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Which NYC tunnel is oldest?

The Atlantic Avenue Tunnel is officially the world's oldest subway tunnel. This tunnel was built in 1844 beneath a busy street in the City of Brooklyn (Brooklyn did not become part of NYC until a half-century later). The Atlantic Avenue Tunnel is a half-mile long and accommodated two standard gauge railroad tracks.



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The first segment of Weehawken's Lincoln Tunnel wouldn't open until 1937, making the Holland Tunnel's 1927 opening unique and essential.

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1927 - On November 13, the Holland Tunnel opened to traffic.

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The Lincoln Tunnel is one of two automobile tunnels built under the Hudson River, the other being the Holland Tunnel between Jersey City, New Jersey and Lower Manhattan. The Lincoln Tunnel is also one of six tolled crossings in the New York area owned by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

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The Union Canal Tunnel is the oldest existing transportation tunnel in the United States. According to oral history, George Washington visited the canal diggings in 1792, and then again in 1794, while he was accompanying troops to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion in Western Pennsylvania.

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Technically called “Tunnel Street,” the three-block-long passage is the city's only underground street, according to 6sqft. It serves as a Broadway entrance to the 191st Street subway station, which, at 175 feet underground, is the deepest in the system.

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The Union Canal Tunnel, owned and operated by the Lebanon County Historical Society, is the oldest existing transportation tunnel in the United States. From 1827 to 1885 the Union Canal linked the commercial centers of Harrisburg, Reading, and by extension, the port of Philadelphia.

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Also known as the Cobble Hill tunnel, the half-mile Atlantic Avenue tunnel is not only the oldest subway tunnel in NYC but also the world. Running beneath Brooklyn's Atlantic Avenue, it was first built in 1844 and was sealed off in 1861.

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The Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel is the longest tunnel in New York. The Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel is the longest tunnel in New York. It is a marvel of engineering, stretching an impressive 9,117 feet beneath the bustling streets of New York City.

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The Holland Tunnel is a vehicular tunnel under the Hudson River that connects Hudson Square and Lower Manhattan in New York City in the east to Jersey City, New Jersey in the west.

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Gotthard Tunnel with Italian and German interests. After 10 years of excavation, marked by labour unrest and the death of some 167 workers, the 9.3-mile (15-km) tunnel—then the world's longest—opened in 1882. Thus, the cantons of Uri and Ticino were connected by rail, and…

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The island of Manhattan is connected to the rest of the world through 21 bridges and 15 tunnels. The bridges range in complexity from the comparatively simple Harlem River swing bridges to the grandeur of the Brooklyn Bridge and cover a hundred years of bridge construction technology and social change.

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Dingess Tunnel has been called “America's Bloodiest Tunnel” due to stories from the late 1800s/early 1900s of immigrant and African-American coal miners and railroad employees being murdered while traveling through the tunnel (Appalachian Magazine, 2014.)

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The Twin Bores 15, 1968, and was completed five years later on Mar. 8, 1973. The Eisenhower Tunnel celebrates a big milestone of Connecting Colorado for 50 Years as of March 8, 2023. This bore was originally called the Straight Creek Tunnel, and later was officially named the Eisenhower Memorial Bore.

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Running through the Continental Divide in the Rocky Mountains, the Eisenhower–Edwin C. Johnson Memorial Tunnel is among the highest car tunnels in the world, reaching 11,158 feet at its highest elevation.

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Designed by Ole Singstad, the tunnel was built by shield-and-compressed-air methods to hold back the outside water pressure. The tunnel consists of three vehicular tubes, each of which carries two lanes of traffic. It is about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long and lies 97 feet (30 metres) below the river's surface.

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Motorized vehicles only. No pedestrian or bicycle access. Operators of overweight or over-dimensional cargo, or to lead a convoy across the Lincoln Tunnel, must contact the 24-hour Communications Desk at (201) 617-8115 prior to their trip for approval.

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