Grand Avenue–Newtown station explained

Grand Avenue–Newtown
Address:Grand Avenue, Broadway & Queens Boulevard
Queens, NY
Borough:Queens
Locale:Elmhurst
Coordinates:40.737°N -73.8775°W
Division:IND
Line:IND Queens Boulevard Line
Service:Queens local
Service Header:Queens local header
Connection: NYCT Bus:
MTA Bus:
Platforms:2 side platforms
Tracks:4
Structure:Underground

The Grand Avenue–Newtown station is a local station on the IND Queens Boulevard Line of the New York City Subway. Located under private property at the northeast corner of the intersection of Grand Avenue, Broadway, and Queens Boulevard in the neighborhood of Elmhurst, Queens, it is served by the M train on weekdays, the R train at all times except nights, and the E and F trains at night.

The station opened on December 31, 1936 as part of the Independent Subway System's Queens Boulevard Line. The opening of the station brought significant growth to Elmhurst.

History

The Queens Boulevard Line was one of the first built by the city-owned Independent Subway System (IND), and was planned to stretch between the IND Eighth Avenue Line in Manhattan and 178th Street and Hillside Avenue in Jamaica, Queens, with a stop at Grand Avenue.[1] [2] The line was first proposed in 1925.[3] Construction of the line was approved by the New York City Board of Estimate on October 4, 1928.[4] The line was constructed using the cut-and-cover tunneling method, and to allow pedestrians to cross, temporary bridges were built over the trenches.[5]

The first section of the line opened on August 19, 1933 from the connection to the Eighth Avenue Line at 50th Street to Roosevelt Avenue in Jackson Heights.[6] Later that year, a $23 million loan was approved to finance the remainder of the line, along with other IND lines.[7] The remainder of the line was built by the Public Works Administration.[8] [9] In 1934 and 1935, construction of the extension to Jamaica was suspended for 15 months and was halted by strikes.[10] Construction was further delayed due to a strike in 1935, instigated by electricians opposing wages paid by the General Railway Signal Company.[11] In August 1936, tracks were installed all the way to 178th Street, and the stations to Union Turnpike were completed. On December 31, 1936, the IND Queens Boulevard Line was extended by eight stops, and 3.5miles, from its previous terminus at Roosevelt Avenue to Union Turnpike.[12] [13] [14] The E train, which initially served all stops on the new extension, began making express stops in April 1937,[15] and local GG trains began serving the extension at the time.[16]

In Elmhurst, almost all of the century-old buildings in the heart of the village were destroyed for the construction of the subway. Land was taken on the west side of the Broadway to avoid the demolition of St. James Episcopal Church and the Reformed Church of Newtown. An easement was granted so the line could pass under the old St. James Church building at the southwest corner of Broadway and 51st Avenue.[17] [18] Many nineteenth century residences and the Wandowenock Fire Company buildings had to be torn down. To allow the subway line to curve into Queens Boulevard from Broadway, the northeast corner of the two streets was removed, in addition to some stores. New buildings were built behind a new curb line once the subway was completed, bringing a new face to Elmhurst. The introduction of the subway stimulated local growth in Elmhurst. Commercial buildings and apartment houses replaced existing structures.[19] [20] The Metropolitan Transportation Authority announced in April 2024 that it would make esthetic improvements to the station during mid-2024 as part of its Re-New-Vation program.[21]

Station layout

There are four tracks and two side platforms; the two center express tracks are used by the E and F trains at all times except late nights. The E and F trains serve the station at night, the M train serves the station on weekdays during the day, and the R train serves the station at all times except late nights. The station is between Elmhurst Avenue to the west and Woodhaven Boulevard to the east.

In between the local tracks and the express tracks, there are trackway walls.[22] The station has a full length mezzanine, but as the fare control and booth area are at the center of the mezzanine, crossover is available only at the easternmost staircase.[23] [24]

Both platforms have a medium Cerulean blue tile band with a black border and mosaic name tablets reading "GRAND AVE. – NEWTOWN" broken onto two lines in white sans serif lettering on a black background and Cerulean blue border.[25] The tile band was part of a color-coded tile system used throughout the IND.[26] The tile colors were designed to facilitate navigation for travelers going away from Lower Manhattan. As such, the blue tiles used at the Grand Avenue station are also used at, the next express station to the west, while a different tile color is used at, the next express station to the east. Blue tiles are similarly used at the other local stations between Roosevelt Avenue and 71st Avenue.[27] [28] Small tile captions reading "GRAND" in white lettering on black run below the trim line, and directional signs in the same style are present below some of the name tablets.

Concrete-clad columns, painted blue, run along both platforms at regular intervals with alternating ones having the standard black name plates in white lettering.[29] These piers are located every 15abbr=NaNabbr= and support girders above the platforms. The roof girders are also connected to columns in the walls adjoining each platform.[30]

The tunnel is covered by a U-shaped trough that contains utility pipes and wires. The outer walls of this trough are composed of columns, spaced approximately every 5feet with concrete infill between them. There is a 1abbr=NaNabbr= gap between the tunnel wall and the platform wall, which is made of 4abbr=NaNabbr=-thick brick covered over by a tiled finish. The columns between the tracks are also spaced every 5feet, with no infill.

Exits

Each side has two sets of street stairs. There is a full-time entrance at Justice Avenue and Broadway on the west end, with staircases to either side of Broadway. There are also exits to either southern corner of Queens Boulevard at 54th Avenue (the southeast-corner staircase being outside the First Presbyterian Church of Newtown complex), and another staircase to the northern side of Queens Boulevard at 54th Avenue.[31]

High entry/exit turnstiles at both ends of the mezzanine allow people to exit fare control without having to walk down to the middle of the mezzanine. A free crossover between two platforms exists at this location. Originally, there were two fare control areas at each end, which is clear from the presence of two closed staircases at the Manhattan-bound side.[32] [33] The mezzanine narrows to about two-thirds of its width on the southern side of the mezzanine directly to the opposite of the closed staircases. The narrowing of the mezzanine did not allow for staircases on the Queens-bound side in this location like on the Manhattan-bound side.[34] Chain-link fence is used to separate the areas inside and outside fare control. The Manhattan- and Queens-bound paid areas are separated by at this location by the unpaid area, which runs down the center of the mezzanine.[35] In total, this side of the station has four staircases in addition to the two closed ones mentioned, while the other side has five staircases.[36]

External links

Notes and References

  1. See:
  2. News: Queens Lauded as Best Boro By Chamber Chief. September 23, 1929. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. October 4, 2015. 40.
  3. News: 1925-03-21. New Subway Routes in Hylan Program to Cost $186,046,000. en-US. 1. The New York Times. 2020-03-27. 0362-4331.
  4. News: $17,146,500 Voted For New Subways; Estimate Board Appropriates More Than $9,000,000 for Lines in Brooklyn. $6,490,000 For The Bronx Smaller Items for Incidental Work --Approves the Proposed Queens Boulevard Route. October 5, 1928. The New York Times. August 4, 2016. 0362-4331.
  5. Book: Forest Hills. Hirshon. Nicholas. Romano. Foreword by Ray. January 1, 2013. Arcadia Publishing. 978-0-7385-9785-0. en.
  6. News: August 19, 1933. Two Subway Links Opened In Queens. 13. The New York Times. December 11, 2016. 0362-4331.
  7. News: Unfinished Sections of Subway Lines To Be Completed. December 13, 1933. The New York Sun. July 30, 2016. 47.
  8. News: Trains Testing Jamaica Link Of City Subway. April 10, 1937. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. April 24, 2018. 3.
  9. News: Test Trains Running In Queens Subway; Switch and Signal Equipment of New Independent Line Is Being Checked.. December 20, 1936. The New York Times. April 26, 2016. 0362-4331.
  10. News: Men Toil Under Earth to Build Subway. Neufeld. Ernest. August 23, 1936. Long Island Daily Press. August 12, 2016. 2 (Section 2).
  11. See:
  12. Book: The Wheels That Drove New York: A History of the New York City Transit System. August 23, 2012. Springer Science & Business Media. 978-3-642-30484-2. 416–417. Roger P. Roess. Gene Sansone.
  13. News: December 31, 1936 . City Subway Opens Queens Link Today; Extension Brings Kew Gardens Within 36 Minutes of 42d St. on Frequent Trains. . The New York Times . April 26, 2016 . 0362-4331.
  14. News: 31 Dec 1936 . Mayor Takes 2,000 for a Ride ln Queens Subway Extension: Heads Civic Leaders in 10-Car Train Over Route to Kew Gardens That Opens at 7 A. M. Today; Warns of 15-Cent Fare if Unity Plan Fails The Mayor Brings Rapid Transit to Kew Gardens . 34 . New York Herald Tribune . 1941-0646 . .
  15. News: April 10, 1937 . Trains Testing Jamaica Link Of City Subway . 3 . The Brooklyn Daily Eagle . April 24, 2018.
  16. News: April 23, 1937 . Jamaica Will Greet Subway . 8 . The New York Sun . April 24, 2018.
  17. Web site: September 19, 2017. Old St. James Episcopal Church. New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. 10. 2020-06-21.
  18. Web site: November 12, 1999. St. James Church. National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service. 15. 2020-06-21.
  19. Book: Seyfried, Vincent F.. Elmhurst : from town seat to mega-suburb. Vincent F. Seyfried. 1995.
  20. Book: Old Queens, N.Y., in Early Photographs. Seyfried. Vincent F.. Asadorian. William. 1991. Courier Corporation. 978-0-486-26358-8. en.
  21. Web site: Pozarycki . Robert . These 13 NYC subway stations will receive ‘Re-NEW-vation’ upgrades and cleaning this spring and summer . amNewYork . April 23, 2024 . April 24, 2024.
  22. Web site: Trackway Walls at Grand Avenue. E.. Bill. July 31, 2007. www.nycsubway.org. December 13, 2016.
  23. Web site: A sign indicating that the crossover to the other platform is at the easternmost end of the platform.. Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. subwaynut.com. December 13, 2016. December 20, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161220164143/http://www.subwaynut.com/ind/grandr/grandr19.jpg. dead.
  24. Web site: Two High Entrance Turnstiles, and Two High Exit Only turnstiles on the very narrow portion of the mezzanine that serves as an overpass between the two platforms.. Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. subwaynut.com. December 13, 2016.
  25. Web site: Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. Another name tablet at Grand Ave-Newtown this one has a direction pointer for 54th Avenue underneath it.. December 13, 2016. subwaynut.com.
  26. News: August 22, 1932 . Tile Colors a Guide in the New Subway; Decoration Scheme Changes at Each Express Stop to Tell Riders Where They Are . en-US . The New York Times . live . July 1, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220701184626/https://www.nytimes.com/1932/08/22/archives/tile-colors-a-guide-in-the-new-subway-decoration-scheme-changes-at.html . July 1, 2022 . 0362-4331.
  27. Web site: Carlson . Jen . Map: These Color Tiles In The Subway System Used To Mean Something . Gothamist . February 18, 2016 . May 10, 2023.
  28. Web site: Gleason . Will . The hidden meaning behind the New York subway's colored tiles . Time Out New York . February 18, 2016 . May 10, 2023.
  29. Web site: Looking down the Manhattan-bound platform at Grand Avenue-Newtown all the station columns look like boring columns of concrete with no forms in them or indentations giving them character. Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. subwaynut.com. December 13, 2016.
  30. Records of the National Park Service, 1785 - 2006. National Archives. https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/electronic-records/rg-079/NPS_NY/05000672.pdf. National Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks Program Records, 2013 - 2017. New York MPS Elmhurst Avenue Subway Station (IND). 05000672. National Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks Program Records: New York.
  31. Web site: MTA Neighborhood Maps: Grand Av Newtown (M)(R). mta.info. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. September 13, 2018. 2018.
  32. Web site: hen the station opened their must have been a different staircase. There are two now fenced off staircases leading up from the Manhattan-bound platform up to the mezzanine when it is entirely outside of fare control. There is no place to put Queens-bound platform staircases because the mezzanine is only two thirds the width of the tracks and platforms here.. Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. subwaynut.com. December 13, 2016.
  33. Web site: Looking up a closed staircase from the Manhattan-bound platform that leads directly up to the mezzanine to a portion of it that is now outside of fare control.. Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. subwaynut.com. December 13, 2016.
  34. Web site: The mezzanine gets narrow, and the two separate sections of the mezzanine for trains in each direction ends making the entire 2/3 full width mezzanine outside of fare control.. Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. subwaynut.com. December 13, 2016.
  35. Web site: Looking down the mezzanine outside of fare control with the ugly black chain link fences visible on both sides segregating the area from within fare control.. Cox. Jeremiah. June 5, 2008. subwaynut.com. December 13, 2016.
  36. Web site: R Train . January 13, 2015 . July 12, 2016 . bot: unknown . https://web.archive.org/web/20150113014240/http://www.stationreporter.net/rtrain.htm . January 13, 2015 .