BMT Canarsie Line - Extent and Service

Extent and Service

[ ] BMT Canarsie Line
Legend
Eighth Avenue/ 14th Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line)
14th Street (IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line)
Sixth Avenue/ 14th Street (IND Sixth Avenue Line)
Union Square/ 14th Street (BMT Broadway Line)
14th Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line)
Third Avenue
First Avenue
14th Street Tunnel
Bedford Avenue
Lorimer Street/ Metropolitan Avenue (IND Crosstown Line)
Graham Avenue
Grand Street
Montrose Avenue
Morgan Avenue
Jefferson Street
DeKalb Avenue
Myrtle–Wyckoff Avenues BMT Myrtle Avenue Line
Halsey Street
Wilson Avenue
Bushwick Avenue – Aberdeen Street
East New York Yard
Broadway Junction BMT Jamaica Line
Broadway Junction (IND Fulton Street Line)
Atlantic Avenue
Sutter Avenue
IRT New Lots Line
Livonia Avenue
Long Island Rail Road
former connection to LIRR
Linden Shops
New Lots Avenue
East 105th Street
Canarsie Yard
Canarsie – Rockaway Parkway
Flatlands Avenue (demolished)
Avenue L (demolished)
Canarsie Pier (demolished)

The Canarsie Line runs from Eighth Avenue and 14th Street in Manhattan to Rockaway Parkway in Canarsie, Brooklyn. It is double-tracked along its entire length, except for short stretches of layup track in Manhattan and Brooklyn.

The current line is a two-track subway from its Manhattan terminal to Broadway Junction in the East New York section of Brooklyn, with the exception of a short stretch at Wilson Avenue where it is a double-decked structure with the southbound track outdoors directly above the indoor, ground-level northbound track. Although the northbound track appears to be underground, it is in fact outdoors at ground-level for there are no stairs leading from the northbound platform to the station entrance on Moffat Street. This is due to the line being pressed directly against the New York Connecting Railroad, which is pressed directly against the border of Trinity Cemetery. There are no express tracks on the Canarsie line; thus, all trains run local service throughout their route.

Just before Broadway Junction, the line emerges onto an elevated structure, passing over the BMT Jamaica Line. Between Broadway Junction and Atlantic Avenue are the Canarsie Line's only track connections to the rest of the system, via flyover ramps connecting the Canarsie line to the Jamaica Line and East New York Yard (and, until 1956, the Fulton Street Elevated). The Canarsie Line used to share the structure at Atlantic Avenue with the connection from the Broadway and Fulton Street elevated lines to the Liberty Avenue Elevated (still extant further east as part of the IND Fulton Street Line).

East of Pitkin Avenue, the Canarsie Line enters the two-track elevated structure on which the line was originally grade-separated in 1906, entering Sutter Avenue station. At the next station, Livonia Avenue, the Livonia Avenue Elevated of the IRT New Lots Line passes overhead, and just beyond this point is a single track connection to the Linden Shops, which is now a track and structures facility. Besides the connection at Broadway Junction, this non-electrified yard connection is the only other connection to the rest of the subway system, as it is indirectly a connection to the Eastern Parkway Line. B Division-sized equipment cannot access this line, however, because of A Division width restrictions.

Beyond the next station, New Lots Avenue, the elevated structure ends, and an incline brings the Canarsie down to the original 1865 surface right-of-way, the second-oldest such right-of-way on the New York City Transit Authority system. The line operates on this ground-level route to the end of the line at Rockaway Parkway.

Read more about this topic:  BMT Canarsie Line

Famous quotes containing the words extent and/or service:

    We respond to a drama to that extent to which it corresponds to our dreamlife.
    David Mamet (b. 1947)

    The ability to think straight, some knowledge of the past, some vision of the future, some skill to do useful service, some urge to fit that service into the well-being of the community,—these are the most vital things education must try to produce.
    Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve (1877–1965)