My Library Book

Grand Central: How A Train Station Transformed America By Sam Roberts

Contents

Prologue: The Accidental Terminal

Rails vs. Rivers

The Commodore

The Depot

The Station

The Engineer

Terminal City

All Aboard

Gateway to a Continent

Saving Grand Central

The Restoration

The Characters

Commutation

Secrets of Grand Central

How It Works

Since 2001: A Space Odyssey

Epilogue: The Second Century

 

The New York Timesā€™ urban affairs correspondent Sam Roberts (2013) affirms his bookā€™s stance on Grand Central Terminal in the quote stated below:

This book is more about transportation. Itā€™s about the expansion of the city of New York into a metropolis and the aggregation of metropolitan government, which mirrored the ruthless consolidation of corporate America and the nationā€™s railroads. The terminal was a product of local politics, bold architecture, brutal flexing of corporate muscle, and visionary engineeringā€ (p. 17).

I believe Robertsā€™ book would be vital in my research because it provides historical information about the transition from water to railroad travel, the shift from steam-powered locomotives to electrification, and the driver behind Grand Central Terminal, Cornelius Vanderbuilt. Additionally, the popularization of the ā€œred carpet treatmentā€, its impact on Park Avenue, urban renewal, and office building development during the Roaring Twenties, GCTā€™s birth, collapse, preservation, and restoration, the iconic cameos in film/television/media, its current progression as a commuter railroad, GCT employees that help keep it running at optimal performance, and a handful of little known secrets are discussed in depth.

 

Works Cited

Roberts, Sam (2013). Grand Central: How a Train Station Transformed America.

New York, NY: Grand Central Publishing.

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