Franklin Avenue station (Fulton Street) explained

Franklin Avenue
Type:complex
Accessible:yes
Service:FranklinFulton
Service Header:Franklin-Fulton header
Division:BMT/IND
Line:BMT Franklin Avenue Line
IND Fulton Street Line
Connection: NYCT Bus:
Address:Franklin Avenue & Fulton Street
Brooklyn, NY
Borough:Brooklyn
Locale:Bedford–Stuyvesant
Coordinates:40.6811°N -73.9557°W
Open Date:[1]
Levels:2

The Franklin Avenue station is a station complex shared by the BMT Franklin Avenue Line and the IND Fulton Street Line of the New York City Subway, located at Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. It is served by the:

__TOC__

Station layout

2FSide platform
Westbound← toward
(Demolished:)
1FCrossoverConnection to eastbound Fulton Street trains
GStreet levelStation house, exit/entrance
BNorth mezzanineFare control
Side platform
Westbound local← toward
← toward late nights
Westbound express← does not stop here
Eastbound express does not stop here →
Eastbound local toward
toward late nights
Side platform
South mezzanineFare control

BMT Franklin Avenue Line platform

Franklin Avenue
Former:Franklin Avenue–Fulton Street
Division:BMT
Line:BMT Franklin Avenue Line
Service:Franklin
Platforms:1 side platform
Tracks:1
Hide Traffic:yes
Structure:Elevated
Open Date:[2] [3]
Rebuilt: (Dual Contracts)
(shuttle refurbishment)
Opposite Transfer:N/A

The Franklin Avenue station on the BMT Franklin Avenue Line has one track and one side platform. It is the northern terminal of the Franklin Avenue Shuttle.

History

This elevated station opened on August 15, 1896, to connect with the adjacent Franklin Avenue station of the Fulton Street Elevated (see). It was a replacement for the August 18, 1878-built Bedford Terminal station originally built by the Brooklyn, Flatbush and Coney Island Railway.[4] It was a two-track through station with side platforms and the point where steam railroad trains from the Fulton Street Line turned onto the BMT Brighton Line to access Brighton Beach. The station also had a connection with the Franklin Avenue Line streetcars, as well as Fulton Street Line streetcars.

In 1920, the track connection to the Fulton Street Line was severed as Brighton Line trains to Downtown Brooklyn and Manhattan were rerouted via a new tunnel under Flatbush Avenue. In 1924, the station was rebuilt as a single-track station. The former westbound (now northbound) track was decked over with a wood platform to accommodate crowds transferring between the Fulton Street and Franklin Avenue Lines. The station platforms were also extended south to accommodate longer trains. Originally accommodated for five elevated BU cars for a length of ~250 ft (~76 m), they were now able to hold six subway-type AB Standard cars for a length of ~402 feet (~123 m).

The next stop to the south was Dean Street but only for Brighton Line trains. The next stop to the west was Grand Avenue. When the BMT system was taken over by the City of New York on June 1, 1940, the Fulton Street Elevated Line was closed and later demolished while paper transfers were issued at Franklin Avenue for passengers to access the new IND Fulton Street Line subway.

In 1985, the station had only 210 paying daily riders on a typical weekday in 1985 not counting farebeaters, making it one of the least used stations in the system.[5]

Rehabilitation

This station was completely rebuilt between 1998 and 1999[6] as a single-track station with a single platform on the west side of the track. The new platform is only 180feet long and can accommodate a train of two 75feet-long cars, or three 60feet-long cars. The track ends at a bumper block at the north end of the platform.

The 1999 artwork here is called Life and Continued Growth by Eric Pryor. It consists of stained glass panels on the top of the entranceway to the shuttle platform.

Exit

At the north end of the platform is the station's main station house, a three-story building on the southwest corner of Fulton Street and Franklin Avenue that connects to both platforms of Franklin Avenue on the IND Fulton Street Line. One up-only escalator and one long staircase go down to the fare control area at ground level, where one staircase goes down to the southbound IND platform and one turnstile bank provides access to/from the station. A set of doors then lead out to the streets after the token booth.[7]

The shuttle platform has another short staircase that goes down to a mesh-enclosed bridge above Fulton Street. On the other end is an elevator and one staircase going down to the northbound IND platform. A second elevator from the shuttle platform goes down to the overpass, main fare control area, and the southbound IND platform. These two elevators make the entire station complex ADA-accessible.[7]

IND Fulton Street Line platforms

Franklin Avenue
Division:IND
Line:IND Fulton Street Line
Service:Fulton local
Service Header:Fulton local header
Platforms:2 side platforms
Tracks:4
Structure:Underground
Hide Traffic:yes
Open Date:[8]
Accessible:yes

The Franklin Avenue station is an underground local station on the IND Fulton Street Line.

History

The Franklin Avenue station was constructed as part of the IND Fulton Street Line, the main line of the city-owned Independent Subway System (IND)'s main line from Downtown Brooklyn to southern Queens.[9] The groundbreaking for the line was held on April 16, 1929, at Fulton Street and Arlington Place.[10] This station opened on April 9, 1936, as part of an extension of the Independent Subway System (IND) from its previous Brooklyn terminus at Jay Street–Borough Hall, which opened three years earlier, to Rockaway Avenue. The new IND subway replaced the BMT Fulton Street Elevated, and this station replaced its namesake Franklin Avenue, which closed on May 31, 1940.[11]

When Aretha Franklin died on August 16, 2018, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority pasted sticker signs with the word "Respect" on the walls of the Franklin Avenue station, as well as the Franklin Street station in Manhattan.[12] [13] A Brooklyn resident had suggested adding the signs after impromptu tributes to Franklin had arisen at these two stations.[13]

Station layout

Opened on April 9, 1936,[8] it has four tracks and two side platforms. The two center express tracks are used by the A train during daytime hours.

Both platforms have a light green trim line with a dark green border and small "FRANKLIN" tile captions below them in white lettering on a black background. The mosaic name tablets read "FRANKLIN AVE." in white sans-serif font on dark green background and light green border. Directional signs pointing to fare control are underneath some of them. Both platforms are entirely column-less.

Prior to introduction of the MetroCard, the Euclid Avenue-bound platform had a same-level fare control and a paper bus-style transfer was handed out at either IND fare control areas (the only place in the subway where this was still being done) for access to the shuttle station only. After the MetroCard was introduced, a paper MetroCard transfer was issued from a machine that resembled a bus farebox. These transfers were good for 20 minutes and were discontinued after construction of the in-system transfer.

Exits

Fare control areas are at the extreme east (railroad south) end of the platforms. On the Manhattan-bound side, there is an unstaffed turnstile bank and one staircase going up to the northeast corner of Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street. Inside fare control, one staircase and one elevator go up to the overpass above Fulton Street that connects to the shuttle platform. On the Euclid Avenue-bound platform, a staircase goes up to the main station house, where a connection to the Franklin Avenue Shuttle is available.[14] An elevator from the platform goes up to the shuttle platform with intermediate stops at the main station house and overpass.[7]

Directional signs obscured with paint, along with newly tiled rooms, point to evidence of a closed exits on the west (railroad north) end of the station, which went to both eastern corners of Classon Avenue and Fulton Street. These exits were closed in the 1980s.[15] The exit to the Manhattan-bound platform is blocked by a trapdoor, while the exit to the eastbound platform is completely sealed.

BMT Fulton Street Line platforms

Franklin Avenue
Type:former
Division:BMT
Line:BMT Fulton Street Line (formerly)
Service Custom:None
Platforms:1 side platform, 1 island platform
Tracks:3 tracks
Hide Traffic:yes
Structure:Elevated
Next Topwest:Grand Avenue
Next East:Nostrand Avenue

This original elevated station at this intersection opened on April 24, 1888, along the demolished BMT Fulton Street Line. It was originally built by the Kings County Elevated Railway, and was not only one of the original stations along the line, but the penultimate station, until it was extended to Albany and Sumner Avenues the next month, Rockaway Avenue by the end of the year, Van Siclen Avenue in 1889, Montauk Avenue in 1892, and Grant Avenue in 1894. In 1896, the Brooklyn and Brighton Beach Railroad connected the former BF&CI line to the station. It was a two-track through station with side platforms, gaining a third track along the south side at the point where steam railroad trains from the Fulton Street Line turned onto the BMT Brighton Line to access Brighton Beach. The southern platform was shared with the northbound Brighton Line platform, with the different sections of the platform located at right angles. As with the Franklin Street platforms, the station also had a connection with the Franklin Avenue Line streetcars.

When the extension of the Montague Street Tunnel under Flatbush Avenue rerouted Brighton Line trains to Downtown Brooklyn in 1920, the track connection to the BMT Franklin and Brighton Lines were severed.[16] The connection to the now Franklin Avenue Shuttle was rebuilt in 1924 as a single-track station. The former westbound (now northbound) track was decked over with a wood platform to accommodate crowds transferring between the Fulton Street and Franklin Avenue Lines.

The next stop to the east was Nostrand Avenue. The next stop to the west was Grand Avenue. When the BMT system was taken over by the City of New York on June 1, 1940, the Fulton Street Elevated Line was closed[17] and later demolished as the IND Fulton Avenue Subway station built four years earlier was used as a replacement.[8] The portion of the Fulton Street Elevated line beneath the Franklin Avenue shuttle platforms remained standing until the reconstruction project of 1998 and 1999.[18]

External links

NYC Subway.org:

Station Reporter:

Other:

Google Maps Street View:

Notes and References

  1. News: Thomas J. . Lueck . . Subway Shuttle Gets $74 Million Makeover . October 18, 1999 . B3.
  2. News: . . New Route to Coney Island. August 14, 1896. 12.
  3. News: . . First Trains to Brighton. August 14, 1896. 7.
  4. Web site: The lore of the FRANKLIN AVENUE SHUTTLE - Forgotten New York. forgotten-ny.com. October 4, 1998 . July 21, 2016.
  5. News: COLUMN ONE: TRANSPORT. Levine. Richard. November 5, 1986. The New York Times. 0362-4331. October 2, 2016.
  6. News: 18-Month Renovation for Brooklyn Shuttle. Blair. Jayson. July 25, 1998. The New York Times. 0362-4331. July 21, 2016.
  7. Web site: Accessible Stations in the MTA Network. web.mta.info. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. November 29, 2016.
  8. News: NEW SUBWAY LINK OPENED BY MAYOR; He Tells 15,000 in Brooklyn It Will Be Extended to Queens When Red Tape Is Cut.. April 9, 1936. The New York Times. 0362-4331. August 15, 2016.
  9. News: Duffus. R.L.. Our Great Subway Network Spreads Wider; New Plans of Board of Transportation Involve the Building of More Than One Hundred Miles of Additional Rapid Transit Routes for New York. September 22, 1929. The New York Times. August 19, 2015.
  10. News: New Fulton Street Subway Officially Started as Byrne Turns Earth; Ground is Broken For Subway Line Along Fulton St.; Byrne Turns First Spade of Arlington Pl. Earth as Merchants Applaud.. April 17, 1929. Brooklyn Daily Eagle. August 28, 2016. 4. Newspapers.com.
  11. News: The New York Times. Last Train is Run on Fulton St. 'El'. June 1, 1940. February 7, 2020. 0362-4331.
  12. Web site: Marcus . Lilit . Aretha Franklin gets respect at 2 NYC subway stations . CNN . September 3, 2018 . December 9, 2021.
  13. Web site: September 4, 2018. Ben. Yakas. MTA Adds Aretha Franklin 'Respect' Tributes To Franklin Avenue & Franklin Street Subway Stations . Gothamist . December 9, 2021.
  14. Web site: MTA Neighborhood Maps: Bedford-Stuyvesant. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. July 5, 2016. 2016.
  15. Web site: Review of the A and C Lines. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. January 19, 2016. December 11, 2015.
  16. News: Montague Street Tube, Brighton Subway Operation Begun . 53 . Brooklyn Daily Eagle . August 1, 1920 . May 3, 2018 . Brooklyn Public Library
    newspapers.com
    .
  17. News: Fulton Street 'L' Was Last Word In Progreess at '88 opening. May 31, 1940. February 19, 2016. Newspapers.com. Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
  18. Web site: "The New Franklin Avenue Shuttle," by Douglas Diamond (The Third Rail Online) . September 26, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150926042928/http://thethirdrail.net/0003/bf_dd1.htm . September 26, 2015 . live .