IRT Flushing Line
The 7 and 7 Express trains serve the entire IRT Flushing Line at all times
Overview
Type
Rapid transit
System
New York City Subway
Termini
Flushing Main Street
Times Square
Stations
21
Operation
Opened
1915-1928
Owner
City of New York
Operator(s)
New York City Transit Authority
Character
Underground(Manhattan Western Queens and Main Street)
Elevated(Most of Queens)
Technical
No. of tracks
2-5
Track gauge
4 ft 8 12 in (1435 mm)
Electrification
600V DC third rail
v d eIRT Flushing Line
Legend
LIRR Port Washington Branch
Flushing Main Street / LIRR at Flushing Main Street
Former LIRR Whitestone Branch
Mets Willets Point / LIRR at MetsWillets Point
LIRR Port Washington Branch
Approach to Corona Yard
111th Street
103rd Street Corona Plaza
Junction Boulevard
90th Street Elmhurst Avenue
82nd Street Jackson Heights
74th Street Broadway
IND Queens Boulevard Line
69th Street
Woodside 61st Street
LIRR at Woodside
52nd Street
46th Street Bliss Street
40th Street Lowery Street
33rd Street Rawson Street
LIRR Main Line
IND Queens Boulevard Line
Queensboro Plaza / BMT Astoria Line
60th Street Tunnel Connection to BMT Broadway Line
former connection to the IRT Second Avenue Line
Court Square 23rd Street / IND Queens Boulevard Line
Court Square
Court Square / IND Crosstown Line
Former Inspection Track (19171928)
Hunters Point Avenue
IND Crosstown Line
Vernon Boulevard Jackson Avenue
Steinway Tunnel
Grand Central / IRT Lexington Avenue Line
Fifth Avenue Bryant Park
IND Sixth Avenue Line
BMT Broadway Line
Times Square / IRT Broadway Seventh Avenue Line
IND Eighth Avenue Line
Tenth Avenue (proposed; not funded)
34th Street 11th Avenue (under construction)
IRT Corona/Flushing Line
The line reached Main St, Flushing, on January 21st, 1928. ... The Flushing Line became the responsibility of the IRT, and the Astoria Line had its platforms shaved back, ...
The line reached Main St, Flushing, on January 21st, 1928. ... The Flushing Line became the responsibility of the IRT, and the Astoria Line had its platforms shaved back, ...
The Flushing Line is a rapid transit route of the New York City Subway system operated as part of the IRT Division and designated the 7 route. It runs from Flushing in Queens to Times Square in Manhattan carrying trains of the 7 local service (as well as the express <7> rush hours in the peak direction) and is shown in the color purple on station signs the NYC Subway Map and route signs on the front and sides of the subway cars. Before the line was opened all the way to Flushing it was known as the Corona Line or Woodside and Corona Line. Prior to the discontinuance of BMT services in 1949 the portion of the IRT Flushing Line between Times Square and Queensboro Plaza was known as the Queensboro Line. Express trains run to Manhattan from 06:00 am to 10:00 am (6:00 to 10:00 ET ) and from Manhattan from 3:00 pm to 9:30 pm (15:00 to 21:30 ET). Express service is also provided during New York Mets games and U.S. Open matches.
Contents
1 Diverse ridership and national recognition
2 Extent and service
3 History
3.1 Queensboro Plaza and beyond
3.2 Rolling stock on the line for World's Fairs
3.3 Service curtailments in the 1940s & 50s
4 Future extension in Manhattan
5 Station listing
6 External links
7 References
Diverse ridership and national recognition
screeching around the tight IRT Interboro Rapid Transit tunnel curves I know I m there as much as I ever could be without actually being there And that s the joy of train simming The Flushing Line was the first of many enjoyable routes I ve explored in BVE 2 Since it was one of the first made in the west right after the sim was discovered here it suffers from
http://www.vscaler.com/viewfromcab.html
Irt Flushing Line
Irt Flushing Line on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and ...
Irt Flushing Line on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and ...
The 8 mile (12.9 km) line runs through some of the most ethnically diverse areas in the world. The terminus of the 7 service in the large Chinatown and Koreatown neighborhoods of Flushing Queens has at one time earned the nickname of being called the Orient Express after the famed Paris-Istanbul train. It is now nicknamed the "International Express" because of the diversity of the population of the communities it serves. It is also famous for being the official train of the New York Mets and the US Open (tennis) as both are located at Mets Willets Point station which serves Citi Field Louis Armstrong Stadium and Arthur Ashe Stadium in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park. The line also serves Little India in the neighborhood of Jackson Heights and the P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in Long Island City.
Flushing – Main Street (IRT Flushing Line) - Wikipedia, the ...
Flushing – Main Street is the northern terminal station on the IRT Flushing Line of the ... platforms are the offices and dispatch tower for the Flushing Line. ...
Flushing – Main Street is the northern terminal station on the IRT Flushing Line of the ... platforms are the offices and dispatch tower for the Flushing Line. ...
In 1999 the Flushing Line was designated a National Millennium Trail (along with the Appalachian Trail and 14 others) by a joint program of the White House Millennium Council the United States Department of Transportation and the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy. It was chosen as a representative of the immigrant experience and because the approximate path of the Flushing Line has been in continuous use as a transportation route since the 17th century.
IRT Flushing Line
Services that use the IRT Flushing Line through midtown have been ... The Flushing Line is a Rapid transit line of the New York City Subway system, operated as ...
Services that use the IRT Flushing Line through midtown have been ... The Flushing Line is a Rapid transit line of the New York City Subway system, operated as ...
Also in 1999 Atlanta Braves baseball pitcher John Rocker was quoted by Sports Illustrated to have said:
It's New York City the most hectic nerve-racking city. Imagine having to take the 7 train to the ballpark looking like you're riding through Beirut next to some kid with purple hair next to some queer with AIDS right next to some dude who just got out of jail for the fourth time right next to some twenty-year-old mom with four kids. It's depressing."
IRT Flushing Line: Grand Central
Transfer here to: IRT East Side Line, IRT Times Square-Grand Central Shuttle ... Flushing line overview and more completely in a 1960 Electric Railroaders' Association ...
Transfer here to: IRT East Side Line, IRT Times Square-Grand Central Shuttle ... Flushing line overview and more completely in a 1960 Electric Railroaders' Association ...
When it became clear that Rocker was serious New York Mets fans and fans nationwide booed Rocker consistently.citation needed
Category:IRT Flushing Line - Wikimedia Commons
Media in category "IRT Flushing Line" The following 14 files are in this category, out of ... Categories: Interborough Rapid Transit Company | New York City Subway lines ...
Media in category "IRT Flushing Line" The following 14 files are in this category, out of ... Categories: Interborough Rapid Transit Company | New York City Subway lines ...
The Flushing Line has various styles of architecture which range from steel girder elevated structures to European-style concrete viaducts. The underground stations have some unique designs as well such as Hunters Point Avenue which is in an Italianate style and Grand Central 42nd Street which is a single round tube similar to a London Underground station.
Extent and service
Queens Boulevard viaduct
IRT Flushing Line Stations
Mets – Willets Point (Irt Flushing Line) Mets – Willets Point (formerly Willets Point – Shea Stadium) is an express station on the IRT Flushing ...
Mets – Willets Point (Irt Flushing Line) Mets – Willets Point (formerly Willets Point – Shea Stadium) is an express station on the IRT Flushing ...
The line has two distinct sections split by the Queensboro Plaza station. It begins as a three-track subway with the center track used for express service at Flushing Main Street. It quickly leaves the ground onto a steel elevated structure above Roosevelt Avenue passing Citi Field and the USTA National Tennis Center. A flying junction between Mets Willets Point and 111th Street provides access to Corona Yard from the local tracks. At 48th Street in Sunnyside the line switches to Queens Boulevard and an ornate concrete viaduct begins. The express track ends between 33rd Street Rawson Street and Queensboro Plaza.
IRT Flushing Line — My Permanent Record
Here's a photo I took at the Grand Central Station on the #7 Flushing Line. ... For some unknown reason, I thought the IRT #1 train would be the closest (it wasn't). I ...
Here's a photo I took at the Grand Central Station on the #7 Flushing Line. ... For some unknown reason, I thought the IRT #1 train would be the closest (it wasn't). I ...
At Queensboro Plaza the eastbound track (railroad north) is above the westbound track with both Flushing Line tracks on the south side of the island platforms. On the north side of these platforms is the BMT Astoria Line. East of this point both the Flushing Line and the Astoria Line were operated by the IRT and the BMT; details on that dual operation are in the Background section. Connections still exist between the eastbound tracks just east of the platforms but they cannot be used for revenue service because BMT trains are wider than IRT trains. This is the only track connection between the Flushing Line and the rest of the subway system.
IRT Flushing Line stations
more on Wikipedia about "103rd Street-Corona Plaza (IRT Flushing Line station) ... more on Wikipedia about "111th Street (IRT Flushing Line station) ...
more on Wikipedia about "103rd Street-Corona Plaza (IRT Flushing Line station) ... more on Wikipedia about "111th Street (IRT Flushing Line station) ...
West of Queensboro Plaza the line immediately turns south onto an elevated structure over 23rd Street. It heads into the west end of Amtrak's Sunnyside Yard and passes through two underground stations before entering Manhattan via the Steinway Tunnel under the East River. In Manhattan the line runs under 42nd Street with part directly underneath the 42nd Street Shuttle (S train) before angling towards 41st Street and ending at the huge Times Square 42nd Street station with no track connections to other lines.
Plans are underway to extend the Flushing Line west to Manhattan's Far West Side. A decommissioned lower level at the IND Eighth Avenue Line's 42nd Street Port Authority Bus Terminal station formerly blocked the way; it had been rumored that the IND built it to keep the IRT from extending the Flushing Line although all initial blueprints indicate that the IRT never planned such an expansion. While some have questioned the necessity of the plan with London receiving the 2012 Summer Olympics as of September 2009 the plan is still going forward.
The Flushing Line is one of only two New York City non-shuttle subway lines that hosts only a single service and does not share operating trackage with any other line or service; the other is the BMT Canarsie Line carrying the L service. Because of this there are plans to automate the line with new trains using CBTC similar to the Canarsie Line.
The IRT Flushing Line has the distinction of running the longest trains on the New York subway by number of cars. Flushing Line trains are 11 cars long; most other New York City subway services run 10-car or 8-car trains. The trains are not the longest by total length however as an IND/BMT 10-car train is still 39 feet (12 m) longer than an 11-car IRT train. Having 11 cars also gives it the distinction of running an odd number of cars which other train services do not.
History
Train of R36 "Redbird" cars at 33rd Street Rawson Street northbound; prior to their retirement
Even though subway service started in 1915 construction on the portion of the line that ran under the East River was originally started by the East River Tunnel Railroad on February 25 1885. The original intent of the line was to connect the Long Island Rail Road with the New York Central Railroad one end of the tunnel being at the terminal of each railroad. Other than an engineering survey of the East River at the tunnel site nothing else was done and in 1887 the company reorganized as the New York and Long Island Railroad. The tunnel was planned to run from approximately 42nd Street and Tenth Avenue under 42nd Street then under the East River to Van Alst (now 21st) Avenue. The rest of the line in Queens would be on private right-of-way and various mappings were planned and revised for this section of route.
Various problems occurred and caused extensive delays and cost overruns. William Steinway founder of Steinway & Sons became involved in 1890 and the tunnel was popularly known as the Steinway Tunnel. He felt that controlling operations of the tunnel company would boost the value of his real estate and envisioned operating the tunnels using electricity. On June 3 1892 groundbreaking occurred at 50th Avenue between Vernon and Jackson Avenues in Queens. However a series of mishaps such as an underground water spring that hampered debris removal followed by lawsuits by property owners along the line forced the company to board up the tunnel on February 2 1893. Various attempts to restart the project between 1893 and 1896 (when Steinway died) and proposals to extend the line into New Jersey all failed.
In February 1902 August Belmont Jr. became interested in the project which became known as the Belmont Tunnel although Belmont preferred the project be known as the Steinway Tunnel. By May 16 1907 the north (westbound) tube was broken through and the south tunnel was broken through on August 7 of the same year. The landfill from the tunnel excavations had been used to construct nearby Belmont Island later called U Thant Island on an existing outcrop in the East River.
46th Street Bliss Street station in Queens with train arriving
Because the Pennsylvania Railroad planned to build a very large station at 32nd and 33rd Streets on the West Side and also planned to tunnel under the Hudson and East Rivers the motive power for the tunnels was changed to interurban trolley cars. However because of the low clearance of the tunnels typical trolley wire could not be used; instead overhead third rail was hung from the roof of the tunnel using special brackets. The Van Alst Avenue station was originally on a loop at the end of a 50-foot (15 m) radius curve located near 50th Avenue and Van Alst Avenue. At Grand Central there was another loop located under Park Avenue and 42nd Street. The tunnel officially opened on September 24 for Belmont the Mayor and other officials. However because Belmont did not have a franchise to operate the line or a company to run it (because of litigation with New York City) he was forced to board up the tunnel. From October 23 1907 until 1915 the completed tunnel was idle of traffic.
On April 3 1913 the City of New York purchased the tunnels from Belmont as part of the Dual Contracts for $3 million and the tunnels were placed under IRT operation. With minor modifications the tunnel could accommodate subway trains. Because of the steep grade of the tunnels special "Steinway" cars were built to run on the line. With the conversion to rapid transit the loops on both ends of the Steinway tunnels were abandoned. No vestiges of the Queens loop remain today as the Hunters Point Avenue station occupies the site. Remnants of the Manhattan loop still exist but are occupied by machinery and not accessible by passengers. The Manhattan loop is just west of the current Grand Central station. IRT "Steinway" cars made the first test trip on June 13 1915. Regularly scheduled subway service began on the line then known as the Queensboro Tunnel from Grand Central to Vernon Boulevard Jackson Avenue at noon on June 22 1915.
Extensions soon opened east to Hunters Point Avenue on February 15 1916 and further east to Queensboro Plaza on November 5 1916.
Queensboro Plaza and beyond
At Queensboro Plaza the line met the BMT's 60th Street Tunnel as well as a spur from the elevated IRT Second Avenue Line on the Queensboro Bridge. From this point east the Flushing and Astoria Lines were built by the City of New York as part of the Dual Contracts. They were officially IRT lines on which the BMT held irrevocable and equal trackage rights. Because BMT trains were wider and the platforms had been built for the IRT normal BMT trains ran only to Queensboro Plaza with a transfer to shuttles using elevated cars that alternated between the Astoria Ditmars Boulevard and Flushing Main Street terminals. IRT trains simply continued from the Queensboro Line and Queensboro Bridge onto the lines to Astoria and Flushing originally called the Corona Line or Woodside and Corona Line before it was completed to Flushing.
The line was opened from Queensboro Plaza to 103rd Street Corona Plaza on April 21 1917. BMT shuttles began to use the line (and the BMT Astoria Line) on April 8 1923. East of there sources conflict on when each section opened. A New York Times article from May 8 reports that service began on May 7 to what is now the MetsWillets Point station and mentions delays due to the structure sinking. Articles from May 13 and May 15 cover a celebration to coincide with the opening to the Willets Point stop on May 14. Finally a January 22 1928 article reports that the line had ended at 103rd StreetCorona Plaza until January 21; the extension had been finished over a year earlier but had to be strengthened due to structural problems.
Flushing Main Street was not originally intended to be the end of the line. The Public Service Commission in June 1913 was actively engaged in considering extensions of the line beyond Flushing but these extensions later planned as part of a large system expansion were never built.
Currently and historically IRT subway services on the Flushing Line were assigned the number 7 though this did not appear on any equipment until the introduction of the R12 class cars in 1948. The BMT services were assigned the BMT number 9 used on maps but not trains.
Western extensions were also built with part underneath the 42nd Street Shuttle:
Grand Central to Fifth Avenue Bryant Park on March 22 1926
west to Times Square on March 14 1927
For the 1939 New York World's Fair the Mets Willets Point station was rebuilt and centered on 123rd Street just west of where the station originally lay. Some remnants of the old station are still visible; ironwork tends to indicate where the older outside-platform stations were and the remains of the fare entry area can be seen east of the current station. The original Willets Point Boulevard station was a "minor" stop on the Flushing Line; it had only two stairways and short station canopies at platform level. It was rebuilt into the much larger station in use today and the ramp used during two World's Fairs still exists but is only used during special events such as the US Open (tennis). Express service to the World's Fair began on the Flushing Line on April 24 1939. This was the first time the middle express track had been used for revenue service; prior to the fair the express track had only been used for non-revenue moves and re-routes during construction.
Rolling stock on the line for World's Fairs
In 1938 an order of all-new World's Fair cars was placed with the St. Louis Car Company. These cars broke from IRT "tradition" in that they did not have vestibules at each car end. In addition because the IRT was bankrupt at the time the cars were built as single ended cars with train controls for the motorman on one side and door controls for the conductor on the other. These cars spent their last days on the elevated IRT Third Avenue Line in The Bronx.
Not to be outdone the BMT rebuilt 90 open gate cars into closed-end cars that became known as the Q Types (named because they operated in Queens). The Q Types were built as three car sets and only the cars at the ends were fitted with traction motors and motorman controls. For the World's Fair the equipment was repainted in the now famous blue and orange the World's Fair colors. In 1949 nine years after the closing of the Fair the BMT Q Types were moved to the elevated IRT Third Avenue Line in Manhattan using old IRT Composite car trucks and ran only as expresses because their weight was a bit too high for the older local tracks. Therefore the last BMT-designed car ran on the last IRT elevated in Manhattan. Like BMT Q-types replacing the older gate cars that rode on the line for the opening of the 1939 New York World's Fair the procedure would be repeated again when in 1964 the picture window R36 World's Fair cars replaced the older R15's for the 1964 New York World's Fair.
Service curtailments in the 1940s & 50s
In 1942 when IRT Second Avenue Line service ended major overhauls for the Corona fleet were transferred to the Coney Island shop. In addition free transfers to the IRT Third Avenue Line were offered at Grand Central from June 13 1942 (when Second Avenue Line service ended including the Queensboro Bridge connection) until May 12 1955 (when Third Avenue Line service ended). In the fall of 1949 the joint BMT/IRT service arrangement ended. The Flushing Line became the responsibility of IRT. The Astoria Line had its platforms shaved back and became BMT-only. Because of this routes through the then eight-track Queensboro Plaza station were consolidated and the northern half of the structure was later torn down. Evidence of where the torn-down platforms were as well as the trackways that approached this area can still be seen in the ironwork at the station. The Flushing Line's extra-long platforms which allow for 11-car operation are also a remnant of the joint service period.
R33/R36 World's Fair cars served the Flushing Line exclusively 19642002. Most have been scrapped and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean as artificial barrier and coral reefs. On November 3 2003 the last Redbird train made its final scheduled trip on this line making all stops between Times Square and Willets Point Shea Stadium (now known as Mets Willets Point). Replacing these cars on this line are the Bombardier built R62A series.
Future extension in Manhattan
Main article: 7 Subway Extension
The IRT Flushing Line is being extended westward and southward in Manhattan with an expected completion date of 2013.1 There will be only one new station at 34th Street and Eleventh Avenue to serve Jacob Javits Convention Center. Funding is in place and construction began in late 2007.
Station listing
Station service legend
Stops all times
Stops all times except late nights
Stops late nights and weekends only
Stops weekdays only
Stops rush hours in the peak direction only
Time period details
Station
Tracks
Services
Opened
Transfers and notes
Begins as a three track line
Flushing Main Street
all
7 <7>
January 21 1928
Connection to LIRR at Flushing Main Street
originally Main Street
Mets Willets Point
all
7 <7>
January 21 1928
Connection to LIRR at MetsWillets Point
formerly Willets PointShea Stadium
originally Willets Point Boulevard
connecting tracks to Corona Yard
111th Street
local
7
January 21 1928
103rd Street Corona Plaza
local
7
April 21 1917
originally Alburtis Avenue
Junction Boulevard
all
7 <7>
April 21 1917
originally Junction Avenue
90th Street Elmhurst Avenue
local
7
April 21 1917
originally Elmhurst Avenue
82nd Street Jackson Heights
local
7
April 21 1917
originally 25th StreetJackson Heights
74th Street Broadway
local
7
April 21 1917
E F M R (IND Queens Boulevard Line at Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue)
originally Broadway
69th Street
local
7
April 21 1917
originally Fisk Avenue
Woodside 61st Street
all
7 <7>
April 21 1917
originally Woodside
Connection to LIRR at Woodside
52nd Street
local
7
April 21 1917
originally Lincoln Avenue
46th Street Bliss Street
local
7
April 21 1917
originally Bliss Street
40th Street Lowery Street
local
7
April 21 1917
originally Lowery Street
33rd Street Rawson Street
local
7
April 21 1917
originally Rawson Street
Center Express track ends
connecting tracks to BMT Astoria Line (No regular service)
Queensboro Plaza
all
7 <7>
November 5 1916
N Q (BMT Astoria Line)
Court Square
all
7 <7>
November 5 1916
G (IND Crosstown Line)
E M (IND Queens Boulevard Line)
Hunters Point Avenue
all
7 <7>
February 15 1916
originally 49th Avenue
Connection to LIRR at Hunterspoint Avenue
Vernon Boulevard Jackson Avenue
all
7 <7>
June 22 1915
Connection to LIRR at Long Island City
Grand Central
all
7 <7>
June 22 1915
4 5 6 <6> (IRT Lexington Avenue Line)
S (IRT 42nd Street Shuttle)
Connection to Metro-North Railroad at Grand Central Terminal
Fifth Avenue Bryant Park
all
7 <7>
March 22 1926
B D F M (IND Sixth Avenue Line at 42nd Street Bryant Park)
Times Square
all
7 <7>
March 14 1927
N Q R (BMT Broadway Line)
1 2 3 (IRT Broadway Seventh Avenue Line)
A C E (IND Eighth Avenue Line at 42nd Street Port Authority Bus Terminal)
S (IRT 42nd Street Shuttle)
Port Authority Bus Terminal
Tenth Avenue
future station
(current plans are to optionally build a shell at 10th Ave to be finished later)
34th Street 11th Avenue
under construction
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: IRT Flushing Line
NYCsubway.org - IRT Corona/Flushing Line (text used with permission)
Corona Yard-unofficial page dedicated to the 7 Train
Barry Popik on origin of "Orient Express" nickname
BMT and IRT Joint Operation on the Flushing Line
References
http://www.wnyc.org/news/articles/134949
Queensboro Tunnel Officially Opened New York Times June 23 1915 page 22
Subway Extension Open New York Times February 16 1916 page 22
New Subway Link New York Times November 5 1916 page XX4
Transit Service on Corona Extension of Dual Subway System Opened to the Public New York Times April 22 1917 page RE1
Additional Subway Service to Borough of Queens New York Times April 8 1923 page RE1
Fifth Av. Station of Subway Opened New York Times March 23 1926 page 29
New Queens Subway Opened to Times Sq New York Times March 15 1927 page 1
Corona Subway Extended New York Times May 8 1927 page 26
Flushing to Celebrate New York Times May 13 1927 page 8
Dual Queens Celebration New York Times May 15 1927 page 3
Flushing Extension of Corona Subway Ready to Open New York Times January 8 1928 page 189
Flushing Line Opens Jan. 21 New York Times January 12 1928 page 12
Flushing Rejoices as Subway Opens New York Times January 22 1928 page 28
v d eNew York City Subway lines
A
Division
IRT
Manhattan/Queens
42nd Street Broadway 7th Avenue Flushing Lenox Avenue Lexington Avenue
Bronx
Dyre Avenue Jerome Avenue Pelham White Plains Road
Brooklyn
Eastern Parkway New Lots Nostrand Avenue
Former
Original subway 2nd Avenue 3rd Avenue 6th Avenue 9th Avenue
B
Division
BMT
Manhattan/Queens
63rd Street Astoria Broadway Manhattan Bridge Nassau Street
Eastern division
Archer Avenue Canarsie Jamaica Myrtle Avenue
Southern division
4th Avenue Brighton Franklin Avenue Sea Beach West End
Former
3rd Avenue 5th Avenue Brooklyn Bridge Culver East New York Loop Fulton Street Lexington Avenue
IND
Manhattan/Bronx
6th Avenue 8th Avenue Concourse
Brooklyn/Queens
63rd Street Archer Avenue Crosstown Culver Fulton Street Rockaway Queens Boulevard
Future
2nd Avenue
Former
World's Fair
Connections
Purpose-Built
Chrystie Street (BMT/IND) 60th Street (BMT/IND) 63rd Street lines (BMT/IND) Astoria / Flushing lines (BMT/IRT) Coney Island Stillwell Avenue station (BMT/IND)
Yards
207th Street Yard (IND/IRT) Coney Island Complex (BMT/IND) Concourse Yard (IND/IRT) Linden Shops (BMT/IRT/LIRR)
Other
South Brooklyn Railway
Lines with colors next to them are trunk lines; trunk lines determine the color of New York City Subway service bullets. A dark gray color indicates a shuttle.




















