Altoona, PA
Operated as a public visitor park (Horseshoe Curve NHL, owned by the Railroaders Memorial Museum). Funicular and stair access to the inside-of-the-curve viewing area, where trains pass on three sides — the original 1854 PRR engineering wonder is still active NS Pittsburgh Line.
The viewing park is fully public access with safety fencing along the curve. The ROW is NS property — do NOT cross the fence or descend to track level. Funicular shuts down in lightning.
Paid visitor lot at the base. Modest admission fee covers the park + funicular ride. Open seasonally (typically April–November); check railroadcity.org for hours.
Late morning to early afternoon — the curve faces northeast, so sun is on eastbound (downhill) trains for most of the day. Amtrak Pennsylvanian passes mid-afternoon eastbound.
Very high — NS Pittsburgh Line is one of NS's busiest mainlines. 50-70 trains/day common, mostly heavy intermodal and merchandise. Amtrak Pennsylvanian once each way daily.
Visitor center with gift shop + restrooms. Full services in Altoona (~6 miles east), including the Railroaders Memorial Museum downtown — both attractions on a combo ticket.
For the parent, spouse, or friend along for the ride — restrooms, food, and what to do while your railfan watches trains.
You're in for a treat while your railfan enjoys the trains at this historic overlook.
While your railfan is captivated by the trains, you can enjoy the beautiful views from the overlook. The visitor center has a gift shop where you can browse for souvenirs. If you're up for a short drive, Altoona offers more dining and shopping options just a few miles away.
Safety: Make sure to keep your kid at least 25 feet back from any track and stay within the safety fencing.
AI-generated · AI-generated, may be incomplete; verify hours/access before driving
POI data © OpenStreetMap contributors. Verify hours/access before driving.
Hotels and rail experiences nearby. Links earn us a small referral — we only surface partners we'd use ourselves.
The starter kit serious railfans wish they'd bought day one. Each link earns us a small Amazon Associates referral — we only list gear we'd actually carry.
Weatherproof pages that take pen ink in rain or sweat. Log road numbers, consist notes, observed times — you'll want them in your logbook later. The No. 311 is the original yellow tagboard model — the most popular field notebook in history; the same one surveyors and biologists carry. ($10-$15)
Affiliate · Amazon
Class 2 reflective vest. Not for trespassing — for legitimate trackside viewing on public sidewalks and parking lots near busy lines, so the engineer sees you and you don't get a friendly 'move along' from BNSF police. Looks the part too. ($10-$20)
Affiliate · Amazon
Reading a CSX road number off a passing unit at half a mile = magic. 10x42 is the railfan sweet spot — enough power, still light enough to hold steady. Nikon's PROSTAFF 3S is the standard recommendation: under $150 and the optics punch above the price. ($120-$170)
Affiliate · Amazon
No recent sightings
Be the first to log a sighting at this spot.