How can the Post-1985 DEFUNCT Subway lines be returned to service? | Transit Talk

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2024
  • In this video, we're going to be talking about the post-1985 defunct subway lines. These consist of the 9, H, K, M, V, and the JFK Express lines. How can they be reincorporated into the NYC subway system? Let's talk.
    Old Maps ► www.nycsubway.org/wiki/Histor...
    Maps used in this video are courtesy of this website.
    MTA Maps ► new.mta.info/maps
    Track Map ► www.vanshnookenraggen.com/_in...
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    See Planned Service Changes! ► new.mta.info/planned-service-...
    0:00 Introduction
    0:22 The 9 train
    7:43 The H train
    10:26 The JFK EXP
    12:09 The K train
    15:00 The Brown M and V trains
    22:56 Ending
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 621

  • @richietattersall2122
    @richietattersall2122 Před 2 lety +214

    They FINALLY extended the G in Brooklyn after rebuilding the center 2 tracks. It used to stop at Smith - 9st, now it ends at Church Ave so they can run the F express to Church.

    • @historyisthebestmyfans2094
      @historyisthebestmyfans2094 Před 2 lety +17

      Not really.
      The G was extended to Church Av because of 4 Av transfer to the R.

    • @michaelscott7706
      @michaelscott7706 Před 2 lety +14

      They have a GO coming up next week with weekend G trains terminating at Smith 9th and weekday G service turning at 18th Ave. If the V was brought back it should be weekdays only and go to 96st via 6th ave.

    • @BrianGomez8888
      @BrianGomez8888 Před 2 lety +3

      @@michaelscott7706 I rail fanned it

    • @jasonjtd79dunne88
      @jasonjtd79dunne88 Před 2 lety +15

      As someone that is originally from Queens I always wished the E,F went further east than just to Jamaica/Hillside respectively. Used to have to take the q46 from Kew Gardens to 259 and Union. But living jn the Bronx now I wish they would make a line from there going down directly to Queens.

    • @nomanejane5766
      @nomanejane5766 Před 2 lety +17

      @@jasonjtd79dunne88 I remember when the G train went to steinway. queens is right next to BK, so they shouldn't force us to go tru Manhattan to get there. the G train is the red headed step child of the MTA... I also agree to making it easier to get to bronx from queens, cuz that shit its ridiculous

  • @jorgegaston5391
    @jorgegaston5391 Před 2 lety +68

    The “C” ran peak hours only. The “K” ran all times except peak hours and nights. It was a former “AA”

  • @Pigsbeawesome
    @Pigsbeawesome Před 2 lety +80

    A couple things about the H train,
    during summers on the weekend it is extended to rockaway blvd
    they are thinking of reactivating the abandoned rockaway beach branch and putting service through lower montauk (queens superexpress) or the queens blvd line. While this probably won't happen, it's cool that the MTA is thinking about it and not only us transit nerds lol

    • @alexthemtaandr211weatherfa2
      @alexthemtaandr211weatherfa2 Před 2 lety +4

      Illogical because the a train is slow in queens and the s train gets entirely replaced by the h train,but the k train replace the sir,so the h train goes to rock park and does the same thing as the a train but won’t run in Manhattan and south of broadway junction during late nights,but the c train can take lefferts blvd and run 24/7,basically the a and c train swapping roles,but the service pattern is intact,while the h train during late nights has two branch lines one via the lirr thing you mentioned,note the blue s train goes from rock park over the existing a line,then via the abandoned lirr thing during daylight hours only.

    • @captainkeyboard1007
      @captainkeyboard1007 Před 2 lety +1

      We are not transit nerds. We are railroad buffs and transit fans for one common cause. That is to share our knowledge about rail transit planning. It is a thing that the general riding public does not take notice of.

    • @toters2724
      @toters2724 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexthemtaandr211weatherfa2 ok wtf

    • @iNevaan
      @iNevaan Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexthemtaandr211weatherfa2 That makes no sense dude

  • @Icyleo
    @Icyleo Před 2 lety +39

    I really loved the brown M on the west end line! My dad used to ride the M from bay parkway to his work since 2009, I don't even remember if I rode on the M since 2009 because I was only 2 years old that time, I also live near the D and N trains and will always remember the M with the D train!

    • @douglasjgallup
      @douglasjgallup Před 2 lety +5

      Me too! I used to live off the 79th street stop and worked in downtown Brooklyn and that empty M train was a godsend.

    • @ariesmichaelsayan4013
      @ariesmichaelsayan4013 Před 2 lety

      I remember one morning I went home after visiting a friend and I was at Bay Parkway… I was like where’s the M? A lady told me… Oh!! As of yesterday the M doesn’t come down here anymore. I was like ugh!! Guess I will have to stand on the D 😡

    • @Icyleo
      @Icyleo Před 2 lety

      @@ariesmichaelsayan4013 Damn

    • @Icyleo
      @Icyleo Před 2 lety

      @@douglasjgallup k

    • @joecassar3990
      @joecassar3990 Před 2 lety

      I used to live by the Fort Hamilton Parkway stop on the West End line, & rode the M while it was there. It did make my commute easier back then, & gave me an option between the THEN B & the M.

  • @lordmegatron8444
    @lordmegatron8444 Před 2 lety +102

    The "F" not being expressed to church is due to local politics. The affluent neighborhood where Bergen is protested that they would be " downgraded" to a local stop. According to the MTA the Bergen express station is in too much disrepair that it would cost too much to fix.

    • @cstism
      @cstism Před 2 lety +23

      I work for MTA and the express station is really bad! With all the money they waste on projects that take waaaay to long to finish it could be fixed. They waste money and cry broke!

    • @lordmegatron8444
      @lordmegatron8444 Před 2 lety +4

      @@cstism Did someone say east side access?

    • @ejm1225
      @ejm1225 Před 2 lety +6

      But how much exactly? Like between $500 million to $1 billion? Like with the Chambers Street BMT station?

    • @lordmegatron8444
      @lordmegatron8444 Před 2 lety +9

      @@ejm1225 Maybe, but the repairs of Chambers street and Bergen, are more useful to the average New Yorker than a white elephant like east side access. Repairing Chambers alone could result in additional service.

    • @qjtvaddict
      @qjtvaddict Před 2 lety +7

      Politicians should be separated from transit

  • @KCIRProjaM1
    @KCIRProjaM1 Před 2 lety +66

    The K (formerly AA) existed because at one point, the C (from Broad Channel to the Bronx) was a rush hour only route alongside the rush hour B between Columbus Circle and 145th Street. When they finally came to their senses and made the C an everyday route from 168th to Euclid & rerouted the B to 145th St/the Bronx, there was no need for the K anymore.
    The brown M ran as a shuttle from Middle Village to Myrtle Av on weekends
    Hope that helps.

    • @lazyjeremy8315
      @lazyjeremy8315 Před 2 lety +1

      What about the yellow B and D train ?

    • @KCIRProjaM1
      @KCIRProjaM1 Před 2 lety +2

      The Yellow B & D were basically continuations of the Orange B & D (from the Bronx/168th St) to Brooklyn due to that Manhattan Bridge project connecting at Herald Sq...& it made sense for both to end at 57th/7th (Yellow Diamond B at Astoria) rather than at Herald Square, which would've clogged all 4 routes running those Broadway express tracks. That's a whole different case. They were not permanent routes like the 9, H, K, brown M, V & JFK.

    • @lazyjeremy8315
      @lazyjeremy8315 Před 2 lety +1

      @@KCIRProjaM1 oh thxs god bless

    • @louisianafriesss
      @louisianafriesss Před 2 lety

      @@KCIRProjaM1 does this mean the brown M still runs but technically as a shuttle between Myrtle Avenue-Broadway and Middle Village?

    • @KCIRProjaM1
      @KCIRProjaM1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@louisianafriesss great question. IDK. 🤣

  • @lil5713
    @lil5713 Před 9 měsíci +8

    The lirr to the AirTrain is now considered the “JFK” express. The JFK express ceased operations before the AirTrain even existed so getting from Jamaica to JFK took much longer since you had to take a bus. You also had to take a bus from the JFK express train to the Airport as well but a much smaller route.

  • @KENNECTED1
    @KENNECTED1 Před 2 lety +27

    The Airport line was strictly for business riders as you paid an extra fare ON BOARD the train. The riders were for people who wanted to get to downtown BK, Wall Street and Midtown without many stops.
    The M train is one of the original elevated lines. I ran from Mid. village down Myrtle to downtown BK. The Brown M to brooklyn can happen any time they want. The connection from the Willie B bridge to 6th Avenue would remain. It's been there and unused for many years.
    A local train starting at Columbus Circle or 6th Ave/57th street over the F line to Kings Highway would be great. The local (terminal KH) & G train (terminal Church St.) could could handle service to Kings Highway. The express from Jay St - (perhaps Bergen lower level) - 7th Ave- Church- Kings Highway.

    • @fgaye1
      @fgaye1 Před 2 lety +1

      The only junction unused is the one at Broadway junction and the one beyond Broad a street to court street on the R

    • @KENNECTED1
      @KENNECTED1 Před 2 lety

      @@fgaye1 huh?

    • @user-vo9ne1cl2k
      @user-vo9ne1cl2k Před 2 lety

      nice idea

    • @captainkeyboard1007
      @captainkeyboard1007 Před 4 měsíci

      The M Train rolled between Metropolitan Avenue and Myrtle Avenue, and then continued on the Broadway trestle. The MJ, which line was in sky blue ran with its old Q-type wooden cars from Metropolitan Avenue to Bridge Street. The old Myrtle Avenue Trestle from Broadway to Bridge Street could support only the Q-Type cars. They were lighter than the steel railcars.

  • @johnlewis3891
    @johnlewis3891 Před 2 lety +14

    They need to bring some of these lines back and build new railroads for them. Where I live is a train desert. We have no trains in our area and we have to take a bus to any train. They should restore some of these old train lines and build routes for them in areas where there are no commercial. Near where I live there is a freight train railroad on Utica Ave that is almost never used. They should use these abandoned freight railroads for some of the defunct train lines.

  • @Catnip11147
    @Catnip11147 Před 2 lety +4

    There were two "8" trains in the NYC Subway System.
    The first one was on the Astoria Line which terminated at Ditmars Blvd. The 8 was an extension of the Queensboro Line which is now part of the 7 line. The 8 ran along the Queensboro line. And it terminated on the other side of the Steinway tunnel at Grand Central Terminal. Service between Astoria and Manhattan ran between 1917 - 1949.
    The second 8 train ran exclusively in the Bronx along the 3rd Avenue line. This 8 was a relatively short line. It ran between the 3rd Avenue Station, ran all along 3rd Avenue and terminated at the Chrystie Street Connection. Sadly, this 8 train was short lived. It ran for only six years between 1967 - 1973, when it was replaced by the Bx55 Bus line and then later by the Bx15.

  • @officialmcdeath
    @officialmcdeath Před 2 lety +29

    And here's me still wondering why they didn't swap B and D back after the Manhattan Bridge repair was done - good to see you reference Vanshnookenragen map though, it's always with me on my laptop \m/

    • @justingaffneysamuels2072
      @justingaffneysamuels2072 Před 2 lety +5

      The Q is a full time train to Second Avenue. So with the Q running full time on Brighton Beach, they did not need two full time lines on the Brighton Line. The D was switched over to West End mine, giving 24 hour access to Manhattan as well. It sucked back in the day when people had to get off the B shuttle at that line.

  • @this51man
    @this51man Před 2 lety +22

    Gonna be a long reply, bear with me lol. Great video BTW
    -Skip-stop is more for passenger distribution, rather than a traditional "express". The 9 was useless simply because there was so few stops actually skipped, and all of those stations have pretty heavy ridership. All of them former 9 trains simply became extra 1 trains. It works on the J/Z because there's more stops skipped.
    -The frequency for the A branches doubles after Rockaway Blvd. A 7 minute wait at a station like Jay St is a 14 minute wait at like 111 St or Broad Channel.
    -The JFK Express is dead forever lol. That train was mostly used by Howard Beach residents to avoid the riff-raff, and paid the extra fare.
    -The K was just fodder. It would be super useless now.
    -The M/V combo was probably the best thing they've ever done. The V was empty more often than not, and was nothing more than extra 53 St service. 2 Av was a convenient terminal for it. The old M was used in Brooklyn just because it was there. Most of the time you would be the only person in the car from Bay Pkwy all the way to Atlantic

    • @mrgooglethegreat
      @mrgooglethegreat Před 2 lety +2

      NYC shouldnt bring back any line except maybe 3rd av. They should call the queens blvd M the B and the coney island B the M. Then extent the M off the J line to the east of all those queens blvd/broadway trains. They need to make a new H that goes the length of Woodhaven to Queens Blvd. That street is already big and crowded. Extend the G and the N to LGA. Extend the 3 into JFKs terminals. Take the L north on 10th av in manhattan. Of course do Utica av from the water to the A on fulton. And please somehow ppl ....drop the Franklin av shuttle underground BEFORE it hits Atlantic and and countinue on to the G. Then start 4 tracking everything and NY will be the best once again! 🗽

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 Před 2 lety

      @@mrgooglethegreat , and you morons should shut the fuck up and expand on the subway system, as well as modernize it as well. Moreover, you should also get rid of the vast majority of the streets in New York City and just make one group of vertically oriented subways and another group of horizontally oriented subways that are deeper underground than the vertically oriented subways, thus getting rid of vehicle congestion, on street parking, and parking lots in the New York City Metropolitan Area.

    • @tonyjaxkson3669
      @tonyjaxkson3669 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mrgooglethegreat Utica should be the (3)

    • @peskypigeonx
      @peskypigeonx Před rokem +1

      “It works on the J/Z” *it doesn’t.* Why do you think there are so many proposals to remove the Z. It’s functionally useless and hinders users, it saves like 1 minute of time while servicing *less* passengers, If the J was just a normal 2 track line like the L without any skip-stop, and the Z trains were transferred to the J, it would be so much more functional.

    • @MrRoyale
      @MrRoyale Před rokem

      Regarding the 1 and 9 skip stop. It was a disaster from the beginning. I was a Conductor at the time that service was in place. Most of the time they both made all stops. It was confusing to most of the riders because it or at least was a heavy Spanish speaking line at the time. And when it did run. Riders were confused. They'd just pull the emergency brake at the stops it skipped and climb out from in between cards. Slowing service down. It was a happy day when it was finally discontinued.

  • @NativeNYker73
    @NativeNYker73 Před 2 lety +16

    New to the channel! Born and raised in NYC (although I currently call the west coast home). For those that might be too young to remember, the JFK Express or the "Train to the Plane" as it was called back in the day was actually marketed by MTA as a premium service. You paid your fare at the turnstile and then boarded those trains (usually with all your luggage in tow) and paid an additional fare which was dropped into a collection box similar to what they used on the buses back in the day. Only certain doors on certain cars would open (usually the last of the four cars which also housed a conductor who would collect additional fares). As I recall, most riders on this line were folks from out-of-town who thought it was a quick and convenient way to get from midtown to the airport or vice versa. Locals from my neighborhood (in Brooklyn) either used gypsy cabs or took the bus to JFK.
    It was also nice to learn about lines MTA put into service after I left NYC for graduate school on the west coast. Namely, the H, K, and V lines. I had no idea that they discontinued the M. Thanks so much for sharing. Looking forward to whatever else is yet to come on this channel...

  • @gregblair5139
    @gregblair5139 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The #8 train used to be the 3rd Avenue train before they tore down that line. The number is reserved, so it wasn't used. If they could install platform doors at the skipped station, then the trains would not have to slow down.

  • @sopaman1234
    @sopaman1234 Před 2 lety +9

    Back in the mid 1970's the E train ran on the C line From 179 St. . to Euclid Ave.. I believe the C train was shuttle train that ran somewhere in Queens on the Far Rockaway A line..

    • @MrRoyale
      @MrRoyale Před rokem +1

      The C which was the CC at the time ran from Bedford Park Blvd to Rockaway Park in the rush hour. After that the rush I don't remember what it did. Fun fact. It was the only line that touched The Bronx, Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens.

  • @ron234halt
    @ron234halt Před 8 měsíci +2

    A few outlandish suggestions:
    1. The K runs from Bedford to Canarsie. There are switch tracks at West 4th, Chrystie, and Broadway Jucntion that could make this possible.
    Bedford-145 on the D Line.
    145-West 4 on the C line
    West 4th-Bway-Lafayette on the F line via switch track to 6th.
    Bway-Lafayette-Delancey-Essex on the M line via Chrystie St exch.
    Delancey-Essex-Bway Jcn on the J line.
    Bway-Jcn-Rockaway Pkwy-Canarsie on the L Line via switch track at Bway-Jcn.
    2. The 9: have it run local while the 1 does peak express service (or vice versa due to this next suggestion). But extend the 9 to Brooklyn and switch it to the 4/5 line to run express Utica Ave with the 4. The switch could take place somewhere between Borough Hall Sta. and Atlantic Ave.
    3. The Brown M: The J and M took over the N and R lines when they were incapacitated by the damage of its Cortlandt St Station just after the 2001 attack. Why not have the J shadow the R and the M shadow the N?
    Outlandish Ideas that would cost billions:
    4. Build the Utica Ave extension, and let the V train service it, terminating at 2nd Ave Station.
    5. The H: Restore the track between on the Far Rockaway Branch and connect it to the Qns. Blvd line at 63rd Drive and have it terminating at Woodhaven Blvd. Build a track loop past Woodhaven Blvd under the QB ROW so it could turn around and return to Far Rockaway.

  • @Preziwalt
    @Preziwalt Před rokem +2

    Ever since coming to NYC I’ve been fascinated by the subway! I appreciate knowing this bit of history … thanks for sharing

  • @Amiri_Francis
    @Amiri_Francis Před 2 lety +9

    To the Railfans and Formers wanting these services back. Listen it’s never going to happen the MTA had valid reasons to remove those services in the first place
    9 train: It was a failed subway line. Heck the 9 train was a failure from DAY 1, The skip stop services was hated by many 1 train riders even when it was first proposed in 1988 it got a lot of backlash from Inwood and Washington Heights riders. It’s started in 1989 at first the 9 train was all weekdays, than in 1994 the 9 train got strictly reduced to rush hours only due to unpopularity. Than in 2005 the 9 train was eliminated entirely due to customers wanting more frequent service and the 1 train now makes all stops.
    K train: It was essentially a half assed copy and paste of the C train it has literally no unique route that justify keeping the K train route the K train was nothing but a waste of space and if it wasn’t eliminated it 1988 it would’ve most likely been eliminated anyway in 2010 with the budget cuts it was completely unnecessary and not needed
    V train: Arguably the most realible train route out of all of them still suffered from low ridership nevertheless and It was basically F trains running local in queens and on a shorter route to Manhattan. I felt that it needed more of a purpose, the 2010 gave it that purpose when the V train was annexed to the M train. And when coming to the bottom line with how much people like the new M train route the V train has NO MORE purpose on the 6th Avenue line
    Brown M train: to be perfectly honest the Brown M train was very useless I mean it was basically J train running via Myrtle ave line. It was often empty, it carried more air than PASSENGERS, Back then The majority of riders often transfer to delanacy st Essex st for F train service to get to midtown. It reroute to the 6th Avenue line while cause of budget cuts turn out to be the BEST THING thats happened to the M train. M train was rerouted from downtown to 6th Ave which has proven very popular and an alternative to the crowded L train
    The Jamaica/Myrtle Avenue line got a one seat ride to midtown via the M train. It not perfect but it took some pressure off the L train, and a serious alternative to the overcrowded L trains were needed
    Well the only major downside of the M rerouting is that M train riders did lose one seat ride to lower Manhattan and during rush hours southern Brooklyn, and even that isn’t really a loss especially when you consider the fact that Williamburg is demanding more midtown service lower Manhattan has a lower ridership Heck at Broadway Junction a handful of J/Z riders transfer to the A/C and/or L trains to get to midtown and before y’all bring up (the “brown M train help the D and R trains during in southern Brooklyn during Rush Hours arguments”) That not a valid excuse. In fact the Brown M train via west end/4th Avenue is the LITERALLY definition of "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink." basically no one went to southern Brooklyn via Nassau Street or took the Brown M train to Nassau Street The demand is to midtown via the 6th Avenue or Broadway lines. EVEN DURING rush hours the trains were nearly empty and if they really want to get to lower Manhattan they can just transfer to the J/Z train. The J/Z aren’t even that crowded so it doesn’t justify bring back the Brown M train. You would be pissing off a lot of Williamsburg and Bushwick riders that want to get to midtown. Yes, there is a demand for lower Manhattan from Williamsburg but there’s still the J/Z trains
    And the G train via Queens Blvd: Perhaps we overestimated the realible of the G train on queens blvd. It’s was kinda a waste to have the G train run on queens blvd when the demand to midtown Manhattan was much higher. I think the G‘s one-seat ride between Brooklyn and Queens was a bit overstated. It was not a hugely popular service when it did run there. And given that the QB Line is the second busiest in the system, with an overwhelming rider preference for Midtown Manhattan service, bringing back the G to Queens Blvd would benefit a relatively small number of riders. It would probably be even less popular if it were brought back than it was in 2001 when weekday G service was cut back to Court Square to make room for the V. If anything I would said extend the G train to the Bronx creating a sort of a Triboro Subway line.
    The JFK express train: A failed subway a waste of money, a waste of time, a waste of space, and a waste of resources. Plan and simply worst subway line to ever exist

    • @Leonard_Wilson
      @Leonard_Wilson Před 2 lety +3

      Finally, a post based on logic and not railfanning fantasies.

    • @Amiri_Francis
      @Amiri_Francis Před 2 lety

      @@activecity4051 Might as well send the E train there

    • @Amiri_Francis
      @Amiri_Francis Před 2 lety

      @@activecity4051 Yes remember even with the Worth Street Line you won’t have enough space for the K train to be revived. This also leaves space for a new Utica Avenue to be built

    • @Amiri_Francis
      @Amiri_Francis Před 2 lety

      proposal for 2nd Avenue line that expands capacity
      In Harlem a new 125th Street Crosstown Amsterdam Avenue running up to 168th street Subway line would be build with transfer to the 1/2/3/4/5/6/A/C/B/D. The T train would be sent there this gives People on West Harlem easier access to the East Side of Manhattan taking pressure off the 7/L trains.
      As for the Bronx the most popular proposal is to rebuild the 3rd Avenue line so I split it up into multiple phases in order to better manage the costs phase 1 would be to build a new tunnel in the Harlem river and extending the Q train to 3rd Avenue 149th street. Phase 2 would be to extend the Q to Fordham Plaza. And phase 3 would be to extend the Q to Gun Hill Road. A optional phase 4 to Co Op City should be studied too. This would balance out west and east side TPH. And maybe even reduce crowding on the 2 train since now people would have a another option of getting to the West side of Manhattan. The 3rd Avenue line would have three tracks to allow for a peak way express and creation of a new Express Train. The express stops would be Co Op city, Gun Hill Road, Fordham Plaza, Tremont Avenue, 3rd Avenue 149th street, and 3rd Avenue 138th street.
      Now usually it’s the T via Bronx and Q via Harlem y’all used to but the reasoning for it is that currently they is 50 trains during rush hours heading to east midtown the 4/5/6 trains vs 25/30 trains heading to west midtown the 2/D. The 1 is further west away from the rest of the Bronx line and only three stations so technically we could exclude it in this scenario. The B is a rush hour only extension and runs on the same route as the D so it doesn’t really count as it’s own Individual line. Add the Q train would balance the ridership access out. And Broadway is a much more attractive line to be extended to the Bronx since it stops at a bunch of major transfer points in midtown ETC (Times Square Herald Square Union Square).
      And sending the T to 125th street crosstown Amsterdam avenue would give the people on Harlem easier access to the east side of Manhattan reducing crowding on the 7/L trains.
      And people are saying that the Q train might be too long while I agree with this at first. Realistic that argument is moot cause I believe we overestimated the length cause let’s be honest the Q train won’t be anywhere near as long as the A or F trains. It would be around the same length as the B train. In fact my proposed K train route would be longer than the Q train
      My estimate on the Q train length.
      Longer than the N train, Shorter than the D train.
      On queens a new 4 track Northern Blvd subway line would be build two new new 2nd Avenue lines will be created these are both currently defunct services the K and V trains.
      The K train would start off at Springfield blvd then it will meet up with the V train at Utopia Parkway the V train would run local while the K train would run express. The local only stations are
      164th Street
      Kissena Blvd
      Main Street Elder Avenue
      College Point Blvd
      108th Street
      100th Street
      85th Street
      78th Street
      Local and Express stops
      Utopia Parkway
      Willets Points Blvd (transfers to flushing line)
      Junction Blvd
      Broadway Northern Blvd (transfers to queens blvd line)
      Both trains are based out of Sunnyside Yard
      The K train would branch off Broadway stoping at
      31st Street (transfer to Astoria line)
      21st Street
      Then a lower level at 72nd Street 2nd Avenue would be made then the K train rises up at 42nd street as the express service.
      The V train
      would branch using the existing 63rd street tunnel than connects to 55th Street running local with the T train.
      The reasoning why I propose Northern Blvd/2nd Ave express trains using the 63rd St tunnel. Is that It would allow would allow riders coming from 6th Ave, Queens blvd, Hillside the chance to easily transfer to the 2nd Ave Subway.
      2nd Avenue would be expanded to 4 tracks the K train would extend to a new Williamburg Utica Avenue line first it would stop at Clinton Street and Bedford Avenue
      The proposed Utica Avenue line would include 8th Avenue and 2nd Avenue services
      The E train would also be extended to Williamsburg using the Worth Street provisions with the stations at Worth Street Chambers Street, Chatham Square, East Broadway and finally Montgomery Street. The Benefits are that it opens up new transfer options for riders in lower Manhattan. World Trade Center terminal will continue to get service but during rush hours only. The World Trade Center would be used to terminate extra C/E train during rush hours if their isn’t capacity on the Brooklyn routes when CBTC is Installed on the 8th Avenue, Fulton street, and the proposed Williamsburg lines. So a total of 8-10 rush hour trains would terminate there 4-5 rush hour C/E trains each would be sent there. But that might limit capacity on the Fulton street and the proposed Williamsburg lines. At all other times WTC is closed so you have to take the E to canal street for an A or C train I mean the Chambers street and World Trade Center are literally the same station complex so shutting it down shouldn’t be too much of a problem, however it does have a ridership count so some people might not like the sound of being forced to transfer at Canal Street for a A/C train. The World Trade Center would still be used for emergencies or G.O work.
      The E train will also make one stop at Bedford Avenue before meeting up with the K train at Havemeyer street
      This route would run south 3rd street and Utica Avenue it would be a 4 track line the E train is the local and the K train is the express.
      Local exclusive stops
      Flushing Avenue
      Lafayette Avenue
      Halsey Street
      Prospect Place
      Empire Blvd
      Church Avenue
      Avenue D
      Flatlands Avenue
      Avenue N
      All local and express stops
      Havemeyer Street
      Broadway South 4th street
      Myrtle Avenue
      Utica Avenue Fulton Street
      Crown Heights Utica Avenue
      Kings Highway
      Kings Plaza Utica Avenue
      This proposed south 3rd street and Utica Avenue line would help balance the load of new commuters from Williamsburg, Bushwick and Bed-Stuy which currently use the L or M to get to Midtown or take the J to get to Lower Manhattan. The J train and the BMT Centre St Subway in general suffer from being built when everyone from northern Brooklyn were headed to lower Manhattan and the Financial District. Today commuting patterns have changed that now both lower Manhattan and midtown are popular designations but the high cost of new infrastructure has hampered the ability to make needed service changes. The new Williamburg line that would be served by the E and K trains would give communters more alternatives for folks in Williamburg other than having to use the congested J/Z M and L trains. And it’s would be very attractive as it offers both west side and east side access to Manhattan.
      Phase 4 would be build too
      Hanover Square would be expanded to 4 tracks the inner tracks used for terminating trains the outer tracks used for Brooklyn service. the V train would only run up to Hanover Square. T trains would be extend to Fulton street local using the Court Street transit museum link. T/V meets up with the A/C at Hoyt Street the C train would be moved to the Express tracks with the A train on Broadway junction the T train would continue to Euclid Avenue. The C train would be extended to Lefferts Blvd. All A trains can than be diverted to Far Rockway and Rockway Park. During late nights V train won’t operate at all the K train operates local in its place. Lefferts shuttle still operates during late nights. The T train ends a at Hoyt street with the A train becoming local

    • @R262SubwayTrain
      @R262SubwayTrain Před 2 lety

      @@Amiri_Francis I wonder how long you spent to replay

  • @michaelsteinberg205
    @michaelsteinberg205 Před 2 lety +6

    Thanks for clarifying this. You solved a mystery I had wondered about from time to time over the last 25 years. Before I lived in NYC, I visited my dad one summer. I saw a K train sign at canal street. It was 1995. I couldn’t find it on any map. We asked a few MTA employees and a police officer about it, but no one had ever heard of the K train.

  • @nathantheog5870
    @nathantheog5870 Před 2 lety +22

    Amazing video. Do you think you could do a series wear you review MTA's rolling stock for their busses, subway fleet etc?

  • @nyceyes
    @nyceyes Před 2 lety +4

    I was born and raised in Manhattan on 125th and Amsterdam Ave, so I used either the 1 train (on 125th & Broadway) or the A and D trains (on 125th & 8th Ave). The A, D express from 125th St. to 59th St. (Columbus Circle) was great. When I went to High School in Brooklyn, that one express jump saved me a lot of time over three years. 🎉
    I should also mention that the 9 train wasn't around all that long. I remember when it was introduced, thinking that it didn't make sense because there's "effectively" only one track for both the 1 and 9 trains (because of track switch and station arrangements). So the 9 train didn't last very long.
    Nice video by the way. 🤗 I was very well explained. Bravo.

  • @DannyEastVillage
    @DannyEastVillage Před 2 lety

    new fan here. you're fantastic to listen to and have an amazing command on the system. I really admire that. Thanks for making this so much fun to watch and listen to.

  • @ChariotManGaming85
    @ChariotManGaming85 Před 2 lety +5

    People don't remember the C Train Originally went to Bedford Park Blvd The Bronx doing rush hours from the B Train Line.

    • @MrRoyale
      @MrRoyale Před rokem +1

      The CC at the time. Ran from Bedford Park Blvd to Rockaway Park. Only line to touch all mainland boros.

  • @justingaffneysamuels2072
    @justingaffneysamuels2072 Před 2 lety +9

    103, 116th Street, 125th Street, and 137th Street are very popular stations. Even skip stop service never skipped. Plus there’s no place actual platforms for a 1 express to stop. There are huge operational issues you just mentioned.

    • @mikoparolanto
      @mikoparolanto Před 2 lety

      Exactly, the 9 train didn't work because it skipped too few stops, and the stops it did skip were heavily used.

  • @RX552VBK
    @RX552VBK Před rokem +1

    "Take the train to plane--the train to the plane..." I remember that commercial when I was a kid! lol

  • @Brillemeister
    @Brillemeister Před 2 lety +1

    So enlightening. Thanks for uploading. God bless

  • @captainkeyboard1007
    @captainkeyboard1007 Před 2 lety +1

    Planning rapid transit lines is a tall order and it requires more than one head to complete the job. This is what I like about TransitTalk NYC. Also, I like that rail Vansnookneragen map that you showed in your show. It is more comprehensive that the subway map.

  • @mrpapagiorgio5404
    @mrpapagiorgio5404 Před 2 lety +1

    I live in brooklyn and honestly this was really interesting. Nice video bro

  • @SevereWeatherCenter
    @SevereWeatherCenter Před 9 měsíci +1

    The 63rd street extension on the F line came into existence in 1989.

  • @MarceloPlus
    @MarceloPlus Před 2 lety +1

    Top 10, videos that I didn’t skip 10 seconds through, great vid

  • @DFWRailVideos
    @DFWRailVideos Před rokem +2

    Not from NYC, or the east coast for that matter, but I really enjoyed this video. I've always had an interest in the NYC Subway and it's quirks. Thank you for educating me on discontinued train lines of NYC!

  • @michaelscott7706
    @michaelscott7706 Před 2 lety +3

    The H is the Rockaway Park shuttle on the pick sheets. Years ago it was a round Robin from RKP to Mott then Mott to Euclid and back to RKP midnights only. The A went to Lefferts 24 hours then the A just went to Mott 24 hours and the OPTO lefferts shuttle came to light.

  • @tobygoodguy4032
    @tobygoodguy4032 Před 2 lety +1

    Back in the 35 cent day, the Broadway Local used to run a 'Thru Express' during rush hour that selectively skipped certain UWS stations before hitting the Bronx.

  • @mzxeternal
    @mzxeternal Před 2 lety +3

    Great Video, I think the H could exist again if they could run a combined rapid transit service via a reactivation of the abandoned portion of the Rockaway Beach Branch, then as you said connecting to the LIRR main line and terminating at its own platform at Penn (which could work with the planned expansions to Penn discussed.
    The train to the plane failed for being a premium service. If it wasn't a premium service and simply operated as a super express, that probably would be a heavily used service. Run it from 59th Street Columbus, making all stops in Manhattan and Jay, then making no other stops other than maybe Broadway Junction for the transfer until Howard Beach and replacing the shuttle to Rockaway during rush hours. That would be one heck of a service. I read that quite a few people in Howard Beach paid the premium fare for the faster trip when it did exist, for the faster trip. I think it could be a great service, but only if it's not premium fare. That's what ultimely killed it.
    And the weekend brown M was just a short shuttle from Metropolitan Avenue to Myrtle Ave where riders needed to xfer to the J to go further.

  • @afhollister19
    @afhollister19 Před 2 lety +11

    It was a good idea in theory during rush hour but as you pointed out it didn’t work as much. All they did was switch 9 trains to 1 and have them make all stops all the time.

    • @ECRALSE40LPS
      @ECRALSE40LPS Před rokem

      Yeah I think that we should have 9 return but Broadway Express.

  • @rockylikm
    @rockylikm Před 2 lety +3

    As someone who lived in Rockaway, mad people use the Shuttle (formerly the H train).

  • @RockvilleTrainFan
    @RockvilleTrainFan Před 2 lety

    Your Channel is too underrated. You need more subs!!

  • @richietattersall2122
    @richietattersall2122 Před 2 lety +9

    They still run "Skip-Stops" on the J in Brooklyn.

    • @TheElectricGhost
      @TheElectricGhost Před 2 lety

      It's unfortunate that they don't use the express track often between Junction and Myrtle

    • @SECERETSONG
      @SECERETSONG Před 2 lety +1

      Yup, during rush hour.

  • @lars7935
    @lars7935 Před 2 lety

    Having never (yet) been to NYC I don't understand much but somehow I still find your videos interesting.
    There's quite a bit I don't yet understand about the design philosophy of transit in NYC but your videos help me kind of understand.

    • @lars7935
      @lars7935 Před rokem

      @@gururaj6594 Having now been there it just looks so run down. Definitely needs a lot more investment.
      I don't know a lot about the commuting patterns but the entire systems seems incomplete. Especially since the commuter railways seem barely integrated into the overall system.

  • @biggabettabadda
    @biggabettabadda Před 2 lety +6

    Some weekends the Brown-Line went to prospect park. Most recently the J did that. It was liked cuz it didn't segregate Brooklyn. You just take the Brighton Line, walk off platform hop and the J in same platform. Easier trip on Jamaica line.

  • @295g295
    @295g295 Před 2 lety +8

    10:44 - 'Out-of-town' people going from Manhattan to JFK Airport want no contact with the people of mid-Brooklyn.

    • @295g295
      @295g295 Před 2 lety

      Now, the E-train service is the Train-to-the-Plane -- to the AirTrain at Jamacia. 12:39

    • @295g295
      @295g295 Před 2 lety

      12:50 - Was the World Trade Center station newly built about 50 years ago?

    • @stephenheath8465
      @stephenheath8465 Před 2 lety +1

      Stick up kids were out to''tax'' back in those days.

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Před 2 lety +4

    The "K" was simply the AA after they drop the double letters.
    Also when the AA ran, the B and CC did not run. The AA was the part time, while the B and CC was rush hours only. So often riders of these lines along central part west often seen the AA than the B and CC, because the AA also ran on weekends. It was a cost cutting move for this period.
    Unfortunately, "A" service was force to cover local service outside rush hours in Brooklyn.
    Another point of history was there was another "B" and "K" service.
    The "B" ran from both 168th Street and 57th Street.
    The "B" from 168 was the 6th Avenue Express while the 57 "B" was the local. The 57 ran full time as the only train besides the JFK. I forgot what served 57 unless it was closed midnights.
    As for the K service that ran like the M train today. But it ran only to 57th Street.
    I personally like the idea of the "K" service as it ran with the J. It was the express from Broadway East NY to Essex Street.

  • @mikec.8556
    @mikec.8556 Před 2 lety

    Great video !

  • @sparkswolverine
    @sparkswolverine Před 2 lety +1

    If I remember, the skip-stop started at 137 St.
    I think the Train to the Plane really catered to folks in Manhattan. They’d be the ones to provide the premium price the transit system was asking for.

  • @MagicMike-rd8mz
    @MagicMike-rd8mz Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent Review on the fromer MTA Subways routes. But the H train can be the revibe Far-RockBeach Line !!

  • @lucasmossman3820
    @lucasmossman3820 Před rokem +1

    I remember the 9 train being in service. I was born in 2001 so I have very faint memories of riding it before it was defunct in 2005.
    And ofc I grew up with the original Brown M and the V train, I wish those were still around

  • @qiaowani
    @qiaowani Před 7 měsíci

    6:56 I agree, a personal expansion plan I have has 3 Island Platforms on 2 Levels, 2 A Division, 1 B Division

  • @justinsimmonds5674
    @justinsimmonds5674 Před rokem +1

    This is an interesting video. I have some ideas on how they could do it. Not sure how my solutions could be worked in practice, but after looking at the track map and the existing services, this is how I would probably do it.
    - For the 9 train, they could implement it as a diamond 1 in peak direction if they wanted to. From Manhattan, it could go all stations from Whitehall St South Ferry to Chambers St, use the express tracks with 2 and 3 up to 96th St, jump to 137th St on the middle track, all stations to 215th St then jump onto middle track again up to Van Cortlandt Park.
    For the H train (Euclid Avenue to Rockaway Park) and JFK Express, I have an alternative idea. So that the A doesn’t have to tackle two terminals in Queens, they could extend the C from Euclid Avenue to Ozone Park and then have all A services go to Far Rockaway. They could then have the H go all stations from Rockaway Park to Euclid Avenue then run express like the A up to Columbus Circle where the H would terminate. The A would continue onto Inwood 207th St just like it does currently.
    I have no idea how a K, V or brown M could work in the modern setting as they would not really have anything new to offer if they were put in.

  • @mr.uncleg5307
    @mr.uncleg5307 Před 2 lety

    #bars, lol. I love the info. Thanks, man.

  • @malachimuhammad-dy2ow
    @malachimuhammad-dy2ow Před 8 měsíci

    I wish the JFK limited express comes back to running between 57th Street, and JFK Howard Beach Airport. I do miss that express service.

  • @Santiago-lb5md
    @Santiago-lb5md Před 2 lety +1

    I don’t know almost anything about the nyc subway, even though, i watched it entirely, great video dude!

  • @graceramos9920
    @graceramos9920 Před 2 lety

    So cool!

  • @ThatBronxRailfanner
    @ThatBronxRailfanner Před 2 lety +8

    About that Queens Crosstown Line, the demand is there. The Rockaway Beach Branch is currently proposed to be revitalized, plus two heavily used Select Bus Service corridors run a few blocks away from the proposed RBB reintegration.
    Edit: The K ran because the C was rush hours only.

    • @HungGottiYoCarti82328
      @HungGottiYoCarti82328 Před 2 lety +1

      The demand is definitely there but mta are crooks they asks for bailouts after bailouts, they OVER charge for construction it’s wild. Rick away line definitely needs to be built try taking the 52,53 to rock away from elmhurts… the worst this line needs to be built ASAP. Extend the R to rock away park

    • @DTD110865
      @DTD110865 Před 2 lety

      @@HungGottiYoCarti82328 I say revive the G extension to the former Rockaway Beach Branch, and have it run down to either Howard Beach, Broad Channel, or Far Rockaway-Mott Avenue. While they're doing that, they should revived Woodhaven Junction station as an LIRR transfer station, and convert the bridge beneath the LIRR Main Line in Rego Park into another LIRR transfer station.

    • @iNevaan
      @iNevaan Před 2 lety

      @@DTD110865 They should also considering converting Woodhaven Blvd - Slattery Plaza into an express station. You have the provisions to make it an express train, plus Woodhaven Blvd has a lot of ridership. Not to mention, but making Woodhaven Blvd an express station, will help lower the crowds at Roosevelt Av

  • @jaimepimentel1502
    @jaimepimentel1502 Před 2 lety

    Also Rockaway Park Shuttle in the summer weekend from 9am to 9pm run till Labor Day between Rockaway Park and Rockaway Blvd.

  • @ronaldharvinjr636
    @ronaldharvinjr636 Před 2 lety +2

    The the train used to be rush hour's operating only. It was never suspended. The (K) train was just a rename of the (AA) train. You have to know the history of these lines. I go way back with these lines following these train lines since I was 7 years old.

  • @landocalrisian2014
    @landocalrisian2014 Před rokem

    This former New Yorker just subed 👍🏽👍🏽

  • @ronaldharvinjr636
    @ronaldharvinjr636 Před 8 měsíci

    The train kudve used the express track btwn 96 - 157 St and Dykman to 242 St.

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Před 2 lety +1

    I agree with you about the Brown *M", the "R" and "V" lines.
    The first problem is the unreliable and infrequent "R" line. So the "M" offered another option partially. Except it should have gone to 95th Street instead of the West End line with the "D".
    The only thing I would say more about the F/V is a peak direction express can come out of the F line south of Church Avenue. Although this would be good for passengers south of the line, the demand is on the B and Q lines. But splitting them up even justify having an express.

  • @kristzikaizhu4266
    @kristzikaizhu4266 Před 7 měsíci

    J trains can still terminate at Broad St while brown M continues to Brooklyn, since there are extra switchback tracks for J trains to switch back, without cutting M's main track. As an example, some 1 trains terminate at 137 St.

  • @RunawayTrain2502
    @RunawayTrain2502 Před rokem

    The (8) designation was last used for the last remnant of the 3rd Ave El between 3rd Ave - 149 St and Gun Hill Road on the White Plains Line wich was demolished in 1973.

  • @imdanumber1
    @imdanumber1 Před 2 lety +3

    The issue with the 1/9 skip-stop was because that part of the line north of 137th Street had growing ridership and it didn't justify skip-stop anymore. Riders at skip-stop stations were experiencing longer wait times, and fewer riders were benefiting from the service pattern overall. It works for the J/Z because there are far more stops skipped and there's 5-6 minutes saved.
    My idea would be to have a.m. rush hour trains with a zone express service. trains would operate from 242 to 137, then express to 96th Street, then local. (1) trains would enter service at Dyckman Street, then local all the way down to South Ferry.

    • @historyisthebestmyfans2094
      @historyisthebestmyfans2094 Před 2 lety +1

      Not only that, Washington Heights and Inwood residents weren't happy with the service plan in 1988, long before the MTA finalized the skip stop service.
      As for the J/Z, it's skip stop is iffy at times.
      You have a Z running local like its a J.

    • @imdanumber1
      @imdanumber1 Před 2 lety

      @@historyisthebestmyfans2094 I have definitely heard stories of trains en route being turned into locals because of crew shortages. Happened to me once.

    • @historyisthebestmyfans2094
      @historyisthebestmyfans2094 Před 2 lety

      @@imdanumber1 Even long before pandemic, the Z ran local sometimes.
      I think once the service levels on Nassau get hectic, that's when Skip Stop service starts.

  • @cuttyf74
    @cuttyf74 Před 2 lety +10

    15:00 my opinion
    I will like the (V) to replace the Kings highway (F) train so the (F) can run rush hour on the middle track then from church Avenue go express to jay Street that will reduce time and make the (F) more attractive....

    • @Flash_Warn1ng
      @Flash_Warn1ng Před 2 lety +2

      @@TransitTalkNYC there can’t be 5 trains on 6th Ave so maybe send limited rush hour E’s there via Culver express trust me as a E rider rush hours there is a E every minute so half of those E trains go to Kings highway and when coming back it goes local to Church then continue to express

    • @justingaffneysamuels2072
      @justingaffneysamuels2072 Před 2 lety

      @@Flash_Warn1ng CBTC upgrades could increase capacity for the Cranbeyrry Street Tunnel allowing the E train to access that Tunnel. At Jay Street it could switch to Culver.

    • @alexthemtaandr211weatherfa2
      @alexthemtaandr211weatherfa2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@justingaffneysamuels2072 I’ll do rush hour extension of my Minecraft v train via Central Park east line ind.

    • @jaimerosado4254
      @jaimerosado4254 Před 2 lety +2

      Most things you said about why the 1/9 failed is contradicted by J/Z service. The real reason why the 9 was discontinued was inconsistency. At a public hearing in February, 2004, many people complained that at stations served by only the 1 train, they would see two or three 9 trains pass before a 1 train arrived, and vice versa.
      Now as for the failure of the JFK Express, you should know that when it was introduced in 1979, the A train only ran express in Brooklyn during rush hours. So outside of rush hour, the JFK Express had the Brooklyn express tracks to itself, thus improving it's efficiency as an express train. But the sad truth is that not only was the JFK Express never really popular, but a survey showed that the majority of riders were not air travelers but rather Howard Beach residents. And then in December, 1988 , the A train started running express in Brooklyn all day on weekdays, thus severely compromising the JFK Express's efficiency and necessity. It was discontinued 16 months later in April, 1990.

    • @coolboss999
      @coolboss999 Před 2 lety

      @@TransitTalkNYC Tbh West End is also in need of an express service but there isn't really a demand for it

  • @JuzCallMeLeX
    @JuzCallMeLeX Před 10 měsíci

    Remember that skip-stop service is not designed to save time. It never was. It’s meant to save space on trains and relieve crowding on trains during the busiest periods of the day. As someone who used the 1/9 and the J/Z at different points in my life, there was nothing really wrong with it. You just had to keep that in mind. Yes it was annoying to wait in the station (with the doors closed) because there was another train in front of it. But this happens on many days during the rush hour anyway.
    Side note: Same is true for limited-stop bus routes. Super annoying when you get on a limited bus route, and the local bus passes you and you’re like, wtf?? But once again, it’s not designed to save time or be speedy, etc. it’s supposed to save space on buses.
    Thanks for your vids 🤘🏿🙏🏿💯

  • @456newportlines
    @456newportlines Před 5 měsíci +1

    I have another idea for broad st:
    Renovate station to have four tracks and make the entire station different from the old looks

  • @RocketShipSquid
    @RocketShipSquid Před 2 lety +4

    Do you think you could do a second video like this where you propose how the Unused Rollsigns on the r62s (like the 10, 11, etc) could be used as working lines?

    • @MrRoyale
      @MrRoyale Před rokem

      Those were there for possible added lines that never made it out of the thinking stage.

  • @Flash_Warn1ng
    @Flash_Warn1ng Před 2 lety +4

    Amazing video also west end needs a peak direction express service

    • @Flash_Warn1ng
      @Flash_Warn1ng Před 2 lety

      @@TransitTalkNYC true but a express revive would be more useful IMO and they can always use the local track anytime that’s not rush hour

  • @johnpastore7685
    @johnpastore7685 Před rokem

    I sometimes, took the JFK air train to Howard Beach, when I lived there.

  • @mark4707
    @mark4707 Před 9 měsíci

    Interesting there was an “8” train that ran in the bronx on third ave from gun hill to 149 hub (current bx41+ bus). It even used to run down 3rd ave in manhattan, but that manhattan part was demolished in the 50s. The bronx section was eventually demolished as well in the 70s. If you see an old map you will see the 8 train

  • @tommynunez1495
    @tommynunez1495 Před 2 lety

    If I'm not mistaking the middle track at 137th street becomes the northbound track the (1) diverge to at the end of the platform? For a express (1) train I would say from Vancourtland Park to Dyckmam, then from w 137th st to w 96th st using the middle track.

  • @Trainsallday
    @Trainsallday Před 2 lety +4

    Now a lot of these lines were rightfully removed. I do believe MTA should run heritage trains one a year like they do with the Christmas trains. However I think something that is needed is the extension of the Franklin ave shuttle!

    • @richietattersall2122
      @richietattersall2122 Před 2 lety

      They're actually be REPLACING it, they tore it down and replaced it with buses. Where the M turns onto the J/Z line above Broadway in Brooklyn is another example, it used to run to what's now the Jay St - MetroTech station.

  • @ChickenNoodle
    @ChickenNoodle Před 2 lety

    After 1968, there was a different K Peak Direction service between 57th Street and 168th Street in Jamaica (Local in Manhattan), It was to provide service between Midtown and the Jamaica Line after the B was extended to Washington Heights, 168th Street. The K and the JJ provided Skip Stop service. In 1973 it was cut back to Eastern Parkway/Broadway Junction. Service ended in 1976, having skip stop on the Jamaica line eliminated (Until the J/Z skip stop service was introduced)

    • @michaelsherrell6389
      @michaelsherrell6389 Před 2 lety

      Between 1976 and the introduction of the Z train, there was still skip stop service on the J train line. There was "A" stations and "B" stations, as well as A/B stations for the morning rush hours. "A" J Trains made A stations, and "B" J trains made the other stops.

    • @Amiri_Francis
      @Amiri_Francis Před 2 lety

      @@michaelsherrell6389 So in the 1988 the Z train was created to reduce confusion with the services right

    • @roberttapken1139
      @roberttapken1139 Před 3 měsíci

      Didn't the KK have Atlantic Ave (Before it was renovated) as a terminal.

  • @grubbinsstuff5063
    @grubbinsstuff5063 Před 11 měsíci

    1. Turn the 9 into the 1 express (bypassing 103rd, 110th, 116th, 125th, then turns into the local by City College OR Ditto, but more earlier than the 1).
    2. The H extension (becomes similar to the A service, alongside using the rockaway as the starting point and goes ALL the way towards 169th within the A service)
    3. JFK Express refresher. (Makes the JFK stop at all of the express stops on its way to the airport).
    4. K 168-WTC (self explanatory).
    5. V extension to Church then F turns into express only past Church (self explanatory).

  • @bostonrailfan2427
    @bostonrailfan2427 Před 2 lety

    the 207th St. connection isn’t for anything other than connecting the 1/2/3/4/5/6 to the major shops there as well as accessing their huge Coney Island shops via the B/D/F lines. the line’s main yard is at 240th St. which is why the third track ends at about 239th St.
    another thing to know: you’re looking at it from a line map, not a satellite map…until Dykeman Avenue the line is in a tunnel so unless they build out on the sides there’s no way to put a platform for express stops.

  • @mellisvids
    @mellisvids Před 2 lety +10

    The 9 was sort of an express that used the middle tracks to bypass stations

    • @joshuaedwards5822
      @joshuaedwards5822 Před 2 lety

      The 9 that I remember only did skip stop with the 1. I'm curious, Was there a 9 express and 1 local at some point??

    • @ss04to06
      @ss04to06 Před 2 lety +4

      @@joshuaedwards5822 I don't think so. It was always a skip-stop service. The way the tracks are configured on the Broadway Line from 96 St to 242 St makes express service very, very difficult.

  • @DarkXNotPsycho17
    @DarkXNotPsycho17 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I wonder if the G train will ever have an express service. The G train is very single to itself sometimes it connects with the F train but at the most end its just by itself.

  • @ronaldharvinjr636
    @ronaldharvinjr636 Před 8 měsíci

    The (M) used to go to Coney Island via Brighton Line during weekdays

  • @qolspony
    @qolspony Před 2 lety

    What hurt the 9 service the most was the amount of people using the 116th Street station. In a perfect situation at least a middle station would be built. And the train should skip 157 peak to a stop at 168th Street.
    But it is pretty obvious that the project ran into funding problems along the way. Notice how this middle track ends at 145th Street. Had the funding continued at least to 168th Street.
    The other issue is the express track is only good to 96th Street. From there we are talking local stops south of there. This is compare to the "A" service that has both north and south expresses. And the fact it jumps from 125th Street to 59th Street without forcing riders to a 2 seat ride. But the 116th Street station is a big attraction to the Broadway line. And making it an express stop and extending the middle track to 168th Street would effectively be branded as the COLUMBIA EXPRESS tying Columbia University with Columbia Presbyterian Hospital.

  • @siah0GG
    @siah0GG Před 2 lety +2

    I dont know who lives in queens but do in LIC and public transport isnt a problem at all, but in many other parts of queens theres only buses and like no trains. Many places in queens need train lines because most of queens feels like long island. All the lines that go to queens are crowded and they mostly have good service because of the lack of transport in queens. Any new line in queens and the H train going along the old rockaway line would really be used and crowd the line. The only thing tho i sthat there trying to do that but with the M rain and extend it to rockaway park. The M train has bad service like every 6-8 min on peak and it would become weird because there 8 car trains and service woudnt be good. That means the rockaway park yard and a new yard would need to be created to support this. This extension would be good for many people tho. U can also have a couple rush hour trains like 6 go to far rockaway and 6 go to rockaway park like now. Idk but this would be legit and ideal to happen. the MTA is studying the line now.

  • @ECRALSE40LPS
    @ECRALSE40LPS Před rokem

    I mean we can refurbished the A and C tracks to include the K. Make the E Express from 42nd Street to WTC. Maybe the K can go to Brooklyn at Flatbush Avenue via the Utica Avenue line after Fulton street- Utica Avenue it would be elevated stopping at Eastern Parkway, Empire Blvd, e.t.c.

  • @vincentm4717
    @vincentm4717 Před 2 lety

    The K train was not around very long. But that same line was formely called the AA line. That was around for years from 168 street to chambers st. During rush hours the AA would become the BB line which ran down 6th Ave during rush hours. A second local the CC ran from the Bronx to chambers Street during rush hours only. The CC train is today the C train and the BB is now the B train. Also E service was extended into Brooklyn and The Rockways via Fulton Street express during rush hours. The A ran local. Today the C runs local and the A run express along Fulton Street in Brooklyn. This was back in the 60s

  • @ariesmichaelsayan4013
    @ariesmichaelsayan4013 Před 2 lety +17

    The 9 train was useless. Getting rid of it actually improved the frequency of service in upper Manhattan and the Bronx. I honestly don’t think it was a big deal. I use to take the 1/9 and the ride wasn’t very long from the Bronx to 59th street.

    • @ejm1225
      @ejm1225 Před 2 lety +1

      Honestly, if I were to bring back the 9 service, I'd reinstate it into a full-time Dyre Avenue Shuttle, while the 5 terminates northbound to either 241st Street or Gun Hill Road. But, that would also mean converting the former station into an express terminal station with two island platforms and three tracks.

    • @ariesmichaelsayan4013
      @ariesmichaelsayan4013 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ejm1225 that would be a disaster. Anyone who lives above E180th on the Dyre line would absolutely hate that during rush hour. They would lose a one seat ride to the east side of Manhattan and would be forced to transfer at E180th causing overcrowding during rush hour. I would just turn the 5 to Nereid into the 9 train to avoid confusion with the 5 to Dyre.

  • @AVeryRandomPerson
    @AVeryRandomPerson Před 2 lety +4

    The (8) was the final section of the 3rd Avenue Elevated, entirely separated from the system until they demolished it in 1973

    • @michaelsherrell6389
      @michaelsherrell6389 Před 2 lety

      The Third Avenue was physically connected to the #2 & #5 lines at the Gun Hill Road station in the northern Bronx until 1973, and had two other connections in the South Bronx when the full Bronx/Manhattan Third Ave El existed.

    • @stevevasta
      @stevevasta Před 2 lety +1

      @@michaelsherrell6389 Two other connections? I know it also connected to the 2 and 5 at 149th/3d Avenue.

    • @owltellyouwut
      @owltellyouwut Před 2 lety

      if i remember correctly, some 1 trains have the 8 train bullet on some cars, its rare tho

    • @stevevasta
      @stevevasta Před 2 lety

      @@owltellyouwut I'm remembering it differently -- that the "8" bullet was purple, the same color as the "7" bullet -- but I, too, could be muddling this up.
      I also remember seeing a "10" bullet; no idea what color it was.

    • @toters2724
      @toters2724 Před 2 lety

      @@stevevasta both were green actually

  • @Cyber-Dragoness-026
    @Cyber-Dragoness-026 Před 2 lety +3

    I agree with this! Instead of making new lines they could bring back these lines.

    • @ECRALSE40LPS
      @ECRALSE40LPS Před 10 měsíci

      9 train can work during rush hours. The orange m gets split into 2 lines the v can go to Chruch Avenue with the g, while the the brown m can get sent to fresh meadows direct service.

  • @Steeeve_
    @Steeeve_ Před 2 lety

    The LIRR is able to send trains through local stations and Amtrak can do so at pretty high speeds at some of their NJ stations. I have mixed feelings about platform screen doors, but this would be one of the benefits. Since the LIRR doesn't go to Lower Manhattan a nonstop from Chambers street to Howard Beach operated with a conductor at a similar fare would appeal to business people. What would make it interesting would be if such a service could be extended in the other direction towards EWR creating a way to take a train between JFK and EWR. Since A line cars would need to run on B line track, this would need to serve a minimal amount of specially modified stations.

  • @noahnorman6877
    @noahnorman6877 Před rokem +1

    If the 9 train is ever brought back, it should be converted into a rush hour peak express service that will use the center express tracks at the 1 train stations instead of the skip-stop method of bypassing the station. Similar to how I think the Z train’s service pattern should be converted into instead of being skip stop.

  • @Untitled_DevX
    @Untitled_DevX Před rokem +1

    The V was a hated line as it had a transfer at every single stop and the brown M got re added for some time as a shuttle

  • @rvouzs2x
    @rvouzs2x Před rokem

    Recently there has been brown M train signs popping up around certain stations like Canal and Atlantic Ave's

    • @TransitTalkNYC
      @TransitTalkNYC  Před rokem

      Yes, but that is likely because people pulled stickers off of the signs. The MTA puts stickers on the signs to hide the Brown M, and people peel it off. I've seen Brown M signs at Borough Hall and V train signs at 14 St.

  • @del.see.oh.89
    @del.see.oh.89 Před 2 lety +2

    I lived on 207th (9 train) and had to commute to 86th (1/9 train) in HS from 2003-2005. I swear that two or three 1 Trains would come before a 9 sometimes.

    • @MrRoyale
      @MrRoyale Před rokem

      Big reason why it didn't work.

  • @curtisrenkin8765
    @curtisrenkin8765 Před rokem +1

    Why not have the run to Forest Hills or beyond when the does not reach Forest Hills on the weekends?

  • @Maunico0809
    @Maunico0809 Před 2 lety

    One of the possibilities of the 2010 budget cuts was to extend the V to Metropolitan Av and completely axe the M. This is why all the B Division NTTs have V train programs that were programmed with announcements to Metropolitan Av and the late night M shuttle would of been the late night V shuttle between Myrtle Av and Metropolitan Av.

  • @landocalrisian2014
    @landocalrisian2014 Před rokem

    I remember taking the defunct LL line to get to the original Stuyvesant H.S. in 85. Do you discuss the LL in any of your videos?

    • @TransitTalkNYC
      @TransitTalkNYC  Před rokem +2

      Nope! I did not talk about that line. But didn't it just get rebranded as the L?

    • @landocalrisian2014
      @landocalrisian2014 Před rokem

      @@TransitTalkNYC A friend told me it did and when I googled I saw all those double letters stoped in 85.

  • @Kuiper_Commentary
    @Kuiper_Commentary Před rokem

    Wait so if the R train and D train have trouble timing then can't we just extend the W train to 4th Avenue and then to West End???

  • @Thunderbolt_7026
    @Thunderbolt_7026 Před rokem

    3:49 what is the HA, HU and NH seen in the corner?

  • @williamerazo3921
    @williamerazo3921 Před 2 lety +3

    Skip stop service works. It moves trains faster and timetables showed. Washington hieghts community wanted more service and they demanded all local trains

    • @MrRoyale
      @MrRoyale Před rokem +1

      Skip stop was a disaster. I can tell you that from experience being a Conductor at that time.

    • @williamerazo3921
      @williamerazo3921 Před rokem

      @@MrRoyale of course you won’t like like. You are a conductor and had to remember the stops during RH

    • @williamerazo3921
      @williamerazo3921 Před rokem

      @@MrRoyale it’s such a disaster that the J Z trains still use it

  • @chrismv102
    @chrismv102 Před rokem +1

    The brown M went through the Montague St tunnel.
    Bergen St lower level station is a mess. Never reopen.

  • @LimboGene
    @LimboGene Před 2 lety +1

    I can speak for West End (D) that it gets EXTREMELY crowded during rush hours (7AM~10AM, then 3PM~8PM) during the weekdays and it's almost nearly impossible to fit said crowds when it traverses between Atlantic Avenue and Bay Parkway. An extra line would definitely benefit the riders here, and when the (M) ran, trains were far more frequent and less crowded. Just a shame that they won't bring it back.
    Edit:
    Brown (M) didn't operate at all on the weekends, and it ran between Delancy St-Essex and Metropolitan Avenue; if I remember correctly. Weekend crowds were far less than the weekday ones.

    • @TheRailLeaguer
      @TheRailLeaguer Před 2 lety +1

      The M was a low ridership route to the point where there are other ways for West End service, including installing two new switches south of 36th Street and swapping the D and R/W over there, increasing the frequency over there.

  • @ifthewindofgamindustri7499

    May I ask how to see the Detailed tracks of NYC Subway?

  • @iamnemo1792
    @iamnemo1792 Před 2 lety +1

    The train to the plane just wasn't worth it because it was a skip-stop service, you'd get stuck behind an A all the way to Howard Beach. The MTA could never possibly sell that to the public.
    If you really wanted a worthwhile express to JFK, the best (expensive) option would be for the LIRR to restore service thro the junction at Rego park and run trains from Penn to a center platform at Howard Beach. That would be some real speed.
    On that tangent, there was a time when the LIRR tracks down to Howard beach also connected to the tracks under Atlantic Ave.

  • @MtaKing
    @MtaKing Před 2 lety +1

    I figure the most interesting Transit Talker I found in a while everything you said in this video is completely correct
    The first thing I have to say is If The (9) Train Came Back then it should definitely go via Broadway Express
    Just like the (J/Z) even when it's not rush hours the (9) Can Go Express
    From either Dyckman Street to Van Cortlandt Park or Van Cortlandt Park to Dyckman Street or 145th Street or 137th Street to 96th Street just like the (J) in Brooklyn when it's not rush hour
    But if the (9) train came back and ran as the Broadway Express die would be fire
    The second thing the JFK Express to be honest I don't really know what to say about the JFK Express Train I mean I do like the song for it's kind of sketchy but other than that I don't really have nothing to say about that train
    Now The (K/H) now in my opinion I think the (K/H) should run on Fulton Street
    (A/K) Express & Local (C/H) but that's just my opinion and the (H) can use the abandoned tracks at Hoyt Schermerhorn Street and terminate there
    And on 8th Avenue the (A/K) Express & Local (C/E) Trains and maybe you could terminate at 42nd Street Port Authority Bus Terminal rebuilding the lower-level which I highly doubt they're going to do that or I can go on Central Park West and Central Park West is a loud have five trains on it now the infamous
    (M) & (V) now what I think they should do with the orange boy they can make that train go to 96th Street all times and maybe they could find some way to bring back the (V) and make it run to Forest Hills and it can go on Church Avenue all times definitely so Mr (F)
    Can run Express all times
    And maybe you can send the (G)
    Back to Forest Hills and sometimes MTA I don't know if they're going to do this or not but sometimes they can make some (V) Trains go Via
    Crosstown with the (G)
    But I highly doubt mta's going to do that all I'm going to say is they just couldn't make it go from Forest Hills to Church Avenue and also I know you didn't discuss this but I have a feeling that if they bring back the (8)
    They should make it run on Lexington Avenue and then find a way to make the
    (9) & (8)
    Going to Brooklyn and meet up and travel down to their last stop
    (9) Express (8) Local
    And that's all I have to say you need more subscribers my guy you're the most interesting MTA talker or reviewer I seen in awhile everything you say is completely correct and For that I'm subscribing to you great job man keep up the good work

    • @MtaKing
      @MtaKing Před 2 lety

      @@TransitTalkNYC np

  • @jasonjtd79dunne88
    @jasonjtd79dunne88 Před 2 lety

    If they were to find a way to incorporate some of the retired stations/platforms that are long enough to use or attempt to extend a couple of the short ones maybe they can finagle a return of some routes