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Wikipedia

Brooklyn–Queens Connector

The Brooklyn–Queens Connector, abbreviated the BQX, is a proposed streetcar line in New York City. It is planned to operate 24/7 on a north–south corridor along the East River between the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn.

Brooklyn–Queens Connector
Depiction of the Brooklyn–Queens Connector at Jay and Willoughby Streets
Overview
Termini
Stations26
WebsiteOfficial website
Service
Services1 (projected)
History
Planned openingat least 2029
Technical
Line length11 mi (18 km)
Number of tracks2
CharacterStreetcar
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
ElectrificationHydrogen fuel cell
Route map

21 St & 27 Av
21 St & Broadway
21 St & 35 Av
21 St & 41 Av
44 Dr
50 Av & Vernon Blvd
Manhattan Av & Ash St
Greenpoint Av
Berry St & North 13th St
Berry St & North 7th St
Berry St & South 2nd St
Berry St & Broadway
Kent/Wythe Avs & Division Av
Washington Av & Kent Av
Brooklyn Navy Yard
Navy St & Flushing Av
Willoughby St & Fleet Pl
Willoughby St & Lawrence St
Fulton St & Culver lines
Court St & Joralemon St
Court St & Atlantic Av
Columbia St & Atlantic Av
Columbia St & Degraw St
Columbia St & Centre Mall
Bay St & Henry St
Garnett St
Smith St
Legend
Proposed station[1]
Connecting subway services

A previous plan bearing similarities to the BQX was initially proposed in 1989 as part of a Brooklyn waterfront streetcar line connecting Red Hook with Downtown Brooklyn. A study by the city, published in 2011, found the proposal to be infeasible. A later proposal by the nonprofit Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector, made public in January 2016, found backing from Mayor Bill de Blasio. A director for Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector was appointed in May 2016, and a list of possible routings was released in November 2016. However, there has been criticism of the project, namely that its completion date of mid-2020s may make it obsolete; that it does not have a clear source for funding; and that it is a poor substitute for subway service.

Previous proposal

 
View of a Brooklyn Historic Railway Association PCC streetcar that was to be placed on a proposed, but never used, streetcar line

Since electric trolleys in Brooklyn stopped running in 1956,[2] activists led by the Brooklyn Historic Railway Association (BHRA) had been trying to revive streetcars.[3] In the 1990s, the BHRA received permission from New York City's government to develop a streetcar line running from Beard Street to Borough Hall. The association's president Robert Diamond collected disused PCC streetcars that had been used in Boston and Buffalo for potential use on the new line.[2] By 1999, the group had begun laying new track for the project in Red Hook. However, in 2003, transportation officials elected to revoke Diamond's rights to the route's right-of-way. Instead, officials intended to sell the rights to the highest bidder in the event that the project ever moved forward. Diamond's efforts to secure independent funding were not successful.[4]

In 2005, U.S. Representative Nydia Velázquez helped obtain a $300,000 federal grant for a six-month streetcar study.[3] Although the BHRA had estimated $10–$15 million would be required to complete the project, the New York City Department of Transportation (NYCDOT) streetcar feasibility study (completed in April 2011) concluded that the 6.8-mile (10.9 km) line would cost $176 million in capital funding, plus an additional $6.2 to $7.2 million in annual operating funds. A significant portion of the capital cost would be required to make modifications to Red Hook's narrow streets in order to allow streetcars to make right turns.[5] The study concluded that, due to a number of factors such as high costs, low ridership, and physical constraints like narrow streets, a streetcar line would not be an appropriate transit solution for the area.[5][6] By June 2013, Diamond had partnered with John Quadrozzi of Gowanus Bay Terminal (a concrete firm), and the Gowanus Canal Community Development Corporation in an effort to revive the project, which he now envisioned running partly underground through the Cobble Hill Tunnel, a former Long Island Rail Road tunnel under Atlantic Avenue. Diamond pursued federal funding in order to pay for the project, which he estimated would cost $50 million.[7]

Connector proposal

Initial study

The current line was initially proposed by a non-profit group, Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector, which commissioned a study to examine the corridor along the Brooklyn and Queens waterfront.[8][9] First publicly reported on in January 2016, the study proposed a 17-mile (27 km) route between the neighborhoods of Astoria in Queens and Sunset Park in Brooklyn, passing through several neighborhoods on the way.[9] News media reported that the study had estimated construction costs of $1.7 billion, annual operating costs of $26 million, and 15.8 million annual riders by 2035.[9] The proposal included a branch going through Downtown Brooklyn to the Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center station.[10]

The study described a routing that would begin in Queens near the New York City Housing Authority's Astoria Houses. It would run down 21st Street south to Queensboro Plaza, west onto 11th Street to Newtown Creek. The streetcar would cross Newtown Creek into Greenpoint, then pass through Williamsburg and the Brooklyn Navy Yard using one-way streets close to the waterfront. It would turn onto Park Avenue, run to Navy Street, then through Farragut Houses, Vinegar Hill, and Dumbo. The line would then run south through Red Hook, cross the Gowanus Canal, and continue south on Third Avenue to 58th Street, where it would turn west to serve the Brooklyn Army Terminal and Industry City. From there, the line would turn east, terminating at the 59th Street subway station in Sunset Park.[11]

Schwartz's firm worked on the proposal for over a year and considered five options aside from streetcars.[8] One other option, Select Bus Service, was estimated to cost $1 billion to implement, and was not chosen since it would not raise property values as a streetcar would. The engineers projected 52,000 to 53,000 riders per day on the streetcar, which would have required a bus every minute. Each street car would be able to carry 150 to 175 passengers. Additionally, buses would also have a harder time navigating the 12 to 15 streets along the route. The engineers' route would have its own dedicated lanes for the whole route.[12][13] The study recommended that two facilities for maintenance and storage would be built at a cost of $100 million. In addition, the streetcar would need at least 140 employees to operate the streetcars and a host of other workers, including traffic enforcement agents.[14]

Mayoral endorsement

 
Long Island City, one of the areas that would be served by the new streetcar

On February 3, 2016, the office of Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that the city would begin planning work for the streetcar line, with a formal announcement by de Blasio at his State of the City speech the following day.[15] The BQX was promised as a way to reinvent the city's transit system, along with the Citywide Ferry Service (now NYC Ferry) proposal.[16] City officials said that several years of additional study and review would precede groundbreaking, planned for 2019, with service beginning around 2024.[15] Since the line would be a street-level project, the streetcar would not need state approval.[6][17] The city will rely on increased real estate revenues to pay for the project.[12] Mayor de Blasio's office commissioned a study toward researching the projected effects of the streetcar.[11]

Under the slightly revised plan released by the city, the route would travel 16 miles (26 km) with 30 wheelchair-accessible stops, with an increased construction cost of $2.5 billion.[11][15] There would be sixty vehicles, costing $5 million total,[11] that would travel at 11.3 miles per hour (18.2 km/h), and would be separated from vehicular traffic for 70% of the route.[11] Two bridges over the Newtown Creek and the Gowanus Canal were proposed, in the case that the Pulaski Bridge over the Newtown Creek, and the Hamilton Avenue bridge over the Gowanus Canal, aren't able to accommodate the vehicles;[14] the Newtown Creek bridge will probably be located at Vernon Boulevard, where another bridge previously existed.[11] A trip between Dumbo and Greenpoint would take 27 minutes via the line.[18] The fare for the route would equal the fare of the subway and the buses.[11][19][20]

The line is planned to use multi-section vehicles to negotiate sharp curves at Lorraine Street, Cadman Plaza, 21st Street, and Astoria Boulevard. Streetcars, rather than light rail vehicles (LRVs), are proposed to be used, despite the fact that LRVs have more capacity and shorter headways; this is because streetcars were determined to operate better within mixed-use rights-of-way, as opposed to LRVs, which were determined to operate better within dedicated rights-of-way.[11] Electrification is proposed to be from hydrogen fuel cells within the streetcars themselves, as opposed to from overhead lines or from embedded rails.[11] Since the BQX would operate on both dedicated rights-of-way and on streets, the BQX would use both standard traffic lights and dedicated signals during operation.[11] Annual operating costs are estimated at $26 million.[11]

The new line would provide a new transit route for 45,000 public-housing residents.[11][15][21] An additional motivation for the line has been the tremendous growth in Brooklyn and Queens waterfront areas since the early 2000s.[22]

Development

In May 2016, Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector appointed its first executive director, Ya-Ting Liu, to oversee route operations and design.[23] Two months later, mayor De Blasio appointed Adam Giambrone, former councilor in Toronto and chair of the Toronto Transit Commission, to serve as a consultant or "streetcar czar" for the project.[24][25][26][27]

On November 1, 2016, the city presented a list of possible routings of the BQX through several neighborhoods.[28][29] The study found that four New York City Subway stations along the BQX's route—at Jay Street–MetroTech, Borough Hall, Court Square–23rd Street, and Vernon Boulevard—had high weekday ridership, and thus, would benefit from a BQX transfer.[30] The city, citing the successes of other American cities' streetcar systems, estimated that the project will pay for itself by increasing the property values in the neighborhoods around it in a form of transit-oriented development, similar to how the 7 Subway Extension was built. It is expected to create 86,000 jobs through 2045.[31]

In November 2017, Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector revealed a mockup of a vehicle that might be used on the BQX. The $100,000 prototype, a Citadis low-floor streetcar created by Alstom, was displayed at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.[32][33] However, there was insufficient funding to start construction.[34][33] Internal memos from the city around this time suggested that the project was endangered due to an ongoing dispute between Mayor de Blasio and New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo, since the state government owned some of the land that the BQX was to pass through.[35] Shortly afterward, Liu stepped down from the director's position of Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector, to be replaced by Deputy Director Jessica Schumer, the daughter of U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer.[36][37]

By April 2018, there was still insufficient funding, and de Blasio announced that the city would ask for federal aid for the BQX, despite the city's previous assurances to completely self-fund the project.[38][39] Moreover, the streetcar project was already behind schedule: major design work had been slated to start that year, but the public approvals process that preceded it had not started. Officials predicted that even if the BQX were to be fully funded, construction would not start until at least 2020.[37][39] Additionally, if the BQX's construction were to proceed, the project would interfere with the renovation of the Brooklyn Heights Promenade section of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, which would occur during roughly the same time frame.[40]

The BQX's proposed route between Red Hook and Sunset Park was eliminated in August 2018, and a routing through Dumbo was shelved in favor of a more direct routing through Downtown Brooklyn. The route was thereby shortened from a 16-mile (26 km) alignment with 30 stops to an 11-mile (18 km) alignment with 26 stops. This was supposedly because of cost constraints, since it was projected that the stops in Sunset Park and Dumbo would not have enough ridership to justify building the streetcar there.[41] However, the shortened route was estimated to be more expensive than the original proposed route to Sunset Park.[42] The new route would cost $2.73 billion, versus the original proposal, which would have cost $2.5 billion.[42][43] The proposed completion date for the BQX was also postponed to 2029.[43][44]

The NYCEDC announced in February 2019 that it had awarded a contract to create an environmental impact statement for the BQX.[45][46] The report would be written by the firm Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc., which would publish a final statement by 2020.[47] Afterward, the city would perform a comprehensive Uniform Land Use Review Procedure zoning plan (ULURP) for the areas along the BQX. Due to the length of the ULURP process, construction would not begin until at least 2024.[48] In September 2020, de Blasio deferred decisions on the BQX to after the 2021 New York City mayoral election; de Blasio was term-limited and unable to run for reelection, which meant further action on BQX would be taken by the next mayoral administration. The city had experienced financial shortfalls that year because of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, making it unfeasible for de Blasio's administration to commence the project before the end of his term in 2022.[49][50] By 2021, it was uncertain whether the BQX would ever be built. In the 2021 New York City Democratic mayoral primary, only one of the nine candidates (Loree Sutton, who later dropped out of the race) supported building the BQX, while five candidates opposed it.[51]

Route

As proposed in November 2016, the northern end of the route would probably be at Hoyt Avenue or along 27th Avenue, with the BQX using either 31st Street (under the Astoria subway line, carrying the N and ​W trains), Vernon Boulevard, 21st Street, or Crescent Street to go south to Long Island City.[52]: 14  From there, the BQX would use 44th Drive and then cross the Newtown Creek using one of three bridges (a new bridge at either 2nd Street or Vernon Boulevard, or the existing Pulaski Bridge). These options would then travel down either Franklin Street, Manhattan Avenue (over the Crosstown subway line), or McGuinness Boulevard, respectively.[52]: 15 

 
According to the November 2016 BQX proposal, the streetcar line could travel along Manhattan Avenue (pictured) through Greenpoint.

In southern Greenpoint, the Franklin Street routing would use either Kent Avenue or Berry Street (using Banker Street). The other two options could go down Wythe Avenue, Berry Street, or Bedford Avenue, via Nassau Avenue or Norman Street.[52]: 16  The four options would merge into two (Kent Avenue and Wythe Avenue) south of Division Avenue in Williamsburg. South of the neighborhood, all of the options would then cut through the Brooklyn Navy Yard using Assembly Street.[52]: 16  At Clinton Avenue, the BQX would have three options to the west to access Downtown Brooklyn, Dumbo, or Brooklyn Heights. The BQX could use Market Street and Eighth Street; Flushing Avenue; or Park Avenue. The Eighth Street option would merge onto Flushing Avenue at Cumberland Street in Fort Greene.[52]: 17  At Navy Street, the two routings had three options: go to Dumbo using Gold Street, Front/York Streets, and Cadman Plaza East; go to Downtown Brooklyn using Navy Street, Ashland Place, Willoughby Place, and Joralemon Street; or use Tillary Street to access Brooklyn Heights.[52]: 17  At Joralemon and Court Streets, all of the options would turn south down Court Street and then west along Atlantic Avenue.[52]: 17  The Dumbo option was ruled out in August 2018.[43]

In Cobble Hill, the route could go in one of three directions. It could continue to the west end of Atlantic Avenue and then southward down Columbia Street, serving the Columbia Street Waterfront District; serve the residential section of Cobble Hill via Henry, Congress, and Columbia Streets; or turn down Hicks Street.[52]: 18  The two Columbia Street options would need to go around the Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel toll plaza, while the Hicks Street option would use Sackett and Union Streets to use Van Brunt and Richards Streets, thus bypassing this detour.[52]: 18  South of the Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel toll plaza, the Van Brunt/Richards Streets option would travel down to the streets' south end to Beard Street and turn eastward there, while the Columbia Street option could go down to either Mill or Bay Streets, then travel eastward at one of these two streets.[52]: 19  The Mill Street option would go across the Gowanus Canal using 10th Street, while the Bay Street option further south could either use the existing 10th Street bridge or a new 19th Street bridge to cross the canal.[52]: 19 

The BQX's southernmost leg was canceled in August 2018.[42] As originally planned, it would have traveled down Third Avenue underneath the Gowanus Expressway. This would be parallel to the Fourth Avenue subway line, one block east under Fourth Avenue.[52]: 20  Between either 10th or 19th Street (depending on which bridge option was chosen) and 39th Street, the BQX would have run along Third Avenue.[52]: 20  From 39th Street to 58th Street, the BQX could have swung west to 39th Street to serve Industry City, the Brooklyn Army Terminal, and the industrial center of Sunset Park; or it could have kept running along Third Avenue and serve residents of western Sunset Park. The BQX would have ended at Third Avenue and 59th Street, a block from the entrance to the 59th Street subway station.[52]: 20 

Criticism

The Brooklyn–Queens Connector has received criticism in regards to its operation and cost. Several complaints are that while it is planned to connect to 17 subway stations, it would be far from the BMT Canarsie Line (L train) at Bedford Avenue. The line would also not go near the BMT Jamaica Line (J, M, and Z​ trains) at Marcy Avenue. Much of the areas that the new streetcar would serve are all 0.5 miles (0.80 km) from the IND Crosstown Line (G train), while areas in Eastern Queens and parts of Brooklyn do not have nearby subway lines. Since the project would be constructed and run by New York City and not the MTA, it is not known how it would integrate to the MTA's fare system, if at all.[53] Public officials on Staten Island, including Staten Island Borough President James Oddo, did not oppose the plan, but they have stated that they felt under-represented after previous plans in Staten Island, including light rail along the island's North and West Shores, were rejected.[54][55]

The line was also criticized by public officials in South Brooklyn, who stated that their areas had their express bus service cut, their subway stations lacked elevators, their neighborhoods were under-served by public transit in general, and their requests for express F subway service and more reliable R train service had not yet been heeded.[56] The proposal has also received criticism as it was viewed as a government subsidy to property developers.[57] In addition, the BQX runs through several "100-year flood zones", meaning that the line would be prone to flooding during heavy storms and hurricanes.[58]

Steven Strauss, a Princeton University professor, expressed his reservations about the BQX in a New York Daily News editorial in May 2016. In the article, he stated that he was concerned that by the time the project is completed, it will be potentially obsolete due to the development of autonomous vehicles. Further, he thought the estimated cost of $10 per person per ride might be uneconomic compared to other alternatives. Instead, Strauss recommended that the city engage in a wider Request for Expressions of Interest Process to look at other potential alternatives.[59]

In February 2017, the Village Voice examined the BQX project's cost and found that the city had only tenuous sources of funding for the project.[31] The Voice's study found that the neighborhoods along the proposed BQX pay a combined $1 billion annually in residential taxes, with the tax revenue having increased 17% since 2015. However, to pay for the BQX, the streetcar alone would need to raise tax by another 17%, or else the city would need to resort to financing the streetcar out of its own budget.[31] In addition, there would be less benefit in building in already-gentrified neighborhoods than in neighborhoods that are gentrifying or being redeveloped. The streetcar's feasibility study estimated that property values would go up even without the streetcar.[31]

References

  1. ^ New York City Economic Development Corporation (August 2018). "Brooklyn Queens Connector Completion of Conceptual Design Report" (PDF). Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  2. ^ a b Geberer, Raanan (November 22, 2013). "De Blasio gives Diamond hope for Red Hook trolley plan". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Calder, Rich (May 18, 2010). "Trolley good news for Red Hook rail plan". New York Post.
  4. ^ "Red Hook Trolley Revival". Forgotten New York. March 13, 2012. Retrieved October 4, 2016.
  5. ^ a b "Brooklyn Streetcar Feasibility Study Final Report" (PDF). New York City Department of Transportation. August 2011. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
  6. ^ a b Guion, Payton (February 4, 2016). "New York mayor to propose $2.5B streetcar for underserved communities". The Independent. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  7. ^ Musumeci, Natalie (June 3, 2013). "Train buff's dreams streetcar desire will become reality". The Brooklyn Paper. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
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  9. ^ a b c Rivoli, Dan (January 5, 2016). "$1.7B streetcar route desired for Brooklyn-Queens waterfront". www.nydailynews.com. NY Daily News. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  10. ^ Patel, Neel V. (February 4, 2016). "What's Up with NYC's Streetcar Plans? (Can New York City's mayor muster his inner Robert Moses?)". Inverse. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
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  13. ^ Dwyer, Jim (February 4, 2016). "A Waterfront Route to Serve the Poor, Not Just the Wealthy". New York Times. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
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  16. ^ . DNAinfo New York. March 3, 2016. Archived from the original on September 23, 2016. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  17. ^ Jorgensen, Jillian (February 4, 2016). "A Streetcar Named Independence: De Blasio Invests in Non-MTA Transit". Observer. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  18. ^ Calder, Rich; Furfaro, Danielle (February 3, 2016). "De Blasio to propose streetcar connecting Brooklyn, Queens". New York Post. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
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  20. ^ Davidson, Justin (February 5, 2016). "Why the Brooklyn-Queens Streetcar Is the Folly We Need". Daily Intelligencer. New York Media LLC. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
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  22. ^ Enman, Scott; Geberer, Raanan (February 12, 2016). "Long a dream of many, a streetcar line now grows in Brooklyn as real project". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Everything Brooklyn Media. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  23. ^ "Brooklyn Queens Connector support group hires exec". am New York. May 5, 2016. Retrieved May 9, 2016.
  24. ^ Bruce Demara (July 16, 2016). "Adam Giambrone hired as NYC transit consultant". Toronto Star. Retrieved July 18, 2016. Former city councillor and TTC chair Adam Giambrone has a new gig in New York City, overseeing the creation of a streetcar line along the waterfront linking the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn.
  25. ^ Justin Davidson (July 16, 2016). "The Mayor's Brooklyn-Queens Streetcar Plan Gets a Czar". New York magazine. Retrieved July 16, 2016. Tall and athletic with a spiky crew cut and a Boy Scout demeanor, the 39-year-old Giambrone comes to the job with both experience and baggage — and with knowledge of New York sketchy enough that at one point during an interview he referred to the “Downtown East Side.”
  26. ^ Terry Davidson (July 16, 2016). "Ex-TTC chair Adam Giambrone is New York City's new streetcar guru". Toronto Sun. Retrieved July 16, 2016. Adam Giambrone — the one-time mayoral candidate who was brought down by a sex scandal — is New York City’s new streetcar guru.
  27. ^ "Former TTC chair Adam Giambrone tapped to lead New York City streetcar project". CBC News. July 16, 2016. Retrieved July 16, 2016. Former Toronto politician Adam Giambrone has been appointed director of a new transit project in New York City. The project, called the BQX (Brooklyn Queens Connector) is a plan for a roughly 26-kilometre streetcar route that would run along the waterfront connecting those boroughs.
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  39. ^ a b Cuba, Julianne (April 10, 2018). "Trouble connecting: Mayor, underlings publicly project different futures for waterfront streetcar scheme". Brooklyn Paper. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  40. ^ Cuba, Julianne (December 26, 2017). "Pick a lane: Transit honchos claim construction of mayor's BQX trolley will impede BQE repairs". Brooklyn Paper. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
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  42. ^ a b c "Shorter route, higher cost unveiled for BQX". am New York. August 30, 2018. Retrieved August 31, 2018.
  43. ^ a b c "New Plan for City Streetcar: Shorter, Pricier and Not Coming Soon". The New York Times. August 30, 2018. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  44. ^ George, Michael (August 30, 2018). "Brooklyn-Queens Connector Streetcar Would Cost $2.7 Billion". NBC New York. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  45. ^ Plitt, Amy (February 6, 2019). "Brooklyn-Queens streetcar plan picks up speed". Curbed NY. Retrieved February 7, 2019.
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  56. ^ Ellefson, Alex (February 8, 2016). . Bensonhurst Bean. Corner Media, Inc. Archived from the original on February 10, 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
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External links

  • Official website  

brooklyn, queens, connector, abbreviated, proposed, streetcar, line, york, city, planned, operate, north, south, corridor, along, east, river, between, boroughs, queens, brooklyn, depiction, willoughby, streetsoverviewterminiastoria, queensred, hook, brooklyns. The Brooklyn Queens Connector abbreviated the BQX is a proposed streetcar line in New York City It is planned to operate 24 7 on a north south corridor along the East River between the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn Brooklyn Queens ConnectorDepiction of the Brooklyn Queens Connector at Jay and Willoughby StreetsOverviewTerminiAstoria QueensRed Hook BrooklynStations26WebsiteOfficial websiteServiceServices1 projected HistoryPlanned openingat least 2029TechnicalLine length11 mi 18 km Number of tracks2CharacterStreetcarTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrificationHydrogen fuel cellRoute mapLegend21 St amp 27 Av21 St amp Broadway21 St amp 35 Av21 St amp 41 Av 63rd St Line 44 Dr50 Av amp Vernon Blvd Flushing Line Newtown Creek bridge QueensBrooklynManhattan Av amp Ash StGreenpoint AvBerry St amp North 13th StBerry St amp North 7th StBerry St amp South 2nd StBerry St amp BroadwayKent Wythe Avs amp Division AvWashington Av amp Kent AvBrooklyn Navy YardNavy St amp Flushing AvWilloughby St amp Fleet PlFourth Av LineWilloughby St amp Lawrence StFulton St amp Culver lines Eastern Parkway Line Court St amp Joralemon StBrooklyn Branch Montague St amp Joralemon St tunnels Court St amp Atlantic AvColumbia St amp Atlantic AvColumbia St amp Degraw StColumbia St amp Centre MallBay St amp Henry StGarnett StSmith StCulver Line LegendProposed station 1 Connecting subway servicesThis diagram viewtalkeditA previous plan bearing similarities to the BQX was initially proposed in 1989 as part of a Brooklyn waterfront streetcar line connecting Red Hook with Downtown Brooklyn A study by the city published in 2011 found the proposal to be infeasible A later proposal by the nonprofit Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector made public in January 2016 found backing from Mayor Bill de Blasio A director for Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector was appointed in May 2016 and a list of possible routings was released in November 2016 However there has been criticism of the project namely that its completion date of mid 2020s may make it obsolete that it does not have a clear source for funding and that it is a poor substitute for subway service Contents 1 Previous proposal 2 Connector proposal 2 1 Initial study 2 2 Mayoral endorsement 2 3 Development 3 Route 4 Criticism 5 References 6 External linksPrevious proposal Edit View of a Brooklyn Historic Railway Association PCC streetcar that was to be placed on a proposed but never used streetcar line Since electric trolleys in Brooklyn stopped running in 1956 2 activists led by the Brooklyn Historic Railway Association BHRA had been trying to revive streetcars 3 In the 1990s the BHRA received permission from New York City s government to develop a streetcar line running from Beard Street to Borough Hall The association s president Robert Diamond collected disused PCC streetcars that had been used in Boston and Buffalo for potential use on the new line 2 By 1999 the group had begun laying new track for the project in Red Hook However in 2003 transportation officials elected to revoke Diamond s rights to the route s right of way Instead officials intended to sell the rights to the highest bidder in the event that the project ever moved forward Diamond s efforts to secure independent funding were not successful 4 In 2005 U S Representative Nydia Velazquez helped obtain a 300 000 federal grant for a six month streetcar study 3 Although the BHRA had estimated 10 15 million would be required to complete the project the New York City Department of Transportation NYCDOT streetcar feasibility study completed in April 2011 concluded that the 6 8 mile 10 9 km line would cost 176 million in capital funding plus an additional 6 2 to 7 2 million in annual operating funds A significant portion of the capital cost would be required to make modifications to Red Hook s narrow streets in order to allow streetcars to make right turns 5 The study concluded that due to a number of factors such as high costs low ridership and physical constraints like narrow streets a streetcar line would not be an appropriate transit solution for the area 5 6 By June 2013 Diamond had partnered with John Quadrozzi of Gowanus Bay Terminal a concrete firm and the Gowanus Canal Community Development Corporation in an effort to revive the project which he now envisioned running partly underground through the Cobble Hill Tunnel a former Long Island Rail Road tunnel under Atlantic Avenue Diamond pursued federal funding in order to pay for the project which he estimated would cost 50 million 7 Connector proposal EditInitial study Edit The current line was initially proposed by a non profit group Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector which commissioned a study to examine the corridor along the Brooklyn and Queens waterfront 8 9 First publicly reported on in January 2016 the study proposed a 17 mile 27 km route between the neighborhoods of Astoria in Queens and Sunset Park in Brooklyn passing through several neighborhoods on the way 9 News media reported that the study had estimated construction costs of 1 7 billion annual operating costs of 26 million and 15 8 million annual riders by 2035 9 The proposal included a branch going through Downtown Brooklyn to the Atlantic Avenue Barclays Center station 10 The study described a routing that would begin in Queens near the New York City Housing Authority s Astoria Houses It would run down 21st Street south to Queensboro Plaza west onto 11th Street to Newtown Creek The streetcar would cross Newtown Creek into Greenpoint then pass through Williamsburg and the Brooklyn Navy Yard using one way streets close to the waterfront It would turn onto Park Avenue run to Navy Street then through Farragut Houses Vinegar Hill and Dumbo The line would then run south through Red Hook cross the Gowanus Canal and continue south on Third Avenue to 58th Street where it would turn west to serve the Brooklyn Army Terminal and Industry City From there the line would turn east terminating at the 59th Street subway station in Sunset Park 11 Schwartz s firm worked on the proposal for over a year and considered five options aside from streetcars 8 One other option Select Bus Service was estimated to cost 1 billion to implement and was not chosen since it would not raise property values as a streetcar would The engineers projected 52 000 to 53 000 riders per day on the streetcar which would have required a bus every minute Each street car would be able to carry 150 to 175 passengers Additionally buses would also have a harder time navigating the 12 to 15 streets along the route The engineers route would have its own dedicated lanes for the whole route 12 13 The study recommended that two facilities for maintenance and storage would be built at a cost of 100 million In addition the streetcar would need at least 140 employees to operate the streetcars and a host of other workers including traffic enforcement agents 14 Mayoral endorsement Edit Long Island City one of the areas that would be served by the new streetcar On February 3 2016 the office of Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that the city would begin planning work for the streetcar line with a formal announcement by de Blasio at his State of the City speech the following day 15 The BQX was promised as a way to reinvent the city s transit system along with the Citywide Ferry Service now NYC Ferry proposal 16 City officials said that several years of additional study and review would precede groundbreaking planned for 2019 with service beginning around 2024 15 Since the line would be a street level project the streetcar would not need state approval 6 17 The city will rely on increased real estate revenues to pay for the project 12 Mayor de Blasio s office commissioned a study toward researching the projected effects of the streetcar 11 Under the slightly revised plan released by the city the route would travel 16 miles 26 km with 30 wheelchair accessible stops with an increased construction cost of 2 5 billion 11 15 There would be sixty vehicles costing 5 million total 11 that would travel at 11 3 miles per hour 18 2 km h and would be separated from vehicular traffic for 70 of the route 11 Two bridges over the Newtown Creek and the Gowanus Canal were proposed in the case that the Pulaski Bridge over the Newtown Creek and the Hamilton Avenue bridge over the Gowanus Canal aren t able to accommodate the vehicles 14 the Newtown Creek bridge will probably be located at Vernon Boulevard where another bridge previously existed 11 A trip between Dumbo and Greenpoint would take 27 minutes via the line 18 The fare for the route would equal the fare of the subway and the buses 11 19 20 The line is planned to use multi section vehicles to negotiate sharp curves at Lorraine Street Cadman Plaza 21st Street and Astoria Boulevard Streetcars rather than light rail vehicles LRVs are proposed to be used despite the fact that LRVs have more capacity and shorter headways this is because streetcars were determined to operate better within mixed use rights of way as opposed to LRVs which were determined to operate better within dedicated rights of way 11 Electrification is proposed to be from hydrogen fuel cells within the streetcars themselves as opposed to from overhead lines or from embedded rails 11 Since the BQX would operate on both dedicated rights of way and on streets the BQX would use both standard traffic lights and dedicated signals during operation 11 Annual operating costs are estimated at 26 million 11 The new line would provide a new transit route for 45 000 public housing residents 11 15 21 An additional motivation for the line has been the tremendous growth in Brooklyn and Queens waterfront areas since the early 2000s 22 Development Edit In May 2016 Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector appointed its first executive director Ya Ting Liu to oversee route operations and design 23 Two months later mayor De Blasio appointed Adam Giambrone former councilor in Toronto and chair of the Toronto Transit Commission to serve as a consultant or streetcar czar for the project 24 25 26 27 On November 1 2016 the city presented a list of possible routings of the BQX through several neighborhoods 28 29 The study found that four New York City Subway stations along the BQX s route at Jay Street MetroTech Borough Hall Court Square 23rd Street and Vernon Boulevard had high weekday ridership and thus would benefit from a BQX transfer 30 The city citing the successes of other American cities streetcar systems estimated that the project will pay for itself by increasing the property values in the neighborhoods around it in a form of transit oriented development similar to how the 7 Subway Extension was built It is expected to create 86 000 jobs through 2045 31 In November 2017 Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector revealed a mockup of a vehicle that might be used on the BQX The 100 000 prototype a Citadis low floor streetcar created by Alstom was displayed at the Brooklyn Navy Yard 32 33 However there was insufficient funding to start construction 34 33 Internal memos from the city around this time suggested that the project was endangered due to an ongoing dispute between Mayor de Blasio and New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo since the state government owned some of the land that the BQX was to pass through 35 Shortly afterward Liu stepped down from the director s position of Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector to be replaced by Deputy Director Jessica Schumer the daughter of U S Senator Chuck Schumer 36 37 By April 2018 there was still insufficient funding and de Blasio announced that the city would ask for federal aid for the BQX despite the city s previous assurances to completely self fund the project 38 39 Moreover the streetcar project was already behind schedule major design work had been slated to start that year but the public approvals process that preceded it had not started Officials predicted that even if the BQX were to be fully funded construction would not start until at least 2020 37 39 Additionally if the BQX s construction were to proceed the project would interfere with the renovation of the Brooklyn Heights Promenade section of the Brooklyn Queens Expressway which would occur during roughly the same time frame 40 The BQX s proposed route between Red Hook and Sunset Park was eliminated in August 2018 and a routing through Dumbo was shelved in favor of a more direct routing through Downtown Brooklyn The route was thereby shortened from a 16 mile 26 km alignment with 30 stops to an 11 mile 18 km alignment with 26 stops This was supposedly because of cost constraints since it was projected that the stops in Sunset Park and Dumbo would not have enough ridership to justify building the streetcar there 41 However the shortened route was estimated to be more expensive than the original proposed route to Sunset Park 42 The new route would cost 2 73 billion versus the original proposal which would have cost 2 5 billion 42 43 The proposed completion date for the BQX was also postponed to 2029 43 44 The NYCEDC announced in February 2019 that it had awarded a contract to create an environmental impact statement for the BQX 45 46 The report would be written by the firm Vanasse Hangen Brustlin Inc which would publish a final statement by 2020 47 Afterward the city would perform a comprehensive Uniform Land Use Review Procedure zoning plan ULURP for the areas along the BQX Due to the length of the ULURP process construction would not begin until at least 2024 48 In September 2020 de Blasio deferred decisions on the BQX to after the 2021 New York City mayoral election de Blasio was term limited and unable to run for reelection which meant further action on BQX would be taken by the next mayoral administration The city had experienced financial shortfalls that year because of the COVID 19 pandemic in New York City making it unfeasible for de Blasio s administration to commence the project before the end of his term in 2022 49 50 By 2021 it was uncertain whether the BQX would ever be built In the 2021 New York City Democratic mayoral primary only one of the nine candidates Loree Sutton who later dropped out of the race supported building the BQX while five candidates opposed it 51 Route EditAs proposed in November 2016 the northern end of the route would probably be at Hoyt Avenue or along 27th Avenue with the BQX using either 31st Street under the Astoria subway line carrying the N and W trains Vernon Boulevard 21st Street or Crescent Street to go south to Long Island City 52 14 From there the BQX would use 44th Drive and then cross the Newtown Creek using one of three bridges a new bridge at either 2nd Street or Vernon Boulevard or the existing Pulaski Bridge These options would then travel down either Franklin Street Manhattan Avenue over the Crosstown subway line or McGuinness Boulevard respectively 52 15 According to the November 2016 BQX proposal the streetcar line could travel along Manhattan Avenue pictured through Greenpoint In southern Greenpoint the Franklin Street routing would use either Kent Avenue or Berry Street using Banker Street The other two options could go down Wythe Avenue Berry Street or Bedford Avenue via Nassau Avenue or Norman Street 52 16 The four options would merge into two Kent Avenue and Wythe Avenue south of Division Avenue in Williamsburg South of the neighborhood all of the options would then cut through the Brooklyn Navy Yard using Assembly Street 52 16 At Clinton Avenue the BQX would have three options to the west to access Downtown Brooklyn Dumbo or Brooklyn Heights The BQX could use Market Street and Eighth Street Flushing Avenue or Park Avenue The Eighth Street option would merge onto Flushing Avenue at Cumberland Street in Fort Greene 52 17 At Navy Street the two routings had three options go to Dumbo using Gold Street Front York Streets and Cadman Plaza East go to Downtown Brooklyn using Navy Street Ashland Place Willoughby Place and Joralemon Street or use Tillary Street to access Brooklyn Heights 52 17 At Joralemon and Court Streets all of the options would turn south down Court Street and then west along Atlantic Avenue 52 17 The Dumbo option was ruled out in August 2018 43 In Cobble Hill the route could go in one of three directions It could continue to the west end of Atlantic Avenue and then southward down Columbia Street serving the Columbia Street Waterfront District serve the residential section of Cobble Hill via Henry Congress and Columbia Streets or turn down Hicks Street 52 18 The two Columbia Street options would need to go around the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel toll plaza while the Hicks Street option would use Sackett and Union Streets to use Van Brunt and Richards Streets thus bypassing this detour 52 18 South of the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel toll plaza the Van Brunt Richards Streets option would travel down to the streets south end to Beard Street and turn eastward there while the Columbia Street option could go down to either Mill or Bay Streets then travel eastward at one of these two streets 52 19 The Mill Street option would go across the Gowanus Canal using 10th Street while the Bay Street option further south could either use the existing 10th Street bridge or a new 19th Street bridge to cross the canal 52 19 The BQX s southernmost leg was canceled in August 2018 42 As originally planned it would have traveled down Third Avenue underneath the Gowanus Expressway This would be parallel to the Fourth Avenue subway line one block east under Fourth Avenue 52 20 Between either 10th or 19th Street depending on which bridge option was chosen and 39th Street the BQX would have run along Third Avenue 52 20 From 39th Street to 58th Street the BQX could have swung west to 39th Street to serve Industry City the Brooklyn Army Terminal and the industrial center of Sunset Park or it could have kept running along Third Avenue and serve residents of western Sunset Park The BQX would have ended at Third Avenue and 59th Street a block from the entrance to the 59th Street subway station 52 20 Criticism EditThe Brooklyn Queens Connector has received criticism in regards to its operation and cost Several complaints are that while it is planned to connect to 17 subway stations it would be far from the BMT Canarsie Line L train at Bedford Avenue The line would also not go near the BMT Jamaica Line J M and Z trains at Marcy Avenue Much of the areas that the new streetcar would serve are all 0 5 miles 0 80 km from the IND Crosstown Line G train while areas in Eastern Queens and parts of Brooklyn do not have nearby subway lines Since the project would be constructed and run by New York City and not the MTA it is not known how it would integrate to the MTA s fare system if at all 53 Public officials on Staten Island including Staten Island Borough President James Oddo did not oppose the plan but they have stated that they felt under represented after previous plans in Staten Island including light rail along the island s North and West Shores were rejected 54 55 The line was also criticized by public officials in South Brooklyn who stated that their areas had their express bus service cut their subway stations lacked elevators their neighborhoods were under served by public transit in general and their requests for express F subway service and more reliable R train service had not yet been heeded 56 The proposal has also received criticism as it was viewed as a government subsidy to property developers 57 In addition the BQX runs through several 100 year flood zones meaning that the line would be prone to flooding during heavy storms and hurricanes 58 Steven Strauss a Princeton University professor expressed his reservations about the BQX in a New York Daily News editorial in May 2016 In the article he stated that he was concerned that by the time the project is completed it will be potentially obsolete due to the development of autonomous vehicles Further he thought the estimated cost of 10 per person per ride might be uneconomic compared to other alternatives Instead Strauss recommended that the city engage in a wider Request for Expressions of Interest Process to look at other potential alternatives 59 In February 2017 the Village Voice examined the BQX project s cost and found that the city had only tenuous sources of funding for the project 31 The Voice s study found that the neighborhoods along the proposed BQX pay a combined 1 billion annually in residential taxes with the tax revenue having increased 17 since 2015 However to pay for the BQX the streetcar alone would need to raise tax by another 17 or else the city would need to resort to financing the streetcar out of its own budget 31 In addition there would be less benefit in building in already gentrified neighborhoods than in neighborhoods that are gentrifying or being redeveloped The streetcar s feasibility study estimated that property values would go up even without the streetcar 31 References Edit New York City Economic Development Corporation August 2018 Brooklyn Queens Connector Completion of Conceptual Design Report PDF Retrieved October 2 2019 a b Geberer Raanan November 22 2013 De Blasio gives Diamond hope for Red Hook trolley plan Brooklyn Daily Eagle Retrieved September 29 2014 a b Calder Rich May 18 2010 Trolley good news for Red Hook rail plan New York Post Red Hook Trolley Revival Forgotten New York March 13 2012 Retrieved October 4 2016 a b Brooklyn Streetcar Feasibility Study Final Report PDF New York City Department of Transportation August 2011 Retrieved January 28 2018 a b Guion Payton February 4 2016 New York mayor to propose 2 5B streetcar for underserved communities The Independent Retrieved February 4 2016 Musumeci Natalie June 3 2013 Train buff s dreams streetcar desire will become reality The Brooklyn Paper Retrieved September 29 2014 a b Schwartz Sam Brooklyn Queens Connector Sam Schwartz Transportation Consultants Retrieved February 9 2016 a b c Rivoli Dan January 5 2016 1 7B streetcar route desired for Brooklyn Queens waterfront www nydailynews com NY Daily News Retrieved February 3 2016 Patel Neel V February 4 2016 What s Up with NYC s Streetcar Plans Can New York City s mayor muster his inner Robert Moses Inverse Retrieved February 4 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l Brooklyn Queens Connector Streetcar Light Rail Rapid Assessment PDF Capitalnewyork com Friends of the Brooklyn Queens Connector Archived from the original PDF on April 23 2016 Retrieved April 29 2015 a b Goldensohn Rosa February 4 2016 Sneak peek at de Blasio streetcar s likely Queens Brooklyn route Crain s New York Business Retrieved February 8 2016 Dwyer Jim February 4 2016 A Waterfront Route to Serve the Poor Not Just the Wealthy New York Times Retrieved February 8 2016 a b G Fitzsimmons Emma February 19 2016 Streetcar Service Proposed by Mayor de Blasio May Require 2 New Bridges the New York Times Retrieved February 24 2016 a b c d Grynbaum Michael M February 3 2016 Mayor de Blasio to Propose Streetcar Line Linking Brooklyn and Queens The New York Times Retrieved February 4 2016 Citywide Ferry Service to Launch in June 2017 Official Says DNAinfo New York March 3 2016 Archived from the original on September 23 2016 Retrieved September 22 2016 Jorgensen Jillian February 4 2016 A Streetcar Named Independence De Blasio Invests in Non MTA Transit Observer Retrieved February 5 2016 Calder Rich Furfaro Danielle February 3 2016 De Blasio to propose streetcar connecting Brooklyn Queens New York Post Retrieved February 4 2016 Rivoli Dan February 4 2016 Mayor de Blasio to propose Brooklyn Queens waterfront streetcar at State of the City address New York Daily News Retrieved February 4 2016 Davidson Justin February 5 2016 Why the Brooklyn Queens Streetcar Is the Folly We Need Daily Intelligencer New York Media LLC Retrieved February 9 2016 Goldenberg Sally Rubinstein Dana February 3 2016 De Blasio expected to back Brooklyn Queens streetcar proposal www capitalnewyork com Politico Archived from the original on February 5 2016 Retrieved February 4 2016 Enman Scott Geberer Raanan February 12 2016 Long a dream of many a streetcar line now grows in Brooklyn as real project Brooklyn Daily Eagle Everything Brooklyn Media Retrieved February 4 2016 Brooklyn Queens Connector support group hires exec am New York May 5 2016 Retrieved May 9 2016 Bruce Demara July 16 2016 Adam Giambrone hired as NYC transit consultant Toronto Star Retrieved July 18 2016 Former city councillor and TTC chair Adam Giambrone has a new gig in New York City overseeing the creation of a streetcar line along the waterfront linking the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn Justin Davidson July 16 2016 The Mayor s Brooklyn Queens Streetcar Plan Gets a Czar New York magazine Retrieved July 16 2016 Tall and athletic with a spiky crew cut and a Boy Scout demeanor the 39 year old Giambrone comes to the job with both experience and baggage and with knowledge of New York sketchy enough that at one point during an interview he referred to the Downtown East Side Terry Davidson July 16 2016 Ex TTC chair Adam Giambrone is New York City s new streetcar guru Toronto Sun Retrieved July 16 2016 Adam Giambrone the one time mayoral candidate who was brought down by a sex scandal is New York City s new streetcar guru Former TTC chair Adam Giambrone tapped to lead New York City streetcar project CBC News July 16 2016 Retrieved July 16 2016 Former Toronto politician Adam Giambrone has been appointed director of a new transit project in New York City The project called the BQX Brooklyn Queens Connector is a plan for a roughly 26 kilometre streetcar route that would run along the waterfront connecting those boroughs Fitzsimmons Emma G November 1 2016 City Unveils Possible Routes for Streetcar in Brooklyn and Queens The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 6 2016 BQX Fall 2016 PDF nycedc com Government of New York City November 1 2016 Retrieved November 6 2016 BQX Fall 2016 PDF nycedc com Government of New York City November 1 2016 Retrieved November 6 2016 a b c d DeMause Neil February 7 2017 Light Rail s Dark Side How Will NYC Pay for the BQX Village Voice Retrieved February 7 2017 Fenton Reuven Jaeger Max November 13 2017 A first look at the Brooklyn Queens Connector New York Post Retrieved December 20 2017 a b Fox Alison November 13 2017 Group debuts BQX prototype despite lack of funding am New York Retrieved December 20 2017 Rubinstein Dana April 14 2017 City memo suggests BQX may not be financially feasible after all Politico PRO Retrieved December 20 2017 Calder Rich November 10 2017 De Blasio s Brooklyn Queens trolley may be a pipe dream New York Post Retrieved December 20 2017 Barone Vincent November 30 2017 Friends of the BQX director steps down from role am New York Retrieved April 11 2018 a b Fitzsimmons Emma G April 10 2018 Is Mayor de Blasio s Brooklyn Queens Streetcar Dead The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 11 2018 De Blasio admits Brooklyn Queens trolley needs federal cash New York Post April 6 2018 Retrieved April 11 2018 a b Cuba Julianne April 10 2018 Trouble connecting Mayor underlings publicly project different futures for waterfront streetcar scheme Brooklyn Paper Retrieved April 11 2018 Cuba Julianne December 26 2017 Pick a lane Transit honchos claim construction of mayor s BQX trolley will impede BQE repairs Brooklyn Paper Retrieved April 11 2018 Warerkar Tanay August 30 2018 Brooklyn Queens streetcar changes course will cost more Curbed NY Retrieved August 31 2018 a b c Shorter route higher cost unveiled for BQX am New York August 30 2018 Retrieved August 31 2018 a b c New Plan for City Streetcar Shorter Pricier and Not Coming Soon The New York Times August 30 2018 Retrieved August 1 2018 George Michael August 30 2018 Brooklyn Queens Connector Streetcar Would Cost 2 7 Billion NBC New York Retrieved August 1 2018 Plitt Amy February 6 2019 Brooklyn Queens streetcar plan picks up speed Curbed NY Retrieved February 7 2019 Stayin Alive Plans for the Brooklyn Queens streetcar are inching forward The Real Deal New York February 6 2019 Retrieved February 7 2019 VHB lands contract for environmental review of proposed Brooklyn Queens Connector Railway Track and Structures February 6 2019 Retrieved February 7 2019 Berger Paul February 5 2019 Brooklyn Queens Streetcar Plan Expected to Roll Into Next Phase Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved September 15 2020 Brooklyn Queens Connector may be another victim of the pandemic Railway Track and Structures September 4 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Duggan Kevin September 3 2020 BQ next de Blasio says pricey tram line will be up to following mayor Brooklyn Paper Retrieved September 15 2020 Rivoli Dan March 10 2021 With de Blasio Gone What Will Happen to the Brooklyn Queens Streetcar Spectrum News NY1 New York City Retrieved September 25 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n BQX Fall 2016 PDF nycedc com Government of New York City November 1 2016 Retrieved November 6 2016 Fried Ben February 4 2016 4 Reasons a 2 5 Billion Brooklyn Queens Streetcar Doesn t Add Up Streetsblog New York City Retrieved February 4 2016 Sanders Anna February 4 2016 Staten Island fumes at 2 5B Brooklyn Queens streetcar plan SILive com www SILive com Retrieved February 4 2016 Rojas Rick February 4 2016 Elation and Skepticism Over Proposal for Streetcars in Brooklyn and Queens The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 8 2016 Ellefson Alex February 8 2016 Southern Brooklyn Pols Slam Mayor s Street Car Plan Transportation Must Benefit All NYers Bensonhurst s News Site Bensonhurst Bean Corner Media Inc Archived from the original on February 10 2016 Retrieved February 8 2016 Rose Joel Revived Streetcars May Be On Track For Disappointment NPR org Retrieved February 24 2016 City gives new BQX streetcar details and revs up outreach plan www capitalnewyork com Archived from the original on April 23 2016 Retrieved April 29 2016 Steven Strauss Wanted Real urban transit innovation NY Daily News Retrieved May 23 2016 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brooklyn Queens Connector amp oldid 1129681769, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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