155 Street | |
Address: | West 155th Street & St. Nicholas Avenue New York, NY |
Borough: | Manhattan |
Locale: | Washington Heights, Hamilton Heights, Harlem |
Coordinates: | 40.8309°N -73.9414°W |
Division: | IND |
Line: | IND Eighth Avenue Line |
Service: | Eighth north local |
Service Header: | Eighth north local header |
Connection: | NYCT Bus: |
Platforms: | 2 side platforms |
Tracks: | 2 |
Structure: | Underground |
Open Date: | [1] |
The 155th Street station is a local station on the IND Eighth Avenue Line of the New York City Subway. Located under the intersection of 155th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue, at the border of the Harlem and Washington Heights neighborhoods of Manhattan, it is served by the C train at all times except nights, when the A train takes over service.
The station opened on September 10, 1932, as part of the city-operated Independent Subway System (IND)'s initial segment, the Eighth Avenue Line between Chambers Street and 207th Street.[1] [2] Construction of the whole line cost $191.2 million (equivalent to $ million in . While the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line already provided parallel service, the new Eighth Avenue subway via Central Park West and Frederick Douglass Boulevard provided an alternative route.[3]
Ground | Street level | Exit/entrance |
Mezzanine | Fare control, station agent | |
Platform level | Side platform | |
Northbound local | ← toward ← toward late nights (163rd Street–Amsterdam Avenue) | |
Southbound local | toward → toward late nights (145th Street) → | |
Side platform | ||
Lower tracks[4] | Northbound express | ← does not stop here |
Southbound express | does not stop here → |
The station once had a southern mezzanine with exits to 153rd Street, but it is now closed and used as a MTA New York City Transit facility.[5] The north end at 155th Street has vent chambers and a high ceiling.
Like several other IND Eighth Avenue Line local stations, this station does not have a trim line, but does have mosaic name plates reading "155TH ST." in white sans-serif lettering on a yellow background with black border. Small tile captions reading "155" run along the wall at regular intervals between the name tablets, and beneath the name tablets are directional captions, all white lettering on a black background.The trim line was part of a color-coded tile system used throughout the IND.[6] The tile colors were designed to facilitate navigation for travelers going away from Lower Manhattan. As such, the yellow tiles used at the 155th Street station were originally also used at, the next express station to the south, while a different tile color is used at, the next express station to the north. Yellow tiles are similarly used at the 163rd Street–Amsterdam Avenue station, the only other local station between 145th Street and 168th Street.[7] [8]
This station has pairs of staircases leading to the northwestern, northeastern, and southwestern corners of St. Nicholas Avenue and West 155th Street.