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The Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer station contains two levels, each with two tracks and an island platform. [30] [31] The E train serves the upper level (IND) [30] at all times. [32] The J and Z trains serve the lower level (BMT); [30] the former operates all times and the latter operates during rush hours in the peak direction. [33]
The two Archer Avenue lines begin at a northern (geographic eastern) terminal, Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer (E , J, and Z trains), as a bi-level subway, each level having two tracks. The upper level is used by the B2 ( IND Division ) Archer Avenue line, and uses IND radio frequencies, while the lower level is used by the B1 ( BMT Division ...
The current Q44 route begins at the intersection of Merrick Boulevard and Archer Avenue in Downtown Jamaica, Queens (or Jamaica Center), just south of the 165th Street Bus Terminal. This terminus is shared with the Q17. Traveling west along Archer Avenue, it passes the Jamaica Center station of the Archer Avenue subway and its bus terminal.
Served 168th Street/Jamaica Avenue station until 1977. Served 169th Street/Hillside Avenue station until December 11, 1988, when the current terminus at the Jamaica Center – Parsons/Archer station was opened. All trips began running between Jamaica and Freeport on April 8, 2012.
The next stop to the east is Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer. [29] Like the other stations on the Archer Avenue Line, Sutphin Boulevard is fully ADA-accessible. [30] Both platforms are 600 feet (183 m) in length, standard for a full-length B Division train. [citation needed]
English: Sign along the Broad and Wall Street-bound tracks along the lower level platform of the Jamaica Center – Parsons/Archer New York City Subway station on the Archer Avenue Lines in the Jamaica section of Queens, New York City, indicating that skip-stop express service is available for the and trains, as well as express trains between Myrtle and Marcy Avenue stations in Brooklyn.
Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer (New York City Subway) Add languages. Add links. Article; Talk; English. ... Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer station; Retrieved from ...
Samuel Bowne Parsons Sr. was an accomplished and well noted horticulturist, who was the first to import Japanese Maples and propagate rhododendrons. Parsons' nursery was located within present-day Kissena Park. The oldest section of Parsons Boulevard is between Kissena Boulevard in Kew Gardens Hills and Archer Avenue in Jamaica.