BMT Brighton Line
BMT Brighton Line | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Status | Operational |
Owner | City of New York |
Locale | Brooklyn, New York City, NY |
Termini | |
Stations | 20 |
Service | |
Type | Rapid transit line |
System | New York City Subway |
Operator(s) | New York City Transit Authority |
History | |
Opened | July 2, 1878 |
Technical | |
Character | Open cut, underground, embankment and elevated |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) |
The BMT Brighton Line, also known as the Brighton Beach Line,[1] is a rapid transit line in the B Division of the New York City Subway in Brooklyn, New York City, United States. Local service is provided at all times by the Q train, but is joined by the B express train on weekdays. The Q's segment on the Brighton Line begins at the line's south end, Coney Island – Stillwell Avenue, and the Q travels the entire line, over the Manhattan Bridge south tracks to the BMT Broadway Line. The B begins at Brighton Beach and runs via the bridge's north tracks to the IND Sixth Avenue Line.
History
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Origins
The Brighton Line opened from the Willink entrance of Prospect Park (modern intersection of Flatbush and Ocean Avenues and Empire Boulevard, now the Prospect Park station on both the renamed Brighton and the Franklin Ave. Shuttle lines) to Brighton Beach (modern Coney Island Avenue at the shoreline) on July 2, 1878 and the full original line on August 18. It was an excursion railroad — the Brooklyn, Flatbush and Coney Island Railway — to bring beachgoers from downtown Brooklyn (via a connection with the Long Island Rail Road) to the seashore at Coney Island on the Atlantic Ocean, at a location named Brighton Beach at the same time the railroad arrived. It has been known since its opening as the Brighton Beach Line but is now described as the Brighton Line in MTA literature and in public usage.
After losing its connection with the Long Island Rail Road in 1883, the railroad fell on hard times, reorganizing as the Brooklyn and Brighton Beach Railroad. Seeking a new route for its excursion business and its local trade in communities along the way, it formed an agreement with the Kings County Elevated Railway to connect to its Fulton Street Line, which gave access to the new Brooklyn Bridge and Manhattan passengers. This was accomplished in 1896.
A series of mergers and leases put the Brighton Beach Line in the hands of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (BRT), a holding company which eventually controlled most of the rapid transit, streetcar, and bus lines in Brooklyn and part of Queens. The line was electrified with trolley wire and, for a time, trolleys from several surface routes and elevated trains operated together on the line.
The BRT was reorganized as the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) in 1923. In 1940, the BMT was purchased by the City of New York, and operation passed to the city's Board of Transportation, which already operated the city-built Independent Subway System (IND).
The original line was a two-tracked high-speed surface steam railroad operating from Bedford Station, at Atlantic Avenue near Franklin Avenue in the City of Brooklyn, at which point it made a physical connection to the Long Island Rail Road's Atlantic Branch. From Bedford the line ran on a surface private right-of-way several blocks south to Park Place, which it crossed at grade, and then in an open cut with street overpasses through what is now Crown Heights and Flatbush, as far as Church Lane (now Church Avenue) in the Town and Village of Flatbush. From that point the line continued on the surface to a point at current Beverley Road between Marlborough Road (East 15th Street) and East 16th Street, curving southeast and running on the surface between the lines of the latter streets through the Towns of Flatbush and Gravesend to Sheepshead Bay, then turning southerly to reach the beach at Brighton Beach on Coney Island in the Town of Gravesend.
The line was extended westward from Brighton Beach in 1903, so that it could terminate with the former Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad at Culver Depot in Coney Island. Passengers, with this short extension, were given access to the developing area of Coney Island. The Culver Depot became the center of operations for the Culver Line and the Brighton Beach Line.[2]
Grade crossing eliminations, 1903-08 and 1918-20
In 1903, the New York State Legislature created the Brooklyn Grade Crossing Elimination Commission (BGCEC) to eliminate grade all grade crossings on the Brighton Beach Line and the Bay Ridge Line of the Long Island Rail Road. The city was supposed to cover half of the costs, not exceeding $1,000,000, while the railroads were to cover the other half of the costs. The work started on December 30, 1905, and was completed in 1908. A short piece of two-tracked elevated railroad was built from the ramp connecting to the Fulton Street Elevated as far as Park Place, where the original 1878 open cut began. From the end of that original cut south of Church Avenue, the line was wholly rebuilt as a four-track railroad with express and local stations to a point south of Neptune Avenue at the border of Coney Island, continuing along its original right-of-way to Brighton Beach station. The portion from Church Avenue to Avenue H was placed in a depressed open cut, while the portion from Avenue H to south of Sheepshead Bay was raised onto an earthen embankment, primarily with earth excavated from the open-cut portion and from the Bay Ridge Improvement of the Long Island Rail Road. The separation of the railroad grade allowed the line's trolley wire north of Sheepshead Bay to be replaced with ground-level third rail.[2]
The above work by the BGCEC left the line between Park Place and Church Avenue in substantially its original condition from steam railroad days. Between 1918 and 1920, however, further work rebuilt the portion between Prospect Park and Church Avenue as a four-track line. At the same time, the remaining portion of the line south of Neptune Avenue was replaced with a four-track elevated structure, including a four- to six-track elevated line extension, connecting the Brighton Line to the new Coney Island terminal at Surf and Stillwell Avenues. This same work rerouted mainline Brighton Beach trains from the Fulton Street elevated line via a new deep tunnel under Flatbush Avenue to connect to the BMT Fourth Avenue Line at DeKalb Avenue station, where trains could access the new BMT Broadway subway. This work was done as a part of the Dual Contracts.
Brighton–Franklin Line
The St. Felix Street and Flatbush Avenue Connection opened on August 1, 1920, providing direct service between the Brighton Line and midtown Manhattan.[1][3] With the opening of the connection, the original portion of the line between the Fulton Street Elevated and the link to the new subway at Prospect Park became a secondary line, known as Brighton–Franklin, and now known as the BMT Franklin Avenue Line. At times through services (including expresses) operated on mainline Brighton tracks to Coney Island. Some special weekend trains even operated beyond Coney Island back to Manhattan via the BMT Sea Beach Line express tracks and the BMT Fourth Avenue Subway. This service was variously known as Franklin–Nassau and as the Coney Island Express, but its popular name was the "Sunny Sunday Summer Special," because it was only supposed to operate as needed on the hottest beach-going days.
Through services gradually diminished on the Brighton–Franklin, and after 1963 it became a pure shuttle, operating between Franklin Avenue station at Fulton Street and Prospect Park station, where it connects with mainline Brighton Beach trains.
During the era of route contraction from 1940 to about 1975, the Franklin Avenue Shuttle seemed a prime candidate for abandonment; its physical structure had been allowed to deteriorate and its service steadily curtailed. The New York City fiscal crisis of the '70s and the recession in 1990 contributed to plans to discontinue the line. By the 1990s the Franklin Avenue Shuttle was known as the "ghost train". It was shrunk in size to only two cars and the Dean Street station was closed. The entire line was under consideration for abandonment, but community pressure forced the MTA to rebuild rather than abandon the line, and as a result, most of the supporting infrastructure and stations were completely rehabilitated in 1998–1999 at a cost of $74 million and reopened in 1999.[4]
Brighton Line platform extensions
During the 1964–1965 fiscal year, the platforms at the Atlantic Avenue, Seventh Avenue, Parkside Avenue, Church Avenue, Beverley Road, Cortelyou Road, and Newkirk Avenue stations were lengthened to 615 feet to accommodate a ten-car train of 60-foot IND cars, or a nine-car train of 67-foot BMT cars. At the time, work continued on the platform extensions for Avenue H, Avenue J, Avenue M, Kings Highway, Avenue U, Neck Road, Brighton Beach, Ocean Parkway, West 8th Street and Stillwell Avenue.[5]
Brighton Line Station Reconstruction Project
On December 8, 2008, the first phase of the Brighton Line Station Reconstruction Project began. The Coney Island-bound platforms of Avenue U and Neck Road were closed for rebuilding and all southbound trains ran on the express track from Kings Highway to Sheepshead Bay.
On September 14, 2009, the second phase of the project involving all stations between Kings Highway and Newkirk Plaza began, requiring all trains to run local until Fall 2011.[6] Over the next two weeks, temporary platforms were placed on the Manhattan-bound express track at Kings Highway and Avenue J for southbound service. On September 28, the southbound platforms of Avenue H, Avenue J, Avenue M, and Kings Highway began rebuilding. South of Cortelyou Road, a single crossover connected the southbound local track with the express one and all southbound trains skipped Avenue H and Avenue M.
On January 18, 2010, Coney Island-bound service was restored at Avenue U and Neck Road. The Manhattan-bound platforms were closed for rebuilding until October 25 and all northbound trains operated on the express track from Sheepshead Bay to Kings Highway.
On September 13, Coney Island-bound service to Avenue H and Avenue M was restored and the two southbound tracks south of Cortelyou Road were separated. Over the next two weeks, the temporary platforms at Avenue J and Kings Highway were moved to the southbound express track and the two northbound tracks were connected to each other north of Newkirk Plaza. On September 27, the Manhattan-bound platforms of those three stations as well as Avenues H and M, which are now being bypassed, began rehabilitation and all northbound service is on the express track until Cortelyou Road. The platforms of all stations reopened on September 12, 2011 and B express service was restored on October 3. However, rehabilitation work that did not affect service continued until the end of the year.
Service patterns
Service | Section of line | ||
---|---|---|---|
Weekdays | Weekends | ||
B | express | no service | north of Brighton Beach |
Q | local | entire line |
Since 1920, the primary service on the line has been through to Manhattan rather than over the tracks now used by the Franklin Avenue Shuttle. Local service has run all the time, while express service has generally been provided during weekday rush hours and later middays. Until the 1960s, all service on the line north of Prospect Park was labeled 1.
Standard local service ran through the Montague Street Tunnel and along the BMT Broadway Line local tracks; service instead crossed the Manhattan Bridge north tracks and ran express under Broadway during Broadway theatre hours (7:30 pm to midnight). Over the years, the local bridge service was expanded, and the local tunnel service ended up only from 6 am to 7 pm. Express service over the bridge to the Broadway express tracks, initially during rush hours, was also expanded to 6 am to 7 pm. The three patterns were assigned latter designations in the early 1960s: Q express via bridge, QT local via tunnel, and QB local via bridge.
The Chrystie Street Connection opened in late 1967, and almost all Brighton Line trains were removed from Broadway. The Q and QB were both combined with the D on the IND Sixth Avenue Line, running express during the day and local at other times. The daytime QT local was combined with the J and JJ to form the QJ, running through the tunnel to the BMT Nassau Street Line. The only Brighton-Broadway service was a new QB, running in the peak direction at rush hours on the local Brighton and express Broadway tracks. (The two QB services were distinct; the old QB had run at non-peak times; this new QB had the same name and almost the same route but was a different service.)
The QJ's Brighton section was replaced with an extension of the M in 1973, but no other major changes were made until 1986, when reconstruction of the Manhattan Bridge subway tracks began. Though the same general service patterns remained on the Brighton Line, all trains were sent over the bridge and onto the Broadway or Sixth Avenue Line, depending on which set of tracks was open. From 1986 to 1988, the south side (Broadway) was in service, and the D continued to serve the line at all times, while the M was rerouted away from the Brighton Line, replaced by a greatly increased daytime Q service that absorbed the old QB as part of a 1985 elimination of double letters. For two years, the D and Q provided skip-stop service on the four-track portion of the Brighton Line during the daytime on weekdays.
Bridge trains ran over the north side (Sixth Avenue) from 1988 to 2001; at this time, the skip-stop pattern was eliminated, and the D became a full-time local service, while the Q ran express during the day. The 2001 shifting of trains back to the south side (Broadway) led to the D only running north of Midtown Manhattan; the Brighton express portion of the Q became the diamond <Q>. When both sides of the bridge were finally reopened in 2004, the <Q> became an extension of the B rather than of the D; the B was already running only during the day, and s this change allowed the Q to remain a full-time local service. This Brighton-Broadway combination was made permanent, rather than a return to the pre-1986 patterns where most Brighton Line trains ran along Nassau Street or Sixth Avenue, because Brighton Line residents preferred Broadway service, and West End Line residents from Chinatowns in Brooklyn wanted full-time access to Grand Street, on the Sixth Avenue Line in the Manhattan Chinatown. The restored Brooklyn B service was moved to the Brighton Line instead of returning to the West End Line on which it had run since 1967, except for periods of construction rerouting, in order to avoid running two separate shortened services (the B and D) outside weekday hours. The plan was for the B to run only on weekdays on its Bronx segment, while the restored service on the Brighton Line (formerly the D) was to run only on weekdays on its Brooklyn segment. Thus, moving the B to the Brighton Line meant it would only need to be operated on weekdays, while the D could now provide 24-hour service to both the Concourse Line in the Bronx and the West End Line in Brooklyn. This eliminated the need to run late-night and/or weekend shuttles on either the Concourse Line or the West End Line.[7]
Description
The modern-day line shows a mix of its various re-buildings. The 1920 subway portion from the DeKalb Avenue connection to the Fourth Avenue subway is a typical New York City subway tunnel of the Dual Contracts era.
Fulton Street to Prospect Park
At Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street, where the BMT Fulton Street Line elevated railway had given way to the IND Fulton Street Line subway, a large station is present with modern conveniences, elevators and escalators, providing an easier transfer between the shuttle and the IND line. From that station, most of the original steelwork from elevated days has been removed and replaced with heavier construction. The line runs on a single track from Franklin/Fulton to another new station at Park Place. Though this portion of the line uses much of the reinforced viaduct from 1903-1905, it is virtually new as of 1999. After Park Place, the line broadens from one to two tracks and the right-of-way transforms from 1999 reconstruction to near-original 1878 right-of-way, including the original railroad-style tunnel under Eastern Parkway, at the south end of which is the rehabilitated Botanic Garden station of 1928. From Botanic Garden, the line continues on original 1878 roadbed to its connection with the main part of the Brighton Beach Line at Prospect Park. Before entering Prospect Park, most trains switch to the northbound track to enter the station, where the shuttle terminates.[8]
Prospect Park to Church Avenue
Though this part of the route is on the alignment of the 1878 open cut, it was rebuilt in 1918 to 1920 to a four track line with an express station at Prospect Park, a local station at Parkside Avenue (replacing the original station at Woodruff Avenue) and another express station at Church Avenue.
The construction features of the portion of the line resemble those of the BMT Sea Beach Line, which reopened as an open-cut line in 1915. Both lines feature slightly sloped and capped reinforced concrete walls and subway-like tunnels underneath cross-streets.
From this point, the Brighton Line is a four-track line for the remainder of its route. Currently, the B and Q trains come off Flatbush Avenue to join the line at Prospect Park; the B uses the central tracks and runs to Brighton Beach, serving express stations, while the Q provides local service on the outer tracks to the end of the line at Coney Island – Stillwell Avenue.[8]
Church Avenue to Avenue H
This part of the line is a result of the BGCEC rebuilding program of 1903–1907. Just south of the tunnel which carries the line under Church Avenue, the construction of the cut wall visibly changes. The subway-like street crossings of the former section give way to steel trestles for the streets, giving the line a more open appearance. Cottage-style station houses are suspended over the line at local stations at Beverley and Cortelyou Roads, and at the express station at Newkirk Plaza. Past Newkirk Plaza the line continues in an open cut, then begins to rise to street level at the north end of Avenue H station.[8]
Avenue H to Sheepshead Bay
The station house at Avenue H is unique. Placed at the east side of the tracks, it is a wooden structure built in 1905 and originally housed a real estate office for the sale of homes in the new Fiske Terrace community surrounding the station.. The building was threatened with demolition as part of an upgrading of stations along the line, but the community intervened and, on June 29, 2004, the station house was designated a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.
The line now runs on an earthen embankment with local stations at Avenue H, Avenue J and Avenue M, an express station at Kings Highway, local stops at Avenue U and (Gravesend) Neck Road, and an express station at Sheepshead Bay (formerly Shore Road).[8] All of the station houses for these stops are located beneath the tracks at street level.
Sheepshead Bay to Brighton Beach
The line continues south on the 1907 embankment to a bridge over Neptune Avenue. At this point the BGCEC roadbed ends, and the line used to descend to the surface on two single track concrete and steel ramps to operate on the surface to Brighton Beach. As part of the 1918–1920 Dual Contracts work, all four tracks now continue on a steel elevated structure to the junction of Coney Island and Brighton Beach Avenues, where the line turns west onto Brighton Beach Avenue and enters the Brighton Beach station.
Brighton Beach to Coney Island
On May 30, 1919, Brighton Beach Line service was extended west to the area once known as West Brighton, now the heart of what is left of the entertainment area of Coney Island, where it occupied part of New West End Terminal, better known as the Stillwell Avenue Terminal, the structure which serves as a union terminal for the four subway lines that run to Coney Island.
On September 8, 2002 Brighton passenger service was suspended west of Brighton Beach due to the complete rebuilding of the Coney Island – Stillwell Avenue terminal station, which had deteriorated due to the effects of salt water corrosion and deferred maintenance. On May 23, 2004, one week short of the 85th anniversary of the Brighton Beach Line's original entry into Stillwell Avenue terminal, service resumed between Brighton Beach and the terminal.
Travelling west from Brighton Beach station, the line operates on an unusual six track elevated structure over Brighton Beach Avenue, the former right-of-way of the Sea View Railway which originally provided service west of Brighton Beach. Only the outer two tracks are currently used for revenue service Q trains, the inner four are layup tracks.[8]
Two of the yard tracks end before Ocean Parkway station, after which the four remaining tracks merge into two to climb up and over two more tracks of the IND Culver Line (F train), which enter from the north. Both lines then share West Eighth Street – New York Aquarium station, a double-level steel structure with two tracks on each level. The Brighton trains occupy the upper level and the Culver Line trains the lower.[8]
Both lines then enter the 8-track Stillwell Avenue terminal (renovated in 2004), where the Brighton trains occupy tracks 3 and 4.[8]
Chaining information
The entire main line of the Brighton Line (excluding the Franklin Avenue Shuttle) is "chained" BMT A. This has no relation to the letters assigned to the services on the Brighton Line, which are B for the weekday Sixth Avenue service and Q for the full-time Broadway service.[8]
Chaining zero is BMT Southern, located just north of the 57th Street – Seventh Avenue station of the BMT Broadway Line via the Manhattan Bridge. The Brighton Line picks up this chaining south of DeKalb Avenue station.[8]
Railroad north is toward Manhattan, generally corresponding to compass north-northwest.[8]
Brighton Beach terminal's BMT telegraphy call letters were BC and in the past the entire Brighton Line had been referred to by the letters BC as a shorthand notation in internal documents. This has gradually diminished and is now uncommon.
Tracks on the Brighton Line are numbered as follows:[8]
- Odd numbered tracks are away from Manhattan (southbound)
- Even numbered tracks are toward Manhattan (northbound)
- Tracks 1 and 2 are usually local (outside tracks, shown in Roman type)
- Tracks 3 and 4 are usually express (inside tracks, shown in bold type)
- Non-revenue tracks are shown in italic type
From | To | Track arrangement | Line orientation | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
DeKalb Avenue | Prospect Park | A3-A4 | NNW | no local tracks |
Prospect Park | Brighton Beach | A1-A3-A4-A2 | NNW | local tracks for Franklin Avenue Line in Prospect Park station only |
Brighton Beach | Ocean Parkway | A1-A5-A3-A4-A6-A2 | WSW | A3-A4 were originally express tracks; A5-A6 are layup tracks |
Ocean Parkway | West Eighth Street – New York Aquarium (upper level) | A3-A4 | WSW | |
Ocean Parkway | West Eighth Street – New York Aquarium (lower level) | A1-A2 | WSW | abandoned 1954; trackbeds only |
West Eighth Street – New York Aquarium (upper level) | Coney Island – Stillwell Avenue (C-D tracks) | A3-A4 | WSW | All Brighton line trains |
West Eighth Street – New York Aquarium (lower level) | Coney Island – Stillwell Avenue (E-F tracks) | A1-A2 | WSW | now used by IND Culver Line (F) trains only |
Station listing
Station service legend | |
---|---|
Stops all times | |
Stops all times except late nights | |
Stops late nights only | |
Stops weekdays during the day | |
Stops rush hours 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 |
Neighborhood (approximate) |
Station | Tracks | Services | Opened | Transfers and notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Begins as a merge of the Montague Street Tunnel[Note 1] (N R W ), BMT Broadway Line express tracks via the Manhattan Bridge (N Q ), and IND Sixth Avenue Line express tracks via the Manhattan Bridge (B D ). | ||||||
Downtown Brooklyn | DeKalb Avenue | bridge, tunnel | B D N Q R W | August 1, 1920[3] | 6 tracks; tunnel tracks and one set of bridge tracks stop at station; the other set of bridge tracks bypass through the middle towards Fourth Avenue Express. North end of the rerouting of the line from Franklin Avenue to Flatbush Avenue (except for the ramp up to the Manhattan Bridge). | |
split with the BMT Fourth Avenue Line (D N R W ) | ||||||
Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center | all | B Q | August 1, 1920[1][3] | 2 3 4 5 (IRT Eastern Parkway Line) D N R W (BMT Fourth Avenue Line) Connection to LIRR at Atlantic Terminal | ||
Park Slope | Seventh Avenue | all | B Q | August 1, 1920[1][3] | ||
Flatbush | Prospect Park | all | B Q | July 2, 1878[9] | S (BMT Franklin Avenue Line). This stop is at the border between the 1920 expansion and the original 1878 open cut. Before the 1920 expansion, the Brighton line north of this station followed the Franklin Avenue route. | |
Two Center Express tracks begin (B ) | ||||||
Parkside Avenue | local | Q | by 1895[citation needed] | |||
Church Avenue | all | B Q | July 2, 1878[9] | Originally called Flatbush station, or sometimes Church lane, Flatbush.[9] | ||
Beverley Road | local | Q | by 1899[citation needed] | |||
Cortelyou Road | local | Q | by 1902[citation needed] | Formerly known as Avenue C.[1] | ||
Newkirk Plaza | all | B Q | July 2, 1878[9] | Last station of the open cut. Ramp rises to grade south of the station. Originally known as Parkville station.[9] | ||
Midwood | [Note 2] | Avenue H | local | Q | 1896 or 1897[10][11] | Station house is landmarked and has unique architecture, but is not the original station house, and sits on the other side of the tracks from the original station house location. Grade level station, with pedestrian street (non-fare) crossing running in a tunnel underneath the tracks.. Ramp rises onto embankment just south of this station. |
Avenue J | local | Q | August 23, 1907[citation needed] | First station fully on embankment, and sits partially on trestle running above the street. | ||
Avenue M | local | Q | 1878[12][13][14] | Originally known as South Greenfield station, and later Elm Avenue station.[1] | ||
Kings Highway | all | B Q | July 2, 1878[9] | Originally described as at Kings Highway, near the Prospect Park Fair Grounds.[9] | ||
Homecrest | Avenue U | local | Q | by 1898[citation needed] | Originally known as Gravesend station. | |
Neck Road | local | Q | July or August 1878[15] | Remnants are still visible of the LIRR Manhattan Beach line station that was built together with the Brighton line station along the same embankment. The most obvious remnant is a staircase, now sealed, leading up from the street to where the LIRR station platform used to be. | ||
Sheepshead Bay | Sheepshead Bay | all | B Q | July 2, 1878[9] | Originally described as at Coney Island Creek, Sheepshead Bay. | |
Brighton Beach | Brighton Beach | all | B Q | July 2, 1878[9] | South Terminal for B . Originally serviced the Brighton Beach Hotel at this location. | |
Express tracks continue (No Regular Service) | ||||||
Ocean Parkway | all | Q | April 22, 1917 | |||
Local tracks merge into Express tracks (Local tracks used ramp to lower level of West Eighth Street prior to 1954) | ||||||
Coney Island | West Eighth Street–New York Aquarium | all | Q | May 19, 1919 | F <F> (IND Culver Line). Brighton tracks are on the second stack of the station. | |
Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue | all | Q | May 29, 1919 | Terminal.
D (BMT West End Line) |
- ^ No regular service is operated from the Montague Street Tunnel to the Brighton Line.
- ^ Avenue H provides wheelchair access only to the southbound platform.
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f District, New York (State) Public Service Commission First (January 1, 1921). Annual Report for the Year Ended ... The Commission.
- ^ a b Cudahy, Brian J. (January 1, 1999). The Malbone Street Wreck. Fordham Univ Press. ISBN 9780823219322.
- ^ a b c d "New Subways Add Seven More Miles to BRT on Aug 1". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. July 25, 1920. Retrieved August 19, 2016 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ Wilson, Michael (July 24, 2008), "In Brooklyn, It's the Little Train That Can", New York Times, ISSN 0362-4331, retrieved July 27, 2008
- ^ Annual Report 1964–1965. New York City Transit Authority. 1965.
- ^ "MTA - Press Release - NYC Transit - Temporary Loss of Brighton Line Express". mta.info.
- ^ "A Subway Map Remade, in Hopes of Matching Routes and Riders". The New York Times. February 20, 2004. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Dougherty, Peter (2006) [2002]. Tracks of the New York City Subway 2006 (3rd ed.). Dougherty. OCLC 49777633 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Template:Cite BDE
- ^ Template:Cite BDE
- ^ Template:Cite BDE
- ^ "The Little Station in the Woods".
- ^ Seymour, Jr. (State Engineer & Surveyor), Horatio (1879). Annual Report on the Railroads of New York (1878). Albany, NY: New York State / Charles van Benthuysen & Sons. p. 58.
July 11 About half past nine in the evening John Galagher was struck by engine No 4 train No 101 going south at Greenfield and was instantly killed He was standing on the platform when the train approached and when the engine was within fifty feet of him he stepped on the track in front of the train and was struck and instantly killed He was employed on repairs of track at the time Coroner's jury exonerated the company from any blame in the matter
- ^ Template:Cite BDE
- ^ Template:Cite BDE
External links
- nycsubway.org – BMT Brighton Line: