No
There are many different subway stations at 14th Street: one at 8th Avenue, one at 7th Avenue, one at 6th Avenue, one at Lexington Avenue, one at 3rd Avenue, and one at 1st Avenue. The L line stops at all of them: the L line runs west/east and east/west along 14th Street, from 8th Avenue and West 14th across to 1st Avenue and East 14th, then under the East River, and out to Canarsie, Brooklyn. At the 1st Avenue and 14th Street Station, and the 3rd Avenue and 14th Street Station, the only train you can catch is the L. At the East 14th Street and Lexington Avenue Station (also known as the Union Square Station), you can catch the L, and the 4-5-6 line (the green line), which runs north to Spanish Harlem and the Bronx, and south to Brooklyn. You can also catch the N-R-Q-W line (the yellow line) to Queens and Brooklyn. At the 6th Avenue Station, you can catch the L, and the B-D-F-V line (the orange line), which runs north to West Harlem and the Bronx, and south into Brooklyn. At the 7th Avenue Station, you can catch the L, and the 1-2-3 line (the red line), which runs from Battery Park at the southernmost tip of Manhattan, up north to West Harlem and the Bronx. At the 8th Avenue Station, you can catch the L, and the A-C-E line (the blue line), which runs from the northernmost tip of Manhattan all the way out into Brooklyn, to Far Rockaway and JFK airport.
Yes. Take the Downtown 2 train (of the 1-2-3, the red line) from 34th Street-Penn Station to Flatbush Avenue-Brooklyn College.
Fifth Avenue Line - Brooklyn elevated - ended in 1940.
Fifth Avenue Line - Brooklyn elevated - was created in 1888.
Yuandong Avenue Station was created in 2010.
Huandongyi Avenue Station was created in 2012.
Willis Avenue Station was created in 1916.
The address of the Stone Avenue is: 581 Mother Gaston Blvd., Brooklyn, 11212 5933
North Avenue - MARTA station - was created in 1981.
Gaston Avenue - LIRR station - ended in 1955.
Gaston Avenue - LIRR station - was created in 1888.
Nostrand Avenue - LIRR station - was created in 1877.