2 OR 3
Subway restaurants are on every corner just about. Now the subway system runs underneath the city, especially Manhattan, and stations are on about every other block.
In a taxi, it's about a 30 to 90-minute ride, depending on traffic. On the subway, it's about 60 to 90 minutes. For more information on taking the subway from JFK to Manhattan, see the Related Question below.
No, it's a beautiful and vibrant borough. And it has also gone through a lot of gentrification in the 20 years or so. After Manhattan, it seems to be everybody's favorite borough nowadays. Nobody in Manhattan would ever take the subway to the Bronx, or Queens, or especially Staten Island, to hang out. It's usually the other way around: people from the other four boroughs come to Manhattan for the nightlife. But nowadays, many Manhattanites will cheerfully inconvenience themselves by taking the subway out to Brooklyn to party, instead of going to the bars and clubs in Manhattan.
As of my last update in October 2023, a subway ticket for the A train, or any New York City subway line, costs $2.90 for a single ride. This fare applies regardless of the specific route, including trips from Manhattan to Brooklyn. Additionally, riders can use a MetroCard or OMNY for contactless payments.
Yes it is. It is also one subway stop away from Manhattan.
The subway was full of people.
The Metropolitan Railway S Stock is a rail line in the Manhattan subway system. The primary purpose of a subway is to get traffic off the streets so that the city is less congested.
Take the subway to 34th St (Manhattan). That's Penn Station. Take Amtrak.
On October 27, 1904, the first branch of the Interboro Subway opened. It later expanded, and the BMT and IND companies (the IND was run by the city) came into Manhattan. More information is available at: www.nycsubway.org
Sometimes it depends on where the subway is. IF it is in Japan there is no room for anyone. There it is people's job to push people inside the subway so that it can get more people on. In busy citys there is no telling how much space you will get at all.
36. What does BMT® stand for?The acronym BMT® stands for Biggest, Meatiest, and Tastiest. In the early days of SUBWAY® restaurants, it was a promotion that was based on the Brooklyn Manhattan Transit system in New York City that went along with the subway theme.