Gov. Hochul, Sen. Chuck Schumer, and Rep. Adriano Espaillat joined MTA bigs in East Harlem Monday morning to break ground on what will be the launch site for a pair of tunnel boring machines that should ultimately extend the long-promised Second Avenue subway line.
“Nearly a century after false starts and broken promises, today we finally break ground on a dream that’s 100 years in the making,” Hochul said, standing on a temporary plywood dais in a patch of dirt at the corner of E. 120th St. and Second Avenue.
To her left, cordoned off with traffic cones and yellow chains, sat a shallow pit — the start of a shaft that will be used to launch a pair of specialized digging machines when they arrive from Germany. Officials say that will happen early next year.
The work is the latest piece of progress on what is officially known as Second Avenue Subway Phase 2. The plan will extend the current Second Avenue Line, made up of the three northernmost stops on the Q train, with three additional stops up the East Side and into East Harlem, where it will connect to the current 125th St. station on the Lexington Line.
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Once Phase 2 is completed — it is scheduled to go into service in 2032 — Hochul and MTA leadership plans to keep the massive tunneling machines in the ground to continue digging an additional phase that would bring the subway across Manhattan under 125th Street.