List of New York City Subway transfer stations explained

In the New York City Subway there are several types of transfer stations:

  1. A station complex is where two or more stations are connected with a passageway inside fare control. There are stations of the New York City Subway when each station is counted separately. When station complexes are counted as one station each, the count of stations is .
  2. Station serving two or more lines. It may be a multi-level or adjacent-platform station and is considered to be one station as classified by the MTA. Typically each track in a station belongs to a certain line.
  3. Station serving two or more services. Different services may share tracks. These stations are not included in this article; see List of New York City Subway stations.[1]

Transfers are not limited to enclosed passageways. The New York City Transit Authority (NYCTA), manager of the New York City Subway, also offers limited free transfers between subway lines that allow passengers to reenter the system's fare control. This was originally done through a paper ticketing system before it was replaced by the MetroCard. Now the only permanent MetroCard subway-to-subway transfers are between the Lexington Avenue/59th Street complex and the Lexington Avenue–63rd Street station in Manhattan and between the Junius Street and Livonia Avenue stations in Brooklyn. The contactless OMNY fare payment system installed in 2019-2020 supports the same free transfers as the MetroCard does.

Some paper transfers between specific subway stations and bus routes also existed prior to July 4, 1997, when the MetroCard allowed free system-wide subway–bus transfers with fewer restrictions. The Rockaway Parkway station on the BMT Canarsie Line offers a transfer to the B42 bus within the station's fare control, the only such transfer within the NYCTA.

__TOC__

Context

The system was created from the consolidation of three separate companies that merged in 1940: the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT), and the Independent Subway System (IND). The earliest transfer stations were between lines of the same system: either the IRT, BMT or IND. The earliest free connection between lines that remains in existence is at Grand Central–42nd Street between the IRT Flushing Line and the original IRT subway (now served by the IRT 42nd Street Shuttle), which opened on June 22, 1915. Some stations were constructed with passageways that connected different systems, such as the original IRT subway's (now IRT Lexington Avenue Line) Brooklyn Bridge station with the BMT Centre Street Loop Subway's (now BMT Nassau Street Line) Chambers Street station. On July 1, 1948, post-unification, many free transfers between the former systems were created coincident with the doubling of the fare from five to ten cents.

The most recently created station complex is the Jay Street–MetroTech complex in Brooklyn on the IND Culver Line, IND Fulton Street Line and BMT Fourth Avenue Line; opened on December 8, 2010.[2] The Court Square complex in Queens, which opened in 1988 as a connection between the IND Queens Boulevard and IND Crosstown lines, was expanded by adding a passageway to the IRT Flushing Line on June 3, 2011.[3] [4] A free transfer from to the uptown platform of opened on September 25, 2012. A transfer to the downtown platform has existed since May 19, 1957.[5] [6] A passageway between and opened on December 29, 2017, along with a connection to the World Trade Center Transportation Hub. A passageway between the Times Square–42nd Street and station complex, and the Bryant Park station complex, was built in 2021, along with a new platform at the shuttle station (both the platform and passageway are closed during late nights).

Manhattan

Lower Manhattan (14th Street and below)

width=15% Station complexwidth=15% Individual stationswidth=15% Lineswidth=12% Serviceswidth=43% Notes
14th Street/Sixth AvenueIRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue LineThe IND Sixth Avenue Line and BMT Canarsie Line were connected inside fare control in the late 1960s<--Chrystie??-->, and a passageway west to the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line opened on January 16, 1978.
IND Sixth Avenue Line
BMT Canarsie Line
14th Street/Eighth AvenueIND Eighth Avenue LineThe transfer passageway between the IND Eighth Avenue Line and BMT Canarsie Line was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.
BMT Canarsie Line
14th Street–Union SquareBMT Broadway LineThe BMT Broadway Line, BMT Canarsie Line, and IRT Lexington Avenue Line are linked by passageways at Union Square. The two BMT lines were connected on June 30, 1924, when the Canarsie Line opened.[7] A passageway to the IRT was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.
BMT Canarsie Line
IRT Lexington Avenue Line
IRT Lexington Avenue LineA transfer passageway between the southbound IRT Lexington Avenue Line and both directions of the IND Sixth Avenue Line was placed inside fare control on May 19, 1957.[8] The Bleecker Street uptown platform was remodeled to provide an easier transfer to/from the Broadway-Lafayette Street station and opened on March 26, 2012. The northbound transfer for the Lexington Avenue line opened on September 25, 2012, and the station became ADA-accessible.[9]
IND Sixth Avenue Line
IRT Lexington Avenue LineThese two adjacent stations on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line and BMT Nassau Street Line are connected by two passageways. The south one opened in 1914,[10] and was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948. A second passageway, at the north end of the stations, was opened in the evening of September 1, 1962, when the Lexington Avenue Line platforms were extended and the Worth Street station was closed.[11]
BMT Nassau Street Line
Canal Street (lower level – express)BMT Broadway LineThe lower level of the BMT Broadway Line is linked to the upper level of the BMT Broadway Line, the IRT Lexington Avenue Line and the BMT Nassau Street Line via passageways. The three BMT stations were linked on September 4, 1917, when the Broadway Line opened. The IRT was connected on January 16, 1978.
(upper level – local)BMT Broadway Line
IRT Lexington Avenue Line
BMT Nassau Street Line
IND Eighth Avenue LineThe two halves of the IND Eighth Avenue Line and the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line are connected by the IND Eighth Avenue Line's express platform. The connections were opened in the 1950s, before which none of the three parts, not even the two IND stations, were connected.
The BMT Broadway Line was connected to the Eighth Avenue Line's local platform in 2017 via a passageway.[12]
BMT Broadway Line
IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line
IND Sixth Avenue LineA passageway between the IND Sixth Avenue Line and BMT Nassau Street Line was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.<--it's not in the list in the article, but it is on a 1948 map-->
BMT Nassau Street Line
Fulton Street/Fulton CenterIND Eighth Avenue LineA complicated network of passageways connects four separate stations on the IND Eighth Avenue Line, IRT Lexington Avenue Line, BMT Nassau Street Line, and IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line. The full transfer system here was formed on July 1, 1948. While the passageways between the Eighth Avenue, Nassau Street, and Broadway–Seventh Avenue platforms all existed at the time, and were simply placed inside fare control, a paper transfer to the Lexington Avenue Line was issued at first, until a new passageway was opened on August 25, 1950.[13] In December 2010, the Eighth Avenue Line station's name was changed from Broadway–Nassau Street to Fulton Street.
IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line
IRT Lexington Avenue Line
BMT Nassau Street Line
OculusBMT Broadway LineIn November 2014, the Fulton Center opened, connecting the stations to Cortlandt Street outside of fare control, through the Dey Street Passageway.[14] The BMT Broadway Line and IND Eighth Avenue Line stations at Cortlandt Street and World Trade Center were connected in 2017 via a passageway.
IND Eighth Avenue Line
IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue LineOn September 8, 2018, the WTC Cortlandt station reopened, connecting the station to Cortlandt Street (BMT), World Trade Center (IND), and Fulton Center outside of fare control via the Dey Street Passageway and World Trade Center Transportation Hub.[15]
IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue LineA new passageway opened concurrently with the opening of the new South Ferry station on March 16, 2009.[16] This connects the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line with the Whitehall Street station on the BMT Broadway Line.
BMT Broadway Line
lower levelIND Sixth Avenue LineThe station became a transfer station when the Sixth Avenue Line opened in 1940.
upper levelIND Eighth Avenue Line

Former transfers

See main article: Chatham Square (IRT Third Avenue Line). When the elevated IRT Third Avenue Line closed from Chatham Square to South Ferry on December 22, 1950, a paper transfer was given to the M15 bus route. The Third Avenue Line was closed in Manhattan on May 12, 1955, removing this transfer.

See main article: Rector Street (IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line), Wall Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line) and Wall Street (IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line). When the new "H" system was implemented on August 1, 1918, the Public Service Commission was unprepared for the heavy traffic using the 42nd Street Shuttle. The shuttle was closed for rebuilding at the end of August 3, and a paper transfer was added between Rector Street on the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line and Wall Street on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line (the only one of the two lines to go to Brooklyn at that time).[17] Shuttle service resumed on September 28, 1918, but the transfer remained, and was expanded to allow transfers from Wall Street on the Brooklyn Branch of the Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line, its temporary end.[18] After the Brooklyn Branch was completed on April 15, 1919, the transfer was no longer needed.[19]

There was never a free transfer between the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line (outer) and IRT Lexington Avenue Line (inner) platforms at South Ferry. However, by 1960, night and weekend Lexington Avenue Line service (5 and 6 trains) stopped at the outer platform. This unadvertised transfer existed until 1977, when Lexington Avenue Line trains stopped running to South Ferry.[20]

Midtown and Upper Manhattan

width=15% Station complexwidth=15% Individual stationswidth=15% Lineswidth=12% Serviceswidth=43% Notes
34th Street–Herald SquareBMT Broadway LineThe BMT Broadway Line and IND Sixth Avenue Line, which lie on top of each other, received a transfer at the time of the July 1, 1948 fare increase. An existing connection was placed inside fare control.
IND Sixth Avenue Line
Grand Central–42nd StreetIRT 42nd Street ShuttleThe subway station at Grand Central Terminal serves the IRT Lexington Avenue Line, IRT Flushing Line, and IRT 42nd Street Shuttle. Connections are closely integrated, since all three lines were operated by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company. The original station, opened on October 27, 1904, served only the first IRT subway, and is now the shuttle platform.[21] The Flushing Line station opened on June 22, 1915,[22] and the Lexington Avenue Line station on July 17, 1918,[23] each with direct connections to the existing station. The elevated IRT Second Avenue Line was closed on June 13, 1942, and, starting the next day, a paper transfer was available between the elevated IRT Third Avenue Line and the Grand Central complex. This allowed passengers who had taken the Second Avenue Line over the Queensboro Bridge to instead use the Third Avenue Line to Lower Manhattan.[24] The Third Avenue Line closed on May 12, 1955, ending this transfer.[25]
IRT Flushing Line
IRT Lexington Avenue Line
42nd StreetIRT Third Avenue LineN/A
Times Square–42nd Street/Port Authority Bus TerminalIRT 42nd Street ShuttleAt Times Square, a number of passageways connect the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line, IRT Flushing Line, IRT 42nd Street Shuttle, and BMT Broadway Line. A block-long passageway west to the IND Eighth Avenue Line is also inside fare control. The first transfer here was between the original IRT subway (now the shuttle platform) and the Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line, opened on June 3, 1917, when the latter line opened as a shuttle to .[26] The Flushing Line was extended to Times Square on March 14, 1927,[27] and a passageway connecting the IRT and BMT was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948. The same was done with the connection to the Eighth Avenue Line in December 1988.[28]

A passageway to the 42nd Street–Bryant Park station opened on September 7, 2021, along with a new platform at the shuttle station.[29] The new passageway is closed during late nights, when the shuttle doesn't operate.

BMT Broadway Line
IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line
IRT Flushing Line
IND Eighth Avenue Line
IND Sixth Avenue LineA paper transfer[30] was added between the IND Sixth Avenue Line and IRT Flushing Line at Bryant Park on July 1, 1968, when KK service started and the new station opened. The transfer was only valid on weekdays from 5:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. until a passageway was opened[31] by 1971.[32]
IRT Flushing Line
upper levelIND Eighth Avenue LineThe station became a transfer station when the Queens Boulevard Line opened in 1933. There is no free connection between trains in opposite directions. A free transfer only exists between the northbound (uptown) services and another exists between the southbound (downtown) services.
lower levelIND Queens Boulevard Line
IRT Lexington Avenue LineA passageway connects these two stations on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line and IND Queens Boulevard Line. The $13 million tunnel was paid for by Boston Properties, who was building an office tower on the southeast corner of Lexington Avenue and 53rd Street, in exchange for a zoning bonus of 20% more space, and opened in early November 1986.[33] [34]
IND Queens Boulevard Line
cross-platform interchange on two levelsIND Sixth Avenue LineThe station became a transfer station when the Sixth Avenue Line opened in 1940.
IND Queens Boulevard Line
59th Street–Columbus CircleIRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue LineThe IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line and IND Eighth Avenue Line stations at Columbus Circle, which lie above each other, are connected by a passageway that was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.
IND Eighth Avenue Line
Lexington Avenue/59th–63rd StreetsIRT Lexington Avenue LineThe passageways between the Broadway Line and the upper-level local Lexington Avenue Line stations were placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948. When the lower-level express Lexington Avenue platforms opened in 1962 to relieve congestion at the Grand Central–42nd Street transfer point, those platforms were connected to the local platforms and Broadway Line platforms above.

A MetroCard transfer to the IND 63rd Street Line was added on December 16, 2001, when the Queens section of that line was completed. Since the F had moved to the new line, there was no longer a direct transfer to the Lexington Avenue Line, and so this transfer was added with an above-ground walk, free for MetroCard users within two hours of the original boarding.[35] [36]

The cross-platform transfer between both the IND and BMT 63rd Street lines opened on January 1, 2017 with the opening of the Second Avenue Subway.[37] Lexington Avenue-63rd Street was originally a two level station with the BMT tracks hidden behind a now demolished wall with orange tiles.[38]

BMT Broadway Line

(cross-platform interchange on two levels)
IND 63rd Street Line
BMT 63rd Street Line
upper levelIND Eighth Avenue LineThe station became a transfer station when the Concourse Line opened in 1933.
lower levelIND Concourse Line
168th Street (New York City Subway)IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue LineAt the crossing of the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line and IND Eighth Avenue Line in Washington Heights, a passageway connects the two stations. It was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.
IND Eighth Avenue Line

Former transfers

See main article: 155th Street (IND Concourse Line) and 155th Street (IRT Ninth Avenue Line). A paper transfer[39] at the Polo Grounds (155th Street), between the IND Concourse Line and Polo Grounds Shuttle, was created on June 12, 1940, immediately after the IRT Ninth Avenue Line was closed south of 155th Street. It, along with the new transfer at 161st Street–Yankee Stadium, allowed passengers who had taken the Ninth Avenue Line from the IRT Jerome Avenue Line in the Bronx to use the IND Concourse Line and IND Eighth Avenue Line.[40] The Polo Grounds Shuttle and the transfer were discontinued on August 31, 1958.[41]

The Bronx

width=15% Station complexwidth=15% Individual stationswidth=15% Lineswidth=12% Serviceswidth=43% Notes
149th Street–Grand ConcourseIRT Jerome Avenue LineThe station became a transfer station when the Jerome Avenue Line opened in 1917. The upper-level Jerome Avenue platforms and the lower-level White Plains Road platforms are perpendicular to each other.
IRT White Plains Road Line
161st Street–Yankee StadiumIND Concourse LineA passageway connects the elevated IRT Jerome Avenue Line and underground IND Concourse Line at Yankee Stadium. The free transfer was added on June 12, 1940 as a paper transfer, replacing the closed IRT Ninth Avenue Line through Manhattan. Passengers that had transferred from the Jerome Avenue Line to the Ninth Avenue Line could now use the Concourse Line and IND Eighth Avenue Line, or alternately use the Polo Grounds Shuttle and another new transfer to the Concourse Line at 155th Street. A passageway was later built inside fare control.<--needs when it was built-->
IRT Jerome Avenue Line

Former transfers

See main article: Third Avenue–149th Street (IRT White Plains Road Line). The first portion of the IRT White Plains Road Line opened on November 26, 1904 as a branch from the elevated IRT Third Avenue Line north of 149th Street to in West Farms.[42] It was connected into the original IRT subway on July 10, 1905, and Third Avenue service was ended.[43] Transfers were given at 149th Street for passengers who wanted to change to Third Avenue, and transfers were added between the Manhattan-bound subway and the Third Avenue Line to the north on July 13 due to the "congestion and confusion" at that point. These transfers originally only applied to trains continuing in the same direction;[44] [45] by the 1920s, this transfer point had become very congested. A passageway inside fare control was opened on June 1, 1927 in the triangle bounded by 148th Street, Third Avenue, and Willis Avenue.[46] [47] The Third Avenue Line closed on April 28, 1973, ending the transfer.[48]

See main article: East 180th Street (IRT White Plains Road Line). The IRT Dyre Avenue Line opened on May 15, 1941. At first, it did not connect directly to the IRT White Plains Road Line, and a transfer passageway (used by the New York, Westchester and Boston Railway when the Dyre Avenue Line tracks were part of its operation) was placed inside fare control.[49] A direct connection to the White Plains Road Line north of the station opened on May 6, 1957,[50] and the old NYW&B station was closed.

Brooklyn

width=15% Station complexwidth=15% Individual stationswidth=15% Lineswidth=12% Serviceswidth=43% Notes
IND Culver LineA transfer between the BMT Fourth Avenue Line and IND Culver Line was added on May 28, 1959.[51]
BMT Fourth Avenue Line
Atlantic Avenue–Barclays CenterBMT Brighton LinePassageways connect the BMT Fourth Avenue Line and BMT Brighton Line, with the IRT Eastern Parkway Line in the middle. The passageway between the Brighton and Eastern Parkway Lines was added on November 26, 1967, when the Chrystie Street Connection opened and most Brighton Line trains were sent to the IND Sixth Avenue Line.[52] The transfer to the Fourth Avenue Line was added on January 16, 1978.[53]
IRT Eastern Parkway Line
BMT Fourth Avenue Line
Broadway JunctionBMT Canarsie LineThe elevated BMT Jamaica Line and BMT Canarsie Line and underground IND Fulton Street Line are connected by passageways inside fare control. This was originally the site of a transfer station between the BMT Fulton Street Line and the other two lines, but the Fulton Street portion was removed as part of the Dual Contracts rebuilding. The passageway connecting to the IND Fulton Street Line was built and placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.
IND Fulton Street Line
BMT Jamaica Line
four island platforms, one for each line, on the same levelBMT Brighton LineThe first connection between lines was between the Sea Beach and the West End lines on December 23, 1918. The Brighton Line platform opened on May 29, 1919 followed by the Culver Line on May 1, 1920. When the Culver Line passed from BMT to IND control in 1954, the transfer became inter-division. The station is a terminal for all four lines and services.
IND Culver Line
BMT Sea Beach Line
BMT West End Line
IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue LineThe BMT Fourth Avenue Line is connected to the IRT Eastern Parkway Line and IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line via a passageway at Borough Hall. This was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.
IRT Eastern Parkway Line
BMT Fourth Avenue Line
cross-platform interchangeBMT Fourth Avenue LineThis station, opened on June 19, 1915 and completed on August 1, 1920, has been a major transfer point between BMT services, with the lines splitting north and south of the station.
BMT Brighton Line
BMT Franklin Avenue LineA passageway connects the underground IND Fulton Street Line and the end of the elevated BMT Franklin Avenue Line. The transfer here was added on June 1, 1940, immediately after the elevated BMT Fulton Street Line (to which Franklin Avenue Line passengers could transfer) closed.[54] Transfers were made with paper transfer slips until October 18, 1999, when the Franklin Avenue Line reopened after reconstruction, doing away with the last remaining paper transfer on the Subway.[55]
IND Fulton Street Line
Franklin AvenueBMT Fulton Street LineN/A
BMT Franklin Avenue LineA transfer passageway between the IRT Eastern Parkway Line and BMT Franklin Avenue Line was added on October 18, 1999, when the Franklin Avenue Line was reopened. It was formerly occupied and blocked by a Transit police station.
IRT Eastern Parkway Line
cross-platform interchangeIND Crosstown LineThe station is laid out on six tracks: the two innermost tracks serve the Crosstown Line, the next two outer tracks serve the express Fulton Street Line and the outermost two serve the local Fulton Street Line. The station became a transfer station upon its opening on April 9, 1936 between Fulton Street Line trains running to/from Manhattan on the Fulton Street express tracks and the HH (Court Street Shuttle) on the Fulton Street local tracks. (The shuttle was discontinued on June 1, 1946.) The Crosstown Line and its transfer opened on July 1, 1937.
IND Fulton Street Line
Jay Street–MetroTechcross-platform interchangeIND Culver LineThe station became a cross-platform transfer station when the Fulton Street Line opened in 1936. A transfer passageway was opened to the BMT Fourth Avenue Line on December 10, 2010, concurrently with renaming the complex to Jay Street – MetroTech.[56] [57]
IND Fulton Street Line
BMT Fourth Avenue Line
/IRT New Lots LineA free out-of-system transfer on nights and weekends was introduced on April 26, 2019 as part of the L shutdown, and introduced permanently in February 2020.[58] It is planned to convert an overpass running between the Junius Street and Livonia Avenue stations into a in-system transfer passage between them, due to increasing ridership and plans for additional housing in the area.[59] In February 2020, the MTA awarded a design–build contract to construct the free transfer and associated elevator upgrades.[60]
BMT Canarsie Line
BMT Canarsie LineA passageway between the BMT Canarsie Line and IND Crosstown Line was placed inside fare control on July 1, 1948.
IND Crosstown Line
Myrtle–Wyckoff AvenuesBMT Canarsie LineThe station became a transfer station when the Canarsie Line opened in 1928.
BMT Myrtle Avenue Line
BMT West End LineThe station became a transfer station when the West End Line opened in 1916.
BMT Sea Beach Line
cross-platform interchangeBMT Brighton LineThe station became a transfer station when the connection to the Brighton Line subway from Seventh Avenue opened in 1920.
BMT Franklin Avenue Line
same-level interchangeBMT Canarsie LineThe BMT Canarsie Line on the surface south of Rockaway Parkway became a streetcar line on October 26, 1917 with a free transfer to the Canarsie Line. On November 21, 1942, the private right-of-way was closed, and the transfer was instead given to the Rockaway Parkway Line, now the B42 bus route. The streetcars, later buses, stop inside fare control.[61]
Rockaway Parkway LineB42 bus
upper levelBMT Brighton LinePrior to the opening of the Culver Line in 1920, local Brighton Line trains used the lower level and express Brighton Line trains used the upper level. The transfer station commenced with the opening of the Culver Line on the lower level under the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (the predecessor to the BMT). Level usage varied over the years with different Brighton services using the lower level at different times. When the Culver Line passed from BMT to IND control in 1954, the transfer became inter-division. Shortly thereafter, the Brighton Line track connection to the lower level was severed, thereby allowing each line to have exclusive use of their own levels.
lower levelIND Culver Line

Former transfers

See main article: Ditmas Avenue (IND Culver Line). On October 30, 1954, a connection between the IND Brooklyn Line and the BMT Culver Line opened, and the Culver Line was transferred from BMT to IND control. Service through the new connection commenced, and the BMT Culver Shuttle was instituted between Ditmas Avenue and Ninth Avenue, making Ditmas Avenue an inter-division transfer station. When the BMT Culver Shuttle ceased on May 11, 1975, the station was left to be served by the IND Culver Line only.

See main article: Bridge–Jay Streets (BMT Myrtle Avenue Line) and High Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line). On March 5, 1944, when the elevated BMT Myrtle Avenue Line was removed from the Brooklyn Bridge elevated tracks, and cut back from Park Row to Bridge–Jay Streets, a paper transfer was added at Bridge–Jay Streets to the Brooklyn Bridge trolley lines, specifically the Smith Street Line, DeKalb Avenue Line, and Seventh Avenue Line.[62] Bridge trolleys were discontinued on March 6, 1950, and the transfer was replaced with one to the IND Sixth Avenue Line. Manhattan-bound passengers received a transfer when boarding the Myrtle Avenue Line west of Broadway, but Brooklyn-bound passengers could only get one when entering at Broadway – Nassau Street, near Park Row.[63] In addition, similar trolley transfers were provided at High Street – Brooklyn Bridge, at the Brooklyn end of the bridge.[64] The Myrtle Avenue Line west of Broadway closed on October 3, 1969,[65] and the transfer was replaced with one to the B54 bus route, which ran under the line. The transfers at High Street – Brooklyn Bridge were discontinued at some point, but the B54 transfer remained for a long time.

See main article: Marcy Avenue (BMT Jamaica Line). When the Broadway Elevated spur to Broadway Ferry closed to passengers on July 2, 1916, a paper transfer was added to the Broadway Ferry Shuttle streetcar line. The shuttle was moved from Broadway Ferry to Lorimer Street when the BMT Canarsie Line opened through Williamsburg on June 30, 1924, and Broadway Line streetcars were rerouted to the ferry. Later the transfer was to the Meeker Avenue Line, now part of the B24 bus route.

See main article: Rockaway Avenue (IND Fulton Street Line) and Rockaway Avenue (BMT Fulton Street Line). A paper transfer[39] was added at Rockaway Avenue between the temporary east end of the underground IND Fulton Street Line and the new west end of the elevated BMT Fulton Street Line, immediately after the BMT Fulton Street Line was closed west of Rockaway Avenue on June 1, 1940.[54] When the BMT Fulton Street Line was closed east of Rockaway Avenue on April 27, 1956, these transfers were discontinued.[66]

See main article: Myrtle Avenue (BMT Jamaica Line). The lower level, serving the Jamaica Line, opened in 1888. The station became a transfer station when the Myrtle Avenue Elevated platform on the upper level opened in 1889. When Myrtle Avenue Line service west of this station ended in 1969, the upper level was abandoned and all Myrtle Avenue Line trains from the east merged onto the Jamaica Line tracks.

Queens

width=15% Station complexwidth=15% Individual stationswidth=15% Lineswidth=12% Serviceswidth=43% Notes
Court Square–23rd StreetIND Queens Boulevard LineAn $8.5 million 350-foot (100 m) passageway connecting the IND Queens Boulevard Line with the IND Crosstown Line was built by Citicorp, who was building the Citicorp Building above. It opened in December 1988.[67] [68] [69] A MetroCard transfer to the IRT Flushing Line was added on December 16, 2001, when the IND 63rd Street Line was completed and the G was cut back to Court Square during peak hours. This transfer was free for MetroCard users within two hours of the original boarding. A passageway was completed in June 2011 between the Flushing and Crosstown lines, which ended the MetroCard transfer.
IND Crosstown Line
IRT Flushing Line
lower levelBMT Archer Avenue LineBoth levels of the station opened on December 11, 1988.
upper levelIND Archer Avenue Line
cross-platform interchange on two levelsBMT Astoria LineAs part of the Dual Contracts, the Astoria Line and Flushing Line were operated by both the Interborough Rapid Transit Company and the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation. This arrangement remained through unification, until, starting October 17, 1949, the Astoria Line became BMT-only and the Flushing Line IRT-only. A cross-platform transfer at Queensboro Plaza, where the lines meet, was made available by closing the north (BMT) half of the station and routing all trains into the south (IRT) half.[70]
IRT Flushing Line
IRT Second Avenue LineN/A
IRT Flushing LineThe elevated IRT Flushing Line and underground IND Queens Boulevard Line are connected inside fare control in Jackson Heights. A paper transfer was added on July 1, 1948, and was later replaced by a passageway in 2005 when the station was rebuilt.
IND Queens Boulevard Line
lower levelBMT Archer Avenue LineBoth levels of the station opened on December 11, 1988.
upper levelIND Archer Avenue Line

Notes and References

  1. For example, the 145th Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line) station is included, because its two levels are considered parts of two different lines, while the 125th Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line) station, serving the same set of services, is not included, because all its tracks belong to one line.
  2. Web site: MTA Unveils New Jay Street/MetroTech Station In Downtown Brooklyn . . John . Mancini . December 10, 2010 . May 14, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110304033003/http://www.ny1.com/content/top_stories/130386/mta-unveils-new-jay-street-metrotech-station-in-downtown-brooklyn . March 4, 2011 .
  3. News: New Transfer at Court Square. June 3, 2011. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. July 27, 2016. February 18, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200218111154/http://www.mta.info/news/2011/06/03/new-transfer-court-square. dead.
  4. News: LIC subway station opens. June 15, 2011. Times Ledger. Henely. Rebecca. July 27, 2016.
  5. News: Passage Links Subways. The New York Times . October 10, 2016.
  6. News: With Connection on No. 6 Line, a Manhattan Transfer Is Coming. Chan. Sewell. May 7, 2005. The New York Times. Sewell Chan. April 27, 2011.
  7. [New York Times]
  8. News: Sewell . Chan . Sewell Chan. With Connection on No. 6 Line, a Manhattan Transfer Is Coming . . May 7, 2005 . April 27, 2011.
  9. News: Transfers At Bleecker Street Are No Longer A Bleak Situation. NY1. Tina. Redwine. September 25, 2012. September 26, 2012. dead. https://archive.today/20130130082002/http://www.ny1.com/content/top_stories/169624/transfers-at-bleecker-street-are-no-longer-a-bleak-situation. January 30, 2013. mdy-all.
  10. Joseph Brennan, Abandoned Stations: Chambers St closed platforms, accessed April 23, 2007
  11. [New York Times]
  12. Web site: Getting to the Oculus Just Got Much Easier. December 30, 2017. Tribeca Citizen. January 3, 2018.
  13. News: 1950-08-25. Subway Transfer Made Easier. en-US. The New York Times. 2020-12-30. 0362-4331.
  14. Web site: Fulton Center, a Subway Complex, Reopens in Lower Manhattan. Yee. Vivian. November 10, 2014. The New York Times. September 8, 2018.
  15. Web site: Cortlandt Street Station, Damaged on Sept. 11, Reopens 17 Years Later. September 8, 2018. The New York Times. September 8, 2018.
  16. http://www.mta.info/mta/news/releases/?en=090316-HQ8 MTA Opens New South Ferry Station
  17. [New York Times]
  18. [New York Times]
  19. [New York Times]
  20. Joseph Brennan, Abandoned Stations: Bowling Green & South Ferry platforms, accessed April 24, 2007
  21. [New York Times]
  22. [New York Times]
  23. [New York Times]
  24. [New York Times]
  25. Ralph Katz, New York Times, Last Train Rumbles on Third Ave. 'El', May 13, 1955, page 1
  26. [New York Times]
  27. [New York Times]
  28. http://www.railfanwindow.com/gallery2/v/NYC-photos/mapsandguides01/MTAdec111988/a4_lower_left_front_small.jpg.html Lower left front
  29. Web site: Guse . Clayton . MTA opens new walkway between Times Square and Bryant Park subway stations, revamped shuttle platforms . New York Daily News . 2021-09-08 . 2021-09-09.
  30. [New York City Transit Authority]
  31. [New York Times]
  32. Dudley Dalton, New York Times, Subway Murals Depict History of Bryant Park Area, September 26, 1971, page S30
  33. Albert Scardino, New York Times, Subterranean Engineers, October 27, 1986, page D1
  34. Anthony DePalma, New York Times, In a New Tower, a Waiting Rental Strategy Works, December 7, 1986, page A7
  35. [New York Times]
  36. [New York City Transit Authority]
  37. Web site: Mta.info | Guide.
  38. Subway Nut http://www.subwaynut.com/ind/lexf.htm
  39. [New York Times]
  40. [New York Times]
  41. [New York Times]
  42. [New York Times]
  43. [New York Times]
  44. [New York Times]
  45. [Brooklyn Daily Eagle]
  46. [New York Times]
  47. [New York Times]
  48. [New York Times]
  49. [New York Times]
  50. [New York Times]
  51. Linder. Bernard. August 1966. Culver Shuttle. New York Division Bulletin. Electric Railroaders' Association.
  52. Emanuel Perlmutter, New York Times, Subway Changes to Speed Service, November 16, 1967, page 1
  53. [New York Times]
  54. [New York Times]
  55. Thomas J. Lueck, New York Times, Subway Shuttle Gets $74 Million Makeover, October 18, 1999, page B3
  56. Web site: Long-Awaited Subway Transfers To Open In Brooklyn, Queens . John Mancini . December 3, 2010 . NY1 . December 12, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120307222228/http://brooklyn.ny1.com/content/top_stories/130033/long-awaited-subway-transfers-to-open-in-brooklyn--queens . March 7, 2012 .
  57. Web site: Welcome to the New Jay Street/MetroTech Station!. MTA.info. December 10, 2010. December 12, 2010.
  58. Web site: Service information for L, M, G, 7, M14 SBS and free transfers. April 26, 2020. April 26, 2020.
  59. Web site: Eisinger. Dale W.. Rivoli. Dan. Brooklyn official wants transfer at 2 nearby subway stations in East New York. Daily News (New York). October 9, 2016. July 6, 2015.
  60. Web site: New York City Transit and Bus Committee Meeting February 2020. February 24, 2020. mta.info. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. 179–181. February 23, 2020.
  61. Web site: Rockaway Parkway . April 18, 2012.
  62. [New York Times]
  63. [New York City Transit Authority]
  64. [New York Times]
  65. [New York Times]
  66. [New York Times]
  67. Alan S. Oser, New York Times, Perspectives: Offices in Queens, May 17, 1987, page A9
  68. Anthony DePalma, New York Times, A Giant to Dominate Low-Rise Queens, August 7, 1988, page A7
  69. Bruce Lambert, New York Times, Citicorp's Tower: Still a Majestic Misfit, February 6, 1994, page A10
  70. [New York Times]