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Avenue C Line - Manhattan - was created in 1869.

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11y ago

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What subway do you take to 18th Street at the West Side Highway in Manhattan?

The closest subway stops are the 18th Street stop on the 1 train (of the 1-2-3, the red line), at 7th Avenue, and the 23rd Street stop on the C and E trains (of the A-C-E, the blue line), at 8th Avenue.


Which train is the closest to 34th Street and seventh Avenue in Manhattan NY?

The 1-2-3 (the red line) stops at the east side of Penn Station, at 34th Street and 7th Avenue.The A-C-E (the blue line) stops at the west side of Penn Station, at 34th Street and 8th Avenue.


How do you get from Penn Station to Avenue of the Americas between Walker and Lispenard Streets in the TriBeCa section of Manhattan?

Take the Downtown A-C-E (the blue line) from 34th Street-Penn Station to Canal Street (at 6th Avenue, aka Avenue of the Americas). Then walk 1.5 to 2.5 blocks down 6th Avenue (depending on which subway exit you use) to 6th Avenue between Lispenard and Walker Streets.


What are some streets in New York City that start with C?

Avenue C (Lower Manhattan) Cabrini Boulevard (Upper Manhattan) Canal Street (Lower Manhattan) Cardinal Hayes Place (Lower Manhattan) Carlisle Street (Lower Manhattan) Carmine Street (Lower Manhattan) Cathedral Parkway (Upper Manhattan) Catherine Lane (Lower Manhattan) Catherine Street (Lower Manhattan) Cedar Street (Lower Manhattan) Central Park North (Upper Manhattan) Central Park South (Midtown) Central Park West (Upper Manhattan) Centre Street (Lower Manhattan) Chambers Street (Lower Manhattan) Charles Revson Plaza (Upper Manhattan) Charles Street (Lower Manhattan) Charlton Street (Lower Manhattan) Chatham Square (Lower Manhattan) Chelsea Square (Lower Manhattan) Cherry Street (Lower Manhattan) Chisum Place (Upper Manhattan) Chittenden Avenue (Upper Manhattan) Christopher Street (Lower Manhattan) Chrystie Street (Lower Manhattan) Church Street (Lower Manhattan) Claremont Avenue (Upper Manhattan) Clarkson Street (Lower Manhattan) Cliff Street (Lower Manhattan) Clinton Street (Lower Manhattan) Coenties Alley (Lower Manhattan) Coenties Slip (Lower Manhattan) Collister Street (Lower Manhattan) Columbia Street (Lower Manhattan) Columbus Avenue (Upper Manhattan) Columbus Circle (Midtown) Commerce Street (Lower Manhattan) Convent Avenue (Upper Manhattan) Cooper Square (Lower Manhattan) Cooper Street (Upper Manhattan) Corlear Place (Upper Manhattan) Cornelia Street (Lower Manhattan) Cortlandt Street (Lower Manhattan) Crosby Street (Lower Manhattan) Cumming Street (Upper Manhattan)


How do you get to coney island by train from Jersey City?

Take the D or F trains (of the B-D-F-M, the orange line) from Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue (at Surf Avenue) to West 4th Street in Manhattan. Transfer at West 4th Street to the Uptown A-C-E (the blue line), from West 4th Street to 34th Street-Penn Station.


Which subway from Port Authority do you take to get to 50th Street in Manhattan?

Take the Uptown C or E trains (of the A-C-E, the blue line) one stop, from 42nd Street-Port Authority to 50th Street (at 8th Avenue).Or you could just walk. It's 8 blocks, which is less than half a mile.


Will there be a new New Jersey subway line to New York City?

New Jersey has its own train into Manhattan, called the PATH train, which connects to the Eighth Avenue subway line (the A-C-E, or the blue line). So, no, there are no plans to extend the MTA (Metro Transit Authority) subways into New Jersey.


How many subway lines go through Times Square?

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.


When was Green Line 'C' Branch created?

Green Line 'C' Branch was created in 1889.


When was Lyon Metro Line C created?

Lyon Metro Line C was created in 1862.


What train can you take from utica avenue to 23street Manhattan?

To travel from Utica Avenue to 23rd Street in Manhattan, you can take the A train or the C train from Utica Avenue station. You would ride the train towards Manhattan and transfer at either the 42nd Street-Port Authority Bus Terminal or 34th Street-Penn Station, then take the E train to 23rd Street. Alternatively, you can take the 2 train from nearby stations to reach 23rd Street directly.


Will there be a new New York City subway line?

Yes! As of now, there is only one subway line that runs all the way up and down (north/south and south/north) the East Side of Manhattan: the 4-5-6 line (color code green), aka the IRT, aka the Lexington Avenue Subway. On the West Side, there are two lines that run up and down Manhattan: the A-C-E line (color blue), and the 1-2-3 line (color red), aka the BMT, aka the Broadway line. (The 4-5-6 green line, and the 1-2-3 red line, were the first subway lines in Manhattan. Back then, they were called the IRT, or the Lexington Avenue line, and the BMT, or the Broadway line). Since there is only one subway line on the East Side that runs all the way up and down, it's really, really congested all the time. And it's even worse at rush hour: since the train goes from the Upper East Side -- the richest neighborhood in the city -- down to Wall Street, the Financial District, and City Hall and the courthouses, at rush hour most of the white collar people in the city are taking the exact same train at the exact same time. Sometimes it's so crowded, you literally have to push and shove your way into the car, and fight for a space to breathe. So, a new subway line is being built, the 2nd Avenue Line. The Second Avenue Line will be called the T train, and its color code will be light blue (as opposed to the dark blue A-C-E line). Second Avenue runs north/south through Manhattan, two blocks east of Lexington Avenue. The city has been waiting a long, long time for this: the first plans for the 2nd Avenue line date back all the way to 1929. The line will open one segment at a time, with the first segment due to open sometime around 2013.