News

The Niagara Falls tunnel is located 180 feet under the Niagara Parks Power Station. The power station, which was in operation from 1905 to 2006, transformed the falls’ powerful water into usable ...
Today, the Niagara Parks station is the world’s only fully intact hydroelectric plant of its era. Originally operated by the Canadian Niagara Power Company, it used Westinghouse generators to ...
The big draw at the115-year-old Power Station Niagara Falls is the 2,200-foot-long tunnel that links the hydropower plant to the Niagara River. For more than 100 years, that tunnel carried water ...
From the generator floor, take a glass-enclosed elevator down 180 feet beneath the Niagara Parks Power Station, built in 1901, to the massive 2,200-foot tunnel that was used to expel water back ...
But the secrets deep below the power station are coming to life once again. Visitors can now explore the former cathedral of power and a new tunnel that opens to a spectacular view of the falls.
There is light at the end of The Tunnel. And when the sun hits the misty air just right, the light is a dazzling rainbow that begins and ends in the roiling basin of froth below Niagara Falls ...
Below the cascade: A new attraction has opened at Niagara Falls, allowing visitors to explore the tunnel created by an electricity generating company to harness hydro power from the landmark's ...
The big draw at the115-year-old Power Station Niagara Falls is the 2,200-foot-long tunnel that links the hydropower plant to the Niagara River. For more than 100 years, that tunnel carried water ...