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For photos see
www.nycsubway.org North refers to 205th
Street-Bainbridge and South refers to Coney
Island. This line operates 24 hours a day,
7 days a week on the full route listed below.
Express between 145th
Street-Harlem and Fordham Road, peak rush
direction only (6:15 AM to 9 AM to Manhattan,
4:20 PM to 6:45 PM from Manhattan.)
Although the current route along the West End
portion is elevated since the dual contracts
construction in 1916-17, the line originally ran
at grade (street level) since 1875.
________________________
205
STREET
205th
Street Norwood
(205th
St at Bainbridge Ave) Opened 7/1/1933:
This is the last stop of the Concourse D
line, but this station never was intended to be
a terminal, planned extensions would be to the
then-unbuilt Co-Op city or the northeastern
section of the Bronx. Like 179th
Street or 71st/Continental Ave
station on the IND Queens Blvd. line, there are
tail tracks east of the station to allow relays
back downtown. Trains discharge on one
side and pick up passengers on the
southbound side. Station has 2 tracks on 1
island platform, and two entrances. The
main Fulltime booth at Bainbridge Ave and East
206th Street has 2 street stairs, 2
platform stairs and one single up escalator.
The stairs from mezzanine to platform show
evidence that half of the width is closed and is
converted to a station storage area.
The Part time entrance at East 205th
Street and Perry Ave lies in a residential area
and has 2 street stairs and one ramp (no stairs)
to the extreme eastern end of the platform.
Platform tiles match those of Bedford Park
(green). The signs to the Part time booth
also show some strange hours of operation, it is
open late on weeknights; however it closes at
1:40 PM on Saturdays.
___________________________
BEDFORD PARK BLVD
Bedford Park Boulevard
Bedford
Park
Blvd/Grand Boulevard and Concourse) Opened
7/1/1933 Station has 3 tracks, 2 island
platforms, D trains use the wall tracks while
rush hour
B trains use the center track. 2
mezzanines once joined by a full length
passageway both inside and outside fare control.
This passageway is now closed and sealed off.
Part-time mezzanine at West 203rd St.
has ghost booth, and was converted to 24/7 HEET
access in 2003. Part-time side also has 2
street stairs and 2 stairs to each platform.
Fulltime side at Bedford Park has 2 street
stairs, 2 stairs to each platform and passageway
to Bedford Park Blvd underpass. NOTE: Over
half of the stations in the Bronx segment of the
Concourse line currently, or used to have, exit
underpasses. These exits usually sit
directly alongside the intersecting roadway
traveling underneath the Grand Concourse as a
tunnel. When we discuss the underpass, we
refer to the pedestrian exit to street (outside
fare control), not to be confused with subway
underpasses from one platform to another inside
fare control. Had the intermediate full
length mezzanine been open, there would’ve been
2 additional platform stairs, 2 stairs are still
standing, and 2 were removed. Current
tower sits at south side, and has been replaced
by a new Concourse Master Tower that also
replaced all other towers along the
Concourse line. Tile band on track wall is
green
________________________
KINGSBRIDGE
ROAD
Kingsbridge
Road
(Kingsbridge
Road and Grand Concourse) Opened
7/1/1933: Express stop, 3 tracks, 2
island platforms, 2 mezzanines (one above
station and one below station.). Full time
side is at north end and has 2 street stairs and
one stair to each platform. Part Time side
is at Kingsbridge Road at south end and has 3
downstairs to Lower Mezzanine, with exits to
street via 2 stairs to each side of the
Concourse or Kingsbridge Road underpass.
However, prior to a switch in booth operations
in the late 90’s, the Fulltime side was at
Kingsbridge Road, and the Part time side was at
196th Street on the north end.
There were 2 additional exits to the South side
of Kingsbridge Road, these were closed in the
1990’s and are still visible. Tile band is
Marine Blue and vent chambers are also present.
A strange white wall is near the Kingsbridge
Road side of the platforms, it exists for no
apparent reason I know.
________________________
FORDHAM ROAD
Fordham Road Between Fordham
Road and 188th Streets/Grand
Concourse)
opened 7/1/1933: This is
the largest station on the Concourse line with
plenty of hidden stairs and passageways and is
home to one of the largest shopping strips in
New York City. Express stop with the usual
3 tracks and 2 island platforms, the Southbound
platform widens at the north end to allow a wall
that splits the middle track with the Southbound
local track, creating 2 “side” platforms, the
only station to have a mix of island and side
platforms split up in the entire NYC subway
system. The platform wall used to have a
passageway when you came down the first
staircase at Fordham Road side, from middle
track to local track, it is cordoned off
permanently. Fulltime side is actually at
East 188th Street, with 4 street
stairs, one for each corner, while Part time
side at Fordham Road has 2 street stairs, both
at east side of Fordham and Concourse.
There use to be 2 additional street stairs and
passageway at the west side of Fordham and Grand
Concourse, (that’s nearest where the former
Alexander’s/Caldor stores once stood in the
large building, today there are a mix of stores
inside. There also was once an exit inside
the store) the passageway and exits are closed,
but it is a result of the shortening of the
mezzanine and elimination of 2 platform stairs
for each side. Uptown side has 6 platform
stairs and 2 closed stairs. Downtown side
has 6 platform stairs and 4 closed stairs, 2
existing at north end of local side, and 2
removed stairs at south side. Tile band is
purple with black borders. A tower was on
the south end at the Manhattan-bound platform,
and has been closed
and removed .
________________________
182-183
STREET
182nd
-183rd Street
(183rd Street/Grand Boulevard
and Concourse)
Opened 7-1/1933: Local
stop, 4 tracks, 2 side platforms, full length
mezzanine (as originally used, now truncated).
It has 4 street stairs at 183rd
Street, 4 stairs to each platform.
Crossover is only allowed from the northern 2
stairs. Ghost booths are at both ends at
182nd St. and 184th St.
Passageway (both closed.), with additional
staircase closed at far north end. Tiles
show evidence of wrong color used at both sides,
as this station is in need of some TLC.
When the original purple tiles were peeling off
from the platform wall, NYCT replaced them with
odd lilac/blue tiles instead. This causes
an interesting mismatch on the tile band.
________________________
TREMONT AVENUE
Tremont Avenue
(Between Tremont Ave and
West 179th Streets/Grand Concourse)
opened 7/1/1933: This station
was renovated in house in 1999, and is an
express stop, 3 tracks and 2 island platforms.
Prior to the renovation, the station had a full
length mezzanine connecting both the north and
south side. Fulltime booth is on the south
side at Tremont Ave, with 3 street stairs and
two stairs to each platform. Street stair
on West side has slightly long passageway to one
block north of Tremont Ave. Artwork
“Uptown New York” by Frank Leslie Hampton (2000)
uses a mixture of glass and marble mosaics to
create a full width display of a Bronx apartment
building with rooftop garden, and clothes
hanging out on a line to dry on a cloudy day.
North Part time side has ghost booth (it was
removed during the renovation, a sneak tactic to
close booths during ongoing station
renovations), 2 street stairs (one to each side
of the Concourse at 179th St.) and 2
stairs to each platform. There is also one
staircase at the center of each platform, this
only leads to a storage area, however the
passageway can still be seen from platform
level. Artwork “Uptown New York” by Frank
Leslie Hampton (2000), uses glass stone and
marble to create a large, lifelike picture of
the rooftop of a Bronx apartment building and
the happenings on it, the clothes hanging out to
dry, indicates a bright sunny day. This
mural is as wide as the mezzanine and faces the
Fulltime booth area. Tile band and name
mosaics are replicas of original purple band,
before the renovation, the condition of the
track walls were among the worst in the system.
A tower was on the south end at the
Manhattan-bound platform, and is now closed
________________________
174-175
STREET
174th
– 175th Street
174/175 Streets (Between West 174th
St/Selwyn Ave and West 175th
Street/Morris Ave on the Grand Concourse)
Opened 7/1/1933. This is an very unusual
station, at one time it had six entrances and
three booths. Today the station is
whittled down to just 4 entrances and two
booths. The station is divided into 2
mezzanines. The full time booth is located
on the south end and covers 174th St.
and the south side. To exit the south
side, one must go downstairs to exit, although
there is an old fashioned HXT exit only at the
Bedford Park Blvd-bound side still in use.
A similar HXT on the Manhattan-bound side is
cordoned off. Once reaching the mezzanine,
you can use the passageway behind the booth to
exit below to 174th St underpass or
the east stairs going back up to reach the
Concourse. The north mezzanine is part
time and only 2 staircases both lead to the east
and west sides of the Concourse. The
closed off areas are the following: Ghost
Booth at north end, going downstairs from
platform to mezzanine that you could’ve exited
at Morris Ave, stairs at north mezzanine leading
to the Ghost booth 2 levels down and Southbound
passageway and stairs leading to west side of
the Grand Concourse at the Fulltime end.
This is the only “underground” station in the
entire subway system that is built above the
expressway (The Cross Bronx expressway was built
20 years after the Concourse line opened and
posed a challenge to Robert Moses and his
engineers on how to cut across a 1933 subway
tunnel.). There is a painted mural that
dots the outside of the south Fulltime entrance
at 174th St. and is an MTA authorized
artwork. “Love Life” (1995) was done by
William Walsh and is funded by various public
and private partnerships depict various people
from different cultures. The paintings
surround the station entrance and the columns
supporting the subway underneath the Grand
Concourse. I observed garbage strewn along
the closed exit only passageway at the
Southbound platform. There are three
staircases to platform, 2 to upper mezzanine at
north end and one downstairs to lower mezzanine
at south end. North Mezzanine has 2 street
stairs, one for each side of the Concourse.
South mezzanine has one street stair to east
side of Concourse and stairs down to East 174th
St./Selwyn Avenues (and where the artwork is
located). The remains of the closed
mezzanine at Morris Street at the north end and
the staircase to the west side of the Concourse
above 174th St. on the south end are
clearly visible. One name tablet on the
S/B platform has the wrong color tiles replaced,
thus the name “174-175th Streets” is
chopped in half and barely readable. Tile
band is orange .
________________________
170
STREET
170th
Street
(West 170th/171st
Streets and Grand Concourse)
opened 7/1/1933: Local
stop, 3 tracks, and 2 side platforms.
Fulltime side is actually at 171st
Street at north end, with crossover mezzanine, 2
street stairs and 2 stairs to each platform.
This station and 167th St. have
unusual tiles, the name tablets are not orange
and consistent with the rest of the IND stations
built in the 1930’s, they are brown and the
lettering is softer and bigger. There are
two platform level Part time exits, one for each
platform and both were connected to the
underpass at 170th St. tunnel, and
this area is abandoned. Northbound side is
exit-only with 1 street stair; southbound Part
time area has 2 street stairs and a booth.
Original signs to 170th St underpass
still exist on the station wall near the closed
staircases.
Between 170th Street and 167th
Street, there is a 4th track next to
us. It ends at bumper block and goes
nowhere, except it merges with the
Manhattan-bound local track. This gives
the clearest evidence that then-NYC Mayor John
Hylan and the IND wanted a 4 track line in the
Bronx to give the most leverage in competing
directly with the IRT’s Jerome/9th
Ave elevated lines to the west and to their
hopes that the el will fold and be torn down.
Evidently, they had better success with the 3rd
Ave line, than the Jerome line. The
platforms were probably designed later, but
before the 1933 completion of the line,
as the
plans were scaled back to the current 3 track
configuration.
________________________
167
STREET
167th
Street 167th
Street (West 167th St and Grand
Concourse)
opened 7/1/1933: local
station, side platforms, and 2 tracks.
Similar to 170th St in layout, there
is 1 Fulltime mezzanine and 2 Part time platform
level fare control areas. Fulltime
mezzanine side at far north end has 4 street
stairs to 167th St, one stair to each
corner, and is larger than the 170th
Street mezzanine. Alongside the sides of
the mezzanine are two winding stairs to 167th
St. underpass and was permanently closed for
security reasons in 1993. There is no
pedestrian access to the underpass from either
side outside on street level. At the south
end are 2 Part time areas to McClellan Street,
the South side has a ghost booth due to the 2003
booth closings, while Northbound end is
exit only. Each Part time mezzanine has 1
street stair. A tower sits on the far
north end at the Manhattan-bound platform, and
is usable. This tower was closed and
removed .
________________________
161
STREET
YANKEE
STADIUM
161st
Street Yankee Stadium
(River Ave/West 161st Street) IND
Section opened 7/1/1933, IRT Section
opened 7/12/1917: Is described on the
complexes page.
________________________
155 STREET-
8 AVENUE
155th
Street 8th Avenue
(Frederick Douglass Blvd, underneath
West 155th St overpass at east end of
Polo Grounds Houses) Opened
7/1/1933: The Polo Grounds and home of
baseball’s NY Giants was directly upstairs from
this station before they packed their bags and
headed west, the stadium was used until 1964.
Station currently has only one crossover
mezzanine; however there was another mezzanine
at the south end. Much of the station is
boarded up, presumably after the Polo Grounds
closed in 1964 to make way for public housing
that currently is in place. An extra-wide
set of Single Street stairs (to accommodate
baseball crowds at that time the station opened)
will take to 8th Ave, there is no
access to West 155th St and the
Macombs Dam Bridge unless some amount of
roundabout walking is involved. Current
station has 3 stairs to each platform, and 4
closed off staircases. Some of the
abandoned stairs were removed to enhance
security. A tower sits on the south end at
the Manhattan-bound platform, it is abandoned.
When the IRT elevated and later Polo Grounds
shuttle ran upstairs, there was a provision for
transfer tickets between the IND underground
level and the IRT shuttle level. A very,
very steep walk upstairs was in store for those
who elected this transfer.
________________________
145
STREET
145th
Street-Harlem
(St. Nicholas Ave between 145th and 147th
Streets)
opened 9/10/1932:
This station has 2 levels, the upper
level is where the A (See
A Lefferts and
A Rockaway)and
C trains stop, and the lower level is where
the Concourse
B and D trains stop here. There are 2
full time mezzanines, one at 145th street (4
street stairs available, one for each corner),
and the other at 147th street (2 street stairs).
Each side has 3 stairs from mezzanine to the
upper level, and 1 escalator from each
mezzanine, directly down to the Uptown only side
lower level (B/D)
platform. There are no escalators from the
Downtown side to upper level. Like many
other IND stations when first opened, it had a
full length mezzanine connecting both of today's
mezzanines; this space is now used by the NYPD
as a Transit Bureau District Office.
Unknown to most people, there was also exits in
the middle of the closed mezzanine, there
actually is (what appears to be) an original
1932 IND sign on the Downtown, upper level side
that sits overhead in the middle of the
platform. To see this sign, you need to stand
and face the north end it reads "exit to
street". Outside of the station, on the
street, a closed and slabbed over staircase
still sits on the Northwest corner of 146th
Street and St. Nicholas. The upper level
is 4 tracks and 2 island platforms; however the
lower level has 3 tracks and 2 island platforms.
The Uptown platform on the lower level is wider
than the Downtown platform, the possible IND
plan was to make the Concourse line in the Bronx
as 4 tracks, but plans were scaled back down to
3. The Concourse line opened a year later
after the first IND line (1933). This
station is where midday and evening B trains
terminate on the middle track before returning
back to Brooklyn. During AM and PM rush
hours, the same middle track is used by D
Concourse express trains in the peak direction
traveled only (AM Southbound and PM
Northbound). From this point down to 59th
Street/Columbus Circle, there are 4 lines (A
(See
A Lefferts and
A Rockaway) ,
B,
C, D) running. From 145th the train
enters a maze of complex switches, but is
actually easier to figure things out when you
ride area between these points a few times each
way.
________________________
125
STREET
125th Street (125th
Street and Saint Nicholas Ave.)
Opened
9/10/1932:
Express stop in the heart of
Harlem's busiest commercial strip, it is an
express stop with 4 tracks and 2 island
platforms. The station had a
renovation in the 1980's, during which the set
of stairs to each platform at the north end were
removed. The current plan restored these 2
stairs at the far North end. Station has
full length mezzanine with one each of Fulltime
and Part time fare control areas. Fulltime
side at 125th street has 4 street stairs and
Part time side has 2 street stairs. There are 5
stairs to each platform. There are large
scale photos of Harlem in the 1920's and 1930's,
In the middle of the mezzanine, there is
evidence of closed stairs and exits to 126th
street, one on each side. One of the
stairs appears to lead into a business that
existed at street level. The tile band on
the platform walls is untouched from the 1980's
renovation and is green
________________________
59
STREET
COLUMBUS CIRCLE
59th
Street Columbus Circle
IND opened
on 9/10/1932 and is described on the
Complexes Page
________________________
7
AVENUE - 53
STREET
7th Avenue
53rd Street opened on
12/15/1940 and has two tracks and an island
platform on each level. The north track serves
Eighth Avenue Service (E
train) and the South serves Sixth avenue trains
(B
and D). The south exit leads to Broadway and the
North to Seventh Avenue. Trains to lower
Manhattan and Brooklyn are on the upper level
and trains to upper Manhattan, Bronx and Queens
are on the lower level. This station has been
renovated and uses panel tile rather than
individually set tiles
________________________
47-50
STREET
ROCKEFELLER CENTER
47th
street- 50th Street Rockefeller
Center (Ave of the Americas, between
West 47th and West 50th
Streets) Opened 12/15/1940:
Very large station, it is an express stop
along the prestigious Avenue of the Americas,
with 4 tracks and 2 island platforms.
Ordinarily, since this portion of the line is
express, we would be arriving on the express
track. Because of the tricky “T” shaped
line configuration involving the
E,
F ,M
and
B/D lines traveling in different directions,
southbound express and local trains come in on
opposite sides, the
B and D express trains use the local track,
while
F and
M trains use the express track.
Station has numerous passageways and exits, a
total count of at least 14 entrances from street
level alone, were taken. This does not
include several passageways through Rockefeller
Center, all outside fare control. Fulltime
booth is at north end of full-length mezzanine,
at West 49th Street, with 1
passageway through Rockefeller Center on the
East side, and another set of passageways
through various Concourse levels of office
buildings along the west side of Avenue of the
Americas. A passageway to one northern
Part time staircase leads to Radio City Music
Hall/West 50th Street and is open
late during evening performances. Another
passageway along west side of 49th
St, was recently extended to connect with the
BMT 49th St station on the
N,
R and former
W lines (no free transfer). Middle fare
control at West 48th Street has ghost
booth and all-day HEET access. South fare
control at West 47th St has a Part
time booth and more staircases. Eagle eye
movie fans who saw the 1976 thriller “Marathon
Man”, will note the old KK rush hour subway
route on a street entrance of the east side of
Ave of the Americas and West 47th
Street, before the routes’ demise. Each
platform has 7 stairs to mezzanine, the north
end of the Northbound platform has an active
tower, and is depressed about 10 feet below the
Southbound platform. This is to prepare
the lines to be branched out towards the Bronx
and Queens. Color band is red, with dark
brown borders, “47” and “50” alternate each
other below the tile band
________________________
42
STREET BRYANT PARK
42nd
Street Bryant Park IND opened on
12/15/1940 and is discussed on the
complexes page
________________________
34
STREET
HERALD
SQUARE
34th
Street Herald Square
opened on
12/15/1940 and is discussed on the
complexes page
________________________
WEST 4
STREET
West 4th
Street (Ave of the Americas between West
3rd St and Waverly Place) Upper level
opened 9/10/1932, Lower level opened 12/15/1940.
has four tracks on the upper level, serving A,(
see
A Lefferts and
A Rockaway)
C and
E trains, a lower Mezzanine and then a lower
level serving
B, D,
F ,
M and former
V trains. The lower Mezzanine is full width
and length and also holds numerous offices for
NYCT. The north end of the upper level has exits
to the street. The south end of the upper level
ramps up to a crossover and a booth. Full ADA is
via the south end.. A tower is at the south end
of the southbound lower level platform. The
North exit leads to West Eighth Street and the
south to west Third Street. The exit to west
Fourth Street has been removed. The station has
a secondary name of Washington Square.
________________________
BROADWAY LAFAYETTE
Broadway Lafayette
(West Houston Street between Broadway
and Lafayette Ave)
Station is approx 3 levels
deep. Opened 10/1/1936. The relatively high ceiling
at the North end indicates a ramp was
planned . This station features only 1 fulltime
fare control area at Broadway and West Houston,
with 2 street stairs. Before the
renovation, the fare control was situated in the
middle, between the 2 Broadway entrances and the
Lafayette Ave entrance. The Lafayette Ave
entrance on the south side is currently 24/7
HEET access. A new entrance and booth on
the North side of Lafayette Ave and Houston was
constructed during the renovation, the booth
fell victim to the 2003 ax, as is now listed a
ghost booth and part-time HEET access.
There is an intermediate level between the
mezzanine/IRT level and platform level, it
contains artwork on the columns. “Signal”
by Mel Chin (1998) uses various materials to
create a lighted appearance at the bottom of the
column. There are 3 stairs from each
platform to intermediate level and an additional
2 stairs from intermediate to mezzanine level.
At the far western end (due north in accordance
to lines traveled) is another set of stairs (1
for each side) that lead directly up to fare
control, 3 levels and a steep walk up. It
is now included the the
Broadway
Lafayette/Bleecker Street Complex.
________________________
GRAND
STREET
Grand Street
Grand
and Chrystie Streets.)
Opened 11/27/1967:
This is one of 2 additional
stations added during the massive IND Chrystie
St. Connection from 1967-68, and plays an
important part for customers traveling to/from
Chinatown. Station is 2 tracks on 2 side
platforms, 2 stairs to each platform, and 3
street stairs to the only mezzanine in the
station. The station originally had 2
stairs to the east side of Chrystie St, the 3rd
staircase on the west side of Chrystie St was
added in the early 1990's to alleviate
overcrowding in the station. Recent
artwork installed at the mezzanine and platform
suggests red clay formations made on train sets.
At the Brooklyn-bound side, there is a small
sign "Change Radio Channel to B1" indicating the
Train Operator must change his channel from B2
(IND) to B1 (BMT), before crossing the Manhattan
Bridge.
As we
enter the Manhattan Bridge we see a
bellmouth inward. This bellmouth was originally
Broadway Line Q/ QB used to enter the North side
of the bridge before the Chrystie
realignment.
We are crossing the North Side of the Manhattan
Bridge, while the Broadway Line uses the south
side. Before the IND came over the
Manhattan Bridge in 1967, the north 2 tracks
were for Broadway Line trains, while the south 2
tracks were used for trains using the Nassau St.
Loop. For more details on the Manhattan
Bridge track configuration, please see
www.nycsubway.org for more details. As we cross the Manhattan
Bridge on the south side, we see evidence that
the same side was used for Broad connection
trains (before Chrystie connection in
11/27/1967), at the tunnel mouth on the
Manhattan side. Prior to 6th
Ave opening, Broadway N and Q/QB trains used the
north side of the bridge, while QT Brighton
trains used the south side after using the
Nassau St loop from Chambers St. For more
information on the Nassau St loop and Chambers
St, please see the
J Line Page . We skip the
abandoned Myrtle Avenue Station and also skip
DeKalb Ave via. the bypass track. As we cross
a maze of switches, we always keep to the left
side in order to use DeKalb bypass.
________________________
PACIFIC STREET
Pacific Street
opened on 9/13/1915 . It is now called Atlantic
Avenue Barclays Center and is discussed on the
complexes page
________________________
36
STREET
36th
Street (36th Street and 4th
Avenue) Opened 6/24/1917 this station serves
Bush Terminal; it had an in-house renovation in
1997. Express stop, 2 island platforms, 4
tracks, relay tracks for shuttles to the north,
turnouts to West End line to the south.
The station has 2 sets of stairs to each
platform, 3 staircases to street. The West
End line Y shaped turnouts are where the
original 36th St station stood before
it was relocated to the north, about 100 feet
south of this station. The mezzanine also
features the original X shaped BRT tile band,
common in most BMT stations today, and looks
restored. Artwork in mezzanine, inside
fare control, features “An Underground Movement;
Designers, Builders, and Riders” by Oliver
Smith. Using ceramic mosaics, the artwork
depicts the origins of the BRT (hence we now
call it the BMT), from the Design, to Building
the subway, to the riders of the subway.
The Design painting also has the BRT “X” mosaic.
Platform extensions are clearly to the north
end. We now leave 36th
Street and curve to see daylight as we enter the
West End Line. These tracks are non-electrified
and run at grade, with grade crossings at3
d and 2nd Avenues. Many R68/68A
train sets as well as earlier models, were first
delivered here. We enter a half mile long tunnel
and two tracks now become four tracks. We use
the outer two tracks while to our left we see
the end of the 38th Street Yard,
where mostly work trains and some
R Trains are stored here. A master tower,
Joe Murphy Tower, named after an employee of the
tower who served in the National Guard and was
killed during the 1991 Gulf War, controls all
switches along 9th Avenue, 62nd
Street and most of 4th Avenue is also
located here. This site extends our gratitude to
our armed forces and their efforts to safeguard
our nation from foreign threats.
________________________
9
AVENUE
9th Avenue
(East side of 9th Ave
between 38th and 39th
Streets) Opened 6/24/1916.
This station has a station house on
street level, and has a sealed entrance on left
side facing from outside. 2 island
platforms, with 3 tracks and two staircases for
each platform, comprise the upper level.
The lower level was formerly used for the
Culver Shuttle (and prior to the 1954 IND
Culver connection from Ditmas to Church Avenues,
a through route from the McDonald Ave elevated
to the 4th Ave line, along much of
the present ROW on the D line today), and was
last used for the ending of the original
“Crocodile Dundee” (1986), film, a makeshift
replacement for the 59th St/Columbus
Circle station. However, the giveaways
that make it clearly 9th Ave are the
wall mosaic “9” and the sunlight to the far end
while watching the film’s ending. The
current lower level is so dark, and there are no
safety plates on the staircases. A
fluorescent light is left on at the S/B side.
The 2 sets of staircases to lower 9th
Ave are still intact. The tablet grilles
in the mezzanine are still left intact, such as
a newsstand that stood opposite to the current
location of the station agent booth.
Although the Culver Shuttle bid farewell on
5/11/1975, the el. structure along 37/38th
Streets was still standing until the mid.
1980’s. The Manhattan-bound platform is
slightly wider than the Coney Island-bound
platform; a 4th track once existed at
this station but it is unclear whether it served
the upper or lower level at this station.
Artwork is by Christopher Russell and is
entitled Bees for Sunset Park, 2012. It is Cast
bronze. Christopher Russell’s artwork is centered on
the image of the bee. The artist imagined the
station as a kind of beehive, a center of
activity, with many individuals converging, like
bees, darting in and out, to and from their many
pursuits. The historic building with its central
entrance and peaked roof evokes the feeling of a
beehive. The artist found the image of the bee
as an appropriate motif since the station’s
architecture is inspired by the Arts and Crafts
style. During the Arts and Crafts period,
artists and designers utilized the bee, the
hive, and honeycomb extensively, in the
decorative wall coverings, objects and
furnishings. Incorporating this imagery, Russell designed
2 sets of gates and finials for the fences that
surround the open spaces at each side of the
station. The cast bronze gates are based on
honeycombs, greatly magnified. These monumental
honeycombs are populated by equally magnified
bees depicted in their crowds, busily occupied.
The cells of the honeycomb are open, allowing
light to pass through, and bringing out the
hexagonal pattern of the comb, which creates
depth and visual interest, when viewed from a
distance. The finials, atop each the tallest posts
along the fences, feature a single bee, larger
than life, working on an equally exaggerated
flower head. The bees are intended as an
affirmation of nature in the city, reminding
passers-by of their fertility, productivity, and
community. The artwork was fabricated by Modern
Art Foundry. As we rise from embankment
to elevated outside 9th Avenue
station we clearly see the old Culver Line ROW
below us and to the right side at the curve.
There is also a platform present, this was
installed in the late 1980s for NYCT employees
only and does not represent part of the original
Culver ROW. Although there is no express service
along this point to Bay 50th Street,
there is a third track along this elevated
route. The identification of Express and Local
stations is for the purpose of the way the
stations were originally built and does not
reflect any express service used.
From here to Bay 50th
Street all stations have been renovated and now
feature Tudor style windscreens.
________________________
FT
HAMILTON PKWY
. It is Ft. Hamilton Parkway
On New Utrecht Ave between 44th
and 45th Street, crossing Fort
Hamilton Parkway in the middle). Opened
6/24/1916 .Local stop with two side platforms
and a Ghost Booth on north side at 44th
Street, mezzanine and stairs left
intact. Current (2011) plans call for a
temporary reopening until renovation is
completed. The North mezzanine also has evidence
of windows at one time. Current south side
mezzanine has old buzzer lights, 2 stairs to
street, and 2 stairs to each platform.
Artwork is by Portia Munson and is entitled
Gardens of Fort Hamilton Parkway Station, 2012.
It is Laminated glass in platform windscreens. The Gardens of Fort Hamilton Parkway
Station are six sets of flower compositions
in laminated glass which bring elements of
nature onto the subway platform. Artist Portia
Munson created the work from digital scans of
actual flowers that are realized as larger than
life to create fantastical gardens. Each
composition represents a garden at different
times in the growing season. The first,
Double Happiness, represents early spring.
The second grouping, Peony is made up of
flowers that bloom from late spring in May. The
third, July, depicts mid-summer and the
fourth, Hibiscus, shows flowers commonly
seen toward the end of August. The last gardens
are Morning Glory created in September
and October, illustrating a garden in
late Fall. These six different gardens are
comprised of flowers that can be seen growing in
Brooklyn. Each image appears like an aerial plan of
imagined flower gardens. Using arrangements
inspired by mandalas, representing the universe,
the flowers have been placed into orbiting
combinations of color and shape, preserving what
was in bloom on the day that the images were
created. The large fantastical flower beds are
meant to function as meditation garden for
subway travelers.
________________________
50
STREET
50th
Street (On New Utrecht Ave at 50th
Street) opened 6/24/1916: Same as
55th Street, renovated mezzanine, but
only 2 streets stairs are present. The
platform is also straight and not curved like 55th
Street. There is no
artwork
________________________
55
STREET
55th
Street (on New Utrecht Ave at
intersection of 13th Ave and 55th
Street.) Opened 6/24/1916:
The mezzanine is renovated and new roof canopies
on platform. Chain link fence replaces
bars and new square windows also in mezzanine.
3 stairs to street and 2 stairs for each
platform are available at this station. The
platforms are curved . There
is no artwork
________________________
62
STREET
62nd
Street/ New Utrecht Avenue
opened on
9/15/1916 for the West End Line and is discussed
on the
complexes page .Artwork
for this line is by Andrea
Dezsö and is entitled Nature Rail, 2012. It is
Stainless steel. Nature Rail, created
by Andrea Dezsö, is a stainless steel sculptural
work installed in the railings of the station’s
transfer areas connecting the D with the N line.
Nature Rail is composed of five modular
compositions by Dezsö’s which can be combined
depending on the location and configuration of
the station railings. The plant and animal life that survives on
its own, in the urban environment surrounding
the elevated train captured Dezsö’s imagination
and served as the central theme of Nature
Rail. Plants—trees, vines, flowers, and
small, wild animals—grasshoppers, bees, birds
and rabbits, are depicted in silhouetted details
using laser cut-out with sandblasted finishes.
The resulting work resembles the traditional
paper cut, a popular folk art medium familiar to
many of the ethnic groups who make Bensonhurst
their home. For Dezsö, Chinese cut paper art may
differ from Italian, Jewish or Mexican
decorative and folk cut paper art, yet there are
common elements among each, including natural
subjects and varying degrees of symmetry. With
her work, she creates a delightful visual focal
point, which can be seen by all who enter the
station as well as those on the street below.
________________________
71
STREET
71st
Street (71st Street and New
Utrecht Avenue) Opened 6/24/1916:
Same setup as 79th Street on
both ends, one part time and one Full time area.
Difference is Fulltime area has 4 street stairs
instead of 79th Street’s 2
staircases. Platform extensions appear to
the south, steel fence is present also. An
error on one of the platform signs does reveal
“Bay Ridge Ave” as the main cross street on the
Part time side. The exit actually leads to
70th Street, while Bay Ridge Ave is
one block south of this exit. Artwork is by Joan
Linder and is entitled The Flora of Bensonhurst,
2012. It is Laminated glass on station platforms Elevated stations of Bensonhurst provide a
dramatic opportunity for glass artwork at the
platform level. Joan Linder created drawings of
flora based upon wild vegetation seen from the
streets and lots within a 6-block radius of the
71st Street station. The result is an elegant,
dynamic and specific tribute to the landscape of
Bensonhurst, which endures, among other things,
as an echo of Brooklyn’s past. These panels act
as windows to a lost history—a place shaped by
Native Americans and farmers. The botanical
images offer passengers an experience that is a
counterpoint to the built environment of the
city. Entitled The Flora of Bensonhusrt, the
work is composed of six intricate drawings of
plants flowing in the direction of train. Three
on each platform, the plants rendered in cool
colors (blue, green and purple) on the Manhattan
bound platform alert the riders as they venture
out in the morning. Whereas, those in warm
colors (red, turquoise, and orange) are placed
on the Brooklyn bound platform to greet the
commuters as they make their way home from work. For the project, Linder painstakingly created
large scale drawings in pen and ink on paper,
which then be scaled and translated into
laminated glass. The plants against a milky
white background resemble a lightbox, which are
constantly shifting under the daylight and also
viewable at night from the street level.
________________________
79
STREET
79th
Street
(79th Street and
New Utrecht Ave)
opened 6/22/1915:
Local stop with 3 tracks and 2 side
platforms. There are separate areas to use
this station. The Fulltime side at 79th Street
is at the south end and has 2 street stairs and
2 stairs to each platform. The north end
at 77th Street is divided up around
the closed and sealed mezzanine. Fare
control is outside the mezzanine as you walk
upstairs from street, no crossunder is allowed
at this end. The Manhattan-bound side has
HEET access but no room for any MVM machines.
The Coney Island bound side is exit only, no
entry from this end. It is evident that
there is a ghost booth inside the mezzanine when
it was open and usable. New tall
steel fencing is present on both platforms.
Artwork is by Susanna Starr and is entitled A
Continuous Thread, 2012. It is Laminated glass
in platform windscreens A Continuous Thread created by Susanna
Starr was inspired by the lace doily that has
particular significance to the predominantly
Italian-American community in the Bensonhurst
neighborhood. Lace doilies are iconic images of
home. Passed from one generation to the next,
connecting the past, present, and future, the
colorful laces evoke home and belonging while
referencing traditional handcrafts and cultures
in the neighborhood such as Chinese paper cuts
and Latin American textiles. Accompanying the
artwork is a poem by Susan B. Auld, titled In
the Shadow of the Design, which Starr
considers an important element of the artwork.
In the medium of glass, each of the doilies
is made up of two identical layers of brightly
colored lace pattern, which were then
meticulously positioned to reveal one from
another. The effect of the layering adds a
physical dimension and depth. The layered laces
shift and change when seen from different
angles, and as the light changes throughout the
day. Though the images are based upon vintage
lace doilies, the color combinations of the
windows are graphic and modern. As a
counter-balance to the landscape of the subway
platforms, these large scale and at the same
time, intimate domestic objects, act as visual
anchors that hover delicately within the station
windscreens, a continuous layering of thread.
________________________
18
AVENUE
18th
Avenue
(18th Avenue at New Utrecht Ave/85th Street)
Opened
6/22/1915.
Station sits in between two curves to the
right, platform extensions are to the north on
both sides. Has a Single mezzanine with 3 street
stairs and 2 stairs to each platform.
While the "French Connection" chase sequence
continued past this station, 20 years later some
exterior scenes of the Steven Segal action film
"Out For Justice" (1992) were shot outside this
station. Standing at either end, one can
see trains curve into the station as well .
Artwork is by Francesco Simeti and is entitled
Bensonhurst Gardens, 2012. It is Laminated glass
in platform windscreens Bensonhurst Gardens depicts imaginary
landscapes comprised of native plants with an
unexpected array of flowers growing side by
side. Simeti selected plants and flowers that
are culturally meaningful to the three main
ethnic groups currently found in Bensonhurst:
Chinese, Italian, and Jewish. The 32 laminated
glass panels were created through a process of
collage. One of these examples includes the rose and
lily which reference the Santa Rosalia Festival
which is highly celebrated in the neighborhoods
served by the station. The artist’s aim is not
to make the individual panels immediately
recognizable to a specific culture but to
function as a framework, creating surreal
compositions that belong to different times,
cultures and habitats. In addition, Simeti’s
“light-box” compositions comment on society’s
relationship to nature by showing the soil which
nurtures the plants also collecting society’s
cast-off detritus.
________________________
20
AVENUE
20th
Avenue (20th Avenue and 86th
Street) Opened 6/29/1916:
Local stop, 3 tracks, 2 side platforms, 4
street stairs, and 2 stairs to each platform
from the only mezzanine. The Coney
Island-bound platform is slightly to the south
of the Manhattan bound platform, which accounts
for the locations where the platforms were
extended in the 1960's Artwork
is by Odili Donald Odita. It is entitled
Kaleidoscope, 2012. It is Laminated glass in
platform windscreens. Kaleidoscope, created by Odili Donald
Odita, is a laminated glass installation
spanning throughout the elevated station
platforms, which cross the commercial street and
neighborhood hub of 20th Avenue. Odita is known for creating site-specific
wall painting and installations that use
abstract color patterns as a personal response
to and visual memory of the specific site. Odita
shares his perceptions of the Bensonhurst
neighborhood in his choice of color and patterns
in the artwork. He was particularly aware of the
changes in this neighborhood since the 1990s and
its parallels to the evolution of communities in
general. Impressions of the neighborhood became
his major inspiration in the design and the
color palette for Kaleidoscope. Composed of forty panels of vibrant color
patterns in an invigorating diagonal movement,
the formation of bold to pastel colors in
Kaleidoscope exists similarly to the way
that color exists in quilts, creating patterns
and visual interest while symbolizing the many
individual elements it takes to compose a
unified whole, in this case, a community. Odita
also sought to have the work represent the
vitality and diversity within the neighborhood’s
businesses. Kaleidoscope represents the
vitality of its location at the 20th Avenue
subway, and like the subway itself, resonates
throughout the City.
________________________
BAY
PARKWAY
Bay Parkway (22nd
Avenue) (Bay Parkway and 86th
Street) Opened 6/29/1916:
Express stop, 2 island platforms, the
center track is served by either platform while
the 2 local tracks are at the outer ends. There
are 2 stairs to each platform from mezzanine
level, the windows in the mezzanine are usable
and are facing to the west. However on the
area over Bay Parkway to any of the 4 street
stairs, there is black tar covering what were
once windows. Had the windows existed
today, you would have a clear, unobstructed view
on both directions of Bay Parkway below. Artwork
is by Xin Song and is entitled Tree Of Life,
2012. It is laminated glass in Mezzanine window Located in the mezzanine window at the Bay
Parkway Station, Tree of Life bridges the
art of contemporary photo collage and
traditional Chinese paper cut to evoke the
community that surrounds the Bay Parkway
Station, in a masterwork of precision and grace.
Xin Song began by photographing the busy
street scene below the elevated station. Using
traditional paper cutting techniques, she
transformed the colorful imagery from her photos
into an intricate pattern, creating a
symmetrical and vibrant flowering tree. This
unique work is laminated between thick panes of
glass, and can be viewed from two sides. From
the outside of the window, a black silhouette
appears, creating a graphic filigree reminiscent
of Brooklyn’s historic iron work. The interior
view, which serves as the focal point upon
entering the station mezzanine, is a colorful
collage of the contemporary life in the
neighborhood. For Song, the subway itself, the
surrounding neighborhoods and peoples’ daily
movements, are the threads that connect the
diverse community. The complex interplay of Song’s cut paper
designs with the color, forms and figures
meticulously cut out from the photographs offer
riders a visual record to continuously
rediscover their surroundings. The pattern and
techniques in Tree of Life will speak to
all, including the many Asian-American families
who have transformed the community in recent
years.
________________________
25
AVENUE
25th
Avenue
(25th Avenue and 86th Street) Opened
6/29/1916:
Similar to Bay 50th Street,
it has 3 tracks, 2 side platforms, 4 street
stairs, and 1 stair to each platform. This
station is adopted by students of Lafayette High
School as part of NYCT's Adopt a Station
program. This is the clerk’s answer when
Popeye Doyle asks for the next stop in pursuing
the sniper. As we all know, the tough
detective takes someone else’s car and starts
one of the best chase sequences ever filmed, up
to 62nd Street station on this line,
car to train. Although the entire sequence
appears to be shot on location, some close up
scenes (the car narrowly missing the woman and
her stroller) were actually filmed in Bushwick,
near Central and Myrtle Avenues as well .
Artwork is by Amy Cheng and is entitled
Rediscovery, 2012. It is laminated glass in
platform windscreens. Amy Cheng’s series of four windscreen
compositions are designed as imaginative land
and skyscapes representing mystery and
adventure. They refer to the largeness of life,
the wonders and mystery of the natural world,
rendered in resplendent color and form. As an immigrant, Cheng feels a deep affinity
with the West End D Line neighborhoods,
particularly the work ethic and diversity of the
residents. A Turkish restaurant sits
cheek-by-jowl with a Japanese restaurant, which
faces a Spanish bodega, which shares the
sidewalk with a Chinese green grocer, who faces
an Italian bakery, who neighbors an Afghan
restaurant, and so on. It is as if the places of
business were proclaiming in unison: “We come
from all over the globe, we have chosen to make
our living in this corner of Brooklyn, and we
want to share the riches of our culture and
cuisine with you.” Whether from this year or 100 years ago, it
takes courage for immigrants to leave the safety
of the familiar and set out for the greater
unknown world. Rediscovery echoes the
human longing for discovery, adventure, and
spiritual quests.
________________________
BAY 50
STREET
Bay 50th
Street
(Bay 50th Street at Stillwell Ave)
Opened 7/21/1917:
This stop is where the classic
chase sequence, "The French Connection" (1971)
started; the sniper boards the train here, and
then hijacks it. Of course the change booth
where Popeye Doyle asks the clerk the next stop
of the train which the sniper boarded is no
longer there. This is a Local stop, 3
tracks, 2 side platforms, 1 Fulltime mezzanine
with 4 street stairs and 1 stair to each
platform. There are 1960's Platform
extensions visible to the north on the
Manhattan-bound platform and to the south on the
Coney Island bound platform, allowing you to see
trains enter and leave the yard. The tracks are
from both ends past this station. The
station is positioned between 2 yard leads
to/from, Coney Island Yard. An abandoned
tower sits above and the middle of the
Manhattan-bound platform. It is
replaced by a modern tower about 20 feet south
of the original tower. This station is
adopted by the students of John Dewey H.S. as
part of the NYCT's Adopt a Station Program .
Artwork is by Dan Zeller and is entitled
Internal Connectivity, 2012. It is laminated
glass in platform windscreens Bay 50th station is adjacent
to John Dewey High School and is one station
away from Coney Island, which provides a natural
setting for Dan Zeller’s detailed and intricate
abstract drawings to address the connectivity of
lives in an urban environment. Zeller studied
satellite imagery, local streets, and biological
systems along the West End Line (D) and
interpreted them into abstract patterns. Six
drawings were recreated in luminous color in
laminated glass panels installed along the
platform windscreens. As the artist’s response to the site, these
colorful images have an organic quality that is
in concert with the green space next to the
station and the nearby bay area. In his
drawings, Zeller introduces colors and
curvilinear elements to the rigid structure of
the elevated train line, as it sweeps through
the Brooklyn terrain. Among the drawings, the
satellite view of Brooklyn surrounding the Bay
50th Street station may be most recognizable in
some compositions. Others reflect varying
degrees of abstraction that evolved from the
satellite drawing and related images. The work
represents an artist keenly aware of his
surroundings and who makes it his own, as he
illuminates and highlights the ways in which
infrastructure, nature, and human activity
interact and evolve. We leave Bay 50th and
see a subway yard to our left, this is Stillwell
Yard. The Coney Island Yard complex is between
the
N and
F lines and is partially visible. In
terms of operation both yards are combined into
one yard complex. For more information on Coney
Island Yards and Shops see
www.nycsubway.org. As we pass the yard's
end, the
N Sea Beach line meets up with us, side by
side. The Sea Beach line returned to Stillwell
in May 2005. We enter Stilwell Avenue.
________________________
STILLWELL AVENUE
CONEY
ISLAND
Coney Island
(Stillwell and Surf Avenues)
opened 7/21/1917: This station
is fully discussed in our
Complexes page. Contact us at
subway-buff@stationreporter.net
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rights reserved by
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