Take the Uptown A or C trains (of the A-C-E, the blue line) from Penn Station to 125th Street. You will get off at 125th and Manhattan Avenue, which is one block west of Frederick Douglass Boulevard.
Walk north one block to 126th Street, and then east one block to Frederick Douglass Boulevard.
You can take the Uptown E train (of the A-C-E, the blue line) from 34th Street-Penn Station to 5th Avenue-53rd Street. Then walk 3 blocks south to 50th Street, and 1 block west to 6th Avenue.
If you wish, you can take the Uptown E to 7th Avenue-53rd Street, and transfer there to the Downtown B or Dtrains (of the B-D-F-M, the orange line), 1 stop, to 47th-50th Street-Rockefeller Center. You won't have to do any walking, but you will have to make a transfer.
You can also take the Uptown C train from 34th Street-Penn Station to 50th Street (at 8th Avenue). Then walk 3 blocks east to 6th Avenue: 8th Avenue ---> Broadway ---> 7th Avenue ---> 6th Avenue.
Take the Uptown 6 train (of the 4-5-6, the dark green line) from 23rd Street (at Park Avenue South, which is Park Avenue below 34th Street) to 42nd Street-Grand Central Station. At Grand Central Station, get the Manhattan-bound 7 train (the purple line), one stop, to 42nd Street-5th Avenue.This station is connected to the 42nd Street-Bryant Park Station (at 42nd Street and 6th Avenue) on the B-D-F-M, the orange line. So you can either exit at 42nd Street and 5th Avenue, and walk one block west above ground, or walk through the tunnel that connects the two stations, and exit at 42nd and 6th.
Cortlandt Street - IRT Sixth Avenue Line - ended in 1938.
Grand Street - IRT Sixth Avenue Line - ended in 1938.
Chambers Street - IRT Sixth Avenue Line - ended in 1938.
Franklin Street - IRT Sixth Avenue Line - ended in 1938.
What are you talking about? If you mean the 6th Avenue trains, they stop one long block away at 34 St and 6th Avenue. If you mean the #6 train, it stops about 7/8 of a mile away at 33 St. and Park Avenue South. Neither stops right in Penn Station. Only the 7th Avenue and 8th Avenue trains do that.
Avenue of the Americas is the legal name of Sixth Avenue in Manhattan. Locals still call it Sixth Avenue.
Take the 1 train (of the 1-2-3, the red line), or the 2 late nights, to Houston Street. Even though it's called the Houston Street Station, you will get off on Varick Street, between King and Houston Streets.If you're going further south on Varick Street, then take the 1 (or 2 late nights) to Canal Street (at Varick Street).You could also take the C train (of the A-C-E, the blue line), or the A late nights, to Spring Street. It will let you off at the intersection of 6th Avenue and Spring Street. Sixth Avenue runs north, and Spring Street runs east. You need to walk one block west on Spring Street to get to Varick.
It's very easy. You don't have to make any transfers. You have two options, the 1-2-3 (the red line) and the A-C-E(the blue line).On the 1-2-3:1) Take the Uptown 1-2-3 from 34th Street (Penn Station) to 96th Street. In this case, it is preferable to take the 2or 3, instead of the 1. All three of these trains (the 1, the 2 and the 3) stop at 96th Street. However, the 2 and 3 are express trains, while the 1 is local. If you take the 2 or 3, there will be only three stops: 34th Street (Penn Station) ---> 42nd Street (Times Square) ---> 72nd Street ---> 96th Street. On the 1 train, there will be eight stops.2) You will exit the subway at 96th Street and Broadway. Walk two blocks east to 96th and Columbus: Broadway ---> Amsterdam Avenue ---> Columbus Avenue.On the A-C-E:1) Take the Uptown C train from 34th Street (Penn Station) to 96th Street. DO NOT take the A or E trains. The A is an express train, and, unlike with the 1-2-3, 96th Street is NOT an express stop on the A-C-E. The A train will not stop at 96th Street, and the E train goes to Queens after 50th Street. So, you can only take the C.2) You will exit the subway at 96th Street and Central Park West. Walk one block west to Columbus Avenue.See the Related Link below for a complete New York City subway map.
Sixth Avenue Electronics was created in 1984.
IRT Sixth Avenue Line ended in 1938.
Sixth Avenue in Ney York City is a common tourist attraction. The name that Sixth Avenue is most commonly known by is "Avenue of the Americas". Avenue of the Americas was also named this way out of respect to the Organization of American States.