Overview | |
---|---|
Location | Manhattan, New York |
Coordinates | 40°44′56″N 73°58′48″W / 40.74889°N 73.98000°W |
Route | Northbound Park Avenue |
Start | East 33rd Street (entrance ramp) East 34th Street (entrance portal) |
End | East 40th Street (exit ramp) East 39th Street (exit portal) (all traffic must continue to East 46th Street) |
Operation | |
Opened | 1834 |
Owner | New York City |
Operator | New York City Department of Transportation |
Traffic | Cars (formerly trains and street cars) |
Technical | |
Length | 5 blocks, approximately 0.25 miles (0.40 km) |
No. of lanes | 1 |
Operating speed | 35 mph (56.33 km/h) |
Tunnel clearance | 8 feet 11 inches (2.72 m) |
Width | 16 feet (4.88 m) |
The Park Avenue Tunnel, also called the Murray Hill Tunnel, is a 1,600-foot-long (488 m) tunnel that passes under seven blocks of Park Avenue in Murray Hill, in the New York City borough of Manhattan. Traffic used to travel northbound from 33rd Street toward the Park Avenue Viaduct. The tunnel is under the jurisdiction of the New York City Department of Transportation. It is designed to carry one lane of northbound car traffic from East 33rd Street to East 40th Street. From 40th Street north, traffic must follow the Park Avenue Viaduct around Grand Central Terminal to 46th Street. The vertical clearance is 8 ft 11 in (2.72 m).
The IRT Lexington Avenue Line of the New York City Subway, carrying the 4, 5, 6, and <6> trains, runs parallel to the Park Avenue Tunnel in two tunnels below it.[1]