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The southwestern portion of Brooklyn shares numbered streets and avenues starting from 36th Street to 101st Street and from 1st Avenue to 25th Avenue, passing through the neighborhoods listed below: Bay Ridge. Fort Hamilton; Bensonhurst. Bath Beach; New Utrecht; Borough Park. Mapleton lies mostly in Borough Park but its southern reaches are ...
The Central Avenue station is a station on the BMT Myrtle Avenue Line of the New York City Subway. Located at Myrtle Avenue and Cedar Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn , it is served by the M train at all times.
Planning and design for a post office in the then-independent city of Brooklyn, New York, began in 1885. During his three-year tenure (1884–86), [2] Mifflin E. Bell, supervising architect of the U.S. Treasury Department, designed the building in the Romanesque Revival style of architecture. The building originally functioned as both a post ...
The Fourth Avenue Line was then extended the line south to 86th Street in Bay Ridge on January 15, 1916. The West End Line opened in stages. The line opened from Ninth Avenue to 18th Avenue on June 24, 1916, to 25th Avenue on July 29, 1916, and to Coney Island on July 21, 1917. Culver Line service was inaugurated on March 16, 1919, to Kings ...
Central Avenue: M July 20, 1889 [24] Station rebuilt to 3 tracks July 29, 1914; center track subsequently removed. merges into BMT Jamaica Line just east of Myrtle Avenue (connector added July 29, 1914) Closed section Bedford–Stuyvesant: Broadway: April 27, 1889 [26] [27] Station still in place; tracks removed; closed October 4, 1969 [15]
The Myrtle–Wyckoff Avenues station (announced on New Technology Trains as the Myrtle Avenue–Wyckoff Avenue station) is a New York City Subway station complex formed by the intersecting stations of the BMT Canarsie Line and the BMT Myrtle Avenue Line, served by the L and M trains at all times.
Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn: Nostrand Avenue: New York City Subway: A and C (at Nostrand Avenue) New York City Bus: B52, B44 SBS, B65 East New York, Brooklyn: East New York: New York City Subway: L at (Atlantic Avenue), A, C , J , L , and Z (at Broadway Junction) New York City Bus: B12, B20, B25, B83, Q24, Q56 Richmond Hill, Queens
MDC Brooklyn occupies land that was originally part of Bush Terminal (now Industry City), a historic intermodal shipping, warehousing, and manufacturing complex. [3] The Federal Bureau of Prisons initially proposed converting two buildings at Industry City into a federal jail in 1988, due to overcrowding at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, New York. [4]