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IND Fulton Street Line
New York City Subway line
New York City Subway line
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | IND Fulton Street Line | |
| image | ||
| image_width | 150 px | |
| caption | The IND Fulton Street Line is served by the A and C. | |
| type | Rapid transit | |
| system | New York City Subway | |
| start | Jay Street–MetroTech | |
| end | Ozone Park–Lefferts Boulevard | |
| stations | 22 | |
| daily_ridership | 102,615 | |
| open | 1915–1956 | |
| locale | Brooklyn and Queens, New York City | |
| owner | City of New York | |
| operator | New York City Transit Authority | |
| character | Underground (Brooklyn) | |
| Elevated (Queens) | ||
| tracks | 2-4 | |
| gauge | ||
| electrification | Direct Current traction | |
| map | {{switcher | |
| {{maplink-road | from | IND Fulton Street Line.map}} |
| {{IND Fulton Street Line | inline | 1}} |
| map_state | collapsed |
Elevated (Queens) | |Show interactive map | |Show route diagram
The IND Fulton Street Line is a rapid transit line of the IND Division of the New York City Subway, running from the Cranberry Street Tunnel under the East River through central Brooklyn to a terminus in Ozone Park, Queens. The IND Rockaway Line branches from it just east of Rockaway Boulevard. The A train runs express during daytime hours and local at night on the underground portion of the line; it runs local on the elevated portion of the line at all times. The C train runs local on the underground portion of the line at all times except late nights.
The line runs primarily along Fulton Street, Pitkin Avenue, and Liberty Avenue. The underground portion, which constitutes the majority of the line, was built for the city-owned Independent Subway System (IND), opening between 1936 and 1956. The elevated portion in Queens was originally part of the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT)'s Fulton Street elevated line; the Elevated in Brooklyn was closed and demolished in stages with the opening of the subway line.
Description and service
The following services use part or all of the IND Fulton Street Line:
| Service | Between | Time period | Hoyt– | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schermerhorn Sts | ||||||
| Euclid Ave | Euclid Ave | |||||
| Rockaway Boulevard | Rockaway Boulevard | |||||
| Ozone Park–Lefferts Blvd | ||||||
| All except nights | express | local | ||||
| Late nights | local | shuttle | ||||
| All except nights | local | no service | ||||
| Late nights | no service |
Under Fulton Street, the line is mainly single level, except at Nostrand Avenue, where the express tracks are on the upper level and the local tracks are on the lower level. During the subway line's construction in the late 1930s and early 1940s, the old, now-demolished BMT Fulton Street Elevated (which the IND line replaced) had to be supported.
The stations along Liberty Avenue in Queens, from 80th Street–Hudson Street through Ozone Park–Lefferts Boulevard, as well as the current three-track elevated structure, were built for the elevated Fulton Street Line in 1915 as part of the BMT's portion of the Dual Contracts. This was the only section of the Fulton El that was built specifically to handle steel subway cars, as opposed to lighter wooden elevated cars.
The current service pattern along the line is one of the newest in the New York City Subway system. Prior to December 1988, express service was only provided during rush hours, and before 1999, all trains ran local on weekends and weekday evenings after 9:00 pm. Since May 2, 1999, A trains run express along the line and C trains run local except during late nights, when A trains make all stops.
Route
Entering Brooklyn via the Cranberry Street Tunnel as a two-track line, the IND Eighth Avenue Line travels east on Cranberry Street, then south on Jay Street. It becomes the Fulton Street Line at an interlocking north of Jay Street–MetroTech while briefly running parallel with the IND Culver Line. It turns away from the Culver Line onto Schermerhorn Street to the six-track Hoyt–Schermerhorn Streets station, which it shares with the Brooklyn–Queens Crosstown Line. The local tracks are unused at Hoyt-Schermerhorn Streets, but connect to the abandoned Court Street station which is now the site of the New York City Transit Museum. At this point, the line becomes a four-track system until Euclid Avenue.
The line continues east under Schermerhorn Street to the intersections of Third Avenue and Flatbush Avenue, across them onto Lafayette Avenue and then finally onto Fulton Street until Broadway Junction.
After Broadway Junction, the line leaves Fulton Street via Truxton Street, crosses Broadway, curves through a corner of the East New York Yard, crosses Jamaica Avenue and then south on Pennsylvania Avenue. It then turns east onto Pitkin Avenue until Euclid Avenue station. East of Euclid Avenue, there are track connections to Pitkin Yard, and from either the express or local tracks to the two-track line towards Grant Avenue station. The four mainline trackways continue east on Pitkin Avenue, disused, and end at approximately Elderts Lane.
Past Grant Avenue, the line joins the former Fulton Street elevated via a ramp as it enters Queens, swinging somewhat north until it is over Liberty Avenue. Here, it becomes a three-track line, with the center track coming from Pitkin Yard. Just past Rockaway Boulevard, the IND Rockaway Line branches southward while the Fulton Street Line continues over Liberty Avenue to its terminus at Lefferts Boulevard.
History
Early history
The Fulton Street subway was the city-owned Independent System (IND)'s main line from Downtown Brooklyn to southern Queens.
The construction of the line required multiple high-voltage transmission lines to be rerouted under Atlantic Avenue. Due to the presence of many gas mains, telephone lines, sewers, fire alarm wires, and telegraph connections, digging of the subway line had to be done by hand shovels. In October 1930, the roof of the subway tunnel was completed to Vanderbilt Avenue, and the roadbed was ready for the installation of tracks. The New York City Board of Transportation required four months to pass following the replacement of dirt in excavations before permanent pavement could be installed to allow the soil to settle.
The line was opened from Jay Street to Rockaway Avenue on April 9, 1936, including the stub terminal at Court Street.
To allow the subway line to be built, the following streets were widened from 60 to: Jay Street between Nassau Street to Fulton Street, Smith Street between Fulton Street and Atlantic Avenue, and Schermerhorn Street between Smith Street and Nevins Street. The land acquired to widen the streets was valued at $1.75 million.
Late 1930s and 1940s
Further construction was delayed by funding problems due to the Great Depression in the 1930s. This was temporarily solved by federal Works Progress Administration funding starting in 1936. The portion continuing from east of Rockaway Avenue along Pennsylvania and Pitkin Avenues to Crystal Street began construction in 1938. The next portion east from Crystal Street to around Grant Avenue, including the Euclid Avenue terminal and the Pitkin Yard, began construction in 1940. The progress lasted only a few years, as all work on the last portions in Brooklyn was stopped by December 1942 shortly after the United States entered World War II, with Broadway−East New York complete but not in operation due to lack of signal equipment, and the remaining stations to Euclid Avenue as unfinished shells.
The Court Street station was closed on June 1, 1946, due to low ridership and because of its close proximity to the Hoyt–Schermerhorn Streets station. After World War II ended, workers and materials became available for public use again. The badly needed extension to the more efficient terminal at Broadway−East New York (the current Broadway Junction station) opened on December 30, 1946.
The extension of the Fulton Street Line, the completion of which had been delayed due to war priorities, was finished by funds obtained by Mayor William O'Dwyer and was placed in operation on November 28, 1948, running along Pennsylvania Avenue and Pitkin Avenue to Euclid Avenue near the Queens border. Forty additional R10 cars were placed into service for the extension. The cost of the extension was about $46.5 million. It included the construction of the new Pitkin Avenue Storage Yard, which could accommodate 585 subway cars on 40 storage tracks. Because these stations were completed later than the rest of the line, they received different design features than other IND stations, including different wall tiles and fluorescent lighting.
The Fulton Street express tracks were not used in regular service until October 24, 1949. A trains began running express during rush hours to Broadway–East New York, with trains extended to provide local service. The express reduced travel time by five minutes.
1950s to 1990s
In 1953, the platforms were lengthened at Ralph Avenue and Broadway–East New York to 660 feet to allow E trains to run eleven car trains. The began running eleven car trains during rush hours on September 8, 1953. The extra train car increased the total carrying capacity by 4,000 passengers. The lengthening project cost $400,000.
In late 1952, the Board of Transportation began construction on a connection between the IND and both the Fulton El and the Rockaway Beach Branch of the Long Island Rail Road, which included a new underground station at Grant Avenue. The connection from the 80th Street elevated station to the rest of the BMT Fulton Elevated was severed on April 26, 1956, and the IND was extended east (track direction south) from Euclid Avenue via the intermediate station at Grant Avenue, and a connecting ramp (known as the Grant Avenue ramp). The new service to Lefferts Boulevard began three days later. On June 28, 1956, the connection to the IND Rockaway Line east of Rockaway Boulevard was opened.
2000s to present
The 2015–2019 Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) Capital Plan called for the Fulton Street Line's Clinton–Washington Avenues, Kingston–Throop Avenues, and Van Siclen Avenue stations, along with 30 others, to undergo a complete overhaul as part of the Enhanced Station Initiative. Updates would include cellular service, Wi-Fi, USB charging stations, interactive service advisories and maps, improved signage, and improved station lighting. However, in April 2018, it was announced that cost overruns had forced the MTA to reduce the number of subway stations included in the program from 33 stations to 20. The stations to be renovated along the IND Fulton Street Line were among the 13 stations without funding, which will be pushed back to the 2020–2024 Capital Plan.
As part of a program to upgrade the signaling of the New York City Subway, the MTA's 2020–2024 Capital Program calls for adding communications-based train control (CBTC) to several more lines, including the IND Fulton Street Line west of the Euclid Avenue station. The CBTC signaling system would replace the line's existing signal system, which has not been upgraded since the line originally opened in the 1930s and 1940s. On November 9, 2022, the MTA put out the request for proposals for the design-build contract to install CBTC on the Fulton Street Line between High Street and Euclid Avenue. CBTC installation on the rest of the Fulton Street Line from Euclid Avenue to Ozone Park–Lefferts Boulevard was proposed as part of the MTA's 2025–2029 Capital Program. In December 2025, L.K. Comstock received a $1.3 billion contract to install CBTC on both sections of the Fulton Street Line; the installation was to be funded using revenue from congestion pricing in New York City.
Second System planned route
Early in the planning of the subway, the city considered recapturing parts of the BMT Jamaica Line, which had been built under the Dual Contracts. This would have created two branches of the Fulton Street Subway east of Broadway Junction. Bellmouths were built into the outer walls of the subway tunnel just east of the Broadway Junction station for a future connection.
The IND Fulton Street Line was supposed to be extended farther east into Queens as part of the IND Second System, via an extension of the Fulton Elevated or a new subway. The line would have gone as far as Springfield Boulevard in Queens Village or 229th Street in Cambria Heights, both near the Nassau County border. The line would have also had a spur to the Rockaways.
The 1929 Second System plan suggested recapturing and extending the Fulton elevated along Liberty, Brinkerhoff and Hollis Avenues to Springfield Boulevard, near Hempstead Turnpike, Belmont Park, and the Queens Village LIRR Station.
In a 1940 plan, which was revised in 1945, the IND Fulton Street Line would connect to the IND Rockaway Line in a similar manner to the 1939 plan, via an extension of the subway under Pitkin Avenue. The line, east of Euclid Avenue, would be 4 tracks, with local stations at 76th Street and 84th Street, and an express station at Cross Bay Boulevard. At Cross Bay Boulevard, a flying junction would let the local tracks cross over to the inside and the express tracks cross over to the outside. The layout would be similar to that of Manhattan's 168th Street station. East of Cross Bay Boulevard, another flying junction would bring a two-track branch over the line to a pair of portals north of Aqueduct–North Conduit Avenue station. Meanwhile, the Fulton Street Line's four tracks would merge into two tracks, and end at 105th Street (today's Aqueduct Racetrack), where a scissors crossover would be present just west of the station. Crossovers would also be located between the local and express pair of tracks east of 76th Street, and between the two express tracks east of Cross Bay Boulevard.
Currently the line ends at Lefferts Boulevard in Ozone Park (the former end of the Fulton El), and only the Rockaway extension was completed. The mainline tracks that go past the Euclid Avenue station were to be part of a 4-track line to Cambria Heights.
Station listing
| Neighborhood | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (approximate) | Station | Tracks | Services | Opened | Transfers and notes | Begins as a continuation of the IND Eighth Avenue Line express tracks (); | |||||||||
| with connecting tracks to the IND Sixth Avenue Line local tracks () | Local tracks begin | Local tracks continue east from ; Express tracks continue south then east from | Connecting tracks to Pitkin Yard and spurs; mainline tracks dead-end | Single express track begins from Pitkin Yard () | IND Rockaway Line splits () | ||||||||||
| **Brooklyn** | |||||||||||||||
| Downtown Brooklyn | express | February 1, 1933 | IND Culver Line () | ||||||||||||
| BMT Fourth Avenue Line () | |||||||||||||||
| local | April 9, 1936 | Closed 1946, reopened 1976 as the New York Transit Museum | |||||||||||||
| [[File:Aiga elevator.svg | 20px | alt=Elevator access to mezzanine only]] | all | April 9, 1936 | IND Crosstown Line () | ||||||||||
| Local tracks, and platforms between local and express tracks, unused | |||||||||||||||
| Fort Greene | local | April 9, 1936 | |||||||||||||
| Clinton Hill | local | April 9, 1936 | |||||||||||||
| Bedford–Stuyvesant | local | April 9, 1936 | BMT Franklin Avenue Line () | ||||||||||||
| all | April 9, 1936 | local tracks on lower level, express tracks on upper level | |||||||||||||
| B44 Select Bus Service | |||||||||||||||
| local | April 9, 1936 | ||||||||||||||
| all | April 9, 1936 | B46 Select Bus Service | |||||||||||||
| local | April 9, 1936 | ||||||||||||||
| local | April 9, 1936 | ||||||||||||||
| East New York | all | December 30, 1946 | BMT Canarsie Line () | ||||||||||||
| BMT Jamaica Line () | |||||||||||||||
| originally Broadway-East New York | |||||||||||||||
| local | November 28, 1948 | ||||||||||||||
| local | November 28, 1948 | ||||||||||||||
| local | November 28, 1948 | ||||||||||||||
| all | November 28, 1948 | ||||||||||||||
| City Line | all | April 29, 1956 | |||||||||||||
| **Queens** | |||||||||||||||
| Ozone Park | local | title=New Elevated Line Opened for Queens | newspaper=The New York Times | date=September 26, 1915 | url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1915/09/26/101569347.pdf | access-date=September 28, 2007}} | |||||||||
| local | September 25, 1915 | ||||||||||||||
| local | September 25, 1915 | Q52/Q53 Select Bus Service | |||||||||||||
| local | September 25, 1915 | ||||||||||||||
| Richmond Hill | local | September 25, 1915 | |||||||||||||
| all | September 25, 1915 | Q10 and Q80 buses to JFK Airport |
References
References
- {{NYCS const. riderref. weekday
- {{NYCS const. serviceguide
- {{NYCS const. trackref. trackbook3
- neighborhood. Woodhaven
- (April 30, 1956). "First Leg of Rockaways Transit Opened at Cost of $10,154,702".
- (June 28, 1956). "Rockaway Trains to Operate Today".
- (April 17, 1929). "New Fulton Street Subway Officially Started as Byrne Turns Earth; Ground is Broken For Subway Line Along Fulton St.; Byrne Turns First Spade of Arlington Pl. Earth as Merchants Applaud.". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- (October 16, 1930). "Fulton St. Subway Gateway to World". Brooklyn Standard Union.
- (April 6, 1936). "Two Subway Links Start Wednesday". [[The New York Times]].
- (April 9, 1936). "New Subway Link Opened By Mayor; He Tells 15,000 in Brooklyn It Will Be Extended to Queens When Red Tape Is Cut.". The New York Times.
- (January 28, 1932). "Transit Board Land Ceded To Boroughs; New Street Areas, Valued at $10,000,000, Are in Manhattan, Brooklyn and the Bronx. Acquired In Condemnation Widening of Thoroughfares for Subways Also Has Increased Real Estate Values.". The New York Times.
- (February 2006). "Fulton Street Subway". Electric Railroader's Association.
- (September 12, 1940). "Subway Contract Given to Boro Firm". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- (November 29, 1948). "Trains Roll on $47,000,000 Fulton St. Subway Extension". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- (June 9, 1946). "Shortages Snarl $50,000,000 Tube Links". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- Kramer, Frederick A.. (1990). "Building the Independent Subway". Quadrant Press.
- (1946). "Sign for the Closing of the Court Street Station, 1946; IND Crosstown Line". New York Transit Museum.
- (1949). "Report for the three and one-half years ending June 30, 1949.". New York City Board of Transportation.
- (November 28, 1948). "Fulton Subway Stations Open After All-Night 'Dry Runs'". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- (November 23, 1948). "Last Word in Subways and Cars for Boro". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- (October 20, 1949). "IND Faster Service Will Start Sunday". New York Times.
- (October 1, 1949). "Improving Subway Service". New York Daily News.
- Ingalls, Leonard. (August 28, 1953). "2 Subway Lines to Add Cars, Another to Speed Up Service". New York Times.
- (November 20, 1949). "Transit Platforms on Lines in Queens to be Lengthened". [[The New York Times]].
- (March 6, 1951). "Transit Board to Add 1 Car to Fulton St. IND Trains: 11-Car Units Will East Rush Hour Jam in Boro". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- (October 16, 1952). "Cashmore Hails Slum Clearance in Downtown Section". [[Brooklyn Eagle]].
- (August 13, 1954). "Asks Funds for New Boro Criminal Courts Building: Plan To Construct It at Smith and Atlantic". [[Brooklyn Eagle]].
- (December 23, 1954). "$7,000,000 Signal Job To Be Let In February: City Approves $1,000,000 Contracts For Station And Sub-Station in Broad Channel And For The Rehabilitation Of The Liberty Avenue Line". [[Wave of Long Island]].
- (December 23, 1954). "$7,000,000 Signal Job To Be Let In February: City Approves $1,000,000 Contracts For Station And Sub-Station in Broad Channel And For The Rehabilitation Of The Liberty Avenue Line". [[Wave of Long Island]].
- Sparberg, Andrew J.. (October 2014). "From a Nickel to a Token: The Journey from Board of Transportation to MTA". Fordham University Press.
- (August 11, 1954). "Architectural Rendering of Grant Avenue Control Building: IND Fulton Line". [[New York Transit Museum]].
- (June 28, 1956). "First Train On Rockaway Line Runs This Afternoon". [[Wave of Long Island]].
- (June 28, 1956). "First Train On Rockaway Line Runs This Afternoon". [[Wave of Long Island]].
- (June 28, 1956). "TA's New Line To Rockaways Begins Today: Fifty Piece Band To Play as Special Train Makes First Run". The Leader-Observer.
- (June 29, 1956). "To Rockaways: Beach Trains In Operation". Greenpoint Weekly Star.
- "MTA Will Completely Close 30 Subway Stations For Months-Long "Revamp"". Gothamist.
- "MTAStations". Government of the State of New York.
- Berger, Paul. (April 3, 2018). "New York Subway Cuts Back Plans to Renovate Stations". Wall Street Journal.
- Guse, Clayton. (September 16, 2019). "MTA Announces $51 Billion Plan to Save the Subway, Treat NYC's Transit Sickness".
- (September 2019). "MTA Capital Program 2020–2024". Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
- Duggan, Kevin. (March 29, 2022). "MTA Plans Next Batch of Subway Signal Upgrades".
- (November 9, 2022). "Solicitation Title: S48019 Design-Build Services for Communication Based Train Control Fulton Line in Brooklyn". Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
- Andres, Czarinna. (September 18, 2024). "MTA Unveils $68.4 Billion Capital Plan to Modernize NYC Transit – but Funding Questions Amid Congestion Pricing Pause Remain".
- Burkett, N.J.. (September 18, 2024). "MTA Proposes Five-Year Capital Plan Wish List Including Replacing All Subway Cars".
- Stark-Miller, Ethan. (December 17, 2025). "Subway upgrades: MTA board approves A/C line signal project and new elevators at five stations – all funded by congestion pricing".
- Laterman, Kaya. (December 18, 2025). "Revenue From Congestion Pricing to be Used For Brooklyn Subway Upgrades".
- Worrell, Carolina. (December 18, 2025). "Transit Briefs: NYMTA, SkyTrain, KC Streetcar".
- (April 12, 1927). "Route of Tri-Boro Loop Subway System". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- {{Cite Routes Not Taken
- (September 22, 1929). "Our Great Subway Network Spreads Wider; New Plans of Board of Transportation Involve the Building of More Than One Hundred Miles of Additional Rapid Transit Routes for New York". [[The New York Times]].
- (August 23, 2012). "The Wheels That Drove New York: A History of the New York City Transit System". Springer Science & Business Media.
- [[:File:1929 IND Second System.jpg. Board of Transportation of the City of New York Engineering Department, Proposed Additional Rapid Transit Lines And Proposed Vehicular Tunnel]], dated August 23, 1929
- [[:Image:1939 IND Second System.jpg. Project for Expanded Rapid Transit Facilities, New York City Transit System]], dated July 5, 1939
- (December 6, 1946). "Borough Subway Relief Still 2 or 3 Years Off". [[Brooklyn Daily Eagle]].
- [http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-HDTTMT-jAHs/T5_WEPEViiI/AAAAAAAAAMw/F9yGC2LHtD8/s1600/76st_b.jpg Track diagram of the revised plan]
- (September 26, 1915). "New Elevated Line Opened for Queens". The New York Times.
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