نقل بيتش الهوائي
نقل بيتش الهوائي Beach Pneumatic Transit | |||
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استعراض | |||
النوع | Atmospheric railway | ||
المحل | مدينة نيويورك، الولايات المتحدة | ||
المحطات النهائية | Warren Street and Broadway Murray Street and Broadway | ||
المحطات | 1[note 1] | ||
التشغيل | |||
اِفتـُتح | 26 فبراير 1870[1] | ||
أُغلِق | 1873[1] | ||
المالك | Beach Pneumatic Transit Company | ||
المشغل | Beach Pneumatic Transit Company | ||
القطارات المستخدمة | 1 car | ||
تقنية | |||
طول الخط | 95 m (312 ft)[1] | ||
عدد الخطوط | Single track | ||
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نقل بيتش الهوائي Beach Pneumatic Transit كان أول محاولة لبناء نظام نقل عام تحت الأرض في مدينة نيويورك. وكان من تطوير ألفرد إلاي بيتش في 1869 as a demonstration subway line running on pneumatic power. As the subway line had one stop and a one-car shuttle going back and forth, it was not a regular mode of transportation. It lasted from 1870 until 1873.
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التاريخ
ألفرد إلاي بيتش demonstrated a model of basic pneumatic subway system, in which air pressure in the tube pushed the cars, at the American Institute Exhibition in New York in 1867.[3] After demonstrating that the model was viable, in 1869 Beach and his Beach Pneumatic Transit Company began constructing a pneumatically powered subway line beneath Broadway. Funneled through a company he set up, Beach put up $350,000 of his own money to pay for the full-scale test project.[4] Built with a tunneling shield,[3] the tunnel was complete in only 58 days.[1] Its single tunnel, 312 feet (95 m) long, 8 feet (2.4 m) in diameter, was completed in 1870 and ran under Broadway from Warren Street to Murray Street.[3][5]
However, one of the city's top politicians of the day, William "Boss" Tweed, refused to support the project. With no initial political support for the project, Beach started the project by claiming he was building postal tubes. The initial permit was to install a pair of smaller postal tubes below Broadway; however, Tweed later amended the permit to allow the excavation of a single large tunnel, wherein the smaller tubes could reside.[6][7] The exact location of the tubes was determined during construction by compass and survey as well as verified by driving jointed rods of iron up through the roof of the tunnel to the pavement.[8] The line was built as a demonstration of a pneumatic transit system, open to the public with a 25-cent fare per person.[3] Proceeds for the admission went to the Union Home and School for Soldiers' and Sailors' Orphans.[9] It was planned to run about 5 miles (8 km) in total, to Central Park, if it were ever completed.[6]
For the public, the project was used as an attraction. It ran only a single car on its one-block-long track to a dead-end at its terminus, and passengers would simply ride out and back, to see what the proposed subway might be like. During its first two weeks of operation, the Beach Pneumatic Transit sold over 11,000 rides, and over 400,000 total rides in its single year of operation.[7][10][11] Although the public showed initial approval, Beach was delayed in getting permission to expand it due to official obstruction for various reasons. By the time he finally gained permission in 1873, public and financial support had waned, and the subway was closed down within the year.[11] The project was shut down when a stock market crash caused investors to withdraw support. It is unclear that such a system could have been practical for a large-scale subway network.[3][6][12]
After the project was shut down, the tunnel entrance was sealed. The station, built in part of the basement of the Rogers Peet Building, was reclaimed for other uses until the entire building was lost to fire in 1898.[13] In 1912, workers excavating for the BMT Broadway Line (serving the present-day N R trains) dug into the old Beach tunnel, where they found the remains of the car, the tunnelling shield used during initial construction, and even the piano in the subway's waiting room.[3][11] The shield was removed and donated to Cornell University, which has since lost track of its whereabouts.[14] The tunnel was almost completely within the limits of the Broadway Line's City Hall station, but it is rumored that a small portion could still be accessed by a manhole on Reade Street.[15] The New-York Historical Society commissioned a plaque honoring Alfred Beach to be placed in the City Hall station.[4][7]
Although the Beach Pneumatic Transit lasted for only three years, the project gave rise to the New York pneumatic tube mail system, which was based on the request that Beach had made to Tweed and which ran until 1953.[6]
التصميم
جماليات
The station was very ornate, and was adorned with frescoes and easy chairs. It was illuminated by zirconia lamps that revealed the luxurious interior.[16] There were statues and a goldfish pond in the station that people could look at while they waited for their turn to enter the ride.
مواصفات تقنية
The car could hold 22 people,[17] and the riders would enter the site at Devlin's Clothing Store, a well-known shop located at 260 Broadway, on the southwest corner of Warren Street.[9][18][19]
The ride was controlled by a 48-short-ton (44 t) Roots blower,[7] nicknamed "the Western Tornado", built by Roots Patent Force Rotary Blowers (see Roots Blower Company). When the car reached the end, baffles on the blower system were reversed, and the car was pulled back by the suction.[17]
For the tunnels, Beach used a circular design based upon Brunel's rectangular shield, which may represent the shift in design from rectangular to cylindrical. It was unclear when or who transitioned the tunneling shield design from rectangular to circular until The New York Times wrote an article describing the original Beach tunneling shield in 1870.[20]
تطورات ذات صلة
The Crystal Palace pneumatic railway was a similar but longer system which operated in 1864 on the grounds of the Crystal Palace in London.[21]
In 2013, entrepreneur Elon Musk proposed a hyperloop system, which would propel capsules through evacuated tubes at high speeds using magnetic levitation and linear electric motors.[3]
انظر أيضاُ
- Atmospheric railway
- Cobble Hill Tunnel, a similar abandoned tunnel in New York City
- Track 61 (New York City), another private railroad tunnel in New York City
المراجع
ملاحظات
- ^ The terminus at Murray Street was a dead-end, not a station
تذييل
- ^ أ ب ت ث "www.nycsubway.org". www.nycsubway.org.
- ^ Rachel Serkin (2019-04-04). "New York's Forgotten Subway". historytoday.com.
- ^ أ ب ت ث ج ح خ Santora, Marc (August 14, 2013). "When the New York City Subway Ran Without Rails". The New York Times.
- ^ أ ب "Inventor of the Week - Alfred Beach" (MIT)
- ^ Brennan, Joseph (2005). "They found the tube in excellent condition". Beach Pneumatic. Archived from the original on أكتوبر 6, 2007. Retrieved يناير 17, 2008.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ أ ب ت ث "The remarkable pneumatic people mover" on Damn Interesting
- ^ "To excavate the Earth" (Columbia University)
- ^ أ ب "Beach Pneumatic Transit on capsu.org website". Archived from the original on يوليو 19, 2011. Retrieved نوفمبر 12, 2010.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "The Secret Subway" (PBS)
- ^ أ ب ت Martin, Douglas (November 17, 1996). "Subway Planners' Lofty Ambitions Are Buried as Dead-End Curiosities". nytimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved June 27, 2015.
- ^ "Beach Pneumatic Transit - The Interborough Rapid Transit subway" (plrog.org)
- ^ Barry, Keith (February 26, 2010). "Feb. 26, 1870: New York City Blows Subway Opportunity". Wired.
- ^ Worthington, George (December 12, 1912). "A Subway Relic". Electrical Review and Western Electrician. 61: 1137.
- ^ "Top 12 Secrets of the NYC Subway". Untapped Cities.
- ^ "The Pneumatic Mail Tubes" (USPS)
- ^ أ ب "Frederic Delaitre's Lost Subways / Beach Pneumatic Subway". sfr.fr.
- ^ Super User. "Alfred Ely Beach and NYC's First Subway". Alfred Ely Beach and NYC's First Subway.
{{cite web}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - ^ "They found the tube in excellent condition" Archived أكتوبر 6, 2007 at the Wayback Machine (Columbia University)
- ^ "www.nycsubway.org: Beach Pneumatic Transit". www.nycsubway.org. February 4, 1912. Retrieved January 2, 2019.
- See also: "THE BROADWAY TUNNEL.; Opening the Bore to Public Inspection--Success of the Undertaking Great Crowd of Visitors". The New York Times. February 27, 1870. Retrieved January 2, 2019.
- ^ Delaitre, Frédéric (July 10, 2002). "Crystal Palace Atmospheric Railway". Lost Subways. Archived from the original on March 19, 2005. Retrieved January 17, 2008.
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للاستزادة
- Most, Doug, The Race Underground : Boston, New York, and the incredible rivalry that built America's first subway (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2014), ISBN 9780312591328.
- The First New York Subway: Beach Pneumatic Transit Sometimes Interesting. May 19, 2012
- The Secret Subway: Episode of American Experience about the subway
- No. 1474: Beach's Secret Subway: Episode of The Engines of Our Ingenuity about the subway
- "Pneumatic Transit" Animation by Abby Digital
- The Beach Pneumatic Transit Company - Just a Bunch of Hot Air? from the Museum of the City of New York Collections blog
- Beach, Alfred Ely (March 5, 1870). "The Pneumatic Tunnel Under Broadway, N.Y.". Scientific American. 22 (10): 154–156. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican03051870-154.
وصلات خارجية
- "Beach Pneumatic Transit" at Abandoned Stations, by Joseph Brennan
- "Beach Pneumatic Transit" on nycsubway.org
قالب:NYCS navbox 40°42′48″N 74°00′25″W / 40.71332°N 74.00701°W
- CS1 errors: unsupported parameter
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- Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
- Pages with no gauge entered in Infobox rail line
- Pages using New York City Subway service templates
- Coordinates on Wikidata
- Pneumatics
- History of transportation in New York City
- History of rail transportation in the United States
- Railway lines opened in 1870
- 1873 disestablishments in New York (state)
- Transportation in Manhattan
- Defunct buildings and structures in Manhattan
- 1870 establishments in New York (state)