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4th Street is a street in Lower Manhattan, New York City.It starts at Avenue D as East 4th Street and continues to Broadway, where it becomes West 4th Street.It continues west until the Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue), where West 4th Street turns north and confusingly intersects with West 10th, 11th, 12th, and 13th Streets in Greenwich Village.
The north end of the Broadway station has been blocked by false walls. This northern third of the platform level area consists of passages that would have served as transfers to an unfinished station on a level directly above the Crosstown Line tracks (provisionally called South Fourth Street or Union Avenue).
New York Railways: 86th Street Crosstown Line: Upper West Side: East 92nd Street Ferry: 86th Street and York Avenue New York and Harlem Railroad from 1920 to 1932; [4] Bustitution on June 8, 1936 (now the M86 bus) Third Avenue Railway: 110th Street Crosstown Line: Fort Lee Ferry: East Harlem: 125th Street, St. Nicholas Avenue, and 110th Street ...
Plans for a crosstown subway line were floated as early as 1912. [4] [5] In 1923, a plan for such a line, to be operated by the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (BRT) from the Queensboro Bridge under Jackson Avenue, Manhattan Avenue, Roebling Street, Bedford Avenue, and Hancock Street to Franklin Avenue at the north end of the BMT Franklin Avenue Line, [6] was adopted by the city. [7]
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The 4th Street Food Co-op is a food cooperative located in New York City. The 4th Street Food Co-op runs a retail store at 58 East 4th Street, selling natural foods and household products. The co-op is member-owned and -operated, but open to the public, and focuses on offering locally grown organic, and ethically produced products.
On the Fourth of July, Razzoo’s Cajun Cafe will be open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Red Robin All Red Robin restaurants will open on the holiday but close at 8 p.m. local time.
To the west, the tracks continue under Schermerhorn Street to the decommissioned Court Street station, currently the site of the New York Transit Museum, in Brooklyn Heights. [12] [16] [38] Track A2 is currently out of service for the storage of trains at the New York Transit Museum. [43]