9th Street (PATH station)

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9th Street
9th St PATH platform jeh.JPG
Platform
Station statistics
Address Ninth Street and Sixth Avenue
Manhattan, New York
Coordinates 40°44′03″N 73°59′56″W / 40.734210°N 73.998944°W / 40.734210; -73.998944Coordinates: 40°44′03″N 73°59′56″W / 40.734210°N 73.998944°W / 40.734210; -73.998944
Lines PATH:
Connections New York City Subway:
NYCS A NYCS B NYCS C NYCS D NYCS E NYCS F NYCS M at West Fourth Street – Washington Square
Local Transit New York City Bus: M5 north, M8
Platforms 1 island platform
Tracks 2
Other information
Opened 1908
Owned by Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
Traffic
Passengers (2002) 3.248 million increase 54%
Services
Preceding station   PATH   Following station
    Regular service    
toward Hoboken
HOB–33
toward 33rd Street
JSQ–33
    Nights and weekends    
JSQ–33 (via HOB)
toward 33rd Street

The 9th Street PATH station, opened on February 25, 1908, is located on Ninth Street and Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas), in Manhattan's Greenwich Village neighborhood. It is served by the Journal Square-33rd Street and Hoboken-33rd Street services.

In keeping with the "style" of PATH station entrances in Manhattan, the Ninth Street entrance is in the side of a building on the east side of Sixth Avenue. Passengers travel down a number of stairwells and through a narrow curved tunnel before descending to the north end of the platform.

This underground station has two tracks and a center island platform. It is located in between the local tracks of the IND Sixth Avenue Line (which are on the opposite side of either track from the platform) and above the express tracks.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks, which resulted in the destruction of the vital World Trade Center station Ninth Street experienced serious overcrowding. While a new station near the World Trade Center has opened, the Port Authority plans to build a second entrance (pending environmental review) at this station, despite local opposition to the project.[1] Residents are concerned that the project will endanger the surrounding neighborhood's fragile historic buildings (through the vibrations that major construction would cause) and disrupt business and traffic in the Village. The effects of September 11 did not end quickly. In 2002, Ninth Street was used by an average of 8,900 people per day, about 3.248 million per annum. This was 54% higher than the 1.496 million passengers that utilized this station in 2001.

North of this station, at the curve, there are tunnel headings for a level junction with a never-built branch line that would have run to Astor Place on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line. The bellmouth for the proposed Astor Place connection north of this station runs for about 250 feet. Large portions of the ring erecting machine from the original tunnel construction is in the bellmouth for the proposed extension and the tunnel also filled with equipment.

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