Support
www.wikiquery.en-us.nina.az
The Port Authority Trans Hudson PATH is a 13 8 mile 22 2 km rapid transit system in the northeastern New Jersey cities of Newark Harrison Jersey City and Hoboken as well as Lower and Midtown Manhattan in New York City It is operated as a wholly owned subsidiary of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey PATH trains run around the clock year round four routes serving 13 stations operate during the daytime on weekdays while two routes operate during weekends late nights and holidays It crosses the Hudson River through cast iron tunnels that rest on the river bottom It operates as a deep level subway in Manhattan and the Jersey City Hoboken riverfront from Grove Street in Jersey City to Newark trains run in open cuts at grade level and on elevated track In 2023 the system saw 55 109 100 rides or about 185 600 per weekday in the first quarter of 2024 making it the fifth busiest rapid transit system in the United States PATHA PATH train of PA5 cars on the Newark World Trade Center line crossing the Passaic River en route to the World Trade CenterOverviewOwnerPort Authority of New York and New JerseyLocaleNewark Hudson County New Jersey and Manhattan New YorkTransit typeCommuter railroad de jure Rapid transit de facto Number of lines4Number of stations13Daily ridership185 600 weekdays Q1 2024 Annual ridership55 109 100 2023 HeadquartersPATH Plaza Jersey City New JerseyWebsitepanynj gov pathOperationBegan operationFebruary 25 1908 as H amp M Railroad September 1 1962 as PATH Operator s Port Authority Trans Hudson CorporationNumber of vehicles350 PA5 carsTechnicalSystem length13 8 mi 22 2 km Track gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeElectrificationThird rail 600 V DCSystem mapLegend33rd Street28th Street23rd Street19th Street14th Streetnever built Astor Place spurNinth StreetChristopher StreetHudson TerminalWorld Trade CenterUptown amp Downtown Hudson Tubes NYNJHoboken TerminalExchange PlaceNewportGrove StreetWaldo YardJournal SquarePATH Lift Bridgeover Hackensack RiverManhattan TransferHarrison Car Maintenance FacilityHarrisonCentre Street Dock Bridgesover Passaic RiverPark PlaceNewark Penn StationNewark Airport planned This diagram viewtalkedit The routes of the PATH system were originally operated by the Hudson amp Manhattan Railroad H amp M built to link New Jersey s Hudson Waterfront with New York City The system began operations in 1908 and was fully completed in 1911 Three stations have since closed two others were relocated after a re alignment of the western terminus From the 1920s the rise of automobile travel and the concurrent construction of bridges and tunnels across the river sent the H amp M into a financial decline during the Great Depression from which it never recovered and it was forced into bankruptcy in 1954 As part of the deal that cleared the way for the construction of the original World Trade Center the Port Authority bought the H amp M out of receivership in 1962 and renamed it PATH In the 2000s and 2010s the system suffered considerably from disasters that affected the region most notably the September 11 attacks and Hurricane Sandy Both private and public stakeholders have proposed expanding PATH service in New Jersey and an extension to Newark Liberty International Airport may be constructed in the 2020s Although PATH has long operated as a rapid transit system it is legally a commuter railroad under the jurisdiction of the Federal Railroad Administration FRA Its right of way between Jersey City and Newark is located in close proximity to Conrail NJ Transit and Amtrak trackage and it shares the Dock Bridge with intercity and commuter trains All PATH train operators must therefore be licensed railroad engineers and extra inspections are required As of 2023 update PATH uses one class of rolling stock the PA5 HistoryHudson amp Manhattan Railroad The PATH system pre dates the New York City Subway s first underground line operated by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company The Hudson amp Manhattan Railroad H amp M was planned in 1874 but it was not possible at that time to safely tunnel under the Hudson River Construction began on the existing tunnels in 1890 but soon stopped when funding ran out It resumed in 1900 under the direction of William Gibbs McAdoo an ambitious young lawyer who had moved to New York from Chattanooga Tennessee and later became president of the H amp M The railroad became so closely associated with McAdoo that in its early years its lines were called the McAdoo Tubes or McAdoo Tunnels Construction One of the original plans with branches to the Central Railroad of New Jersey Terminal lower left and the IRT Lexington Avenue Line at Astor Place center Construction started on the first tunnel now called the Uptown Hudson Tubes in 1873 14 Chief engineer Dewitt Haskin built the tunnel by using compressed air to open a space in the mud and then lining it with brick The railroad got 1 200 feet 366 m from Jersey City this way 12 until a lawsuit stopped work accidents including a particularly serious one in 1880 that killed 20 workers caused additional delays The project was abandoned in 1883 due to a lack of funds 67 12 An effort by a British company between 1888 and 1892 also failed Hudson tunnels shortly after their completion When the New York and New Jersey Railroad Company resumed construction on the uptown tubes in 1902 its chief engineer Charles M Jacobs used a different method He had workers push a tunnelling shield through the mud and then place tubular cast iron plating around the tube The northern tube of the uptown tunnel was completed this way shortly after work resumed and the southern tube was built the same way The uptown tubes were completed in 1906 By the end of 1904 the New York City Board of Rapid Transit Commissioners had given the company permission to build a new subway line through Midtown Manhattan to connect with the Uptown Hudson Tubes along with 26 years of exclusive rights to the line The Midtown Manhattan line would travel eastward under Christopher Street before turning northeastward under Sixth Avenue then continue underneath Sixth Avenue to a terminus at 33rd Street In January 1905 the Hudson Companies with 21 million in capital were incorporated to complete the Uptown Hudson Tubes and build the Sixth Avenue line as well as construct a second pair of tunnels the current Downtown Hudson Tubes The H amp M was incorporated in December 1906 to operate a passenger railroad system between New York and New Jersey via the Uptown and Downtown Tubes The current Downtown Hudson Tubes were built about 1 1 4 miles 2 0 km south of the first one Three years of construction using the tubular cast iron method finished in 1909 18 The uptown and downtown tunnels had two tubes each with a single unidirectional track The eastern sections of the tunnels in Manhattan were built with the cut and cover method Opening Park Place Station in Newark was the H amp MRR s terminus until the completion of Newark Penn Station in the late 1930s Test runs of empty trains started in late 1907 Revenue service started between Hoboken Terminal and 19th Street at midnight on February 26 1908 when President Theodore Roosevelt pressed a button at the White House that turned on the electric lines in the uptown tubes the first train carrying passengers all selected officials had run the previous day 21 This became part of the current Hoboken 33rd Street line 2 The H amp M system was powered by a 650 volt direct current third rail which in turn drew power from an 11 000 volt transmission system with three substations The substations were the Jersey City Powerhouse as well as two smaller substations at the Christopher Street and Hudson Terminal stations An extension of the H amp M from 19th Street to 23rd Street opened in June 1908 In July 1909 service began between the Hudson Terminal in Lower Manhattan and Exchange Place in Jersey City through the downtown tubes The connection between Exchange Place and the junction near Hoboken Terminal opened two weeks later forming the basic route for the Hoboken Hudson Terminal now Hoboken World Trade Center line 3 A new line running between 23rd Street and Hudson Terminal was created in September 3 Almost a year after that the H amp M was extended from Exchange Place west to Grove Street and the 23rd Street Hudson Terminal line was rerouted to Grove Street becoming part of the current Journal Square 33rd Street line A fourth line Grove Street Hudson Terminal now the Newark World Trade Center line was also created 3 In November 1910 the Hoboken 23rd Street and Grove Street 23rd Street lines were extended from 23rd Street to 33rd Street The Grove Street Hudson Terminal line was extended west from Grove Street to Manhattan Transfer in October 1911 and then to Park Place in Newark on November 26 of that year After completion of the uptown Manhattan extension to 33rd Street and the westward extension to the now defunct Manhattan Transfer and Park Place Newark terminus in 1911 the H amp M was complete 7 The final cost was estimated at 55 60 million A stop at Summit Avenue now Journal Square located between Grove Street and Manhattan Transfer opened in April 1912 as an infill station on the Newark Hudson Terminal line though only one platform was in use at the time The station was completed by February 1913 allowing service from 33rd Street to terminate there 7 The last station at Harrison opened a month later External relations and unbuilt expansions Map of unbuilt PATH purple and H amp M red expansions Former routing to Park Place is shown in yellow and existing lines are shown in black Edit map Originally the Hudson Tubes were designed to link three major railroad terminals on the Hudson River in New Jersey the Erie Railroad Erie and Pennsylvania Railroad PRR in Jersey City and the Delaware Lackawanna and Western Railroad DL amp W in Hoboken with New York City While PATH still connects to train stations in Hoboken and Newark the Erie s Pavonia Terminal at what is now Newport and the PRR terminal at Exchange Place station have been closed and demolished There were early negotiations for New York Penn Station to also be shared by the two railroads In 1908 McAdoo proposed to build a branch of the H amp M southward to the Central Railroad of New Jersey Terminal at Communipaw When the rapid transit commissioners approved construction of the H amp M s Sixth Avenue line in 1904 they left open the option of digging an east west crosstown line The New York and New Jersey Railroad Company received perpetual rights to dig under Christopher and Ninth Streets eastward to either Second Avenue or Astor Place 22 The project was started but soon abandoned about 250 feet 76 m of the tube that was dug still exists 22 In February 1909 the H amp M announced plans to extend its Uptown Tubes northeast to Grand Central Terminal located at Park Avenue and 42nd Street The openings of the 28th and 33rd Street stations were delayed because of planning for the Grand Central extension The New York Times speculated that the downtown tunnels would see more passenger use than the uptown tunnels because they better served the city s financial district The Interborough Rapid Transit Company IRT a competitor to the H amp M proposed to connect its Lexington Avenue line to the H amp M at Grand Central Astor Place and Fulton Street Hudson Terminal once the planned system was complete Its terminus at Grand Central was supposed to be located directly below the IRT s 42nd Street line but above the IRT s Steinway Tunnel to Queens However the IRT constructed an unauthorized ventilation shaft between its two levels in an effort to force the H amp M to build its station very deeply making it less accessible As an alternative it was proposed to connect the Uptown Tubes to the Steinway Tunnel A franchise to extend the Uptown Tubes to Grand Central was awarded in June 1909 By 1914 the H amp M had not yet started construction of the Grand Central extension and requested a delay 55 Six years later the H amp M had submitted 17 applications for delays in all of them the railroad said it was not the best time for construction The Rapid Transit Commissioners declined the last one effectively ending the H amp M s rights to a Grand Central extension 55 56 Historic tile work at current 14th street PATH station In September 1910 McAdoo proposed another expansion consisting of a second north south line through midtown It would run 4 miles 6 4 km from Hudson Terminal to 33rd Street and Sixth Avenue underneath Herald Square and near the H amp M s existing 33rd Street station The new line would run mainly under Broadway with a small section of the line in the south under Church Street Under McAdoo s plan the city could take ownership of this line within 25 years of completion That November McAdoo also proposed that the two track Broadway line be tied into the IRT s original subway line in Lower Manhattan The Broadway line going southbound would merge with the local tracks of the IRT s Lexington Avenue line in the southbound direction at 10th Street A spur off the Lexington Avenue line in Lower Manhattan in the back of Trinity Church would split eastward under Wall Street cross the East River to Brooklyn then head down Fourth Avenue in Brooklyn with another spur underneath Lafayette Avenue McAdoo wanted not only to operate what was then called the Triborough System but also the chance to bid on the Fourth Avenue line in the future The franchise for the Broadway line was ultimately awarded to the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company BRT in 1913 as part of the Dual Contracts In 1909 McAdoo considered extending the H amp M in New Jersey building a branch north to Montclair in Essex County A route extending north from Newark would continue straight to East Orange From there branches would split to South Orange in the south and Montclair in the north Decline and bankruptcy A record 113 million people rode the H amp M in 1927 55 Ridership declined after the opening of the Holland Tunnel late that year and fell further once the Great Depression began 55 The opening of the George Washington Bridge in 1931 and the Lincoln Tunnel in 1937 drew more riders out of trains and into their cars 56 The Summit Avenue station was renovated and rededicated as Journal Square in 1929 the railroad s powerhouse in Jersey City shut down later that year as its system could now draw energy from the greater power grid 7 In the 1930s service to the Uptown Hudson Tubes in Manhattan was affected by the construction of the Independent Subway System IND s Sixth Avenue Line The 33rd Street terminal closed in late 1937 service on the H amp M was cut back to 28th Street to allow for subway construction The 33rd Street terminal was moved south to 32nd Street and reopened in 1939 The city had to pay the railroad 800 000 to build the new 33rd Street station it reimbursed H amp M an additional 300 000 for lost revenue The 28th Street station was closed at this time as unnecessary since the southern entrances to the 33rd Street terminal were only two blocks away it was later demolished to make room for the IND tracks below The 19th Street station abandoned since 1954 The Manhattan Transfer station was closed in mid 1937 and the H amp M realigned to Newark Penn Station from the Park Place terminus a quarter mile 400 m north the Harrison station across the Passaic River was moved several blocks south as a result The upper level of the Centre Street Bridge to Park Place later became Route 158 Promotions and other advertising failed to stem the financial decline of the H amp M The 19th Street station in Manhattan was closed in 1954 That year the H amp M entered receivership due to its constant losses It operated under bankruptcy protection in 1956 the two states agreed to settle its unpaid back taxes for 1 9 million That year the H amp M saw 37 million annual passengers and transportation experts called for subsidies One expert proposed a rail loop with the Uptown Hudson Tubes connecting to the IND Sixth Avenue Line then continuing up Sixth Avenue and west via a new tunnel to Weehawken New Jersey By 1958 ridership had dropped to 30 46 million annual passengers Two years later creditors approved a reorganization plan During this time H amp M workers went on strike twice over wages for two days in 1953 and for a month in 1957 Port Authority takeover PATH train at Newark Penn Station 1966 In the early 1960s planning for the World Trade Center resulted in a compromise between the Port Authority and the state governments of New York and New Jersey The Port Authority agreed to purchase and maintain the Tubes in return for the rights to build the World Trade Center on the footprint of H amp M s Hudson Terminal which was the Lower Manhattan terminus of the Tubes A formal agreement was made in January 1962 four months later the Port Authority set up two wholly owned subsidiaries the Port Authority Trans Hudson Corporation PATH to operate the H amp M lines as well as another subsidiary to operate the World Trade Center All of the Port Authority s operations would have been subjected to federal Interstate Commerce Commission rules if it ran the trains directly but with the creation of the PATH Corporation only the subsidiary s operations would be federally regulated In September the Port Authority formally took over the H amp M Railroad and the Tubes rebranding the system as Port Authority Trans Hudson PATH 58 Upon taking over the H amp M the PANYNJ spent 70 million to modernize the system s infrastructure The PANYNJ also repainted H amp M stations into the new PATH livery In 1964 the authority ordered 162 PA1 railway cars to replace the H amp M rolling stock much of which dated to 1909 The first PA1 cars were delivered in 1965 Subsequently the agency ordered 44 PA2 cars in 1967 and 46 PA3 cars in 1972 Late 20th century 1970s As part of the World Trade Center s construction the Port Authority decided to demolish Hudson Terminal and construct a new World Trade Center Terminal Groundbreaking took place in 1966 During excavation and construction the original Downtown Hudson Tubes remained in service as elevated tunnels The new terminal west of the Hudson Terminal opened in 1971 It cost 35 million to build and saw 85 000 daily passengers at the time of its opening Hudson Terminal was then shut down The Journal Square Transportation Center opened in 1973 consolidating operations in the 10 story building that is part of the complex PATH arriving at Harrison NJ in 1969 In January 1973 the Port Authority released plans to double the route mileage of the PATH system with an extension from Newark Penn Station to Plainfield New Jersey A stop at Elizabeth would allow PATH to serve Newark Airport where passengers could transfer to a people mover serving the terminals Preliminary studies of the right of way as well as a design contract were conducted that year The extension was approved in 1975 The Federal Urban Mass Transit Administration was less enthusiastic about the extension s efficacy and reluctant to give the Port Authority the 322 million it had requested for the project about 80 of the projected cost Eventually the administration agreed to back it but in 1977 the U S Supreme Court ruled that the two state legislatures had violated the U S Constitution s Contract Clause by repealing a covenant in the 1962 bond agreements in order to make the extension possible In June 1978 the extension by then estimated to cost 600 million was canceled in favor of improving bus service in New Jersey Strikes Labor problems also beset PATH during this time After a January 1973 strike over salary increases was averted talks failed and workers walked out in April A month into the strike negotiations broke down again the union returned to work in June The 1980 New York City transit strike suspended service on the New York City Transit Authority NYCTA s bus and subway routes for 10 days A special PATH route ran from 33rd Street to World Trade Center via Midtown Manhattan Pavonia Newport and Exchange Place during the NYCTA strike PATH motormen also threatened to go on strike during this time for different reasons The special service was suspended in April after some workers refused overtime In June 1980 PATH workers again went on strike for higher pay their first such action since 1973 During the strike moisture built up in the tunnels and rust accumulated on the tracks pumps in the underwater tunnels remained in operation preventing the tubes from flooding Alternative service across the Hudson River was provided by inadequate shuttle buses through the Holland Tunnel The 81 day strike was the longest in PATH s history 1980s and 1990s Substantial growth in PATH ridership during the 1980s required expansion and improvement of the railroad s infrastructure The Port Authority announced a plan in 1988 that would allow stations on the Newark WTC line to accommodate longer eight car trains while seven car trains could operate between Journal Square and 33rd Street Two years later it announced a 1 billion plan to renovate the PATH stations and add new cars Video monitors were installed in stations to make money from advertising PATH also sought a fare hike even though that would reduce its per passenger subsidy to reduce its 135 million annual deficit By 1992 the Port Authority had spent 900 million on infrastructure improvements including repairing tracks modernizing communications and signaling replacing ventilation equipment and installing elevators at seven stations per the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 ADA A 225 million car maintenance facility was opened in Harrison in 1990 It replaced PATH s old Henderson Street Yard a below grade open air train storage yard at the northeast corner of Marin Boulevard and Christopher Columbus Drive just east of the Grove Street station High tides from the December 1992 nor easter flooded the PATH tunnels including a 2 500 3 000 foot 760 910 m section between Hoboken and Pavonia Most trains were stopped before reaching the floods but one became stalled near Hoboken Terminal Some water pumps within the system were overwhelmed The Newark World Trade Center service was not disrupted afterwards but the Journal Square 33rd Street service was slowed because several spots along the route needed to be pumped out Service to Hoboken was suspended for 10 days the longest disruption since the summer 1980 strike A section of ceiling in the World Trade Center PATH station collapsed and trapped dozens during the 1993 World Trade Center bombing the station itself did not suffer any structural damage Within three days PATH service to the station resumed In the summer of 1993 the Port Authority banned tobacco advertisements in all trains and stations A new wash for cars opened in mid September 1993 in Jersey City replacing the one at the 33rd Street terminal In April 1994 an ADA compliant entrance to the Exchange Place station was opened Two years later three trains began running express on the Newark World Trade Center service for six months cutting running time by 31 2 minutes Weekend Hoboken World Trade Center service began in October 1996 on a six month trial basis and the express Newark World Trade Center service was made permanent on the same day 21st century September 11 2001 and recovery The temporary World Trade Center station opened in 2003 Passengers applaud as the inaugural train from Newark arrives at PATH s temporary WTC station in 2003 The World Trade Center station in Lower Manhattan under the World Trade Center one of PATH s two New York terminals was destroyed during the September 11 attacks when the Twin Towers above it collapsed Just prior to the collapse the station was closed and all passengers evacuated 107 Service to Lower Manhattan was suspended indefinitely Exchange Place the next to last station before World Trade Center had to be closed as well because trains could not turn around there it had also suffered severe water damage A temporary PATH terminal at the World Trade Center was approved in December 2001 and projected to open in two years Shortly after the attacks the Port Authority started operating two uptown services Newark 33rd Street and Hoboken 33rd Street and one intrastate New Jersey service Hoboken Journal Square A single nighttime service was instituted Newark 33rd Street via Hoboken In the meantime modifications were made to a stub end tunnel to allow trains from Newark to reach the Hoboken bound tunnel and vice versa The modifications required PATH to bore through the bedrock between the stub tunnel and the Newark tunnels The stub the Penn Pocket had been built to take PRR commuters from Harborside Terminal on short turn World Trade Center to Exchange Place runs The new Exchange Place station opened in June 2003 Because of the original alignment of the tracks trains to or from Hoboken used separate tunnels from the Newark service Eastbound trains from Newark crossed over to the westbound track just west of Exchange Place where they reversed direction and used a crossover switch to go to Hoboken Eastbound trains from Hoboken entered on the eastbound track at Exchange Place then reversing direction and used the same crossover switch to get on the westbound track to Newark before entering Grove Street 108 PATH service to Lower Manhattan was restored when a new 323 million second station opened in November 2003 the inaugural train was the same one that had been used for the evacuation 108 110 The second temporary station contained portions of the original station but did not have heating or air conditioning The temporary entrance was closed in July 2007 then demolished to make way for the third permanent station around the same time the Church Street entrance opened A new entrance on Vesey Street opened in March 2008 the Church entrance was demolished The completed World Trade Center Transportation Hub in April 2016 The construction of the permanent four platform World Trade Center Transportation Hub started in July 2008 when the first prefabricated ribs for the pedestrian walkway under Fulton Street were installed Platform A the first part of the permanent station opened in February 2014 serving Hoboken bound riders Platform B and the remaining half of Platform A opened in May 2015 The hub formally opened in March 2016 with part of the headhouse Platforms C and D the last two were opened that September Hurricane Sandy In the early morning hours of October 29 2012 all PATH service was suspended in advance of Hurricane Sandy The following day New Jersey Governor Chris Christie announced that PATH service would be out for 7 10 days due to the storm damage Storm surge from the hurricane caused significant flooding to the Hoboken and Jersey City stations as well as at the World Trade Center An image captured by a PATH security camera showing water flowing into Hoboken during the storm went viral online and became one of several representative images of the hurricane The first PATH trains after the hurricane were the Journal Square 33rd Street service which resumed on November 6 and ran only in daytime Service was extended west to Harrison and Newark on November 12 in place of the Newark World Trade Center service Christopher Street and Ninth Street were reopened during the weekend of November 17 18 but remained closed for five days afterward Normal weekday service on the Newark World Trade Center and Journal Square 33rd Street lines resumed on November 26 On weekends trains operated using the Newark 33rd Street service pattern The PATH station at Hoboken Terminal suffered major damage after floodwaters as high as eight feet 2 4 m submerged the tunnels it was closed for several weeks for 300 million worth of repairs The Newark 33rd Street route was suspended for two weekends in mid December with the Newark World Trade Center running in its place in order to expedite the return of Hoboken service Hoboken Terminal reopened in December for weekday daytime Hoboken 33rd Street service followed by the resumption of weekday 24 hour PATH service in early 2013 The Hoboken World Trade Center trains resumed in late January and all normal service was restored by March The Downtown Hudson Tubes were severely damaged by Sandy As a result to accommodate repairs service on the Newark World Trade Center line between Exchange Place and World Trade Center was to be suspended during almost all weekends except for holidays in 2019 and 2020 However weekend service was restored in June 2020 six months ahead of schedule 2010s improvements The Port Authority began rebuilding the Harrison station in 2009 It has longer and wider platforms to allow 10 car trains street level to platform elevators within the platform extensions in compliance with the ADA and architectural modifications The westbound platform of the new Harrison station opened to the public in October 2018 and the eastbound one the following June In January 2010 Christopher O Ward as executive director announced that PATH would be spending 321 million on communications based train control CBTC with Siemens Trainguard MT upgrading its signal system for an increase in ridership CBTC would replace a four decade old fixed block signaling system It would reduce the headway time between trains allowing more to run during rush hours At the same time the entire PATH fleet was replaced with 340 CBTC equipped PA5 cars built by Kawasaki Railcar The original contract was completed in 2011 additional cars were delivered in subsequent years PATH s goal was to increase passenger capacity from 240 000 passengers a day to 290 000 The entire CBTC system was originally expected to become operational in 2017 The Port Authority also spent 659 million to upgrade 13 platforms on the Newark World Trade Center line to accommodate 10 car trains until then the line could only run eight car trains Along with CBTC PATH began installing positive train control PTC another safety system during the 2010s per a Federal Railroad Administration FRA mandate that all American railroads have it by the end of 2018 The Newark World Trade Center line west of Journal Square was converted to PTC in April 2018 followed by the segments of track east of Journal Square the following month This caused delays across the entire system when train operators had to slow down and manually adjust their trains to switch between the two signaling systems PTC was tested on the Uptown Hudson Tubes from July to October 2018 forcing weekend closures PTC was finished in November 2018 a month ahead of schedule and the entire system was converted by December The Port Authority also installed two amenities in all PATH stations Cellphone service was added for all customers by early 2019 Countdown clocks displaying the time the next train arrives were installed in all PATH stations that year Subsequently in June 2019 the Port Authority released the PATH Improvement Plan calling for over 1 billion in investments including 80 million to extend Newark World Trade Center line platforms as well as funding for two ongoing projects 752 6 million to complete the CBTC system by 2022 and 215 7 million on the new PA5 cars by 2022 The goal is to increase train frequencies on the Newark World Trade Center line by 40 percent and 20 percent on other lines during rush hours Every train on the Newark World Trade Center line would be nine cars long In addition the platform at Grove Street would be extended eastward at the Marin Boulevard end of the station and two additional cross corridors would be added at Exchange Place The Port Authority would also allocate funds to study the implementation of 10 car trains In September 2019 service on the Newark World Trade Center and Journal Square 33rd Street lines would be increased by 10 percent during rush hours reducing the headway between trains from four minutes to three 2020s In 2019 the last year before the onset of the COVID 19 pandemic the PATH carried an average of 284 000 people per day The second quarter of 2020 which included the nadir of COVID 19 pandemic across the New York metropolitan area was the worst quarter in PATH s history with a 777 million decline in revenues throughout all of the PANYNJ s facility and a specific ridership decline of 94 percent on the PATH system Train service returned to 96 percent of 2019 levels in June 2020 yet ridership continued to lag far below pre pandemic numbers rebounding to only 60 percent of 2019 ridership by February 2022 Amid the spread of the Omicron variant PANYNJ was projected to reach 3 billion in pandemic losses by March 2022 The platform lengthening project was finished the same year In February 2023 it was announced that nine car operation on the Newark World Trade Center line would begin the next month nine car trains began operating on March 22 2023 PANYNJ commissioners voted in late 2023 to spend 230 million replacing some wheel sets on the PA5 fleet and replacing tracks on the New Jersey side In 2024 the PANYNJ announced that it would spend 430 million to refurbish four stations and replace railroad switches as part of the PATH Forward program Proposed expansions Newark Airport extension proposals In the mid 2000s a Newark Airport extension was again considered as the Port Authority allocated 31 million for a feasibility study of extending service two miles 3 2 km from Newark Penn Station estimated at that time to cost 500 million the study began in 2012 In September 2013 Crain s reported that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie would publicly support the extension estimated by then to cost 1 billion The governor asked that the airport s largest operator United Airlines consider flying to Atlantic City International Airport as an enticement to further the project Newark Liberty Airport International Station to which PATH service would be extended In February 2014 the Port Authority s Board of Commissioners approved a 10 year capital plan that included the PATH extension to NJ Transit s Newark Liberty International Airport Station The alignment would follow the existing Northeast Corridor approximately one mile 1 6 km further south to the Newark Airport station where a connection to AirTrain Newark is available Five years of construction were expected to begin in 2018 In late 2014 there were calls for a reconsideration of Port Authority funding priorities The PATH extension followed the route of existing Manhattan to Newark Airport train service on NJ Transit s Northeast Corridor Line and North Jersey Coast Line as well as Amtrak s Keystone Service and Northeast Regional On the other hand there was no funding for either the Gateway Tunnel a pair of commuter train tunnels that would supplement the North River Tunnels under the Hudson or the replacement for the Port Authority Bus Terminal In December 2014 the PANYNJ awarded a three year 6 million contract to infrastructure design firm HNTB to do a cost analysis of the Newark Airport extension In 2017 the PANYNJ released a 10 year capital plan that included 1 7 billion for the extension at the time construction was projected to start in 2020 with service in 2025 A presentation at two December 2017 public meetings showed the new PATH station would include a park and ride lot and a new entrance from the nearby Dayton neighborhood An extension of the PATH to Newark Airport was still being considered in mid 2022 but the PANYNJ announced in March 2023 that it was deferring funding for the Newark Airport extension to a future capital plan Marion station proposal The Marion Section separated by PATH tracks crossed by a pedestrian bridge West of Journal Square in Jersey City the NWK WTC line runs through the Marion Section parallel to the Conrail Passaic and Harsimus Line freight line A pedestrian bridge crosses the tracks Since the 1980s there have been calls for an infill station to be built there In 2018 the government of Jersey City and the PANYNJ reached an agreement that included a feasibility study for a potential station which resulted in the Marion PATH Station Physical Feasibility Study The senior U S Senator the Hudson County Executive and the Mayor of Jersey City have written letters encouraging the PANYNJ to continue with the project The estimated cost of construction varies and could be funded by nearby real estate developers Route operationvtePort Authority Trans HudsonLegendWeekdays NWK WTC NewarkPassaic RiverHarrisonHackensack River JSQ 33 Journal SquareGrove StreetNewport HOB WTC HOB 33 HobokenExchange PlaceNew JerseyNew York Hudson River HOB WTC NWK WTC World Trade CenterChristopher StreetNinth Street14th Street23rd Street JSQ 33 HOB 33 33rd StreetWeekends late nights and holidays NWK WTC NewarkPassaic RiverHarrisonHackensack River JSQ 33 via HOB Journal SquareGrove StreetNewportHobokenExchange PlaceNew JerseyNew York Hudson River NWK WTC World Trade CenterChristopher StreetNinth Street14th Street23rd Street JSQ 33 via HOB 33rd Street PATH operates 24 hours a day seven days a week During weekday hours PATH operates four train services direct descendants of the four original services operated by the H amp M using three terminals in New Jersey and two in Manhattan During late nights weekends and holidays PATH operates two services from two terminals in New Jersey and two in Manhattan Each line is represented by a unique color on timetables and service maps which also corresponds to the color of the marker lights on the front of trains The Journal Square 33rd Street via Hoboken service is the only line represented by two colors yellow and blue since it is a late night weekend holiday combination of PATH s two midtown services Journal Square 33rd Street and Hoboken 33rd Street During peak hours trains operate every four to eight minutes on each service Every PATH station except Newark and Harrison is served by a train every two to three minutes for a peak hour service of 20 30 trains per hour In 2018 update PATH saw 81 7 million passengers As of June 2019 update the system is used by over 283 000 passengers per weekday almost 105 000 per Saturday 75 000 per Sunday and 94 000 per holiday The busiest station is World Trade Center whose 46 000 average passengers per day is over 10 times the daily traffic of Christopher Street the least busy station Ridership in 2018 was down by around a million compared to 2017 but it was still nearly a record for PATH operation having increased 10 million from 2013 These levels of ridership notwithstanding PATH runs at a deficit losing about 400 million per year While some of its recent improvements particularly in Harrison have spurred local development it cannot benefit from that directly as the Port Authority is limited to the revenue it makes from the fees fares and tolls it collects with the state and local governments collecting the sales income and property taxes arising from development Its costs are correspondingly increased by having to comply with FRA regulations PATH is thus subsidized by the Port Authority from surpluses at its airports and seaports Services The PATH system has 13 8 miles 22 2 km of route mileage counting route overlaps only once During the daytime on weekdays four services operate Newark World Trade Center also known as NWK WTC Hoboken World Trade Center or HOB WTC Journal Square 33rd Street or JSQ 33 Hoboken 33rd Street or HOB 33 Between 11 p m and 6 a m Monday to Friday and all day Saturday Sunday and holidays PATH operates two train services Newark World Trade Center Journal Square 33rd Street via Hoboken or JSQ 33 via HOB Prior to 2006 Hoboken World Trade Center and Journal Square 33rd Street services were offered on Saturday Sunday and holidays between 9 a m and 7 30 p m In April 2006 these services were indefinitely discontinued at those times and replaced with the Journal Square 33rd Street via Hoboken service During off peak hours passengers wanting to travel from Hoboken to Lower Manhattan were told to take the Journal Square 33rd Street via Hoboken service to Grove Street and transfer to the Newark World Trade Center train PATH does not normally operate directly from Newark to Midtown Manhattan Passengers wanting to travel from Newark to Midtown via PATH are told to transfer to the Journal Square 33rd Street service at Journal Square or Grove Street However after both the September 11 attacks and Hurricane Sandy special Newark 33rd Street services were operated to compensate for the complete loss of service to Lower Manhattan An intrastate Journal Square Hoboken service was also operated after the attacks The Journal Square Hoboken and Newark 33rd Street services instituted after the attacks were canceled by 2003 From July to October 2018 because of PTC installation on the Uptown Hudson Tubes the Journal Square 33rd Street via Hoboken service was suspended on most weekends In the meantime it was replaced by the Journal Square World Trade Center via Hoboken and the restored Journal Square Hoboken services since all stations between Christopher and 33rd Streets were closed during the weekends Lengths of trains on all lines except the Newark World Trade Center line are limited to seven cars since the platforms at Hoboken Christopher Street Ninth Street and 33rd Street can only accommodate that many and cannot be extended In 2009 the Port Authority started upgrading platforms along the Newark World Trade Center line so that it could accommodate 10 car trains That line has accommodated nine car trains in 2023 eight car trains being the prior Map of the PATH system regular service Map of the PATH system late night hours and on weekends holidays To scale map of the PATH systemStation list Station Services State City Opened Closed County Borough Ridership 2018 RankNinth Street HOB 33 JSQ 33 NY New York February 25 1908 Manhattan 1 500 499 1314th Street HOB 33 JSQ 33 NY New York February 25 1908 Manhattan 2 700 912 919th Street NY New York February 25 1908 August 1 1954 Manhattan23rd Street HOB 33 JSQ 33 NY New York June 15 1908 Manhattan 2 553 706 1128th Street NY New York November 10 1910 September 24 1939 Manhattan33rd Street HOB 33 JSQ 33 NY New York November 10 1910 Manhattan 10 039 352 2Christopher Street HOB 33 JSQ 33 NY New York February 25 1908 Manhattan 1 507 614 12Exchange Place NWK WTC HOB WTC NJ Jersey City July 19 1909 Hudson 5 129 804 8Grove Street NWK WTC JSQ 33 NJ Jersey City September 6 1910 Hudson 6 289 356 6Harrison NWK WTC NJ Harrison June 20 1937 Hudson 2 571 340 10Hoboken HOB WTC HOB 33 NJ Hoboken February 25 1908 Hudson 8 267 843 4Hudson Terminal NY New York July 19 1909 July 2 1971 ManhattanJournal Square NWK WTC JSQ 33 NJ Jersey City April 14 1912 2 Hudson 8 160 293 5Manhattan Transfer NJ Harrison October 1 1911 June 20 1937 HudsonNewark NWK WTC NJ Newark June 20 1937 Essex 8 789 165 3Newport HOB WTC JSQ 33 NJ Jersey City August 2 1909 Hudson 5 683 751 7Park Place NJ Newark November 26 1911 June 20 1937 EssexWorld Trade Center NWK WTC HOB WTC NY New York July 6 1971 Manhattan 18 539 767 1 All New Jersey stations as well as the World Trade Center and 33rd Street terminals in New York are compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 Harrison the last non accessible station in New Jersey was made fully accessible in 2019 The only non accessible stations are the four intermediate stations on the Manhattan side of the Uptown Tubes Christopher Street Ninth Street 14th Street and 23rd Street Panoramic view of the 33rd Street stationFaresThe Port Authority charges a single flat fee to ride the PATH system regardless of distance traveled As of March 1 2022 update a single PATH ride is 2 75 two trip tickets are 5 50 10 trip 20 trip and 40 trip cards charge 2 60 per trip a single day unlimited 10 50 a seven day unlimited 36 00 and a 30 day unlimited 110 25 A senior SmartLink costs 1 25 per trip Single ride tickets are valid for two hours from time of purchase While some PATH stations are adjacent to or connected to New York City Subway Newark Light Rail Hudson Bergen Light Rail and NJ Transit commuter rail stations there are no free transfers between these different independently run transit systems PATH began testing out a new contactless payment system called TAPP similar to MTA s OMNY system at some stations in December 2023 TAPP readers accept only debit and credit cards and digital wallets the SmartLink cards and OMNY are not compatible with the readers History Tier based fares The H amp M used a tier based fare system where a different fare was paid based on where the passenger was traveling For instance prior to September 1961 an interstate fare to or from all stations except Newark Penn Station was 25 cents while an intrastate fare was 15 cents That month the interstate fare was increased to 30 cents and the intrastate fare to 20 cents A fare to or from Newark Penn regardless of the origin or destination point was 40 cents because the station s operations were shared with the Pennsylvania Railroad at the time Under Port Authority operation the PATH fare to and from Newark was lowered in 1966 standardizing the interstate fare to 30 cents The intrastate fare of 15 cents was doubled in 1970 resulting in a flat rate for the entire system Tokens PATH fares were paid with brass tokens starting in 1965 The Port Authority ordered 1 million tokens in 1962 and bought a half million more in 1967 The Port Authority discontinued the sale of tokens in 1971 as a cost cutting measure since it cost 900 000 a year to maintain the token fare system The agency replaced the turnstiles in its stations with new ones that accepted the 30 cent fare in exact change QuickCards A paper ticket called the QuickCard introduced in June 1990 was valid only on the PATH system It stored fare information on a magnetic stripe The QuickCard was replaced by the SmartLink card in 2008 as sales were phased out across the system and at NJ Transit ticket machines By late 2008 PATH had deactivated all turnstiles that accepted cash they continued to accept the various cards The QuickCard was replaced by SmartLink Gray a non refillable disposable version of the SmartLink card This card was sold at selected newsstand vendors and was available in 10 20 and 40 trip increments Unlike regular SmartLink cards SmartLink Gray cards had expiration dates SmartLink Gray was itself discontinued in January 2016 Current payment methods SmartLink PATH s official method of fare payment is a smart card known as SmartLink The SmartLink was developed at a cost of 73 million and initially was intended as a regional smart card that could be deployed on transit systems throughout the New York metropolitan area It was first made available in July 2007 at the World Trade Center The SmartLink can be connected to an online web account system allowing a cardholder to register the card and monitor its usage it allows for an automatic replenishment system linked to a credit card account wherein the card balance is automatically refilled when five trips remain for multiple trip cards or five days for unlimited ride cards MetroCard SmartLink turnstiles at the Exchange Place station PATH fare payment may also be made using single ride two trip and pay per ride MetroCards the standard farecard of New York s Metropolitan Transportation Authority MTA The MetroCard is a magnetic stripe card like the QuickCard PATH riders paying their fare using MetroCard insert the card into a slot at the front of the turnstile which reads the card and presents the MetroCard to the rider at a slot on the top of the same turnstile Other types of MetroCards including unlimited ride MetroCards are not accepted on PATH Plans for using the MetroCard on PATH date to 1996 when the Port Authority and MTA first considered a unified fare system At the time the MetroCard was still being rolled out on the MTA system and more than 80 of PATH riders transferred to other modes of transportation at some point in their trip In November 2003 the Port Authority announced that the MetroCard would be allowed for use on PATH starting the following year The Port Authority started implementing the MetroCard on PATH in 2005 installing new fare collection turnstiles at all PATH stations These turnstiles allowed passengers to pay their fare with a PATH QuickCard or an MTA Pay Per Ride MetroCard MetroCard vending machines are located at all PATH stations The machines sell Pay Per Ride MetroCards allow riders to refill SmartLink cards and sell Single Ride PATH tickets for use only on the PATH system There are two types of MetroCard vending machines large machines which sell both MetroCards and SmartLinks and accept cash credit cards and transit benefits cards and small machines which do not accept cash or sell PATH single ride tickets but otherwise perform the same functions as the large vending machines In 2010 PATH introduced a 4 two trip card using the standard MetroCard form All PATH stations except for the uptown platforms at 14th and 23rd Streets contain blue vending machines which sell this card The front of the card is the standard MetroCard gold and blue but on the reverse it has the text PATH 2 Trip Card Valid for two 2 PATH trips only and No refills on this card The user must dispose of the card after the trips are used up because the turnstiles do not keep or capture the card as was done with the discontinued QuickCard TAPP TAPP turnstiles In June 2019 the Port Authority announced it was in talks with the MTA to implement the new OMNY fare payment system on PATH Under the announced plan OMNY would be available to PATH riders by 2022 with both SmartLink and MetroCard being phased out by 2023 In November 2021 the Port Authority indicated that it would instead implement its own fare payment system which would be similar to OMNY This fare system is named TAPP short for Total Access PATH Payment and is being tested as of December 2023 TAPP accepts debit and credit cards and phones for fare payment but does not accept OMNY cards By March 2024 TAPP compatible turnstiles had been enabled at six stations The rollout of TAPP at all New Jersey stations was completed by early May 2024 and was rolled out at all stations in New York later that month Rolling stockCurrent roster The PA5 cars at Newark Penn StationInterior of a PA5 car As of 2023 update there is only one model the PA5 The cars are 51 feet 16 m long by 9 2 feet 2 8 m wide a smaller loading gauge compared to similar vehicles in the US due to the restricted structure gauge through the tunnels under the Hudson River They can reach 55 mph 89 km h in regular service Each car seats 35 passengers in longitudinal bucket seating and can fit a larger number of standees in each car PA5 cars have stainless steel bodies and three doors on each side LED displays above the windows between the doors display the destination of that particular train The PA5 cars are coupled and linked into consists up to 8 cars long with conductors controls on all cars and engineers cabs on the A driving cars trains on the Newark World Trade Center line will be lengthened to 10 cars as part of the line s 2010s upgrades In 2005 the Port Authority awarded a 499 million contract to Kawasaki to design and build 340 new PATH cars under the PA5 order to replace the system s entire existing fleet With an average age of 42 years and some cars dating back as far as 1964 the fleet was the oldest of any operating heavy rail line in the United States The Port Authority announced that the new cars would be updated versions of the MTA s R142A cars The first of these new cars entered revenue service in 2009 all of them were delivered over the next two years The Port Authority exercised a subsequent contract for 10 additional PA5 cars bringing the total to 350 As part of the fleet expansion program and signal system upgrade the Port Authority had the option to order a total of 119 additional PA5 cars 44 would be used to expand the NWK WTC line to 10 car operation while the remaining 75 would be used to increase service frequencies after communication based train control CBTC was implemented throughout the system by the end of 2018 In December 2017 the Port Authority exercised an option to buy 50 extra PA5 cars for 150 million for an ultimate total of 400 PA5 cars Subsequently in July 2018 Kawasaki was awarded a 240 million contract to refurbish the 350 existing PA5 cars between 2018 and 2024 The contract also called for Kawasaki to build and deliver 72 new PA5 cars starting in 2021 for a total of 422 cars the first of the additional PA5 cars arrived in September 2022 The new cars are being built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries in the U S at Lincoln Nebraska and tested in Yonkers New York The 350 existing cars are being refurbished in Yonkers Since 1990 all PATH trains are stored and maintained at the Harrison Car Maintenance Facility in New Jersey located east of the Harrison station Another train storage yard Waldo Yard exists east of the Journal Square station If the Newark Airport extension is built a third train storage yard would be built at the airport Rolling stock Year built Builder Car body Car numbers Total built NotesPA5 2008 2022 Kawasaki Stainless steel 5600 5829 A cars 5100 5219 5300 5371 C cars 340 base order 119 in fleet expansion option 72 in progress A cars have cab units C cars have no cabs Siemens SITRAC 3 phase AC IGBT VVVF traction system upgradable to CBTC signalling compatibility 3 doors per side prerecorded station announcementsFormer roster PA4 at Journal Square Transportation CenterA PA1 model leaving the 14th Street station Before the Port Authority takeover the H amp M system used rolling stock series that were given letters from A to J All of these cars except for the D and H series were known as black cars for their color 6 There were a total of 325 cars in series A through J of which 255 were black cars 6 The first 190 cars in classes A through C were ordered for the initial H amp M service and delivered in 1909 1911 The cars which were built in seven modular segments measured 48 25 feet 14 71 m long with a loading gauge of 8 83 feet 2 69 m and a height of 12 feet 3 7 m with longitudinal seating and three doors on each side They were ordered to the narrow specifications of the Hudson Tubes and were light enough that they could be tested on the Second Avenue elevated in Manhattan which could only support lightweight trains 2 Seventy five cars in classes E through G were added in 1921 1923 allowing the H amp M to lengthen train consists from six to seven cars each to eight Although classes E G had similar exterior dimensions to classes A C the E G series had higher capacity were heavier and had substantially different window designs compared to the A C series 6 The last order of black cars the 20 cars in series J was delivered in 1928 6 7 Many of the black cars remained in service from their inception until the H amp M s bankruptcy in 1954 By that time they required considerable maintenance The PRR and H amp M joint service comprised 40 cars in classes D and H which were owned by the H amp M as well as 72 cars from the MP38 class which were owned by the PRR Sixty MP38s and 36 Class D cars were delivered in 1911 when the service first operated 43 In 1927 an additional 12 MP38 cars were ordered under the MP38A classification as well as four Class H cars 6 As a result of the different manufacturers and the long duration between the two pairs of orders the Class D and MP38 cars designs were noticeably different from the Class H and MP38A cars designs 6 7 The red cars were branded with the names of both companies to signify the partnership The red cars suffered from corrosion and design defects and were unusable by 1954 All of the red and black car series were designed to be operationally compatible The MP52 and K class which replaced the D class and the 60 MP38s ordered in 1911 comprised an order of 50 cars The 30 MP52s and 20 K classes were purchased by the PRR and H amp M respectively and delivered in 1958 in order to save money on maintenance After the Port Authority took over operation of the H amp M Railroad in 1962 it started ordering new rolling stock to replace the old H amp M cars St Louis Car built 162 PA1 cars in 1964 1965 101 St Louis also built the PA2 a supplementary order of 44 cars in 1966 1967 101 Hawker Siddeley built 46 PA3 cars in 1972 101 The 95 PA4s were built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries in 1986 1987 replacing the K class and MP52 series 101 PA1 PA2 and PA3 cars had painted aluminum bodies and two doors on each side Back lit panels above the doors displayed the destination of that particular train HOB for Hoboken JSQ for Journal Square NWK for Newark 33 for 33rd Street and WTC for World Trade Center 81 In the mid 1980s Kawasaki overhauled 248 of the 252 PA1 PA3 cars at their factory in Yonkers New York and repainted them white to match the PA4 cars then being delivered 81 PA4 cars had stainless steel bodies and three doors on each side Back lit displays above the windows between the doors displayed the destination of that particular train 81 All four series were designed to be operationally compatible Although all four orders contained A cars with cabs at one end the PA1 and PA2 orders also contained some C cars Trains could comprise three to eight cars but in order to operate there had to be an even number of A cars in the consist including one A car at each end All PA1 PA4 equipment was retired from passenger service by 2011 Rolling stock Year built Year retired Builder Car body Car numbers Total built Notes 101 A 1908 1955 Pressed Steel and American Car amp Foundry painted steel black 200 249 50 Pressed Steel built 10 cars numbered 200 209 American Car amp Foundry built the remaining 40 cars numbered 210 249 B 1909 1964 1967 Pressed Steel painted steel black 250 339 90 256 at National Museum of Transportation Car 318 was wrecked at 33rd Street on January 16 1931 C 1910 1964 1967 American Car amp Foundry painted steel black 340 389 50D 1911 1958 Pressed Steel painted steel red 701 736 36 Red cars used in the H amp M PRR joint service and owned by the H amp M Car 728 was wrecked at Hudson Terminal on August 23 1937 MP38 1911 1964 1967 Pressed Steel painted steel red 1901 1960 60 Red cars used in the H amp M PRR joint service and owned by the PRR E 1921 1966 1967 American Car amp Foundry painted steel black 401 425 25F 1922 1966 1967 American Car amp Foundry painted steel black 426 450 25G 1923 1966 1967 American Car amp Foundry painted steel black 451 475 25H 1927 1966 1967 American Car amp Foundry painted steel red 801 804 4 Red cars used in the H amp M PRR joint service and owned by the H amp M MP38A 1927 1966 1967 American Car amp Foundry painted steel red 1961 1972 12 Red cars used in the H amp M PRR joint service and owned by the PRR J 1928 1966 1967 American Car amp Foundry painted steel black 501 520 20 503 at Shore Line Trolley Museum MP52 1958 1987 St Louis Car Company painted aluminum and steel 1200 1229 30 Replaced the D series Owned by PRR and used primarily in H amp M PRR joint service later PATH service K 1230 1249 20 Replaced the D series Owned by H amp M and used primarily in H amp M PRR joint service later PATH service First cars in the H amp M PRR PATH system to feature air conditioning PA1 1964 1965 2009 2011 St Louis Car Company painted aluminum 100 151 C cars 600 709 A cars 162 110 cab units 52 trailers Replaced most B J class and MP38 cars A cars have cab units C cars trailers have no cabs 2 doors per side 143 trailer at Trolley Museum of New York Kingston Cars 139 and 612 wrecked on September 11 2001 see below PA2 1966 1967 2009 2011 St Louis Car Company painted aluminum 152 181 C cars 710 723 A cars 44 14 cab units 30 trailers Replaced all remaining B J class and MP38 cars A cars have cab units C cars trailers have no cabs 2 doors per side Car 160 wrecked on September 11 2001 see below PA3 1972 2009 2011 Hawker Siddeley Canada painted aluminum 724 769 46 All are cab units 2 doors per side 745 at Shore Line Trolley Museum BERA Car 750 wrecked on September 11 2001 see below PA4 1986 1987 2009 2011 Kawasaki Stainless steel 800 894 95 Replaced K class and MP52 series All are cab units Car 845 wrecked on September 11 2001 see below Most in work service A seven car PATH train was left under the World Trade Center after September 11 2001 though five of the cars were destroyed cars 745 and 143 were not positioned directly beneath the tower and survived the collapse relatively intact These two cars were cleaned and placed in storage while the remains of the rest of the train had been stripped of usable parts and scrapped The cars were intended to be displayed in the National September 11 Memorial amp Museum However they were deemed too large to be displayed there as a result car 745 was instead donated to the Shore Line Trolley Museum while car 143 was donated to the Trolley Museum of New York FRA railroad statusView of the Dock Bridge which is used by PATH but owned by Amtrak While PATH operates as a typical intraurban heavy rail rapid transit system it is legally a commuter railroad under the jurisdiction of the FRA which oversees railroads that are part of the national rail network PATH s predecessor the H amp M used to share trackage with the Pennsylvania Railroad between the Hudson interlocking near Harrison and Journal Square The line also connected to the Northeast Corridor near Harrison station and also near Hudson tower 43 44 Though there is no longer any through running of mainline intercity trains into PATH tunnels FRA regulations still apply to PATH because PATH s right of way between Newark and Jersey City is very close to the Northeast Corridor PATH also shares the Dock Bridge near Newark Penn Station with Amtrak and NJ Transit While PATH operates under several grandfather waivers it still must meet requirements not applied to other American rapid transit systems such as the proper fitting of grab irons to all PATH rolling stock installation of PTC and compliance with the federal railroad hours of service regulations Additionally all PATH train operators must be federally certified locomotive engineers and the agency must conduct more detailed safety inspections than other rapid transit systems These requirements increase PATH s per hour operating costs relative to other rapid transit systems in the New York City and Philadelphia areas For instance it is three times more expensive to operate per hour than the New York City Subway despite having only a fraction of the latter system s length and ridership The PANYNJ has sought to switch its regulator to the Federal Transit Administration which oversees rapid transit but the FRA has insisted that safety concerns require PATH to remain under its purview Alternatively the Port Authority has considered transferring PATH to NJ Transit Media and popular culturePATH management has two principal passenger outreach initiatives the PATHways newsletter distributed for free at terminals as well as the Patron Advisory Committee Other passenger outreach initiatives include PATHursday allowing passengers to provide enhancing service suggestions Similarly the PATH Riders Council allows feedback about their system design service and decision making PATH has offered various Community Poster Competitions with schools Transit Lines Poetry Stories featuring poet pieces tied with New York and New Jersey region and Arts In Transit and PATH Performs displaying local artists work and performances Media restrictions As of December 2015 update PATH regulations state that all photography filmmaking videotaping or creations of drawings or other visual depictions within the PATH system is prohibited without a permit and supervision by a PATH representative 17 According to the rules photographers filmmakers and other individuals must obtain permits through an application process 18 Although it has been suggested that the restriction was put in place due to terrorism concerns the restriction predates the September 11 attacks and the 1993 World Trade Center bombing View from the front of a Newark bound train 1997 According to New Jersey newspaper Hudson Reporter this ban excludes members of the general public who want to take pictures and the photography and filmography ban only applies for commercial or professional purposes The general public is allowed to take pictures of PATH stations and all other Port Authority facilities except in secure and off limits areas There have been decisions from the United States Supreme Court stating that casual photography is covered by the First Amendment the case law is mixed Under the law PATH employees may not force a casual photographer to destroy or surrender their film or images but confiscations and arrests have occurred Litigation following such confiscations or arrests have generally but not always resulted in charges being dropped and or damages awarded Tunnel decoration On trains bound for Newark or Hoboken from World Trade Center a short zoetrope like advertisement was formerly visible in the tunnel before entering Exchange Place There was another similar advertisement visible from 33rd Street bound trains between 14th and 23rd Streets near the abandoned 19th Street station Every year around Thanksgiving PATH employees light a decorated Christmas tree at the switching station adjacent to the tunnel used by trains entering the Pavonia Newport station This tradition started in the 1950s when a signal operator hung a string of Christmas lights in the tunnel While PATH officials were initially concerned about putting up decorations in the tunnel they later acquiesced and the tradition continued After the September 11 attacks a backlit U S flag was put up beside the tree as a tribute to the victims In popular culture PATH trains and stations have occasionally been the setting for music videos commercials movies and TV programs For instance the White Stripes s video for The Hardest Button to Button was filmed at 33rd Street Additionally the premiere for season 19 of Law amp Order Special Victims Unit was filmed in the World Trade Center station The PATH system is also often used as a stand in for the New York City Subway as in John Wick Chapter 2 where it was portrayed as a Broad Street bound Z train Major incidentsTrain collisions On August 31 1922 two H amp M trains collided in heavy fog at Manhattan Transfer injuring 50 people eight of them seriously On July 22 1923 another collision near Manhattan Transfer killed one person and injured 15 others On January 16 1931 a seven car H amp M train derailed a switch and collided with a wall at 33rd Street injuring 19 passengers On August 22 1937 a 5 car H amp M train crashed into a wall at Hudson Terminal injuring 33 passengers On November 26 1938 22 passengers were injured when an H amp M train sideswiped a PRR engine in Kearny east of the former Manhattan Transfer station On April 26 1942 a six car H amp M train derailed at Exchange Place Five people were killed and 222 more were injured A subsequent investigation found that the motorman was intoxicated On December 17 1945 a seven car H amp M train collided with a steel barrier on the Dock Bridge west of Harrison killing the motorman and injuring 67 passengers On December 13 1958 an H amp M train rear ended another one at Journal Square injuring 30 passengers none seriously On October 16 1962 26 people were injured in a crash between two H amp M trains at Hudson Terminal On July 23 1963 a PATH train collided with a PRR engine east of Harrison killing two passengers and injuring 28 more On January 11 1968 a rear end accident at Journal Square injured 100 of the approximately 200 combined passengers on the two trains 25 of them seriously On October 21 2009 a PATH train crashed into a bumper block at the end of the platform at 33rd Street Approximately 13 of the 450 people on board suffered minor injuries two crew members and five passengers were hospitalized An investigation by the Port Authority determined that the cause was human error On May 8 2011 a PATH train crashed into a bumper block at Hoboken Terminal injuring 34 people the NTSB said the train engineer failed to control the speed of the train as it entered the station On October 10 2019 a PATH train derailed and collided with the platform at Newark Penn Station No one was on the train at the time Other incidents A train near Exchange Place caught fire on June 3 1982 injuring 28 people Part of the ceiling at Journal Square fell onto the platform on August 9 1983 killing two and injuring 12 A subsequent investigation found that the ceiling collapse had occurred due to the station s poor design bad supervision procedures during construction and inadequate maintenance In July 2006 an alleged plot to detonate explosives in the Downtown Hudson Tubes initially said to be a plot to bomb the Holland Tunnel was uncovered by the FBI According to officials this plan was unsound due to the strength of both tunnels as well as various restrictions in both the Holland Tunnel and the PATH system Three of the eight planners were arrested On January 7 2013 an escalator at Exchange Place suddenly reversed itself resulting in five injuries After the incident all of the escalators in the PATH system were inspected See alsoNew York City portalNew Jersey portalTrains portalTransportation in New Jersey Transportation in New York City List of metro systems PATCO Speedline a similar rapid transit commuter line connecting South Jersey to PhiladelphiaReferences Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2023 PDF American Public Transportation Association March 4 2024 Retrieved March 14 2024 Transit Ridership Report First Quarter 2024 PDF American Public Transportation Association May 23 2024 Retrieved May 31 2024 Port Authority of New York and New Jersey June 25 2012 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved March 2 2018 Fitzherbert Anthony June 1964 The Public Be Pleased William G McAdoo and the Hudson Tubes Electric Railroaders Association nycsubway org Retrieved January 9 2012 Dunlap David W February 25 2008 Why PATH Rides Are Free Today City Room Retrieved April 24 2018 Under the Hudson River by Tunnel About to Become a Reality October 1 Will See the End of a Romance of Thirty four Years Struggle of Capital and Brains Against the Seemingly Insurmountable Obstacles of Nature The New York Times May 26 1907 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 Burr S D V 1885 New York John Wiley and Sons Archived from the original on January 22 2009 Retrieved August 24 2009 Cudahy Brian J 2002 Rails Under the Mighty Hudson 2nd ed New York Fordham University Press ISBN 978 0 82890 257 1 OCLC 911046235 Work On The Tunnel Resumed The New York Times July 23 1879 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 22 2018 Twenty Men Buried Alive The New York Times July 22 1880 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 22 2018 The Hudson River Tunnel Effort Making To Raise Sufficient Money To Complete It The New York Times March 18 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 22 2018 Hudson Tunnel Open End To End The New York Times March 12 1904 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 23 2018 Gilbert Gilbert H Wightman Lucius I Saunders W L 1912 The Subways and Tunnels of New York John Wiley amp Sons pp 155 159 100 000 000 Capital for M Adoo Tunnels The New York Times December 12 1906 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 29 2017 M Adoo Subway Wins Fight For Franchise The New York Times December 16 1904 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 21 000 000 Company For Hudson Tunnels The New York Times 1905 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 Tunnel Companies Join New York Tribune January 10 1905 p 14 Retrieved September 30 2020 via newspapers com The Commercial amp Financial Chronicle A Weekly Newspaper Representing the Industrial Interests of the United States William B Dana Company 1914 100 000 000 Capital For M Adoo Tunnels The New York Times December 12 1906 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 Davies John Vipond 1910 The Tunnel Construction of the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Company Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 49 195 Philadelphia American Philosophical Society 164 187 JSTOR 983892 The World Almanac and Encyclopedia Press Publishing Company The New York World 1911 p 105 Under The Hudson By Train The New York Times December 18 1907 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 Trolley Tunnel Open to New Jersey The New York Times February 26 1908 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2008 Chiasson George September 2015 Rails Under the Hudson Revisited The Hudson and Manhattan Electric Railroaders Association Bulletin 58 9 2 3 6 7 Retrieved April 10 2018 via Issuu Chiasson George June 2015 Rails Under the Hudson Revisited The Hudson and Manhattan Electric Railroaders Association Bulletin 58 6 2 3 12 14 17 Retrieved April 10 2018 via Issuu To Extend Hudson Tunnel The New York Times June 12 1908 p 6 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 40 000 Celebrate New Tubes Opening The New York Times July 20 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 Erie Commuters Held Up The New York Times August 3 1909 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 Chiasson George July 2015 Rails Under the Hudson Revisited The Hudson and Manhattan Electric Railroaders Association Bulletin 58 7 2 3 5 Retrieved April 10 2018 via Issuu Subway Station Not Closed The New York Times August 26 1910 p 6 M Adoo Would Build A West Side Subway The New York Times September 16 1910 p 10 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 Open McAdoo Extension The New York Times November 10 1910 p 10 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 Improved Transit Facilities by Newark High Speed Line The New York Times October 1 1911 p XX2 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 Tube Service to Newark The New York Times November 26 1911 p 9 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 Under the Hudson by Four Tubes Now The New York Times July 18 1909 p 3 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 Dunlap David W October 26 2008 Another Ghost From Ground Zero s Past Fades Away The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2008 McAdoo Co May Use Pennsylvania Depot The New York Times September 2 1908 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 M Adoo To Extend Hudson Tunnels The New York Times October 21 1908 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2018 Two New Subways Now Being Planned The New York Times February 14 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 M Adoo Subway On To Grand Central The New York Times February 11 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2018 Inter Tunnel Shaft In M Adoo s Way The New York Times March 26 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 May Connect M Adoo And Steinway Tubes The New York Times May 6 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 M Adoo Extension To Be Ready In 1911 The New York Times June 5 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 M Adoo s Railroad Slow In Building The New York Times April 9 1914 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 25 2018 Hudson Tube Asks Delay The New York Times February 16 1920 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2018 M Adoo Ready To Run Triborough The New York Times November 19 1910 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 26 2018 Subway Contracts Solemnly Signed PDF The New York Times March 20 1913 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 11 2018 Walker James Blaine 1918 Fifty Years of Rapid Transit 1864 1917 Law Printing Company pp 224 241 Retrieved July 17 2019 McAdoo Tunnel Extension Lines to the Oranges and Montclair with Mountain Tunnels Projected The New York Times March 29 1909 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 24 2018 Travel Here Fell 13 000 000 The New York Times May 4 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2018 H amp M Fight to Win Riders A Long and Frustrating Haul The New York Times September 28 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2018 Hudson Tube Terminus At 33d St Closes Today The New York Times December 26 1937 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 26 2018 Hudson Tube Opens Terminal Today The New York Times September 24 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 15 2018 Tube Terminal to Reopen The New York Times September 12 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 15 2018 New Station Open for Hudson Tubes The New York Times June 20 1937 p 35 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 19 2011 H amp M Station To Close The New York Times February 19 1954 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2018 Hudson Tubes File Bankruptcy Plea The New York Times November 20 1954 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2018 Hudson Tube Deal On Tax Approved The New York Times August 2 1956 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2017 Subsidies Sought To Aid Commuting The New York Times April 16 1956 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2018 Creditors Back Plan to Revamp Hudson and Manhattan Railroad The New York Times June 11 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2017 Raskin A H May 13 1953 Tube Strike Ends With Pay Accord The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2018 Trains Run Again In Hudson Tubes The New York Times April 30 1957 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2018 Grutzner Charles December 29 1961 Port Unit Backs Linking Of H amp M And Other Lines The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2017 Wright George Cable 1962 2 States Agree On Hudson Tubes And Trade Center The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2018 Stengren Bernard April 2 1962 Port Unit Sets Up Section For H amp M The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2018 Wright George Cable January 23 1962 2 States Agree On Hudson Tubes And Trade Center The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2017 Authority Trains Winning Plaudits The New York Times September 4 1967 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 4 2019 Port Unit to Paint Stations of H amp M On Taking Control The New York Times June 15 1962 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2018 162 Cars Ordered for Hudson Tubes The New York Times 1964 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 30 2018 PATH Moves Toward All Air Conditioned Fleet The New York Times April 9 1965 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 13 2018 Prial Frank J January 15 1973 PATH Aims to Grow into New Commuter Line The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2018 Iglauer Edith November 4 1972 The Biggest Foundation The New Yorker Carroll Maurice December 30 1968 A Section of the Hudson Tubes Is Turned Into Elevated Tunnel The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 9 2018 Burks Edward C July 7 1971 New PATH Station Opens Downtown PDF The New York Times p 74 Retrieved May 30 2010 Air Cooled PATH Terminal in World Trade Center Opens Tuesday PDF The New York Times July 1 1971 p 94 Retrieved May 30 2010 Burks Edward C October 14 1973 Jersey City Path Terminal to Open PDF The New York Times Retrieved November 14 2022 Burks Edward C September 30 1973 PATH Is Changing Link to Airport The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 28 2017 Burks Edward C July 8 1973 First Step Taken on a Rail Link to Newark Airport The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 28 2017 Sullivan Ronald February 11 1975 A PATH Extension Ordered By Byrne The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 28 2017 Burks Edward C May 18 1975 U S Cool To PATH Plainfield Extension The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 28 2017 Burks Edward C September 24 1976 U S Ready to Back Extension of PATH The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 28 2017 431 U S 1 1977 Sullivan Ronald May 8 1977 High Court Snags New PATH Link The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 28 2017 Byrne Drops Plan For Rail Extension The New York Times June 2 1978 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 28 2017 Full Impact of the Strike Against PATH Expected to Affect Commuters Today The New York Times April 2 1973 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2018 Fowler Glenn January 3 1973 Nixon Averts a PATH Strike By Creating Emergency Panel The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2018 Malanga Steven April 5 2016 Bloated Broke and Bullied city journal org New Jersey On Line Retrieved April 6 2017 Stetson Damon May 1 1973 Walkout At PATH Enters 2d Month The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2018 Contract Ratified PATH Strike By Carmen Ends After 63 Days The New York Times June 3 1973 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2018 Hanley Robert April 4 1980 Thousands Find a Way Downtown Via the PATH Route to Jersey The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 1 2018 PATH is back at least for now PDF Yonkers Herald Statesman April 9 1980 p 4 Retrieved June 15 2018 via Fultonhistory com Andelman David A June 12 1980 PATH Is Struck After Talks Fail The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 Herman Robin September 1 1980 PATH Trains Idle 81 Days in Strike Rolling Again The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 Hanley Robert July 1 1980 Shuttle Bus a Poor Alternative To Commuters in PATH Strike Hoboken Fires Delay Buses The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2018 Associated Press August 28 1980 Tentative settlement reached on PATH strike PDF Nyack Journal News p 1 Retrieved June 15 2018 via Fultonhistory com Wilson Joyce Wells April 1988 No Free Rides Business Journal of New Jersey Yarrow Andrew L August 12 1990 Port Authority Plans Outlined The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2018 The Media Business TV Ads Are Spreading To Subways and Malls The New York Times January 1 1990 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2018 Levine Richard February 3 1991 As Economy Changes the Port Authority Must Overcome Its Own Image The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2018 Romano Jay March 15 1992 For PATH On Time Record of 90 Percent The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2018 Darlington Peggy 2012 PATH Port Authority Trans Hudson nycsubway org Retrieved April 6 2017 Peterson Iver December 22 1992 PATH Back In Operation After Repairs The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Peterson Iver December 20 1992 PATH Takes Lesson From Storm s Close Calls The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 16 2018 McFadden Robert D February 27 1993 Blast Hits Trade Center Bomb Suspected 5 Killed Thousands Flee Smoke In Towers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Trade Center blast blamed on bomb PDF Greenfield Recorder February 27 1993 p 1 Retrieved June 15 2018 via Fultonhistory com Newkirk Pamela February 28 1993 Now the Cleanup Work begins assessing the damage Newsday New York Marks Peter March 1 1993 PATH and Subway Service Is Being Restored The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Roberts Donald September 1993 New Wash for PATH Cars Pathways 25 3 Port Authority Trans Hudson Corporation 1 3 New Exchange Place Entrance Improves Access to Station Pathways 26 1 Port Authority Trans Hudson Corporation 1 April 1994 Pristin Terry April 30 1996 New Jersey Daily Briefing Express PATH Service Begins The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 4 2018 Pristin Terry October 25 1996 PATH Trains Streamlined The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 4 2018 Hoboken WTC Weekend Direct Service Begins October 27 Pathways 28 2 Port Authority Trans Hudson Corporation 1 3 October 1996 A Day Of Terror Schedules Disruptions and Closings Are Expected to Continue The New York Times September 12 2001 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 16 2018 Archived from the original on January 11 2009 Retrieved October 22 2014 Weiser Benjamin June 29 2003 Closed Since 9 11 a PATH Station Is Set to Reopen Today The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 4 2018 Smothers Ronald December 14 2001 Port Authority Approves New PATH Station for Lower Manhattan The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 11 2018 panynj gov Port Authority of New York and New Jersey September 11 2001 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 10 2018 panynj gov December 14 2001 Archived from the original on December 14 2001 Retrieved June 11 2018 panynj gov Port Authority of New York and New Jersey September 12 2001 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 10 2018 Bye Patricia 2013 A Pre event Recovery Planning Guide for Transportation NCHRP report Transportation Research Board p B7 ISBN 978 0 309 28338 0 Retrieved June 11 2018 Glucksman Randy December 2013 PDF New York Division Bulletin 46 12 Electric Railroaders Association 9 10 Archived from the original PDF on June 12 2018 Retrieved May 25 2017 downtownexpress com Community Media June 29 2007 Archived from the original on July 9 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 Dunlap David W April 1 2008 A New Twist at the PATH Station The New York Times Retrieved December 13 2016 Dunlap David W July 11 2008 Among the Hard Angles a Few New Curves The New York Times Retrieved July 13 2008 Imperfect already City Blog The New York Times February 25 2014 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 29 2017 Rivoli Dan May 7 2015 Awesome new PATH station at World Trade Center opens Thursday AM New York Retrieved May 7 2015 World Trade Center September 8 2016 Archived from the original on December 18 2016 Retrieved December 19 2016 Lorenzetti Laura March 3 2016 The World s Most Expensive Train Station Opens Today Fortune Retrieved December 20 2016 Verrill Courtney March 4 2016 New York City s 4 billion World Trade Center Transportation Hub is finally open to the public Business Insider Retrieved December 20 2016 Port Authority of New York and New Jersey January 19 2016 Archived from the original on February 3 2016 Retrieved January 29 2016 Higgs Larry May 26 2016 New platforms bathrooms open at 4B WTC transit hub NJ com Retrieved December 19 2016 Associated Press November 1 2012 online wsj com Archived from the original on November 1 2012 Retrieved June 13 2018 Goldman Russell Hurricane Sandy Live Updates ABC News American Broadcasting Company Retrieved November 18 2012 Limited PATH Service Resumes Between Journal Square And Manhattan CBS New York November 6 2012 Retrieved April 30 2018 Press release Port Authority of New York amp New Jersey November 11 2012 Archived from the original on May 15 2021 Retrieved April 30 2018 PATH website The Port Authority of New York amp New Jersey Archived from the original on December 3 2012 Retrieved November 18 2012 Boburg Shawn November 27 2012 NorthJersey com Archived from the original on November 30 2012 Retrieved October 2 2013 Press release The Port Authority of New York amp New Jersey Archived from the original on September 26 2019 Retrieved December 14 2012 Hack Charles December 19 2012 Hoboken commuters verdict reopened PATH train service was flawless The Jersey Journal Retrieved December 20 2012 Newman Andy January 9 2013 PATH Trains to Resume 24 Hour Service City Room Retrieved April 30 2018 Press release The Port Authority of New York amp New Jersey January 9 2013 Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved February 11 2013 Press release The Port Authority of New York amp New Jersey January 29 2013 Archived from the original on May 15 2021 Retrieved February 11 2013 Ferrer Ana M January 10 2013 24 hour PATH service to 33rd St restored for Jersey City Hoboken Newark riders NJ com, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library, article, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games, mobile, phone, android, ios, apple, mobile phone, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, pc, web, computer
Top