Penn Station
Amtraked! Carrier to Temporarily Suspend Boston-New York Service
Traveling on I-95 on a summer weekend has never been pleasant, but this weekend you can expect it to be particularly rough.
Amtrak announced that its Accela and regional service between New York, Boston, and New Haven will be cancelled from June 14 to June 17 so the moveable span of the 90-year-old Thames River Bridge connecting Groton and New London, Conn., can be replaced. read more »
Was It Over When the Germans Bombed Pearl Harbor?
From Thomas Friedman's column in The New York Times this morning. He was writing about the lack of investment in American infrastructure, among other things:
If all Americans could compare Berlin’s luxurious central train station today with the grimy, decrepit Penn Station in New York City, they would swear we were the ones who lost World War II.
Ray Kelly to Steve Roth, James Dolan: Put Up That Wall!
WNBC.com got hold of a March 25 letter from Police Commissioner Ray Kelly to Madison Square Garden Chairman James Dolan, Vornado Realty chief executive Steve Roth, and the heads of the M.T.A. and Amtrak, faulting the parties for holding up the installation of a security perimeter around Penn Station to protect what he called “the single most critical transit hub in the United States” from terrorist attacks. read more »
Endangered Hotel Penn Nets Nearly $38 M. in '07
With Merrill Lynch staying put downtown and plans to redevelop Penn Station in flux, Vornado CEO Steven Roth may not know what to do with the Hotel Pennsylvania--a building the company once described as "a placeholder, sort of like a parking lot."
In the meantime, the historic lodge continues to make his company some big bucks--netting roughly $37.9 million last year.
That's $10.6 million more than in 2006, according to the company's latest filing with federal regulators, which further added, "This property continues to trend higher in 2008."
With revenues on the rise, does it still make sense to raze it? read more »
This Won't Take Long, Amtrak Just Wants to Check Your Bags
To jolt commuters from the holiday lull, Amtrak will now greet passengers at Penn Station and elsewhere with bomb-sniffing dogs, machine-gun-wielding security officers, and random carry-on bag checks starting today as part of a program to boost security measures on domestic rail lines.
A long-time proponent of upping security on America’s vulnerable rail system, Senator Charles Schumer, supported the initiative but feared that cash-strapped Amtrak might not have the personnel to make the system work without “bringing service to a screeching halt.” read more »
Civics Let Some Ads In at Moynihan
The statement of principles (PDF) reads: “A limited amount of advertising as long as it is tastefully designed and managed, as it is in Grand Central.”
The Friends’ Web site actually shows a variety of advertising, including the banners in front of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Asked whether the banners should be allowed, Robert Yaro, president of the Regional Plan Association, said, “The principle is that we are standing in front of a landmark here and the landmark has to be respected. Can there be some temporary signage for special events? Perhaps that’s going to be acceptable.”
Peg Breen, the president of the New York Landmarks Conservancy, which has taken a harder line on preserving the exterior but has nonetheless signed onto the design principles announced today, said, “The Garden is going to have opportunities, as I understand it, with kiosks at the corners, mid-block and Ninth Avenue corners. Everyone is going to know where Madison Square Garden is. We want people to know there is a Post Office and great train station inside.”
Is everyone clear on this?
Midtown South Graduates
It’s official: midtown South has been annexed by midtown, as the prospect of billions in investment in Penn Station and some 7.5 million square feet in anticipated development by Steve Roth’s Vornado Realty Trust have convinced a major brokerage that things are changing along 34th Street.
CB Richard Ellis today announced that the Empire State Building, the Penn Plaza buildings and others in the area will now be included in the firm’s definition of “midtown.”
The move, which also stretched the boundaries to include the New York Times building on Eighth Avenue, puts about 17 million square feet of office space into midtown, according to CB Richard Ellis.
Press release after the jump. read more »
Parking Lot Across From Penn Station to Go Residential
The New York-based Savanna Real Estate Fund is planning a 100,000 square foot mixed-use building across the street from the Farley Post Office and Pennsylvania Station, a corner site home to a parking lot.
The site, 415 Eighth Avenue, is on the southwest corner of Eighth Avenue and 31st Street, a location certain to benefit from the gargantuan amount of development – about $14 billion – envisioned for the immediate area by the state, Vornado Realty Trust, and Related Companies. read more »
ESDC Eyes Farley Post Office Buy in March
Shortly after coming into office in January, Pat Foye, the new downstate chairman of the Empire State Development Corporation, extended the option to buy Farley, but just until the end of March--an optimistic target, it seemed at the time, for wrapping up a huge real-estate deal that would have involved moving Madison Square Garden a block west, to the back end of Farley, opening up Penn Station to the sky, and erecting huge office towers around its edges on the Eighth Avenue superblock where the Garden now sits.
But it is increasingly clear that Mr. Foye will not wait until that superdeal gets worked out before buying the post office. And having control of some of the property involved would put the state in a better position to negotiate with the private developers who own Penn Station's air rights over who will pay how much to redo the station.
At a meeting on Wednesday afternoon, the ESDC board agreed to seek a bridge loan or an advance from the developers that would give the agency the few million dollars it would need to close the post-office deal next month. After the meeting, Robin Stout, the president of the Moynihan Station Development Corporation, a subsidiary of ESDC, told reporters that the agency could purchase the post office before wrapping up the larger negotiations. Neither he nor Mr. Foye would say, however, when that would happen.
"A closing date has not been scheduled but we are committed to moving forward as quickly as we can," Mr. Foye said.
A public hearing on the loan comes March 12. The state Public Authorities Control Board could then approve the general project plan--the same one, it turns out, as was rejected last October--before the end of the month, when the option expires.
Will Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver veto it this time around?
- Matthew SchuermanSpitzer Camp to Study Madison Square Garden Move
The board of the Empire State Development Corporation, the state economic development agency, allocated $500,000 for a supplemental environmental impact statement for the Moynihan Station project that would consider the implications--in terms of traffic, historic preservation and whatnot--of moving the basketball arena from its present home at 33rd Street and Eighth Avenue a block west, where the Farley Post Office Annex now resides.
A bigger, better Pennsylvania Station (along with a whole mess of skyscrapers) would rise in the Garden's current location and the front end of the post office would be turned into more train station.
Once the "scoping document" comes out in the next two or three months, we will learn more about what the Garden and the private developers behind the move, Vornado Realty Trust and The Related Companies, want to do back there. It will be another two or three months for a draft general project plan, and then another two or three (or more) months before reaching the final approval stage that the old Moynihan Station plan had reached last October, when it was unceremoniously dumped by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver.
"There are two fundamental issues on Moynihan that are threshold issues. One is the transportation issues," ESDC Downstate Chairman Patrick Foye told reporters after the meeting. "The second fundamental issue relates to ... how any overages are treated. The state and ESDC are not willing to sign on to unlimited liability and are going to be looking for participation, probably from the state and the city, and from the project developers as well."
- Matthew SchuermanLord Foster, Others Propose Massive Plan to Supplant Garden
Penn Station Gets Band-Aid
In This Week's Observer...

The Garden: Where's it headed?
Bakery Transcends Its Transit-Based Comfort Zones

Zaro's Babka: No longer just for Amtrakers.
Having already established a dominating presence at the city's transit hubs--including four stores at Grand Central, two at Penn Station, and another at Port Authority--Zaro's is now targeting Flatiron-area flatfoots.
At its newest location, next door to Mayrose Comfortable Food at the corner of Broadway and 21st Street, contractors worked well past sunset on Friday to install new windows. Seems the circa-1977 chain is in a hurry to expand its audience beyond the Amtrak and LIRR set.
"We are hoping to be open by the end of the year," proprietor Joseph Zaro tells The Observer in an e-mail, "but with construction, one never knows!" read more »
- Chris ShottBeneath Their Stations
Brookfield Goes West
Speaker Silver on Moynihan: Deal by June ’07
Speaker Silver on Moynihan: Deal by June '07
Silver Rejects Moynihan
The Governor had threatened to nullify the agreement with Related and Vornado and start over again--or, in a way, did Silver just do that?--by bidding out a larger plan to move Madison Square Garden and redo Pennsylvania Station. A statement explaining how far he is willing to go is coming out soon.
Sort of a West Side Stadium, Part II, except this time Pataki, not Bloomberg, is the loser.
-Matthew SchuermanThe Squeeze, Pataki-Style
The Mayor, by the way, got quoted in the press release, but did not make it to the event itself, which is emblematic of the way he has stood on the sidelines while watching Silver and Pataki fight.
-Matthew SchuermanPerils of Pataki: Tied to Tracks on Moynihan Station
Perils of Pataki: Tied to Tracks on Moynihan Station
Penn Station Madhouse: Big Storm's A-Comin'!
Her sweatshirt read: 'Aww someone needs a hug.' A reminder of that didn't cut it with her father. "Get outta here," he said. read more »
In Penn Station, it was nuts. The 3:21 for the Fire Island ferries was leaving soon, as was the 3:58 to Montauk. In the ruckus was Gabby, a 22-year-old assistant at a PR firm in Manhattan: "I'm spending my last weekend in East Hampton!" she said. She looked more 25 than 22. "I was out 'til 4 last night! I'm busted right now!" There was an awkward silence. Was she nervous about the weather warnings? Not at all. "If it's not the beach, it's the clubs!"
Landmark Hotel Pennsylvania Needs Big Dose of Lysol
Events for July 25, 2006
John Faso will campaign at Penn Station.
Board of Elections Executive Director John Ravits will announce a poll worker outreach effort during screening of the documentary By The People at the Manhattan BOE headquarters.
NY1 hosts a debate between Tom Suozzi and Eliot Spitzer. Azi has the debate party details.
—Nicole BrydsonLetters
Letters
To the Editor: read more »
Editorials
Tuesday: Gehry's "Flimflam," Lauder's "Club," and $7b for MSG
- Steves Roth and Ross have a little $7 billion plan to move Madison Square Garden a block west. And to build the Farley Post Office into Moynihan Station, of course. And to transform Pennsylvania Station by erecting a monumental glass canopy (plus 20 Corinthian columns). And to construct five towers on top of Penn Station. "We are about making money here on a grand scale," Mr. Roth admits. (A political "battle royale" The Times declares, "seems unlikely.") (The New York Times)
- Jonathan Lethem flexes his argumentative muscles, penning a 2317-word open later to Frank Gehry. Some choice phrases: "out-of-scale flotilla of skyscrapers," "mendacious flimflam," and "slickly patronizing." (Slate, via Curbed)
- Really, our hotel industry is doing just fine: if the Hotel Association of NYC ratifies a new labor deal with the New York Hotel & Motel Trades Council today, a potentially horrific citywide strike just might be avoided. (Crain's)
- Can shunning real estate brokers save sellers money? Sort of. But Prudential Douglas Elliman Senior VP Corinne Pulitzer makes a really convincing case against independence: "We don't drill our own teeth if we're a dentist, and we would go to a real estate professional--both buyer and seller--to understand the data." Exactly. (NY1)
- Weird New York beaches are all the rage: the only thing keeping Manhattan tanners from the scenic shores of Astoria, Battery Park and DUMBO are the beaches' isolation, neglect and pollution--plus the potential for drowning. (NY Daily News)
- You only have to sacrifice a nation-high $175 (per foot, of course) in order to join the so-called Country Club--a group of skyscrapingly elite Manhattan office buildings. It's really a small price to pay for hanging out with Ron "Klimt" Lauder. (New York Post) - Max Abelson
City-State Battle Looms At New Moynihan Station
Roth Rescue: Garden Swap For Moynihan
Dolans to Build New Garden

The Farley post-office building today.
A new office tower would go up above Penn Station instead. read more »
[A] source said The Related Cos. brokered the deal by smoothing over hard feelings remaining from the West Side stadium fight between the Bloomberg administration and Cablevision executive James Dolan, the Garden’s chairman.Meanwhile, office and retail development originally scheduled for the western end of the Farley block will be scotched to make way for the new Garden. - Tom McGeveran
LIRR and NJ Transit to Help Fund Amtrak?

Slithering out.
So now the Bush administration, according to The New York Times, has a new solution: Charge surplus-addled commuter rail systems in those cities for their use of Amtrak facilities--tracks, stations, etc.
The plan, according to The Times,
could hit New Jersey Transit hard, because it operates many trains over long routes. The Long Island Rail Road could be charged more for using Pennsylvania Station in New York City. Metro-North Railroad, which terminates in New Haven, runs on tracks owned by New York and Connecticut, but the Shore Line East, which runs east of New Haven, operates on Amtrak tracks and could be hit for more. Septa, which serves the Philadelphia area, and the commuter systems serving Boston, Wilmington and Baltimore would also be subject to new charges.
But can they actually do this? The commuter rails already have arrangements with Amtrak for the use of their facilities.
And in New York, where a greater portion of commuter rail is already funded through fare-paying customers, are Amtrak trains serving the region to be partially subsidized by suburban commuters?As it is, the successful New Jersey Transit and Long Island Railroad lines are likely to be the ones footing the bill for the new Penn Station--which will be across the street from Amtrak's old "vomitorium," Penn Station. Remember the big plans for a rail hub that would welcome commuters to the city? To paraphrase Vincent Scully, now suburban commuters who already work in the city will be entering like emperors, while tourists slither in like rats. read more »
- Tom McGeveranAutosummarize: Muschamp
Bonus dirty excerpt: read more »
Meanwhile, a few blocks south, Pennsylvania Station was being a really bad building, but a really good one, too. Mr. Hartford had a collection of poodle art that he kept in the gallery, which is why it had no windows.We should get such mail. - Tom McGeveran
WOOD WAR VIII
The Media Mob would like to reward the Post for scaling back its Post Poker ad and getting a nice big screamer headline out there. But the Media Mob happened to first spot this front page out the corner of one eye in its natural competitive habitat--on a Penn Station newspaper rack. And on that newsstand stroll-by, the most salient impression was that "Ferrer ad / lewd diss / to Mike / & Bush" is indecipherable jibber-jabber. read more »
So the Daily News--despite somehow using a photo of George Bush that doesn't look like George Bush--carries the day again.
Winner: Daily News Overall standings: Daily News 6, New York Post 2McMansion Mania
It has been noted here before that the New York Times loves the term “McMansion.” However, Jon Gertner’s excellent magazine piece is an welcome exception to the typical use of the term. Mr. Gertner follows the buying of land, and rampant building of McMansions, err Estate Homes, throughout the country. Only 10 years or so until New Jersey is completely built up.
Upper Deck CEO Richard McWilliam is attempting a $15 million flip on Central Park South, according to the New York Times. Interesting, but haven’t we heard this news somewhere before.
Ivan Reitman will be checking into the Sherry-Netherland Hotel for $30,000 a month, and Carlos Beltran recently dropped $4 million on a Grand Beekman condo, according to the New York Post. Also, Russell Simmons has slashed his asking price down to $8.2 million, but I think we’ve heard that news before, too. read more »
The New York Post gets bubble wrapped, and finds broker and buyers speculating about the much-discussed stats gleaned from the 3rd quarter market reports. While almost every market-related piece analyzes the drop in average sales price, there are plenty of other points worthy of consideration. Finally: hipster pharmacies.
-Michael CalderoneSounds of the City: What Happens to Hearing When You Move to N.J.
Sounds of the City: What Happens to Hearing When You Move to N.J.
Penn Deal Inked
The New York Times reports today that Vornado and Related have sealed the deal to develop Moynihan Station--that's the old Farley post office building accross the street from Penn Station (which was once referred to by a critic as the city's "vomitory.")
They won because they had the highest bid; they had the highest bid because they're going to take the "air rights" from over the station and transfer them across the street where they're building an office tower, at 33rd Street and Eighth Avenue. read more » 


















