The site is bounded by between West 30th Street, West 33rd Street,
10th Avenue, and
12th Avenue. Around 1851, the
Hudson River Railroad built the
30th Street Yard as a depot for a line running down Eleventh Avenue, as trains were not permitted to operate south of West 32nd Street.
New York Central and later
Penn Central expanded the rail yards and used them as a freight terminal up until the 1970s when Penn Central declared bankruptcy and its Manhattan properties were put up for sale. The yard opened in 1987, immediately increasing train capacity through Penn Station. The West Side Yard is named after
John D. Caemmerer, a
New York State Senator from
East Williston who helped obtain $195.7 million for its construction.
Air rights There has been a long series of proposals to develop the rail yard air rights, including for a major expansion of Midtown Manhattan by
William Zeckendorf in the 1950s and for a housing development considered by U.S. Steel in the 1960s. The West Side Yard was designed with space left between the tracks for columns to support development in
air rights above the tracks. In the 1990s the air rights were considered as a possible location for a
New York Yankees stadium. The rail yard air rights were proposed by the
New York City bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics as the location for the media center, Olympic plaza, and
Olympic Stadium, to be occupied afterward by the
New York Jets. The eastern portion of the West Side Yard (east of 11th Avenue) was rezoned for residential and commercial use in January 2005 as part of the
Hudson Yards Redevelopment Project. Following the defeat of the proposal to construct the
West Side Stadium, the western portion of the rail yard was rezoned to accommodate residential and commercial development in December 2009. Construction of the first tower on the eastern portion of the rail yard, the 52-story
10 Hudson Yards, started in December 2012. To support massive towers and other elements, a platform was built above the rail yard. ==Tunnel box==