a huge circle around lower Manhattan, Kevin and I caught a northbound (6) train to GCT. Once at GCT, we parted ways; Kevin headed home on the (7), and I waited for a northbound (5) train so that I could experience the Dyre Avenue… And I waited, and waited, and waited… Finally, I boarded a northbound (6) train, where it was announced that the (5) was running as a shuttle between 125th and 149th, and then in another section betweem 149th and Dyre. So, ruling out a six-seat ride to Dyre and back, I rode the (6) to 125th, where I grabbed a very crowded (4) train to 149th, then transferred to a (2) train to 96th/Broadway, and then finally a (1) train to 86th.

Once at 86th, it was about 9:00 PM and I had about 30 minutes to kill before meeting up with David Greenberger, so I headed over to the Starbucks at 86th and Columbus for some much-needed rest and refreshment. 20 minutes later, I finally forced myself out of the comfy chair and walked back down to 86th. I met David just outside fare control, and we took the next southbound (1) train to Columbus Circle. Once at Columbus Circle, we poked around a bit and scoped out some signs of an closed-off crossunder below the IRT tracks before meeting up with RIPTA42HopeTunnel. From 59th we headed northbound on a (C) local train of R-32’s — my only venture to the B-Division all day — to 168th Street, where we transferred to the IRT once again. This was my first visit to the super-deep stations on the West Side IRT, so this was quite a sight. Due to some sort of delay, we ended up waiting quite a while for our southbound (1) train, even watching one (1) train breeze through the station without stopping before ours finally showed up. Somewhere along the way — it may have been 96th Street — we transferred to a (2) train of Bombardier R-142’s that had been diverted to the express track, and was making express stops only to 34th. I got off at 34th, as I was pretty exhausted and eager to head back to my hotel room, and we all parted company there.

Back at Penn Station, I waited about 30 minutes for the next NJT train to Trenton, which left around midnight. After a screaming child and his parents mercifully got off at Newark, the rest of the ride was quiet and uneventful. As the train was approaching my stop at Hamilton, a passenger seated a couple rows behind me was carrying on a conversation with the conductor about NJT new bi-level trains. I joined the conversation and mentioned that I was visiting from Chicago, where bi-levels rule the roost. The NJT conductor feared that the introduction of bi-levels would induce mass confusion while boarding and alighting on NJT trains, but I told him that Chicago commuters have been using bi-levels with no problems for many years.

The passenger and I both got off at Hamilton, and continued chatting. Turns out he works for the NYCTA (I forgot exactly what he does, but he had been a conductor for some years before), and we chatted for a while on the platform about trains and such. He’s even familiar with nycsubway.org and SubTalk. Before parting ways, he gave me a little MTA booklet outlining “Operators Rules and Regulations” for OPTO. It’s been a pretty interesting read so far… Thanks, mystery MTA employee!

I finally got back to my hotel in Maple Shade at around 2:00 AM, and promptly crashed.

Sunday and Monday found me running around and finding a place to live, and I suddenly found myself bored on Tuesday afternoon. So I decided to head out to Atlantic City to see what that place is all about. The thought that came to my mind was: Daytona Beach on steroids. Tacky as hell and brimming with massive casinos and blue-haired ladies sitting in front of slot machines, Atlantic City was just about what I had expected. There’s a neat little amusement part on the pier near Trump’s Taj Mahal Casino (where I had parked), and the boardwalk itself is a cool place to watch people. Later that day, I made one last visit to Jim’s Steaks at 4th and South Streets for yet another big fat steak hoagie. I flew back to Chicago this afternoon, and I’m now preparing to pack all my belongings into cardboard boxes.

I start my new job on Wednesday, September 4th. That prior weekend (Labor Day weekend) will be spent packing up boxes, loading up a U-Haul truck, driving to New Jersey with my car in tow, and unloading said U-Haul truck in New Jersey. Wish me luck!

Thanks to Jersey Mike for meeting up with me in Philly, and thanks to Kevin Walsh, Francis, David Greenberger, and RIPTA42HopeTunnel for meeting me in NYC. Special thanks to Kevin Walsh for the very cool walking tour of lower Manhattan! Watch for some photos to be posted soon.

We’ve got a nasty thunderstorm bearing down on us now, so I’d better get offline.

(originally posted on the SubTalk forum at nycsubway.org)

Checking In From Philly

Just thought I’d take a quick mintute to check in and say hi. I’m at a Kinko’s on Market Street in Center City, and since I’m paying by the minute on this computer, I’ll make this quick:

  • My car made the trip without any trouble, and actually used less gas than I thought it would. Hopefully it will have a repeat performance on the way back.
  • In northern Indiana, I saw two CTA 2600-series cars on flatbed trucks being shipped back to Chicago from their rebuilding in Hornell, NY. Cool!
  • I took the PA Turnpike, and except for the construction, foul weather, narrow lanes, tight curves, and poor visibility, it was a great drive.
  • The parts of New Jersey I’ve seen so far are like a highway engineer’s wet dream… Apparently every highway in the state is designed to prevent left-hand turns.
  • My interview was re-scheduled for Friday morning, so I spent most of Thursday riding the rails. I took: PATCO from Haddonfield to Center City, Broad Street Subway express to Fern Rock and back (what a kick-ass express run!!), R3 to Media, 101 trolley to 69th, MFL back to Center City, and PATCO back to Jersey. More in-depth report to follow.
  • Late last night I re-aquainted myself with Jim’s Steaks on South Street… *drool* I think I like this town.
  • I did some driving around and stumbled upon the Girard Avenue trolley tracks. Cool!
  • My interview this morning went very well. I think the firm was interested in me, and I’d be very interested in working for them. They’re located way down at the Philadelphia Naval Business Center, former site of the Philly Naval Shipyards where my father was stationed during Vietnam. The firm said they’d call me back next week.
  • I’ve been spending most of today driving around the city and exploring various neighborhoods, trying to find a suitable place to call home. South Jersey is a bit too suburban for my tastes, Media is probably a little too distant, but I love Germantown, Mt. Airy, and Manyunk.
  • Fairmount Park is incredible… I could spend days just exploring it.
  • My side trip to NYC tomorrow is still on. Whether I drive or take NJT will probably depend on the weather and my mood tomorrow morning, but either way, the meeting is still on for 2:00 PM on the shuttle platform at Times Square.

That’s it for now… Watch this space for more details of my trip when I’m able to sit down at a computer without having to watch a clock.

(originally posted on the SubTalk forum at nycsubway.org)

2001 in Review

2001 started off okay, with a decent-paying job for an architecture firm in the Sears Tower. But the firm turned out to be run by idiots, and simply finding the energy to show up each morning was becoming difficult.

In March, I managed to scrape together enough money to spend a week in London. It turned out to be the high point of the year. But a week before leaving, I received a call informing me that my father was diagnosed with cancer.

Soon after getting back, I bought my first car in about 6 years. Right around the time the first payment was due, I lost my job, and remained unemployed for about the next two months.

Soon thereafter, my just-purchased car began showing ominous warning signs that the engine was on its last leg.

I finally got a job with the noise abatement program out at O’Hare. I soon learned more about commercial aircraft than I ever cared to. I also learned more about rotted framing, NIMBY politics, shady contractors, and incompetent subcontractors than I ever cared to.

After lots of hesitation, I finally got involved out at the Illinois Railway Museum. And in early September, I led a group of SubTalkers on the first-ever field trip to IRM and all over Chicago. This turned out to be another highlight of the year.

Less than two weeks later, I watched in horror as over 3000 people in one of my favorite cities were murdered on live television.

It was around this time when I was relieved to learn that my father’s cancer seems to have been put into remission.

In October, my car finally crapped out once and for all, leaving me in a financial mess and unable to make it back out to IRM for the foreseeable future. I ended up replacing it with a $450 Trans Am, which I have grown to like.

December found me filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, but looking forward to possibly getting a fresh start on life in Philadelphia next year.

And the year finally ended on a positive note, with me taking a week off to ride Amtrak down to NC and back for the holidays. Exploring the DC Metro for the first time was an added bonus.

The year had some good points, but overall it was mostly pretty crappy. I feel pretty confident in saying good riddance to 2001, and here’s hoping 2002 is better for all of us.

Happy New Year from Chicago.

(originally posted on the SubTalk forum at nycsubway.org)

Amtrak / DC Metro Trip Report

Hope everybody is having a great holiday season. As promised, here is the lowdown on my rail trip to Raleigh, NC and back.

I checked in at Chicago Union Station and boarded the Capitol Limited (train 30) without any significant delays or problems. I got myself a nice coach-class window seat in the coach just behind the cafe/observation car, which itself was just behind the dining car. For those of you East Coast people who have never been out west on Amtrak’s Superliners, I highly reccomend it. I had forgotten how roomy and spacious these cars are; in many ways it’s almost like a hotel on rails. The Amtrak employees at both Union Station and on board the Capitol Limited were very courteous and helpful.

We left Union Station on time, after which we promptly sat in the yard for over an hour while they hooked up the freight boxes and did whatever else it is they do.

Once we got moving, hoeever, we had no further delays, were moving along at around 75-80 MPH most of the way until we got into the mountains. The overnight portion of the trip was through northern Indiana and Ohio, which is generally incredibly boring country, so you’re not missing much by sleeping through it. As for myself, I just couldn’t seem to make myself comfortable enough to sleep in my coach seat, so I ended up spending most of my time in the observation lounge. As boring as it is, there’s something very relaxing and peaceful about watching the sleepy little farming towns pass by in the darkness. I remember finding that same peace while taking the Cardinal down to Cincinnati and back some years ago, and it’s difficult to find on the Metra or CTA trains.

Somewhere in Indiana, I had a very nice prime rib dinner and cheesecake in the dining car.

Approaching Cleveland, we ran alongside one of that city’s rapid transit lines (I’m not sure which one) for a few miles before entering downtown. It was the dead of night, so there weren’t any trains running, but we passed a few of the stations. For the most part, they were very spartan and had very short raised platforms.

In downtown Cleveland itself, there is a light rail line adjacent to the Amtrak station, but the nearest station was a couple blocks away. The Amtrak station itself is small and utilitarian, nothing at all to write home about. Cleveland was as gritty and industrial as I remember it being from driving through on a couple occasions, sort of like a little miniature Chicago. Leaving Cleveland, I decided to get some sleep and found a nice, quiet corner of the observation lounge to lay down in.

After a few hours of shut-eye, I woke up and saw that we were travelling alongside a large river in a deep valley, and the area was beginning to look rather industrial and built-up. We must be approaching Pittsburg, I figured. We maintained a healthy speed almost right into downtown, and passed under several impressive bridges along the way.

The coolest thing about Pittsburg is the terrian. So much different than pancake-flat Chicago, you see entire neighborhoods of Pittsburg strung high along a ridge or nestled deep within a valley, with streets and highways skirting along steep hillsides. It reminded me a lot of my original hometown of Cincinnati, another river city about the same size as Pittsburg, and with equally steep hills. Downtown Pittsburg looked very compact and urban, laced with expressway ramps and railroad tracks. Near the Pittsburg Amtrak station, I spied a trolley loop, but no trolleys.

Leaving downtown Pittsburg, we soon passed through a long tunnel and emerged in a steep-sided valley peppered with residential neighborhoods and what appreared to be a large college campus. Anybody know what college this was? It has a very tall gothic-looking tower at the top of the hill, so it’s pretty hard to miss.

Soon afterwards, daylight began to appear in the sky, and I had a nice breakfast of eggs, bacon and hash browns in the dining car. These were arguably the best hash browns I’ve ever had.

The rest of the journey between here and suburban Washington was through the mountains of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Maryland. We followed the old B&O tracks most of the way, and most of the old signals were still there. I don’t know much about mainline railroad history or operations, but I could tell these signals were fairly unique. A few of them, however, have been replaced by modern standard-issue signals.

The tracks mostly follow alongside a river, and going into the mountains, you can see how the river gradually becomes smaller and smaller, with more small rapids. Once past Cumberland Gap, however, the reverse is true: the water flows east, and the mild rapids give way to wider and calmer waters. The railroad itself is an impressive engineering feat, given how many cuts, bridges, and tunnels it uses. At no time, however, did the grade seem exceptionally steep. At one point, we crossed over a bridge which led smack into a long tunnel, which itself spilled us directly onto another bridge across the same river.

Our first hint that we were entering the Washington metropolitan area was the appearance of MARC stations along the route. Soon enough, we passed Washington Metro’s Shady Grove yard, and followed the Metro ROW for several stops. While very clean and modern, the trains and stations looked a bit more dated than I was expecting; the above-ground Metro stations remind me of 1970’s shopping mall architecture. (The below-ground stations, however, still look fresh and modern, as I would later see.)

We eventually pulled into Washington Union Station, right on schedule. To our right was a train of bi-level MARC coaches, which are very nice looking, and to our left was my Holy Grail: two Acela Express trainsets. Once I had stepped off the Amtrak train, I attempted to walk over and get a couple pictures of the AE trainsets. However, a snotty prick of an Amtrak security goon chased me away. (I wasn’t even on the Acela platforms.) Hell of a welcome to our nation’s capital. I got off a couple shots anyway, despite the rent-a-cop cursing at me, before I ducked into the station itself with the rest of the crowd. I had a couple hours to kill before my Silver Star train would depart for NC, so I grabbed some lunch downstairs before heading out and doing some exploring.

Union Station itself is everything I had been told it was: an excellent restoration of a beautiful old train station. The shops and restaurants are nice, and overall it’s a very classy place. Am I correct that the main shopping arcade / food court area was once the outdoor portion of the train shed? I noticed vestibules between that space and the main hall that match the main entry doors up front, so I assume that huge space was originally a covered outdoor space at the head of the train platforms.

Finally, the Metro. I put a few dollars into a machine and grabbed a farecard, and took a Rohr Red Line train to Metro Center, where I trasferred to a Breda Blue Line train to the Smithsonian stop. My first impressions:

  • As I alluded to earlier, the underground stations are architectural masterpieces. They looked good when new, they look good today, and they will continue to look good when DC Metro is as old as the IRT now is. The flooring and signage looks a bit dated, but that’s small potatoes. I point out with no small measure of pride that the entire DC Metro system was designed by a Chicago architect, Harry Weese. (Weese himself died a couple years ago, but his firm still continues work for WMATA.)
  • Like the above-ground stations, the rolling stock looks mostly modern but is beginning to look somewhat dated. Also, 25 years of wear and tear are beginning to show. But overall, the cars look and sound good, run nice and fast, and are comfortable to ride in. I’m sure they’ll look a lot better when they get their well-deserved overhaul soon.
  • I thought the signage and wayfinding, while better than Chicago’s, could still be potentially confusing to tourists and newcomers. New York and London seem to have the clearest and easiest signage systems; I was easily able to navigate both complicated systems upon my first visit to each city.
  • Being the lazy slob I am, I’m always in favor of escalators in subway stations. However, this assumes the escalators are working. More often than not, the escalators were either inoperational or under repair, sometimes leaving only a single escalator for arriving and departing passengers. This must be a nightmare during rush hours. The escalators are nice, but I think there should always be at least one stairway to serve as a backup.
  • The differences between the Breda and Rohr cars are fairly subtle, but obvious enough that I could tell them apart after only a couple trips. The Rohr cars have different weatherstripping around the windows, different lights down by the floor at the doors, and stainless steel grab bars on the seat backs, as opposed to brown rubber-coated grab bars.
  • The automated female “doors opening” and “doors closing” voice sounds a bit sultry. I’m surprised the Religious Right hasn’t raised hell about it. (Hey, they’ve bitched much louder about more pointless things.)
  • As cool and modern as the DC Metro is, it still seemed to lack the character of London’s Tube, Chicago’s L, or the NYC subway. I guess maybe it seemed a litte too clean and sanitized. Also, while I appreciate the WMATA’s reasons for keeping the stations a uniform design, it seems a bit monotonous. A little variety, a.k.a. London’s new Jubilee Line extension, would spice things up a lot.
  • Now that I’ve ridden the Washington Metro, I’m proud to say that I’ve now ridden every major subway system in the country!! (I haven’t yet ridden Baltimore or Los Angeles Metro, but they hardly count as major.)

Getting off at Smithsonian, I walked down the Mall past the Washington Monument and to the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial. I’m far too young to have served in Vietnam, and I don’t know too many Vietnam vets. My father was in the Navy during that era, but served at the Philadelphia Naval Hospital. But for some reason, I’ve always felt drawn to The Wall, and going there felt sort of like a pilgrimage for me. The names, I knew there would be thousands of them. But I didn’t fully appreciate just how many there were until I got there and saw how big the wall is. What really struck me, though, was how the light plays differently on the granite surface. From some angles it’s a deep black granite. From other angles, the reflection is so strong it’s like looking into a mirror. Subtle and yet incredibly powerful, the wall is another masterpiece of modern architecture. Naturally, my thoughts led to the WTC site and what sort of memorial could possibly do justice to such a tragedy. My own ideas on a WTC memorial probably aren’t much better than the next person’s, but I think the Vietnam memorial, in its stark yet powerful simplicity, can show us a possible direction.

From there I walked up 23rd Street to the Foggy Bottom-GWU station. The surrounding neighborhood along the way reminded me a lot of Boston. From the station, I boarded a Breda Blue Line train back to Metro Center, where I transferred to a Breda Red Line train to Union Station. Arriving at Union Station, I walked around for a few minutes before heading over to the Amtrak gates to wait for the Silver Star to leave. The same security goon who chased me away from the Acela trains eyed me suspiciously through a set of doors. I almost gave him the finger, but didn’t want to risk missing my train on account of being interrogated by a bunch of Amtrak security goons in some gulag in the bowels of Union Station.

Finally, the Silver Star (train 91) began boarding. The gate agent barked orders to the customers in line, and we eventually headed downstairs and boarded the train. In contrast to my previous train of spacious Superliners, this train of worn-out Amfleet coaches felt very much like a Greyhound bus on rails. The train was crowded and dirty, and the air was stuffy. The cafe car was filled with cigarette smoke, and the employees seemed a bit harried. To top it off, the scenery through Virginia and North Carolina was even more boring than Indiana and Ohio. While the train ride from Chicago to DC was a pleasure, on this trip I found myself counting down the hours until arrival in Raleigh. I had dinner along the way, a fillet of red snapper, which was very good. The PA system on the train wasn’t working, so I was afraid to doze off in fear of missing my stop. This must be what the Amtrak-haters think of when they villify Amtrak, I remember thinking. Mercifully, the train went pretty fast the entire way down, we arrived in Raleigh on time at around 10:25 PM on Christmas Eve.

Raleigh in general, and my parents’ suburb of Knightdale in particular, was the same as it always is, with the addition of a few more strip malls. I spent the next four days in awkward conversation with my parents, being chewed on by the family dog, being ignored by the family cat, and occasionally venturing out with my mom on errands to the grocery store or to Wal-Mart. Oh, joy.

Raliegh is in the process of building a second expressway loop around the city, part of which will almost run through my parents’ back yard. My father is convninced that this will solve all their traffic ills. I also had to feign interest as my father pointed out all the strip malls being built in the area, as if that’s progress. Seemed like he was trying to convince me that they don’t really live in a semi-rural backwater, but sometimes it sounded more like he was trying to convince himself. (My parents are from Cincinnati orginally, and moved to NC from the Chicago suburbs about four years ago.) To his credit, he’s strongly in favor of a proposed commuter rail system they’re apparently planning down there, and my parents are talking about maybe moving back to Cincinnati after they retire. So maybe there’s hope for them after all.

All that said, I generally had a nice time down there. Seems I need trips like this once a year to remind myself why I moved out into my own apartment, but it was nice having some actual home-cooked meals for a few days and being “home” with the family even though I consider my home Chicago.

Saturday morning at 5:00 AM, we arrived at the Amtrak station in Reliegh to check in my bag and board the Silver Star (train 92) back to Washington. The train, which originates in Miami, was a half-hour late getting to Raleigh, and the return trip was essentially a carbon copy of the ride down. The major differences: The dining car was nicer, but we often crept along the tracks at slow speed or stopped altogether for extended periods for no apparent reason. Also, the sun eventually came up, so I was able to see outside for at least part of the journey. We eventually arrived at Union Station at around 1:00 PM, about 90 minutes late, which seriously cut into the time I was hoping to use to explore more of Washington.

After grabbing a bite to eat at the Sbarro eatery at Union Station, I got back on the Metro. Destination: DuPont Circle. The escalators there are certainly impressive, but painfully slow compared to what I got used to in London. I went up to the surface, looked around a bit, and headed back down. My next stop would be Judiciary Square, where I stopped at the National Building Museum to look around a bit. I bought a cool coffee table book, Metro at 25, which has a lot of interesting info and some cool photos of the Washington Metro system. And it was only $10. There was also a moving photo exhibit of the World Trade Center on display at the museum, and I stopped to pay my respects before going back down into the subway. From here, I went to Metro Center to seek out the Sales Office where I hoped to pick up a Metro coffee mug or something like that, but found it closed. I grumbled my way back downstairs, and caught a Breda Blue Line train to the Pentagon. The Pentagon Metro station itself is very cool, reminding me of the Porter Square stop on the MBTA Red Line. After a little nervous hesitation, I headed upstairs to see the Pentagon itself and the damaged section. I didn’t see the damaged area itself, but some construction cranes belied its location. Also, the bus stop shelter up at street level has a very nice architectural design. I snapped a couple photos and headed back down to the subway.

I grabbed a Breda Yellow Line train to Gallery Place-Chinatown, where I transferred to a Rohr Red Line train back to Union Station. One more round of being barked at by Amtrak gate personel before boarding my train, and I was back on board the Capitol Limited (train 29) bound for Chicago. The ride itself was relaxed and uneventful, similar to the ride down. The train in both directions was booked solid, but the Superliners don’t seem nearly as cramped and crowded as the Amfleet coaches. 17 hours on a Superliner is vastly preferable to 6 hours on an Amfleet. Again, the Capitol Limited crew was very nice and helpful. I had another meal of prime rib along the way, and while not quite as good as the prime rib I had on the way down, it certainly beat the mac & cheese that I’m used to having for dinner.

Darkness soon overcame us shortly after leaving Washington, but with a bright full moon and a fresh coat of snow on the ground, we could easily see outside the train once they dimmed the lights on the coaches. The mountains and villages took on a different look in the moonlit darkness, and every so often the train would round a curve and allow me to see the two Genesis locomotives casting a bright ray of light on the tracks ahead. The only sound was the steady rythm of the wheels against the rails, punctuated every so often by the lonely cry of the distant horn was we approached a grade crossing. I was in heaven.

I stayed awake until we got past Pittsburg, and then got some sleep. I was dead tired before even boarding the train, so I slept much better than I did on the way down. I woke up a few hours later somewhere in the middle of Indiana. It was still dark out, but the dining car was open for breakfast. I had a very good breakfast of a ham and cheese omlette with some hash browns (also very good). Not too long thereafter, I found the passing landscape looking familiar was we passed the massive steel mills of northern Indiana and made our way into Chicago. For part of the way we travelled alongside the Chicago Skyway, which is undergoing a massive reconstruction, before turning north and heading up through Bridgeport past Comiskey Park and into the Union Station yards. We pulled onto the westbound BNSF tracks where they disconnected the freight boxes from our train, and after a short wait we backed into Union Station itself.

As we got off the train, we were greeted with an icy blast of wind and temperatures in the teens. I had planned on taking the CTA Red Line home, but as tired as I was and with these temperatures, I sprung for a taxi once I had picked up my bag. For the next several hours, while sitting at my computer and checking my e-mail, my body still felt like it was bouncing along the rails.

Some concluding remarks about my Amtrak journey:

  • While the Silver Star was tedious and boring, I was very impressed with the Capitol Limited. Maybe it was the scenerey or the spacious Superliner coaches, but the Capitol Limited just seemed a lot nicer. Some people argue that long-distance trains have no reason for being, but I think the ride on the Capitol Limited is living proof to the contrary.
  • The Amtrak personel at Chicago Union Station and on board the Capitol Limited were very courteous and helpful. The personel on the Silver Star seemed nice but harried and overworked, and the personel at Washington Union Station seemed like just plain assholes.
  • It’s a shame the Superliners can’t fit into some parts of the East Coast, as I think they would be a vast improvement over the Amfleet coaches.
  • Despite my generally negative experiences on the Silver Star, my trip overall was vastly preferable to flying. How many people fly because they enjoy they actually enjoy being stuffed into tin cans? On flights, people are generally bitchy, high-strung, and usually just grunt at each other. On the train, people are more relaxed and actually feel comfortable talking to each other.
  • I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: This country needs a decent high-speed rail network. The advatanges of high-speed rail for distances of 600 miles or less are already a given. But based on my experiences aboard the Capitol Limited, I believe a strong case could be made for high-speed rail for distances of at least 1000 miles, if the right ammenities are offered on board. Maybe it’s just the effects of 9/11, but a surprisingly large percentage of people on the Capitol Limited were travelling all the way between DC and Chicago.
  • Chicago Union Station has a lot of room for improvement compared to Washington Union Station. It’s okay, but in some respects it’s like a slightly dressed-up version of NYC Penn. We could do much better than that.

Okay, that’s about all I have to say right now… I’m sure I’ve left something out, but I’ll probably add it later.

(originally posted on the SubTalk forum at nycsubway.org)