Everything about Broadway Elevated totally explained
The
Jamaica Line (earlier also
Broadway Line or
Broadway (Brooklyn) Line) is an elevated
rapid transit line of the
B Division of the
New York City Subway, in
Brooklyn and
Queens,
New York City,
United States. It runs from the
Williamsburg Bridge southeast over
Broadway to
East New York, Brooklyn, and then east over
Fulton Street and
Jamaica Avenue to
Jamaica, Queens. In western Jamaica, the line goes into a tunnel, becoming the lower level of the
Archer Avenue Line in central Jamaica. and trains serve the entire length of the Jamaica Line, and the serves the line west of
Myrtle Avenue.
The Jamaica Line includes the oldest existing elevated line on the subway system - the original 1885 line of the
Brooklyn Elevated Railroad - between
Gates Avenue and
Van Siclen Avenue, as well as the newest elevated structure - the 1988 ramp into the underground Archer Avenue Line.
When the
Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) operated the line, north was towards Manhattan (compass west). However, this resulted in services that ran through the
BMT Nassau Street Line to
Downtown Brooklyn having two south ends, and so by 1967, when the
Chrystie Street Connection opened and services (
QJ and
RJ) began running in this manner, the directions were switched, and north was towards Jamaica. However, the
BMT Canarsie Line didn't switch, and so the
JJ trips that switched to the Canarsie Line at
Broadway Junction had two south ends. In addition, the
KK (later
K) had two north ends, since it used the
Chrystie Street Connection from the Jamaica Line to the
IND Sixth Avenue Line.
Description
The Jamaica Line includes a variety of structures. From
Marcy Avenue to a point just before
Alabama Avenue the line operates on the structure of old
elevated railways, but substantially rebuilt and upgraded to a three-track line around
World War I under the
Dual Contracts of 1913. From Alabama Avenue to just before the current
Cypress Hills station, the Jamaica Line operates on the oldest elevated structure in
New York City, a
steel-reinforced
cast iron line opened in 1893. Interestingly enough, west of Alabama Avenue, a third middle trackway exists and elevates over the other two tracks, ending just west of the Alabama Avenue station. It isn't immediately clear whether the trackway was intended to be a stub track or an express track.
At Cypress Hills, the line turns northeast onto Jamaica Avenue on what was known as the Jamaica Avenue Line, a Dual Contracts structure. This structure has provisions on its entire length for three tracks, but a center track was never built, with the exception of a layup track at
111th Street and another between 160th Street and 168th Street on the now-demolished original end of the line.
History
The Union Elevated Railroad, leased to the
Brooklyn Elevated Railroad, opened an elevated line above Broadway from
Gates Avenue northwest to Driggs Avenue in
Williamsburg on
June 25,
1888. This was a branch of the existing
Lexington Avenue Elevated, which then ended at
Van Siclen Avenue; Broadway trains ran between Driggs and Van Siclen Avenues. A popular
free transfer was available at Gates Avenue to Lexington Avenue trains towards
Downtown Brooklyn. The Broadway Elevated was extended to Broadway Ferry on
July 14,
1888.
An extension of the Broadway Elevated east to
Cypress Hills, over Fulton Street and Crescent Street, opened on
May 30,
1893, and the company extended both Lexington Avenue and Broadway trains to the new terminal. This extension incorporated portions of the recently-demolished
Park Avenue Elevated.
Service patterns
The line has had two major service patterns - the
14 Broadway (Brooklyn) Line (earlier called the
Canarsie Line, before that line was connected to the
14th Street Line) and the
15 Jamaica Line. Eventually the 14 became the K and the 15 the J; the K was eliminated in 1976. The Z was introduced in 1988 to provide
skip-stop service, which had been done by the 14/K and 15/J at times.
The line name
From its accession by the BRT to and beyond city ownership in 1940, the portion of the line from its western terminus to Cypress Hills was known as the Broadway L or the Broadway-Brooklyn Line. Beyond that point it was known as the Jamaica Avenue Line. Subsequent to city takeover, the dividing line between the Broadway and Jamaica Avenue Lines was often considered to be the more westerly station at Eastern Parkway, now known as Broadway Junction.
Since the discontinuance of separate Broadway-Brooklyn services, the entire line is now known as the Jamaica Line.
Station listing
|
Station |
Tracks |
Services |
Opened |
Transfers and notes |
| demolished section of original line |
|
168th Street |
|
|
July 3, 1918 |
Closed September 10, 1977 |
|
160th Street |
|
|
July 3, 1918 |
Closed September 10, 1977 |
|
|
Crescent Street |
all |
|
May 30, 1893 |
|
|
Alabama Avenue |
all |
|
September 5, 1885 |
|
| merge with connection from BMT Canarsie Line |
|
Broadway Junction |
all |
|
June 14, 1885 |
(IND Fulton Street Line) (BMT Canarsie Line) Long Island Rail Road at East New York Earlier Manhattan Beach Crossing or Manhattan Junction or Eastern Parkway |
|
Chauncey Street |
local |
|
July 18, 1885 |
|
|
Halsey Street |
local |
|
August 19, 1885 |
|
|
Gates Avenue |
local |
|
May 13, 1885 |
|
|
Kosciuszko Street |
local |
|
June 25, 1888 |
|
| merge with BMT Myrtle Avenue Line |
|
Myrtle Avenue |
all |
|
June 25, 1888 |
moved from Stuyvesant Avenue for the Myrtle Avenue Elevated transfer in April 1889 |
|
Park Avenue |
|
|
June 25, 1888 |
Closed |
|
Flushing Avenue |
local |
|
June 25, 1888 |
|
|
Lorimer Street |
local |
|
June 25, 1888 |
|
|
Hewes Street |
local |
|
June 25, 1888 |
|
Marcy Avenue |
local |
|
June 25, 1888 |
|
| continues over Williamsburg Bridge and becomes the BMT Nassau Street Line |
| |
| demolished section of original line |
|
Driggs Avenue |
|
|
June 25, 1888 |
Closed 1916 |
|
Broadway Ferry |
|
|
July 14, 1888 |
Closed 1916 |
Further Information
Get more info on 'Broadway Elevated'.
|
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