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The subway (underground train)
Usually the subway hours in New York City are 24/7. However, if there is a natural disaster, they will most likely be shut down if it is sever enough.
From time to time, New York City's Metropolitan Transit Authority has claimed that the Lexington Avenue line in Manhattan, where 4, 5 and 6 IRT division trains run on parallel tracks from their starting points in various parts of Manhattan, the Bronx and Brooklyn is "the busiest subway line in the world". The only direct reference to this claim that I could find in a search was an article in the New York Times about the fatal train derailment in August, 1991 near the 14th. Street Union Square station that closed the line in Manhattan for 6 days. A link to the article is posted below. It says that, at the time of the accident, the Lexington Avenue Line was moving 500,000 passengers every workday. You may have to "join" the NYT website to read it, but it's free. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CE1DA1338F930A3575AC0A967958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all But I have also read that transit officials in Tokyo claim that city's Toei Mita line carries the most passengers in the world. I realize this doesn't fully answer the question, but I hope it's a start. Compl. answer : RER A subway / interregional train line in Paris transports more than 1 000 000 people every work day, and 286 millions of people per year. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RER_A
The company that manages trains in New York is called the Metropolitan Transport Authority. Using the rail/subway is by far the most popular form of travel by locals and tourists within New York City.
Mc Donald's makes the most money but if you cont subway as fast food then subway makes the most
NYC i believeAnswerNew York City is the correct answer only if by "longest" the questioner means the longest by miles of track. The Metropolitan Transit Authority reports that the system currently has "approximately 660 miles" of track in "revenue service" - in other words, serving passengers. (Another 180 miles of track is in "non-revenue service," such as in subway yards.) By that measure the system dwarfs all others in the world. However, it's also deceptive. New York's subway is the world's only system that offers extensive express service, meaning that almost every line consists of four tracks rather than two. A more intuitive measure of "longest" subway is miles of route, which gives a much better idea of how much territory a system covers. By that measure, Shanghai is the current winner, at 260 miles. London comes in second at 258 miles, followed by New York (228) Tokyo (181), Seoul (178), and Madrid (176).For more, please see urbanrail.net, the most authoritative on-line source for subways (I'm not affiliated with the site - just a user).Since April 10 2010, Shanghai has become the holder of this record with 420 km of route, carrying more than 5 million passengers per day.
McDonalds
Simon Carr (artist) is based out of New York City, where he lives and works. His most recent works have tended to focus on street and/or subway scenes.
ALOT! tuna from subway is not even on the fresh fit menu. its one of the most fattening subs at subway.
The subway is one of the fastest ways to travel around New York City, and it costs only $2.25 per ride. Taxis are more convenient (and, in good traffic, even faster than the subway) but they're pretty expensive. The bus also costs $2.25, but it's very slow. Most people only take the bus if they are only going a short distance -- like 20 or 30 blocks straight uptown or downtown -- but don't want to walk, or if they are going crosstown. Very few subway lines travel crosstown. The L (the grey line) runs crosstown along most of 14th Street, the 7 train (the purple line) runs across part of 42nd Street, the E (of the A-C-E, the blue line) runs across part of 53rd Street, and the N-R-Q-W (the yellow line) runs across part of 59th Street. Other than that, if you're going crosstown in Manhattan, you'll have to take the bus.
City Line is located in Brooklyn, New York. It is one of the most diverse neighborhoods in Brooklyn and is home to many immigrants. In 1898 Brooklyn and Queens were consolidated into New York City.
Subway is open on Labor day, and most of them run specials.