Abandoned railroad right-of-way in Jersey City, New Jersey, United States
"The Greatest Railroad Cut" 1910The busiest tunnel point in the world in 1911, the six Erie Railroad tracks exiting the Bergen Arches below and four Lackawanna tracks all emerging from tunnels under Bergen HillThe unused tunnel cut After leaving the Erie Cut, trains traveled over city streets to reach the depot.A map of the current active railroads of northern Hudson County. The Bergen Arches are not shown, but they are immediately adjacent to the Bergen Tunnel which is the part blue line marked "Conrail National Docks Branch" which runs between the tunnel portal just east of the West End Junction (bottom center) and the tunnel portal just west of the connection with the Conrail River Line stub.
Bergen Arches is the common name for the Erie Cut, the Erie Railroad's mile-long, four-track cut which linked the railroad's main line to its Hudson River waterfront Pavonia Terminal, where travelers to Manhattan could transfer to the Pavonia Ferry or the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad.[1] From 1906 to 1910,[2] using 250,000 pounds of dynamite, workers blasted through 800,000 cubic yards (610,000m3) of blue trap rock; 160,000 cubic yards (120,000m3) of earth were excavated. There were construction cost overruns (and settlements paid to local homeowners for damage and injuries from flying rock), with a total cost around $5 million, that led to financial trouble for the Erie and the cancellation of plans to build a new terminal along the Jersey City waterfront.[3] The term "Bergen Arches" originally referred to the massive bridges over the cut, but the two terms have become synonymous.
The last trains to the terminal ran in 1957. The line was abandoned that year. The adjacent tunnel (the Long Dock Tunnel) from the mid-19th century that the Erie Cut replaced is used for freight, and is being restored as part of Liberty Corridor Project as an extension of National Docks Secondary line.
A Bergen Arches Preservation Coalition has proposed to run the East Coast Greenway through the Arches.[13][14]
In 2025, NJ Transit announced that as part of the planned BRT Transitway from Secaucus Junction to the Meadowlands Sports Complex, they allocated $22 million to complete design and engineering work for Phase 2 from Secaucus to Jersey City via the Bergen Arches.[15]
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