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Searching
for History,
But
going down for the Art of It
By
Gabriel
Rodríguez-Nava and Michael
R. Schreiber
rush of cold wind told Bob Diamond he had finally found the tunnel
underneath Atlantic Avenue. The first thing that came into his mind
then was the time an employee at the Transit Museum had advised
him several months earlier not to waste his time looking for the
rumored Brooklyn tunnel. But as Diamond recalls, "that was
quickly followed by a feeling of "wow, what an amazing place
to look at. It was like being in another world because it was very
silent underneath and just above, traffic kept on rushing and bustling."
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Pride
written all over his face, Diamond kneels in front of the
legendary manhole c. 1980.
PHOTO:
Andy Feldman.
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For
years, the tunnel had served as the inspiration for many urban legends
that ultimately helped to motivate Diamond on his quest for the
lost tunnel. It was a mysterious passageway that Walt Whitman had
once described as being "of Acheron-like solemnity and darkness;"
a place where John Wilkes Booth, Abraham Lincoln's assassin, had
supposedly hidden the missing pages of his diary in 1865. Or even
more imaginatively, the tunnel from which the noise of "ghost
trains" still emanating into the bathrooms of many a Brooklynite.
However inspiring, the legends did not help Diamond much. A novelist
who wrote about Booth admitted he only mentioned the tunnel to make
his story more interesting. Similarly, a WABC radio announcer who
in 1979 said he had a friend who could hear the ghost train from
his house, confessed there was actually no such friend. He just
wanted to make the AP wire more interesting.
Still,
Diamond refused to give up. At the New York Public Library on Fifth
Avenue, he found a map from the 1850s detailing the existence of
the tunnel. There, following the advice of a librarian, he found
a Brooklyn Daily Eagle article published in 1911 heralding
Brooklyn as the place with the oldest subway in the world. Initially,
the reporter of the article was going through the borough president's
trash for evidence of fraud, but what he found instead were a set
of plans for the Atlantic Avenue Tunnel. Soon thereafter, Diamond
found a duplicate copy in the Brooklyn Borough archives.
Armed
with this evidence, Diamond first queried the water company. But
instead of help, he only received weirder-than-weird stories involving
poisonous gasses, giant alligators and fatal water floods. So instead,
he tried the folks at Brooklyn Union Gas Company (now KEYSPAN,)
whom Diamond said still remembered him because of a science fair
prize he won as a kid. The gas workers went with him to the manhole
that was left as the only entrance to the until-then sealed tunnel,
and as Diamond recalls laughing: "they gave me an air tank
for the poisonous gasses and a stick for the alligator."
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The
1982 voluntary crew that made it all possible. PHOTO:
Courtesy BHRA
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As
Diamond went down into the manhole, he found himself in a tight
dirt-walled chamber. But soon enough, he noticed a crevice between
the walls and the arched brick ceiling. He crawled into the space
and found a concrete doorway that Diamond and the gas workers broke
into. Payday had finally arrived.
ince
the tunnel's discovery in 1981, thousands of New Yorkers have gone
with Diamond on tours. "Everybody wants to be Ed Norton for
a day," said Diamond. But aside from providing an unusual home-based
tourist experience for New Yorkers, the Atlantic Avenue tunnel has
been used most recently as an unconventional art space of sorts.
Last fall, thousands waited in line to submerge themselves in the
artworks installed by Ars Subterranea.
With
its inaugural event in November 2002, Ars Subterranea, an
association formed by artists, historians, architects and urban
explorers, gave a first installment of their mission: to safeguard
abandoned relics in New York by restoring them to life with art
events. The initiative to found this association came during a previous
underground event organized by several of the members now comprising
Ars Subterranea. The evening ended with a banquet inside the Atlantic
Tunnel. Julia Solis, the association's director, recalls that after
the feast, "one of the guests said: 'I will never see the city
the same way again.' That triggered the a-ha! moment. The events
we had previously organized had been very underground, very intricately
choreographed and not accessible to larger groups. But it occurred
to me then to found an organization that would bring this sort of
experience to a larger audience."
"I
was very excited to learn that this incredible underground passage
was made available to the public," said Christina Fuchs, a
self-proclaimed art lover and "tunnel mole." "If
you think about it, this is the opposite of going to a squeaky-clean
gallery or museum where art is placed inaccessibly high on marble
pedestals. This is like going down into your subconscious and getting
yourself creatively dirty with memories and fantasies. I can't wait
for the next event here."
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| The
mysterious passage that managed to even inspire Whitman, rediscovered.
PHOTO:
Andy Feldman |
Fortunately
for Fuchs, she won't have to wait long. This upcoming March, Ars
Subterranea will host an underground film exhibit curated by Bryan
Papciak
and Jeff Sias. (For more information, go to slide show on sidebar.)
The
Atlantic Avenue Tunnel has also been included in the National Register
of Historic Places. During World War I, cagey US investigators dug
pits throughout Atlantic Avenue in search of German spies that they
suspected could be lurking in the tunnel manufacturing mustard gas.
They didn't find any body, but one of them took the time to leave
something behind: a graffiti mark that Diamond would discover almost
seven decades later. More importantly, there are still two sections
of the tunnel which remain walled-off. Diamond believes, one or
two 19th century locomotives may still remain burried.
Despite
all this, Diamond has been involved in disputes with several governmental
agencies, including the Regional Plan Association, that have tried
to demolish or substantially alter the tunnel for a sewage and subway
extension projects. But fortunately for Diamond, the Brooklyn Historical
Railway Association, of which he is president, owns a long term
lease of the tunnel. Among the plans that BHRS has for the Atlantic
Avenue Tunnel, is the restoration of a light rail trolley line that
would run from Red Hook to Borough Hall in Brooklyn. That would
still leave the tunnel available for events like those organized
by Ars Subterranea.
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slide show:

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Atlantic
Tunnel
Quick
Facts:
Date of construction:
1844
Tunnel used until: 1861
Cost of building: $66,000 (about $400
million in 2000 dollars)
Dimensions: 17 feet high and 21 feet
wide
Navigable tunnel surface: from 1700
to 2000 feet
Remaining tunnel sections to be opened: 2
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