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The Manhasset station house. Manhasset is a station on the Long Island Rail Road's Port Washington Branch in Manhasset, New York. It is located at Plandome Road and Maple Place, off Park Avenue – five blocks north of Northern Boulevard (NY 25A). It is 17.2 miles (27.7 km) from Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan.
Park Avenue in Munsey Park, looking west on September 6, 2021. Park Avenue is a road in Manhasset and Munsey Park in the Town of North Hempstead, in Nassau County, on Long Island, in New York, United States. It serves as a through street between Plandome Road and Port Washington Boulevard (NY 101).
The LIRR has an amalgam of different station house designs across its system. Many station houses built during the same time period (e.g., Mineola and Manhasset; 1920s), or as part of the same project (e.g., Central Islip and Deer Park; 1987 Hicksville–Ronkonkoma electrification project), share similar or identical designs.
Plandome Road's southern terminus is at its intersection with Northern Boulevard (NY 25A). [1] It then continues northwards, running through the middle of Manhasset's downtown, passing North Hempstead Town Hall and the Manhasset station on the Long Island Rail Road's Port Washington Branch; it intersects Park Avenue at the Manhasset Long Island Rail Road station, on the south side of the track.
Plandome station was built in 1909, and as such was the last station to be built on the Port Washington Branch until the World's Fair station opened in Queens in 1939. [4] [5] The track was first laid in 1898 with the building of the Manhasset Viaduct, which allowed for the extension of the railroad line from Great Neck to Port Washington; the stone bridge carrying the track over Stonytown ...
A Penn Station-bound train approaching the Manhasset station on December 16, 2020.. The Webster Avenue Bridge was built in 1897 using a steel-stringer design. [1] [2] It is 78.7 feet (24.0 m) in length, and is 20.7 feet (6.3 m) in width.
Standing at a height of 81 feet (25 meters) above Manhasset Bay and measuring 679 feet (207 meters) in length, the Manhasset Viaduct is the highest bridge on the entire LIRR network. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The viaduct uses a steel stringer bridge design and is one of two King Bridge Company -built railway viaducts still in operation as of 2025 – the ...
The Manhasset area, settled by 1680, grew quickly after it began being served by the Long Island Rail Road in 1898. The LIRR provides access to New York City via the Manhasset station with an approximately 40 minute commute to Penn Station or Grand Central. Express trains, which run during rush hour, make the trip in less than 30 minutes.