Buses from the Port Authority Bus Terminal enter and exit the Lincoln Tunnel on those ramps.
Dyer Avenue is the main entrance and exit between the streets and the tunnel itself, however the ramps from the PABT go directly into the tunnel.
Since the PABT is overcrowded, some buses pick up on the streets in the area, and drive into the tunnel so that's probably an accurate statement... people watch buses, trains and planes and it's a bit funny...
The bus terminal is owned and operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, a shared state agency across the two states that also operates the NYC area airports, and the PATH train service (Port Authority Trans-Hudson).
Cars can park inside the PABT (5th through 8th floors), and enter using the ramps as well. Unusually for NYC, it is a self-park parking facility, although it is far too large to have valet service.
Buses from the Port Authority Bus Terminal enter and exit the Lincoln Tunnel on those ramps.
Dyer Avenue is the main entrance and exit between the streets and the tunnel itself, however the ramps from the PABT go directly into the tunnel.
Since the PABT is overcrowded, some buses pick up on the streets in the area, and drive into the tunnel so that's probably an accurate statement... people watch buses, trains and planes and it's a bit funny...
The bus terminal is owned and operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, a shared state agency across the two states that also operates the NYC area airports, and the PATH train service (Port Authority Trans-Hudson).
Cars can park inside the PABT (5th through 8th floors), and enter using the ramps as well. Unusually for NYC, it is a self-park parking facility, although it is far too large to have valet service.