Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The system's 472 stations qualifies it to have the largest number of rapid transit stations in the world. Three rapid transit companies merged in 1940 to create the present New York City Subway system: the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT), and the Independent Subway System (IND). All ...
The system's 472 stations qualifies it to have the largest number of rapid transit stations in the world. Three rapid transit companies merged in 1940 to create the present New York City Subway system: the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT), and the Independent Subway System (IND).
Also serves CT Rail's Shore Line East and Hartford Line and Amtrak's Acela, Hartford Line, Northeast Regional, Valley Flyer, and Vermonter trains. University Heights Hudson Line: University Heights: The Bronx, NY: New York Central ‡ Also served Putnam Branch until 1958 Valhalla Harlem Line: Valhalla: Westchester, NY: New York Central: 1890
near Far Rockaway – Mott Avenue ( S train) Hempstead Avenue (Lynbrook), West Broadway (Woodmere), Central Avenue (Lawrence) No Sunday service. Route shared with n32 from Hempstead to Hewlett. Open-door in Far Rockaway. LIRR connections: Hempstead, West Hempstead, Malverne, Hewlett, Lawrence, Inwood
Belmont Park is a seasonal-use Long Island Rail Road station on the grounds of the Belmont Park racetrack in the New York City borough of Queens.The station is a terminus of a spur line that lies south of and between the Queens Village and Elmont–UBS Arena stations on the Main Line/Hempstead Branch.
The Rosa Parks Hempstead Transit Center is an intermodal center and transportation hub in Hempstead, New York.It contains the Nassau Inter-County Express bus system's indoor customer facility between Jackson and West Columbia Streets – as well as the terminus for the Hempstead Branch of the Long Island Rail Road, located right across West Columbia Street from the bus terminal.
At left, M train pulling into Myrtle Ave subway station with Melrose Street apartments seen just beyond the tracks, apx. 10 feet away from bedroom windows
Mets–Willets Point (formerly Shea Stadium) is a station on the Long Island Rail Road's Port Washington Branch in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, Queens, New York City. Prior to 2021, the station was normally open only during New York Mets home games, the U.S. Open tennis tournament, major events, and emergencies. The station has been served ...