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LEFT: Central Park has many stations in close proximity. The 2, 3, and F run directly under it at some point along their routes. However, there are only three stations that are IN Central Park. This one's at Columbus Circle (under contruction in 2009). RIGHT: 5th Avenue & 59th Street, with a unique pair of entrance lamps.


LEFT: Park entrance, 110th & Central Park West. RIGHT: While the IRT and BMT do have mezzanines, the IND took it to the next level.. lmost all IND stations have mezzanines such as this one at West 4th Street on the A, B, C, D, E, F and V lines. This was done to accommodate more people than was possible on the BMT and IRT.


A unique feature of the 181st Street station on the A is this suspended walkway above the tracks. RIGHT: The #7 Flushing Line is the only line to run 11-car consists, likely because of its heavy traffic.


Two commemorative plaques on the Brooklyn Boro Hall IRT platform serving #4 and #5 trains to celebrate the institution of subway service from Manhattan to Brooklyn in 1908. This station was thoroughly renovated and restored in the early 1980s.





Chandeliers in the subway? If you don't believe it was ever possible, check out the City Hall Station from a downtown 6 train on its turnaround through the City Hall Station before it heads uptown. Only two other stations on the IRT ever had chandeliers. Traces of where they hung them are on the ceiling at the 181st and 168th Stations on the 1. Picture here taken at the 181st Street station. RIGHT: Accommodations for a smaller chandelier is on arc closer to platform level here at 181st Street on the 1.




Two islands located within NYC have one station apiece: Broad Channel (left) and Roosevelt Island (right). Till 1976 a double fare was charged at Broad Channel -- you exited the station by dropping in a token.




LEFT: Due to Manhattan's sharp change in topography in the northrn part of the borough, this tunnel is absolutely necessary. If not for this tunnel, passengering wanting to enter the 191st Street station would have to walk about two blocks downtown, walk up two steep blocks to St. Nicholas Avenue, THEN walk two blocks northward to 191st Street. As one of the subway's longest pedestrian tunnels, it extends from Broadway, crossing under Audubon Avenue then over to St. Nicholas and is very welcomed in the community.
RIGHT: Flatbush Avenue on the 2 and 5 is a very unique station. All other terminal stations in the system have the platform in the center of the two tracks. Here's it's like a standard station on the rest of the Nostrand Avenue line. This was not intended to be a terminal station originally. The IRT had planned to extend its line along Nostrand Avenue to Sheepshead Bay, but budgetary problems nixed that idea.


A substation that earlier escaped FNY's camera exists here at 139th Street between Willis and Alexander Avenue; Mott Haven, the Bronx. This substation serviced the 3rd Avenue el when it crossed the East River to Manhattan. RIGHT: A closeup of the building's plaque.




LEFT: The subway's only direct entrance to a department store. (The 6th Avenue El once opened to the Siegel-Cooper store on 18th Street). This K-Mart was the site of the defunct Wanamaker's department store: Astor Place station on the 6. RIGHT: There aren't too many stations that have part of a building extending into the station. The old telephone company building extendings into the Lawrence Street station on the R and M lines in Downtown Brooklyn. A similar feature can be seen on the staircase on the uptown side at 33rd Street on the 6 line from an old armory.


LEFT: Advertising wasn't in the cards during the planning of the IRT & BMT lines. They were an afterthought, as they were later seen as a source of much needed revenue. The IND planners made accommodations for advertising from the start †by making cutouts in the walls where they could be placed. Sign cutouts like this one can be found throughout the IND System. RIGHT: On the staircase to the St. Lawrence Street station on the 6 line, one sees what may an original feature of this 1920 station.








Touches of Frank Lloyd Wright can be best seen from the inside of the 9th Avenue station. ABOVE RIGHT, LEFT:
It is possible for there to be express service between the Church Avenue and 7th Avenue station on the F line. But there hasn't been regularly scheduled express/local service between the two stations for many years. Hope is high this this service will be reinstituted.

While most express/local tracks are either next to each other as they are on the Broadway line between 96th Street & 42nd Street or are below the local ones as on the Lexington Avenue line between Grand Central and 103rd Street, express service takes a small detour between the two stations - traveling under Prospect Park for some of the distance.
Photos and text by Gary Fonville
Page completed October 4, 2009
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©2009 FNY