Amtrak hits six-month milestone in East River Tunnel rebuild
Amtrak has reached a key milestone in its multi-year rehabilitation of the East River Tunnels, marking six months of construction with a project tour highlighting structural progress and continued on-time rail operations.
The $1.8 billion effort, underway since June, is rebuilding century-old tunnel infrastructure 60 feet beneath Midtown Manhattan. One of the four tunnel tubes is currently closed for a full structural overhaul, while the remaining three continue to carry Amtrak and Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) trains between Queens and Manhattan. Despite reduced capacity, LIRR reports a 96% on-time performance, crediting close coordination and staging between agencies.
Inside the closed tube, crews have removed track and ballast to rebuild structural components and install new communications, fire-protection, and power systems—modern upgrades that include future Wi-Fi and cellular service. “This tunnel will be equipped with state-of-the-art safety systems,” said Amtrak Project Manager Youssef Dehne. “We are halfway done with the work in this area as we continue repairs in the middle and eastern sections.”
The first rehabilitated tube is set to reopen in summer 2026, at which point work will shift to a second tube, scheduled for completion in October 2027. Two of the four East River Tunnel tubes suffered significant damage during Superstorm Sandy, driving the need for full reconstruction of wires, systems, track, and tunnel lining.
Built in 1908, the tunnels remain among the most critical rail links in the Northeast Corridor. Amtrak says the phased schedule ensures passenger service continues while the system receives long-overdue structural modernization.
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