Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Squirrel Hill Tunnel is a tunnel in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. It serves as an eastern gateway to the city for I-376 and was completed in 1953 after 8 years of construction and at a cost of US$18 million. At the time of opening it was the single largest investment by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. It is 4,225 ...
Also known as Mount Washington Coal Tunnel. Sometimes confused with the Mount Washington Transit Tunnel, which follows a similar alignment at a lower elevation of Mount Washington. [3] Schenley Tunnel: P&W Subdivision: 40°26'46.72"N, 79°56'50.53"W: Squirrel Hill Tunnel: I-376 / US 22 / US 30: Squirrel Hill: 40°25'40.8"N, 79°55'34.7"W ...
Pennsylvania Canal Tunnel; Pittsburgh and Castle Shannon Tunnel; ... Squirrel Hill Tunnel This page was last edited on 29 March 2024, at 04:35 (UTC). Text ...
Fort Pitt Tunnel: Pittsburgh I-376: Mount Washington: 3,614 feet (1,102 m) 1960 "Ghost Tunnel" Curtisville: Dawson Road Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad: Penn's Landing Tunnel Philadelphia I-95: 1979 Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel: Lurgan and Fannett Townships, northern Franklin County I-76 (Pennsylvania Turnpike) 4,727 feet (1,441 m) [49] Laurel Hill ...
The vantage was the inspiration for the news opening on Pittsburgh's KDKA-TV for several years in the 1980s and 1990s, [3] and is referenced in Stephen Chbosky's novel The Perks of Being a Wallflower. The Fort Pitt Tunnel is the third-longest automobile tunnel in Pittsburgh, following the Liberty Tunnels and the Squirrel Hill Tunnel.
Kris Kolluri, president and CEO of the Gateway Development Commission, tours the construction taking place along Tonnelle Avenue in North Bergen, NJ on Monday April 15, 2024.
The first section of what would eventually become I-376 opened June 5, 1953, from PA 885 (Bates Street) near the Hot Metal Bridge east through the Squirrel Hill Tunnel to US 22 Bus (then US 22) at Churchill. Construction commenced on this stretch on July 25, 1946, near Wilkinsburg. [10]
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKIThey’re known as “trauma tourists”—people who flock to the scene of natural disasters, airplane crashes, or mass shootings, some to gawk, others to help ease the pain of ...