M (New York City Subway service): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 00:39, 24 September 2010
Northern end | Forest Hills – 71st Avenue Myrtle Avenue (late nights & weekends) |
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Southern end | Middle Village – Metropolitan Avenue |
Stations | 36 |
Rolling stock | R160[1][2] (Rolling stock assignments subject to change) |
The M Sixth Avenue Local is a rapid transit service of the B Division of the New York City Subway. It is colored orange on route signs, station signs, and the official subway map, since it runs on the IND Sixth Avenue Line in Manhattan.
The M service operates at all times. On weekdays, the M operates between 71st Avenue in Forest Hills, Queens and Metropolitan Avenue in Middle Village, Queens via Queens Boulevard, Sixth Avenue, and the Williamsburg Bridge. During late nights and weekends, the M operates as a shuttle between Metropolitan Avenue, and Myrtle Avenue in Brooklyn.
The M is the only service that passes through the same borough (Queens) twice on a single trip and the only non-shuttle route that has both of its terminals in the same borough (Queens). The termini of the M, Metropolitan Avenue and 71st Avenue, are 2.5 miles apart, marking the shortest geographic distances between termini for a New York City Subway non-shuttle service. Furthermore, the M is the only non-shuttle route to be intersected multiple times by the same bus route not in Manhattan (the Q38 intersects the M three times in the neighborhoods of Queens, in Elmhurst, Middle Village, and Rego Park, and the Q58 intersects the M in Ridgewood, Queens and again in Elmhurst).
History
M service
Until 1914, the only service on the Myrtle Avenue Line (east of Grand Avenue) was a local service between Park Row (via the Brooklyn Bridge) and Middle Village (numbered 11 in 1924). A two-track ramp connecting the Myrtle Avenue Line with the Broadway (Brooklyn) Line at Myrtle Avenue – Broadway was opened on July 29, 1914, allowing for a second service, the daytime Myrtle Avenue–Chambers Street Line. These trains ran over the Williamsburg Bridge to Chambers Street station in Lower Manhattan, and ran over the express tracks on Broadway (Brooklyn) during weekday and Saturday rush hours. The number 10 was assigned to the service in 1924.
Sunday service was removed in June 1933, all Saturday trains began running local on June 28, 1952, and on June 28, 1958 all Saturday and midday service was cut, leaving only weekday rush hour service, express in the peak direction (skipping stops between Marcy Avenue and Myrtle Avenue, as the J/Z does now). M was assigned to the service in the early 1960s, with a single letter because it was an express service. Since the new cars using letter designations were not yet running on the Myrtle–Chambers service, it remained signed as 10; while the "M Nassau St" rollsigns were used for rush hour Nassau Street specials on the Brighton and Fourth Avenue Lines (QJ and RJ after 1967). M signs were used on Myrtle–Chambers trains once the Chrystie Street Connection opened in late 1967.
The second half of the Chrystie Street Connection opened on July 1, 1968, and the JJ, which had run along Nassau Street to Broad Street, was relocated through the new connection to the IND Sixth Avenue Line (and renamed the KK). To replace this service to Broad Street, the M was extended two stations, from Chambers Street to Broad Street. Beginning Saturday October 4, 1969, to make up for the loss of MJ, the M was expanded to run middays and a new SS shuttle ran between Broadway–Myrtle Avenue and Metropolitan Avenue at other times.
Effective January 2, 1972, the daytime QJ was truncated to Broad Street as the J, and the M was extended beyond Broad Street during the day along the QJ's former route to Coney Island – Stillwell Avenue, via the Montague Street Tunnel and BMT Brighton Line local tracks. By this time, the off-hour SS shuttle had been renamed as part of the M. The local K was eliminated on August 27, 1976, and the M became a fully local service to provide adequate service in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Reconstruction of the Brighton Line began on April 26, 1986, and the daytime M was shifted to the BMT Fourth Avenue Line (express) south of DeKalb Avenue. In 1987, the route was changed to split from Fourth Avenue at 36th Street, running along the BMT West End Line to Ninth Avenue midday and Bay Parkway rush hours. This service duplicated a pattern that had last been operated as the TT until late 1967. M service along Fourth Avenue was switched to the local tracks in 1994, switching with the N, which had run local since the M was moved in 1987. The midday M was truncated to Chambers Street in April 1995.
Reconstruction of the Williamsburg Bridge subway tracks in 1999 split M service in two. One service ran at all times between Middle Village – Metropolitan Avenue and Marcy Avenue. The other ran rush hours only between Bay Parkway and Chambers Street. A shuttle provided service on the BMT Nassau Street Line.
From July 22, 2001 to February 22, 2004, work on the Manhattan Bridge subway tracks resulted in a midday extension back to Ninth Avenue, as well as an extension of the times that the rush hour service was provided. This change preserved service between the West End Line and Chinatown for passengers that would have taken the B to Grand Street.
The September 11, 2001 attacks caused a temporary reduction of the M to a full-time shuttle. It was extended full-time over the BMT Sea Beach Line to Coney Island, replacing the N, from September 17 until October 28.
On July 27, 2008, weekday evening trains were extended to Broad Street, Manhattan.
MJ service
Between 1931 and 1937 11 trains stopped running over the Brooklyn Bridge, instead ending at Sands Street on the Brooklyn side. On March 5, 1944, the Myrtle Avenue Line was closed west of Bridge–Jay Streets, and all 11 trains were truncated there (with a free transfer to the IND lines at Jay Street – Borough Hall).
In 1967, when the Chrystie Street Connection opened, the label MJ was assigned to the 11 service. MJ was only marked on maps and station signs; the cars along that route never had signed designations. With the opening of the Chrystie Street Connection on November 26, 1967, the new letters officially redesignated the 10 and 11 services on maps and signs.
After a fire damaged the structural integrity of the elevated tracks, the west half of the Myrtle Avenue Line was closed on October 4, 1969, ending MJ service.
Restoration of service to the Chrystie Street Connection
In late 2008, in light of severe budget woes, the MTA announced a slew of potential service cuts; among them was the potential elimination of rush-hour M service, which extends from its usual terminal at Chambers Street station on the BMT Nassau Street Line in Lower Manhattan several stops south to Bay Parkway on the BMT West End Line in Brooklyn. This, as well as all other proposals, were no longer considered after Albany lawmakers offered financial support to the MTA in May 2009.
However, in late 2009, the MTA once again discovered that it was confronting another financial crisis; most of the same service cuts threatened just months earlier were revisited, including the ending of rush-hour M service. In response to extreme public outcry to the cuts, which included the ending of the Student MetroCard program, the MTA chose to review its proposals in an attempt to minimize the impact on riders.
One proposal involved the phasing out of M service; the V would then serve as the route's replacement. Using the Chrystie Street Connection, an unused track connection between the BMT Nassau Street Line at Essex Street and the IND Sixth Avenue Line at Broadway-Lafayette, the V would no longer serve its current terminus at Lower East Side – Second Avenue. Instead, the V would leave Broadway – Lafayette Street and, using the Chrystie Street Connection, serve the current M line stations from Essex Street in Manhattan to Metropolitan Avenue in Queens.
The MTA determined that this move, while still a service cut, would actually benefit M riders in northern Brooklyn; approximately 17,000 weekday riders use the M to reach its stations in Lower Manhattan, whereas 22,000 weekday riders transfer from the M to other lines to reach destinations in Midtown Manhattan. However, about 10,000 riders in Southern Brooklyn use the M to access Nassau Street Line stations.[3] This proposal would also benefit J/Z riders in that with the merger of the M and the V, Z service would be retained; previously, the Z was proposed for removal as part of the service cuts, ending skip-stop service along the BMT Jamaica Line and turning the J fully local. Finally, this merger would open up new travel options for northern Brooklyn and Queens J/Z and M riders in that it would allow direct and more convenient access to areas that are not currently served by those routes, such as Midtown Manhattan (before the service changes, M train passengers had to transfer at least once if heading to Midtown, at Wyckoff Avenue, Canal Street, Essex Street, or Fulton Street).
On March 19, 2010, it was reported that the plan had been changed and that the M train would continue, albeit operating via the new combined route. Instead, the V train would be eliminated, and the M would be recolored orange, to designate the IND Sixth Avenue Line as the M train's Manhattan trunk line. Many MTA board members opposed the elimination of the M designation, saying that riders would be more comfortable with an M designation rather than a V designation, and because the M has been around longer than the V.[4][5] The new routing began on Monday, June 28, 2010.[6]
Route
Following lines
The following lines are used by the M service:
Line | Tracks | Time |
---|---|---|
IND Queens Boulevard Line from 71st Avenue to Queens Plaza | local | weekdays only |
IND Queens Boulevard Line south of Queens Plaza | N/A | |
IND Sixth Avenue Line from 47th–50th Streets – Rockefeller Center to Broadway – Lafayette Street | local | |
Chrystie Street Connection | N/A | |
BMT Nassau Street Line at Essex Street | ||
Williamsburg Bridge | ||
BMT Jamaica Line west of Myrtle Avenue | local | |
BMT Myrtle Avenue Line (full line) | N/A | all times |
Current stations
For a more detailed station listing, see the articles on the lines listed above.
Station service legend | |
---|---|
Stops all times | |
Stops all times except late nights | |
Stops late nights only | |
Stops weekdays during the day | |
Stops all times except rush hours in the peak direction | |
Stops rush hours only | |
Stops rush hours in the peak direction only | |
Time period details | |
Station is compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act | |
↑ | Station is compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act in the indicated direction only |
↓ | |
Elevator access to mezzanine only |
References
- ^ 'Subdivision 'B' Car Assignment Effective December 19, 2021'. New York City Transit, Operations Planning. December 17, 2021.
- ^ "Subdivision 'B' Car Assignments: Cars Required November 1, 2021" (PDF). The Bulletin. 64 (12). Electric Railroaders' Association: 3. December 2021. Retrieved December 3, 2021.
- ^ "2010 NYC Transit Service Reductions" (PDF). MTA New York City Transit. January 27, 2010. p. 9. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
- ^ Grynbaum, Michael M. (March 19, 2010). "Under a New Subway Plan, the V Stands for Vanished". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
- ^ http://mta.info/news/pdf/NYCT_Summary_of_Revisions.pdf
- ^ http://www.mta.info/news/stories/?story=24