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Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street station

The Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street station is a New York City Subway station complex served by the IRT Flushing Line and the IND Queens Boulevard Line. Located at the triangle of 74th Street, Broadway, and Roosevelt Avenue in Jackson Heights, Queens, it is served by the 7, E, and F trains at all times; the R train at all times except late nights; the M train weekdays during the day; and the <F> train during rush hours in the reverse peak direction.

 Jackson Heights–
 Roosevelt Avenue/74 Street
 
New York City Subway station complex
The station complex and adjoining bus terminal as seen from Broadway and 75th Street
Station statistics
AddressRoosevelt Avenue, 74th Street & Broadway
Jackson Heights, NY 11372
BoroughQueens
LocaleJackson Heights
Coordinates40°44′48″N 73°53′28″W / 40.74667°N 73.89111°W / 40.74667; -73.89111
DivisionA (IRT), B (IND)[1]
Line   IRT Flushing Line
IND Queens Boulevard Line
Services   7  (all times)​
   E  (all times)
   F  (all times) <F>  (two rush hour trains, peak direction)
   M  (weekdays during the day)
   R  (all times except late nights)
TransitSee Victor A. Moore Bus Terminal section
Levels2
Other information
Accessible ADA-accessible
Traffic
202211,848,368[2] 25.6%
Rank9 out of 423[2]
Location
Street map

Station service legend
Symbol Description
Stops all times except late nights
Stops all times
Stops weekdays during the day
Stops rush hours in the peak direction only (limited service)

The complex consists of two stations: the elevated station at Broadway–74th Street, built for the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) and Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (BRT), and the underground IND station at Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue, built for the Independent Subway System (IND). The elevated station was built as part of the Dual Contracts and opened on April 21, 1917; the station was also served by the BRT and its successor, the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation, until 1949. The IND station opened on August 19, 1933, and was the terminus of the Queens Boulevard Line until 1936. Escalators between the two stations were installed in the 1950s, and the complex was substantially rebuilt between 2000 and 2005.

The IRT Flushing Line station has two side platforms and three tracks; rush-hour express trains use the inner track to bypass the station. The IND Queens Boulevard Line station has two island platforms and four tracks. A third platform above the Queens Boulevard Line platforms was completed as part of the IND Second System but never opened. The station complex contains elevators, which make it compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. There is also an at-grade bus terminal, known as the Victor A. Moore Bus Terminal, next to the station's main entrance at Broadway and Roosevelt Avenue. In 2022, it was the busiest subway station in Queens and the 9th busiest subway station in the system.[2]

History edit

Development edit

IRT station edit

 
The eastern end of the IRT Flushing Line station, at 75th Street and Roosevelt Avenue

The 1913 Dual Contracts called for the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) and Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (BRT; later Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation, or BMT) to build new lines in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx. Queens did not receive many new IRT and BRT lines compared to Brooklyn and the Bronx, since the city's Public Service Commission (PSC) wanted to alleviate subway crowding in the other two boroughs first before building in Queens, which was relatively undeveloped. The IRT Flushing Line was to be one of two Dual Contracts lines in the borough, along with the Astoria Line; it would connect Flushing and Long Island City, two of Queens' oldest settlements, to Manhattan via the Steinway Tunnel. When the majority of the line was built in the early 1910s, most of the route went through undeveloped land, and Roosevelt Avenue had not been constructed.[3]: 47  Community leaders advocated for more Dual Contracts lines to be built in Queens to allow development there.[4]

The 74th Street station opened on April 21, 1917, as part of an extension of the line from Queensboro Plaza to 103rd Street–Corona Plaza.[5][6] At the time, the station was known as Broadway.[6] The IRT agreed to operate the line under the condition that any loss of profits would be repaid by the city.[7] The opening of the line helped spur the development of Jackson Heights, Queens, which previously had been farmland.[8] In 1923, the BMT started operating shuttle services along the Flushing Line, which terminated at Queensboro Plaza.[9] The city government took over the IRT's operations on June 12, 1940.[10][11] The IRT routes were given numbered designations in 1948 with the introduction of "R-type" rolling stock, which contained rollsigns with numbered designations for each service.[12] The route from Times Square to Flushing became known as the 7.[13]

IND station edit

The Queens Boulevard Line was one of the first built by the city-owned Independent Subway System (IND), and was planned to stretch between the IND Eighth Avenue Line in Manhattan and 178th Street and Hillside Avenue in Jamaica, Queens, with a stop at Roosevelt Avenue.[14][15] The line was first proposed in 1925.[16] Construction of the line was approved by the New York City Board of Estimate on October 4, 1928.[17] As planned, Roosevelt Avenue was to be one of the Queens Boulevard Line's five express stops, as well as one of 22 total stops on the line between Seventh Avenue in Manhattan and 178th Street in Queens.[18] Although the line ran along Queens Boulevard for much of its route, the segment in western Queens was diverted northward to serve Jackson Heights.[19] The line was constructed using the cut-and-cover tunneling method.[20] Temporary bridges were built over the trenches to allow pedestrians to cross,[20] and Roosevelt Avenue was partially closed.[21] Construction of the line between Manhattan and Jackson Heights was split into four phases; by late 1931, these phases were between 90% and 99% complete.[22]

Before the IND station opened, Bickford's leased a store within a two-story building that housed one of the subway's entrances.[23] The Roosevelt Avenue station opened on August 19, 1933, as the terminus of the first section of the line, which stretched from the connection to the Eighth Avenue Line at 50th Street.[24][25] Three thousand people converged at the station's 73rd and 74th Street exits, hoping to be the first to ride.[25] A transfer to and from the Flushing Line station at Broadway was implemented.[24][26][27] One real-estate expert wrote that the station was "the only place in Queens where the interchange between the elevated and the subway system can be made at a common point".[28] Initially, the line was served only by E trains, which ran local.[29][30] In its first year, the IND station collected nearly two million fares, more than the IRT and BMT collected at the Broadway station.[31] By 1938, the station recorded over five million annual entries.[32]

The construction of the new Roosevelt Avenue complex led to increased demand for housing in the area.[33] It also inspired plans for an unbuilt shopping mall nearby,[34] and real-estate investors speculated that sales and rentals of real estate on Roosevelt Avenue would increase significantly.[35] However, no large commercial developments were built around the station in the years after the IND station opened.[36] The station was the Queens Boulevard Line's terminus from 1933 until an extension east to Union Turnpike opened on December 31, 1936.[37][38][39] The E began making express stops on the line in 1937,[40] and local GG trains began serving the Roosevelt Avenue station at the time.[41] With the opening of the IND Sixth Avenue Line in 1940, F trains began running express along the Queens Boulevard Line west of 71st Avenue, stopping at the Roosevelt Avenue station.[42]

As part of the never-completed IND Second System, announced in 1929, the Winfield Spur line would have diverged from the Queens Boulevard Line just east of the Roosevelt Avenue station.[43][44] A second station was built for this line above the Queens Boulevard Line platforms; the Winfield Spur station was finished but never opened.[45][46]

Station complex edit

1940s and 1950s edit

In 1940, Victor Moore, a notable Broadway performer and Freeport resident,[47][48] asked the New York City Board of Estimate for permission to build a $375,000 bus terminal in his name near the station.[49] When the Board of Estimate approved the project that December, Moore invited board members to see his musical Louisiana Purchase at the Imperial Theatre.[49][50] Moore acquired all remaining lots on the block in February 1941[51][52] and began construction on the terminal that June,[53][54] obtaining a $250,000 mortgage for the project.[55] Nine businesses signed lease for the terminal in September,[56] and the Victor Moore Arcade officially opened on December 11, 1941.[47][57] It served as a hub for the operations of Triboro Coach,[58][59] allowing subway passengers to transfer to and from buses for distant neighborhoods and for LaGuardia Airport,[60]

As part of the unification of the New York City Subway system, free transfers between the BMT/IRT and IND stations commenced on July 1, 1948; initially, passengers were issued paper tickets.[61][62] On October 17, 1949, the joint BMT/IRT operation of the Flushing Line ended, and the line became the responsibility of the IRT.[63] In August 1951, the New York City Board of Transportation approved the installation of six escalators at the Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street station. The $965,000 contract called for one escalator between the IND mezzanine and either of the IND platforms; two escalators between the IND and IRT mezzanines; and one escalator between the IRT mezzanine and either of the IRT platforms.[64][65] In 1956, the New York City Transit Authority announced that it would open a request for proposal for additional escalators between the IRT and IND stations.[66] At the time, the station had six exits,[a] but only one token booth in the IND mezzanine, which led to severe congestion during rush hours.[67]

After the end of BMT/IRT dual service, the New York City Board of Transportation announced that the Flushing Line platforms would be lengthened to 11 IRT car lengths; the platforms were only able to fit nine 51-foot-long IRT cars beforehand.[68][69] The platforms at the 74th Street station were extended in 1955–1956 to accommodate 11-car trains.[70] However, nine-car trains continued to run on the 7 route until 1962, when they were extended to ten cars.[71] With the opening of the 1964 New York World's Fair, trains were lengthened to eleven cars.[72][73]

1960s to 1980s edit

On May 2, 1970, an out-of-service GG train collided with another GG train in revenue service on the Queens Boulevard Line. The revenue-service train was switching from the southbound express track to the local track (it had been rerouted around the out-of-service train). Two people died and 71 were injured in the worst subway collision since the 1928 Times Square derailment.[74][75][76] Following the 1970 accident, New York Magazine highlighted the state of the subway system in a lengthy exposé, in which it concluded that the subway's condition was getting worse compared to previous years.[74] The station remained a transfer hub for passengers traveling to LaGuardia Airport, which had no direct subway service.[77]

To speed up passenger flow, dozens of platform conductors were assigned to direct crowds on the Queens Boulevard Line platforms during the late 1980s.[78]

1990s and 2000s edit

Triboro Coach leased the Victor Moore Arcade from Arnold Gumowitz for $1 a year until 1997.[79] The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) acquired the Victor Moore Arcade in March 1999, paying Gumowitz $9.5 million.[80] Later that year, the MTA began buying out 25 merchants' leases within the arcade in preparation for a $90 million renovation of the station complex.[81] The MTA planned to install four elevators, rebuild staircases, and erect the station's main entrance on the arcade's site.[79][82] At the time, the station was the second-busiest in Queens, but the bus terminal was too short to fit CNG-powered buses.[82] The arcade's layout was also inconvenient; bus passengers had to walk outside or through a bakery to access the subway, and passengers had to ascend to a mezzanine before they could access the underground Queens Boulevard Line platforms.[79] The passageways were also narrow and convoluted, causing congestion during peak times.[83]

The MTA proposed hiring Vollmer Associates to design the station's renovation in late 1999,[83] and the MTA announced in 2000 that it would demolish the Victor Moore Arcade as part of the renovation.[84][85] All merchants had moved out by May 2000.[86] Advocacy group Straphangers Campaign conducted a poll the same year, in which riders ranked Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street station as the dirtiest among the city's 15 busiest stations.[85][87] The MTA began restoring the bus terminal in early May 2001.[88][89] The MTA approved a renovation of the station itself in September 2002; at the time, the project was slated to cost $87 million.[90] Fox & Fowle and Vollmer Associates designed the project.[91] The Flushing Line platforms and the bus terminal were completely rebuilt, and the canopies above the Flushing Line platforms were extended to cover the whole platform.[91] The Queens Boulevard Line platforms were refurbished by construction firm Skanska[92] at a total cost of $132 million.[93][94] The renovation also involved adding 8,600 square feet (800 m2) of retail space,[95] expanding the upper mezzanine on either side of 74th Street,[96] and installing elevators.[97][86]

Local merchants complained that the construction damaged their stores and drove away customers.[98] As part of the renovation, the MTA had removed the complex's payphones in April 2005,[99] prompting state senator John Sabini to request that the phones be restored.[100] The MTA agreed to restore the phones that August after Sabini said a woman had died at the station because the lack of phones made it hard to contact paramedics.[99] Local residents also complained that the MTA did not give them enough information about closures due to the ongoing renovation.[96] The new station building was completed in 2005[101] to a design by Stantec.[102] The Jackson Heights bus terminal opened on July 13, 2005.[101][103]

2010s to present edit

In 2011, as part of a pilot program, the MTA installed an online interactive touchscreen kiosk called the "On The Go! Travel Station" at the Roosevelt Avenue/74th Street station.[104][105] As part of a $11,2 million project, the MTA replaced two of the escalators connecting the IND and IRT mezzanines between July 2014 and early 2015.[106] In late 2022, the MTA announced plans to replace three of the complex's elevators during 2023.[107]

Station layout edit

3rd floor Side platform  
Southbound local   toward 34th Street–Hudson Yards (69th Street)
Peak-direction express   AM rush does not stop here
  PM rush/evenings does not stop here →
Northbound local   toward Flushing–Main Street (82nd Street–Jackson Heights)
Side platform  
2nd floor Upper mezzanine Connection between entrance/exit and elevated platforms
Ground Street level Exit/entrance, station house, fare control, bus loops
  Elevator after fare control in station house between 74th and 75th Streets
Basements 1 and 2 Lower mezzanines Connection between entrance/exit and underground platforms
Basement 3 Southbound local   toward Middle Village–Metropolitan Avenue weekdays (65th Street)
  toward Bay Ridge–95th Street (65th Street)
  toward World Trade Center,   toward Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue late nights (65th Street)
Island platform  
Southbound express   toward World Trade Center (Queens Plaza)
   toward Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue (21st Street–Queensbridge)
Northbound express   toward Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer (Forest Hills–71st Avenue)
   toward Jamaica–179th Street (Forest Hills–71st Avenue)
Island platform  
Northbound local   toward Forest Hills–71st Avenue weekdays (Elmhurst Avenue)
  toward Forest Hills–71st Avenue (Elmhurst Avenue)
  toward Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer,   toward Jamaica–179th Street late nights (Elmhurst Avenue)
 
Staircases to the platforms from fare control. The IND Queens Boulevard Line staircases are to the left, while the IRT Flushing Line staircases are to the right.

The station complex consists of two separate stations, connected by escalators, stairs, and elevators. The main entrance, a station building bounded by Roosevelt Avenue, 75th Street, Broadway, and 74th Street, includes the Victor A. Moore Bus Terminal.[88] The new station building is one of the first green buildings in the MTA system, which is partially powered by solar panels on the roof of the station building[101][102] and above the IRT platform.[93] The solar panels were added following the success of a similar project at the Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue station.[108] The building is made of recycled material such as concrete consisted of 15% fly ash and steel that was prefabricated; in addition, the builders recycled 86% of the waste materials.[102] The station building also contains some retail space at the corner of 75th Street and Broadway, and also leases a few other spaces between the fare control area and the bus terminal.[94] Four elevators make the entire station complex ADA-accessible.[86]

Two stairs and an elevator from each of the Flushing Line platforms, lead down to an above-ground landing, whereupon a set of stairs leads to the main station house, which also contains the station agent booth.[109] The Flushing-bound platform's elevator leads from the Flushing-bound platform to the aboveground landing, then to the street level fare control, and finally to a landing between the street level and the belowground Queens Boulevard Line mezzanine.[110] The full-time station agent booth, and two banks of turnstiles for fare control, are located in this station house at street level.[109][110] Two escalators also lead directly from the Flushing Line landing to the Queens Boulevard Line mezzanine.[110] From the mezzanine, various stairs lead down to each of the Queens Boulevard Line platforms, and an elevator from the belowground landing leads to the mezzanine and the Manhattan-bound platform. At the edges of the Flushing Line landing, stairs go towards a room where in the right, a narrow stairwell (originally an escalator passageway, but currently under construction) goes towards the Basement. There is another elevator from the Forest Hills- and Jamaica-bound platform to the mezzanine.[110] There are also some stores and an ATM lining the mezzanine within fare control.[110] In total, the station has 8,600 square feet (800 m2) of storefront space.[111]

The 2004 artwork in the station house is called Passage by Tom Patti, and was designed in conjunction with FX+FOWLE Architects. The artwork consisted of trapezoid-shaped laminated glass panels located on the upper part of the building's eastern facade. The glass panels break up light into different colors, depending on the vantage point.[112][113]

Alternate exits edit

At 73rd Street and Broadway, on the north side of Roosevelt Avenue, a set of stairs from each of the IRT Flushing Line platforms lead down to a landing below the elevated structure.[110] There is a connection to the Queens Boulevard Line mezzanine via three long, narrow escalators, where there are exits from the below-ground fare control points.[109]

Exits from the underground mezzanine lead to the station building; the northeast corner of 73rd Street, 37th Road, and Broadway; the southwest corner of Broadway and 74th Street; and both eastern corners of Broadway and 75th Street.[114] The only direct exit from the Flushing Line platforms is from the 74th Street mezzanine, which leads to the station building, with an additional side exit to the northeast corner of Roosevelt Avenue and 74th Street.[109][114]

IRT Flushing Line platforms edit

 74 Street–Broadway
  
  New York City Subway station (rapid transit)
 
Manhattan bound platform
Station statistics
DivisionA (IRT)[1]
Line   IRT Flushing Line
Services   7   (all times)
StructureElevated
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks3
Other information
OpenedApril 21, 1917; 106 years ago (1917-04-21)[5]
Accessible  ADA-accessible
Opposite-
direction
transfer
Yes
Former/other namesBroadway
Services
Preceding station   New York City Subway Following station
69th Street  
Local
82nd Street–Jackson Heights
90th Street–Elmhurst Avenue
One-way operation
  does not stop here
Track layout

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Station service legend
Symbol Description
  Stops all times
 
Side entrance at the northeast corner of Roosevelt Avenue and 74th Street

The 74th Street–Broadway station (originally Broadway station[6]) on the IRT Flushing Line is a local station that has three tracks and two side platforms.[115] The center track is used by the rush hour peak direction <7> express service, but trains do not stop here,[116] although there are track switches at either side to let express trains stop there in case of emergency or to allow transfers when work on a local track forces trains to run express.[115] The station is between 69th Street to the west and 82nd Street–Jackson Heights to the east.[117]

The station has two fare control areas at 73rd Street and two at 74th. The 74th Street mezzanine has a wooden floor with windscreens on the stairs, a booth, and a crossunder, with stairs to both the new station building and to the northeast corner of 74th Street and Roosevelt Avenue.[109] The 73rd Street mezzanine contains wooden stair walls, no windows, and no booth (the booth being in the IND entrance at street level). The canopy at the west end is different, having been added later than the original canopy.[109] Both canopies originally measured only 300 feet (91 m) long, but they were extended to cover the entire length of the platforms in the mid-2000s.[93]

IND Queens Boulevard Line platforms edit

 Jackson Heights–
 Roosevelt Avenue
      
  New York City Subway station (rapid transit)
 
Trains departing northbound platform
Station statistics
DivisionB (IND)[1]
LineIND Queens Boulevard Line
Services   E   (all times)
   F   (all times) <F>   (two rush hour trains, peak direction)
   M   (weekdays during the day)
   R   (all times except late nights)
StructureUnderground
Levels2 (upper level unused)
Platforms2 island platforms
cross-platform interchange
Tracks4
Other information
OpenedAugust 19, 1933; 90 years ago (1933-08-19)
Accessible  ADA-accessible
Opposite-
direction
transfer
Yes
Former/other namesRoosevelt Avenue–Jackson Heights
Track layout

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Trackways to upper level
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Trackway
 
Track
Station service legend
Symbol Description
  Stops all times except late nights
  Stops all times
  Stops late nights only
  Stops weekdays during the day
  Stops rush hours in the peak direction only (limited service)
 
Renovated trim line and tile captions in 2021, beginning to deteriorate
 
The Winfield Spur bellmouths diverge south between 78th and 79th Streets, underneath O'Connor Playground (pictured)

The Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue station (signed as Roosevelt Avenue–Jackson Heights on overhead signs) is an express station on the IND Queens Boulevard Line that has four tracks and two narrow island platforms.[110] The E and F both stop here at all times; the R stops here except at night; and the M stops here only on weekdays during the day.[116] The M and R always make local stops, while the E and F make express stops during the day and local stops during the night. The next stop to the west (railroad south) is 65th Street for local trains, Queens Plaza for express E trains via the Queens Boulevard Line, and 21st Street–Queensbridge for express F trains via the 63rd Street lines. The next stop to the east (railroad north) is Elmhurst Avenue for local trains and Forest Hills–71st Avenue for express trains.[117]

The outer track walls have a midnight blue trim line with a black border and 2-by-10-tile white-on-black tile captions reading "ROOSEVELT" in Helvetica at regular intervals. These were installed in the renovation, and replace the original Cerulean blue trim line and 1-tile-high captions in the original IND font.[110] The original tile band was part of a color-coded tile system used throughout the IND.[118] The tile colors were designed to facilitate navigation for travelers going away from Lower Manhattan. As such, a different tile color is used at Forest Hills–71st Avenue, the next express station to the east; the blue tiles used at the Roosevelt Avenue station were also used at all local stations between Roosevelt Avenue and 71st Avenue.[119][120]

The platforms' I-beam columns are painted blue, but some columns are encased in concrete and covered with white tiles.[110] The fare control is in the center of the full-length mezzanine above the platforms and tracks, with unmanned High Entry-Exit Turnstile (HEET) entrances at the southeast end of the mezzanine, and a exit with turnstiles and a booth at the northeast end. There is also a HEET entrance in the center of the mezzanine.[110]

West of the station, there are switches between both westbound tracks; the corresponding switches for the eastbound tracks are east of the station. On both sides, there are also switches between both express tracks.[115]

Unused upper level edit

Along the ramp leading to the southeastern fare control, there is an unused and uncompleted Roosevelt Avenue terminal station for the IND Second System directly above the Manhattan-bound platform.[121][46][122] This terminal has an island platform with a trackway on each side. There are no rails in the trackbeds, but tiles depicting the station name on the tile walls are present.[46][123][124] The signs hanging over the platform, however, are blank. East of the station lies a long, dark section of a 3-block-long tunnel[46][123][125][126] with provisions for a crossover[123][127] and a ramp down to the Manhattan-bound local track of the active mainline below.[128] The unused tunnel has about 750 feet (230 m) of trackway. Along these trackways, trains from the lower level tracks can be seen.[129] The never-used upper level platform is around 500 feet (150 m), only long enough for eight 60-foot (18 m) cars rather than the IND maximum of 10.[123] The platform itself has been converted to offices and storage.[46][130]

There is a trackway just east of Roosevelt Avenue that diverges away from the Manhattan-bound local track. The trackway ramps up to the same level as the two trackways coming from the never-used Roosevelt Avenue Terminal,[128] making three trackways on the upper level. The ramp flies over the mainline tracks along with the two other trackways. Between 78th and 79th Streets, the three trackways on upper level curve towards the south and ending at the wall at the edge of constructed subway. There is a diverging bellmouth next to the Jamaica-bound local track several hundred feet north of the station just at the location where the three upstairs trackways are crossing over. This bellmouth also curves towards the south and similarly ends on a concrete wall shortly after the start of the bellmouth.[131] At the end of the unused tunnel there is an emergency exit[132] that opens out to the south side of Broadway across the street from Elmhurst Hospital Center. The four-track subway running south was a plan for a line along the Long Island Rail Road right-of-way to Garfield Avenue and 65th Place. The line, called the Winfield Spur, would have turned along 65th Place to Fresh Pond Road and then along Fresh Pond Road to Cypress Hills Street. The line would have merged with the Myrtle–Central Avenues Line to the Rockaways proposed in 1929.[123][133][134][135] All four trackways end at a concrete wall where they begin to diverge from the excavation for the existing line.[46]

East of this station, next to the southbound track, the bellmouth with the ramp ascending to the upper level once had a layup track on it.[135] On the Roosevelt Avenue interlocking machine in the station tower, there are spare levers for the necessary signals and switches. On the southbound local track, there is a homeball signal, "D1-1415", which has the lower portion lenses covered over and now functions as an automatic signal. The interlocking machine still shows evidence of the now-nonexistent interlocking where the Winfield spur was to have turned off from the D1 track and the D2 track.[136]

Victor A. Moore Bus Terminal edit

 
The Victor A. Moore Bus Terminal attached to the station

The Victor A. Moore Bus Terminal,[101] which replaces the earlier building known as the Victor Moore Arcade,[47] is located within the station building at Broadway and 74th Street.[101] It is named after actor Victor Moore,[86] who had funded the construction of the original arcade after winning a wager.[103] The original two-story bus terminal and arcade, located at the triangle formed by Broadway, Roosevelt Avenue, and 75th Street,[47][137] featured a shopping area.[47] The terminal, designed in the Streamline Moderne[19] or Art Deco style, featured bus-boarding slips at ground level and offices on the second story.[138]

The current terminal serve six bus routes.[139] Lanes 1 through 3, which serve three of these bus routes, are located inside the terminal. Lanes 2 and 3, which serve the Q49 and northbound Q70 SBS buses respectively, can accommodate one bus each, while Lane 1, which serves the Q33, can accommodate two buses. The Q32, Q47, and southbound Q70 SBS buses stop on Roosevelt Avenue, while the Q53 SBS and southbound Q47 stop on Broadway.[139] All buses from the terminal are operated by MTA Bus, successors to the Triboro Coach routes, except the Q32, which is operated by New York City Bus.[139] To accommodate compressed natural gas buses, the rebuilt terminal has a higher roof than the original arcade.[86]

Lane Route Destination[139]
1 Q33 East Elmhurst
Ditmars Boulevard and 94th Street
2 Q49 East Elmhurst
Astoria Boulevard and 102nd Street
3 Q70
Select Bus Service
Northbound:
LaGuardia Airport, All terminals except Marine Air Terminal
Broadway
at 74th Street
Q47 Southbound:
Glendale
The Shops at Atlas Park
at 81st Street and Cooper Avenue
Roosevelt Avenue
at 74th Street
Q32 Westbound:
Penn Station, Midtown Manhattan
West 32nd Street and 7th Avenue
Eastbound:
Jackson Heights
Northern Boulevard and 81st Street
Q47 Northbound:
LaGuardia Airport, Marine Air Terminal
Roosevelt Avenue
at 75th Street
Q70
Select Bus Service
Southbound:
Woodside
61st Street and Roosevelt Avenue
Broadway at
75th Street
Q53
Select Bus Service
Northbound:
Woodside
61st Street and Roosevelt Avenue
Southbound:
Rockaway Park
Beach 116th Street and Rockaway Beach Boulevard

Notes edit

  1. ^ One exit through the arcade, two at the intersection of Broadway and 75th Street, one each at Broadway's intersections with 73rd and 74th Streets, and one at the intersection of 73rd Street and 37th Road.[67]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Glossary". (PDF). Vol. 1. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. March 4, 2003. pp. 1–2. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 26, 2021. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "Annual Subway Ridership (2017–2022)". Metropolitan Transportation Authority. 2022. Retrieved November 8, 2023.
  3. ^ Raskin, Joseph B. (2013). The Routes Not Taken: A Trip Through New York City's Unbuilt Subway System. New York, New York: Fordham University Press. doi:10.5422/fordham/9780823253692.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-82325-369-2.
  4. ^ "Move for Rapid Transit" (PDF). Newtown Register. December 2, 1909. p. 1. Retrieved September 30, 2017 – via Fultonhistory.com.
  5. ^ a b "Transit Service on Corona Extension of Dual Subway System Opened to the Public". The New York Times. April 22, 1917. p. RE1. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  6. ^ a b c "Corona 'L' Line Opens With Big Celebration". Times Union. April 21, 1917. p. 8. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  7. ^ "Flushing Line Risk Put on the City – Interborough Agrees to Equip and Operate Main St. Branch, but Won't Face a Loss – It May Be a Precedent – Company's Letter Thought to Outline Its Policy Toward Future Extensions of Existing Lines" (PDF). The New York Times. December 4, 1913. (PDF) from the original on May 18, 2022. Retrieved September 18, 2015.
  8. ^ "Jackson Heights Built Since 1909: Queensboro Bridge Transformed Farm Land Beyond-- New Projects in Sight". The Wall Street Journal. March 16, 1931. p. 22. ISSN 0099-9660. ProQuest 130916844.
  9. ^ "Additional Subway Service to Borough of Queens; The Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company Starts! Running Trains Today Over the Astoria and Corona Branches". The New York Times. April 8, 1923. p. RE1. ISSN 0362-4331. ProQuest 103096376.
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  14. ^ See:
    • Duffus, R.L. (September 22, 1929). "Our Great Subway Network Spreads Wider; New Plans of Board of Transportation Involve the Building of More Than One Hundred Miles of Additional Rapid Transit Routes for New York". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 19, 2015.
    • Board of Transportation of the City of New York Engineering Department, Proposed Additional Rapid Transit Lines And Proposed Vehicular Tunnel, dated August 23, 1929
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  17. ^ "$17,146,500 Voted For New Subways; Estimate Board Appropriates More Than $9,000,000 for Lines in Brooklyn. $6,490,000 For The Bronx Smaller Items for Incidental Work --Approves the Proposed Queens Boulevard Route". The New York Times. October 5, 1928. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 4, 2016.
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External links edit

Google Maps Street View
  Broadway and 73rd Street entrance
  37th Road entrance
  Broadway and 74th Street entrance
  Broadway entrance
  Roosevelt Avenue entrance
  Broadway and 75th Street entrance
  Roosevelt Avenue and 75th Street entrance
  Mezzanine
  Lobby
  IND platforms
  IRT platforms
  • nycsubway.org – IRT Flushing Line: 74th Street/Broadway
  • nycsubway.org – IND Queens Boulevard Line: Roosevelt Avenue
  • nycsubway.org — Passage Artwork by Tom Patti (2004)
  • Station Reporter —
  • Abandoned Stations — Roosevelt Avenue Upper Level
  • The Subway Nut — Roosevelt Avenue–Jackson Heights (E,F,M,R) Pictures
  • The Subway Nut — 74th Street–Broadway (7) Pictures
  • MTA's Arts For Transit —

jackson, heights, roosevelt, avenue, 74th, street, station, york, city, subway, station, complex, served, flushing, line, queens, boulevard, line, located, triangle, 74th, street, broadway, roosevelt, avenue, jackson, heights, queens, served, trains, times, tr. The Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street station is a New York City Subway station complex served by the IRT Flushing Line and the IND Queens Boulevard Line Located at the triangle of 74th Street Broadway and Roosevelt Avenue in Jackson Heights Queens it is served by the 7 E and F trains at all times the R train at all times except late nights the M train weekdays during the day and the lt F gt train during rush hours in the reverse peak direction Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue 74 Street New York City Subway station complexThe station complex and adjoining bus terminal as seen from Broadway and 75th StreetStation statisticsAddressRoosevelt Avenue 74th Street amp BroadwayJackson Heights NY 11372BoroughQueensLocaleJackson HeightsCoordinates40 44 48 N 73 53 28 W 40 74667 N 73 89111 W 40 74667 73 89111DivisionA IRT B IND 1 Line IRT Flushing LineIND Queens Boulevard LineServices 7 all times E all times F all times lt F gt two rush hour trains peak direction M weekdays during the day R all times except late nights TransitSee Victor A Moore Bus Terminal sectionLevels2Other informationAccessibleADA accessibleTraffic202211 848 368 2 25 6 Rank9 out of 423 2 LocationShow map of New York City SubwayShow map of New York CityShow map of New YorkStreet mapStation service legendSymbol DescriptionStops all times except late nightsStops all timesStops weekdays during the dayStops rush hours in the peak direction only limited service The complex consists of two stations the elevated station at Broadway 74th Street built for the Interborough Rapid Transit Company IRT and Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company BRT and the underground IND station at Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue built for the Independent Subway System IND The elevated station was built as part of the Dual Contracts and opened on April 21 1917 the station was also served by the BRT and its successor the Brooklyn Manhattan Transit Corporation until 1949 The IND station opened on August 19 1933 and was the terminus of the Queens Boulevard Line until 1936 Escalators between the two stations were installed in the 1950s and the complex was substantially rebuilt between 2000 and 2005 The IRT Flushing Line station has two side platforms and three tracks rush hour express trains use the inner track to bypass the station The IND Queens Boulevard Line station has two island platforms and four tracks A third platform above the Queens Boulevard Line platforms was completed as part of the IND Second System but never opened The station complex contains elevators which make it compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 There is also an at grade bus terminal known as the Victor A Moore Bus Terminal next to the station s main entrance at Broadway and Roosevelt Avenue In 2022 it was the busiest subway station in Queens and the 9th busiest subway station in the system 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Development 1 1 1 IRT station 1 1 2 IND station 1 2 Station complex 1 2 1 1940s and 1950s 1 2 2 1960s to 1980s 1 2 3 1990s and 2000s 1 2 4 2010s to present 2 Station layout 2 1 Alternate exits 3 IRT Flushing Line platforms 4 IND Queens Boulevard Line platforms 4 1 Unused upper level 5 Victor A Moore Bus Terminal 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editDevelopment edit IRT station edit nbsp The eastern end of the IRT Flushing Line station at 75th Street and Roosevelt AvenueThe 1913 Dual Contracts called for the Interborough Rapid Transit Company IRT and Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company BRT later Brooklyn Manhattan Transit Corporation or BMT to build new lines in Brooklyn Queens and the Bronx Queens did not receive many new IRT and BRT lines compared to Brooklyn and the Bronx since the city s Public Service Commission PSC wanted to alleviate subway crowding in the other two boroughs first before building in Queens which was relatively undeveloped The IRT Flushing Line was to be one of two Dual Contracts lines in the borough along with the Astoria Line it would connect Flushing and Long Island City two of Queens oldest settlements to Manhattan via the Steinway Tunnel When the majority of the line was built in the early 1910s most of the route went through undeveloped land and Roosevelt Avenue had not been constructed 3 47 Community leaders advocated for more Dual Contracts lines to be built in Queens to allow development there 4 The 74th Street station opened on April 21 1917 as part of an extension of the line from Queensboro Plaza to 103rd Street Corona Plaza 5 6 At the time the station was known as Broadway 6 The IRT agreed to operate the line under the condition that any loss of profits would be repaid by the city 7 The opening of the line helped spur the development of Jackson Heights Queens which previously had been farmland 8 In 1923 the BMT started operating shuttle services along the Flushing Line which terminated at Queensboro Plaza 9 The city government took over the IRT s operations on June 12 1940 10 11 The IRT routes were given numbered designations in 1948 with the introduction of R type rolling stock which contained rollsigns with numbered designations for each service 12 The route from Times Square to Flushing became known as the 7 13 IND station edit The Queens Boulevard Line was one of the first built by the city owned Independent Subway System IND and was planned to stretch between the IND Eighth Avenue Line in Manhattan and 178th Street and Hillside Avenue in Jamaica Queens with a stop at Roosevelt Avenue 14 15 The line was first proposed in 1925 16 Construction of the line was approved by the New York City Board of Estimate on October 4 1928 17 As planned Roosevelt Avenue was to be one of the Queens Boulevard Line s five express stops as well as one of 22 total stops on the line between Seventh Avenue in Manhattan and 178th Street in Queens 18 Although the line ran along Queens Boulevard for much of its route the segment in western Queens was diverted northward to serve Jackson Heights 19 The line was constructed using the cut and cover tunneling method 20 Temporary bridges were built over the trenches to allow pedestrians to cross 20 and Roosevelt Avenue was partially closed 21 Construction of the line between Manhattan and Jackson Heights was split into four phases by late 1931 these phases were between 90 and 99 complete 22 Before the IND station opened Bickford s leased a store within a two story building that housed one of the subway s entrances 23 The Roosevelt Avenue station opened on August 19 1933 as the terminus of the first section of the line which stretched from the connection to the Eighth Avenue Line at 50th Street 24 25 Three thousand people converged at the station s 73rd and 74th Street exits hoping to be the first to ride 25 A transfer to and from the Flushing Line station at Broadway was implemented 24 26 27 One real estate expert wrote that the station was the only place in Queens where the interchange between the elevated and the subway system can be made at a common point 28 Initially the line was served only by E trains which ran local 29 30 In its first year the IND station collected nearly two million fares more than the IRT and BMT collected at the Broadway station 31 By 1938 the station recorded over five million annual entries 32 The construction of the new Roosevelt Avenue complex led to increased demand for housing in the area 33 It also inspired plans for an unbuilt shopping mall nearby 34 and real estate investors speculated that sales and rentals of real estate on Roosevelt Avenue would increase significantly 35 However no large commercial developments were built around the station in the years after the IND station opened 36 The station was the Queens Boulevard Line s terminus from 1933 until an extension east to Union Turnpike opened on December 31 1936 37 38 39 The E began making express stops on the line in 1937 40 and local GG trains began serving the Roosevelt Avenue station at the time 41 With the opening of the IND Sixth Avenue Line in 1940 F trains began running express along the Queens Boulevard Line west of 71st Avenue stopping at the Roosevelt Avenue station 42 As part of the never completed IND Second System announced in 1929 the Winfield Spur line would have diverged from the Queens Boulevard Line just east of the Roosevelt Avenue station 43 44 A second station was built for this line above the Queens Boulevard Line platforms the Winfield Spur station was finished but never opened 45 46 Station complex edit 1940s and 1950s edit In 1940 Victor Moore a notable Broadway performer and Freeport resident 47 48 asked the New York City Board of Estimate for permission to build a 375 000 bus terminal in his name near the station 49 When the Board of Estimate approved the project that December Moore invited board members to see his musical Louisiana Purchase at the Imperial Theatre 49 50 Moore acquired all remaining lots on the block in February 1941 51 52 and began construction on the terminal that June 53 54 obtaining a 250 000 mortgage for the project 55 Nine businesses signed lease for the terminal in September 56 and the Victor Moore Arcade officially opened on December 11 1941 47 57 It served as a hub for the operations of Triboro Coach 58 59 allowing subway passengers to transfer to and from buses for distant neighborhoods and for LaGuardia Airport 60 As part of the unification of the New York City Subway system free transfers between the BMT IRT and IND stations commenced on July 1 1948 initially passengers were issued paper tickets 61 62 On October 17 1949 the joint BMT IRT operation of the Flushing Line ended and the line became the responsibility of the IRT 63 In August 1951 the New York City Board of Transportation approved the installation of six escalators at the Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street station The 965 000 contract called for one escalator between the IND mezzanine and either of the IND platforms two escalators between the IND and IRT mezzanines and one escalator between the IRT mezzanine and either of the IRT platforms 64 65 In 1956 the New York City Transit Authority announced that it would open a request for proposal for additional escalators between the IRT and IND stations 66 At the time the station had six exits a but only one token booth in the IND mezzanine which led to severe congestion during rush hours 67 After the end of BMT IRT dual service the New York City Board of Transportation announced that the Flushing Line platforms would be lengthened to 11 IRT car lengths the platforms were only able to fit nine 51 foot long IRT cars beforehand 68 69 The platforms at the 74th Street station were extended in 1955 1956 to accommodate 11 car trains 70 However nine car trains continued to run on the 7 route until 1962 when they were extended to ten cars 71 With the opening of the 1964 New York World s Fair trains were lengthened to eleven cars 72 73 1960s to 1980s edit On May 2 1970 an out of service GG train collided with another GG train in revenue service on the Queens Boulevard Line The revenue service train was switching from the southbound express track to the local track it had been rerouted around the out of service train Two people died and 71 were injured in the worst subway collision since the 1928 Times Square derailment 74 75 76 Following the 1970 accident New York Magazine highlighted the state of the subway system in a lengthy expose in which it concluded that the subway s condition was getting worse compared to previous years 74 The station remained a transfer hub for passengers traveling to LaGuardia Airport which had no direct subway service 77 To speed up passenger flow dozens of platform conductors were assigned to direct crowds on the Queens Boulevard Line platforms during the late 1980s 78 1990s and 2000s edit Triboro Coach leased the Victor Moore Arcade from Arnold Gumowitz for 1 a year until 1997 79 The Metropolitan Transportation Authority MTA acquired the Victor Moore Arcade in March 1999 paying Gumowitz 9 5 million 80 Later that year the MTA began buying out 25 merchants leases within the arcade in preparation for a 90 million renovation of the station complex 81 The MTA planned to install four elevators rebuild staircases and erect the station s main entrance on the arcade s site 79 82 At the time the station was the second busiest in Queens but the bus terminal was too short to fit CNG powered buses 82 The arcade s layout was also inconvenient bus passengers had to walk outside or through a bakery to access the subway and passengers had to ascend to a mezzanine before they could access the underground Queens Boulevard Line platforms 79 The passageways were also narrow and convoluted causing congestion during peak times 83 The MTA proposed hiring Vollmer Associates to design the station s renovation in late 1999 83 and the MTA announced in 2000 that it would demolish the Victor Moore Arcade as part of the renovation 84 85 All merchants had moved out by May 2000 86 Advocacy group Straphangers Campaign conducted a poll the same year in which riders ranked Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street station as the dirtiest among the city s 15 busiest stations 85 87 The MTA began restoring the bus terminal in early May 2001 88 89 The MTA approved a renovation of the station itself in September 2002 at the time the project was slated to cost 87 million 90 Fox amp Fowle and Vollmer Associates designed the project 91 The Flushing Line platforms and the bus terminal were completely rebuilt and the canopies above the Flushing Line platforms were extended to cover the whole platform 91 The Queens Boulevard Line platforms were refurbished by construction firm Skanska 92 at a total cost of 132 million 93 94 The renovation also involved adding 8 600 square feet 800 m2 of retail space 95 expanding the upper mezzanine on either side of 74th Street 96 and installing elevators 97 86 Local merchants complained that the construction damaged their stores and drove away customers 98 As part of the renovation the MTA had removed the complex s payphones in April 2005 99 prompting state senator John Sabini to request that the phones be restored 100 The MTA agreed to restore the phones that August after Sabini said a woman had died at the station because the lack of phones made it hard to contact paramedics 99 Local residents also complained that the MTA did not give them enough information about closures due to the ongoing renovation 96 The new station building was completed in 2005 101 to a design by Stantec 102 The Jackson Heights bus terminal opened on July 13 2005 101 103 2010s to present edit In 2011 as part of a pilot program the MTA installed an online interactive touchscreen kiosk called the On The Go Travel Station at the Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street station 104 105 As part of a 11 2 million project the MTA replaced two of the escalators connecting the IND and IRT mezzanines between July 2014 and early 2015 106 In late 2022 the MTA announced plans to replace three of the complex s elevators during 2023 107 Station layout edit3rd floor Side platform nbsp Southbound local nbsp toward 34th Street Hudson Yards 69th Street Peak direction express nbsp AM rush does not stop here nbsp PM rush evenings does not stop here Northbound local nbsp toward Flushing Main Street 82nd Street Jackson Heights Side platform nbsp 2nd floor Upper mezzanine Connection between entrance exit and elevated platformsGround Street level Exit entrance station house fare control bus loops nbsp Elevator after fare control in station house between 74th and 75th StreetsBasements 1 and 2 Lower mezzanines Connection between entrance exit and underground platformsBasement 3 Southbound local nbsp toward Middle Village Metropolitan Avenue weekdays 65th Street nbsp toward Bay Ridge 95th Street 65th Street nbsp toward World Trade Center nbsp toward Coney Island Stillwell Avenue late nights 65th Street Island platform nbsp Southbound express nbsp toward World Trade Center Queens Plaza nbsp nbsp toward Coney Island Stillwell Avenue 21st Street Queensbridge Northbound express nbsp toward Jamaica Center Parsons Archer Forest Hills 71st Avenue nbsp nbsp toward Jamaica 179th Street Forest Hills 71st Avenue Island platform nbsp Northbound local nbsp toward Forest Hills 71st Avenue weekdays Elmhurst Avenue nbsp toward Forest Hills 71st Avenue Elmhurst Avenue nbsp toward Jamaica Center Parsons Archer nbsp toward Jamaica 179th Street late nights Elmhurst Avenue nbsp Staircases to the platforms from fare control The IND Queens Boulevard Line staircases are to the left while the IRT Flushing Line staircases are to the right The station complex consists of two separate stations connected by escalators stairs and elevators The main entrance a station building bounded by Roosevelt Avenue 75th Street Broadway and 74th Street includes the Victor A Moore Bus Terminal 88 The new station building is one of the first green buildings in the MTA system which is partially powered by solar panels on the roof of the station building 101 102 and above the IRT platform 93 The solar panels were added following the success of a similar project at the Coney Island Stillwell Avenue station 108 The building is made of recycled material such as concrete consisted of 15 fly ash and steel that was prefabricated in addition the builders recycled 86 of the waste materials 102 The station building also contains some retail space at the corner of 75th Street and Broadway and also leases a few other spaces between the fare control area and the bus terminal 94 Four elevators make the entire station complex ADA accessible 86 Two stairs and an elevator from each of the Flushing Line platforms lead down to an above ground landing whereupon a set of stairs leads to the main station house which also contains the station agent booth 109 The Flushing bound platform s elevator leads from the Flushing bound platform to the aboveground landing then to the street level fare control and finally to a landing between the street level and the belowground Queens Boulevard Line mezzanine 110 The full time station agent booth and two banks of turnstiles for fare control are located in this station house at street level 109 110 Two escalators also lead directly from the Flushing Line landing to the Queens Boulevard Line mezzanine 110 From the mezzanine various stairs lead down to each of the Queens Boulevard Line platforms and an elevator from the belowground landing leads to the mezzanine and the Manhattan bound platform At the edges of the Flushing Line landing stairs go towards a room where in the right a narrow stairwell originally an escalator passageway but currently under construction goes towards the Basement There is another elevator from the Forest Hills and Jamaica bound platform to the mezzanine 110 There are also some stores and an ATM lining the mezzanine within fare control 110 In total the station has 8 600 square feet 800 m2 of storefront space 111 The 2004 artwork in the station house is called Passage by Tom Patti and was designed in conjunction with FX FOWLE Architects The artwork consisted of trapezoid shaped laminated glass panels located on the upper part of the building s eastern facade The glass panels break up light into different colors depending on the vantage point 112 113 Alternate exits edit At 73rd Street and Broadway on the north side of Roosevelt Avenue a set of stairs from each of the IRT Flushing Line platforms lead down to a landing below the elevated structure 110 There is a connection to the Queens Boulevard Line mezzanine via three long narrow escalators where there are exits from the below ground fare control points 109 Exits from the underground mezzanine lead to the station building the northeast corner of 73rd Street 37th Road and Broadway the southwest corner of Broadway and 74th Street and both eastern corners of Broadway and 75th Street 114 The only direct exit from the Flushing Line platforms is from the 74th Street mezzanine which leads to the station building with an additional side exit to the northeast corner of Roosevelt Avenue and 74th Street 109 114 IRT Flushing Line platforms edit 74 Street Broadway nbsp nbsp New York City Subway station rapid transit nbsp Manhattan bound platformStation statisticsDivisionA IRT 1 Line IRT Flushing LineServices 7 nbsp all times StructureElevatedPlatforms2 side platformsTracks3Other informationOpenedApril 21 1917 106 years ago 1917 04 21 5 Accessible nbsp ADA accessibleOpposite directiontransferYesFormer other namesBroadwayServicesPreceding station nbsp New York City Subway Following station69th Streettoward 34th Street Hudson Yards nbsp Local 82nd Street Jackson Heightstoward Flushing Main Street90th Street Elmhurst AvenueOne way operation nbsp does not stop hereTrack layoutLegend nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to 82nd Street Jackson Heights nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to 69th StreetStation service legendSymbol Description nbsp Stops all times nbsp Side entrance at the northeast corner of Roosevelt Avenue and 74th Street The 74th Street Broadway station originally Broadway station 6 on the IRT Flushing Line is a local station that has three tracks and two side platforms 115 The center track is used by the rush hour peak direction lt 7 gt express service but trains do not stop here 116 although there are track switches at either side to let express trains stop there in case of emergency or to allow transfers when work on a local track forces trains to run express 115 The station is between 69th Street to the west and 82nd Street Jackson Heights to the east 117 The station has two fare control areas at 73rd Street and two at 74th The 74th Street mezzanine has a wooden floor with windscreens on the stairs a booth and a crossunder with stairs to both the new station building and to the northeast corner of 74th Street and Roosevelt Avenue 109 The 73rd Street mezzanine contains wooden stair walls no windows and no booth the booth being in the IND entrance at street level The canopy at the west end is different having been added later than the original canopy 109 Both canopies originally measured only 300 feet 91 m long but they were extended to cover the entire length of the platforms in the mid 2000s 93 IND Queens Boulevard Line platforms edit Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp New York City Subway station rapid transit nbsp Trains departing northbound platformStation statisticsDivisionB IND 1 LineIND Queens Boulevard LineServices E nbsp all times F nbsp all times lt F gt nbsp two rush hour trains peak direction M nbsp weekdays during the day R nbsp all times except late nights StructureUndergroundLevels2 upper level unused Platforms2 island platformscross platform interchangeTracks4Other informationOpenedAugust 19 1933 90 years ago 1933 08 19 Accessible nbsp ADA accessibleOpposite directiontransferYesFormer other namesRoosevelt Avenue Jackson HeightsServicesPreceding station nbsp New York City Subway Following stationQueens PlazaE nbsp toward World Trade Center nbsp Express Forest Hills 71st AvenueE nbsp F nbsp lt F gt nbsp services split21st Street QueensbridgeF nbsp lt F gt nbsp toward Coney Island Stillwell Avenue nbsp nbsp Express Forest Hills 71st AvenueE nbsp F nbsp lt F gt nbsp eastbound65th StreetE nbsp F nbsp M nbsp R nbsp via Queens Plaza nbsp nbsp Local Elmhurst AvenueE nbsp F nbsp M nbsp R nbsp toward Forest Hills 71st AvenueTrack layoutLegend nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Forest Hills 71st Avenue nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Elmhurst Avenue nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Trackways to upper level nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to 65th Street nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Queens Plazaor 21st Street Queensbridge nbsp Trackway nbsp TrackStation service legendSymbol Description nbsp Stops all times except late nights nbsp Stops all times nbsp Stops late nights only nbsp Stops weekdays during the day nbsp Stops rush hours in the peak direction only limited service nbsp Renovated trim line and tile captions in 2021 beginning to deteriorate nbsp The Winfield Spur bellmouths diverge south between 78th and 79th Streets underneath O Connor Playground pictured The Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue station signed as Roosevelt Avenue Jackson Heights on overhead signs is an express station on the IND Queens Boulevard Line that has four tracks and two narrow island platforms 110 The E and F both stop here at all times the R stops here except at night and the M stops here only on weekdays during the day 116 The M and R always make local stops while the E and F make express stops during the day and local stops during the night The next stop to the west railroad south is 65th Street for local trains Queens Plaza for express E trains via the Queens Boulevard Line and 21st Street Queensbridge for express F trains via the 63rd Street lines The next stop to the east railroad north is Elmhurst Avenue for local trains and Forest Hills 71st Avenue for express trains 117 The outer track walls have a midnight blue trim line with a black border and 2 by 10 tile white on black tile captions reading ROOSEVELT in Helvetica at regular intervals These were installed in the renovation and replace the original Cerulean blue trim line and 1 tile high captions in the original IND font 110 The original tile band was part of a color coded tile system used throughout the IND 118 The tile colors were designed to facilitate navigation for travelers going away from Lower Manhattan As such a different tile color is used at Forest Hills 71st Avenue the next express station to the east the blue tiles used at the Roosevelt Avenue station were also used at all local stations between Roosevelt Avenue and 71st Avenue 119 120 The platforms I beam columns are painted blue but some columns are encased in concrete and covered with white tiles 110 The fare control is in the center of the full length mezzanine above the platforms and tracks with unmanned High Entry Exit Turnstile HEET entrances at the southeast end of the mezzanine and a exit with turnstiles and a booth at the northeast end There is also a HEET entrance in the center of the mezzanine 110 West of the station there are switches between both westbound tracks the corresponding switches for the eastbound tracks are east of the station On both sides there are also switches between both express tracks 115 Unused upper level edit Along the ramp leading to the southeastern fare control there is an unused and uncompleted Roosevelt Avenue terminal station for the IND Second System directly above the Manhattan bound platform 121 46 122 This terminal has an island platform with a trackway on each side There are no rails in the trackbeds but tiles depicting the station name on the tile walls are present 46 123 124 The signs hanging over the platform however are blank East of the station lies a long dark section of a 3 block long tunnel 46 123 125 126 with provisions for a crossover 123 127 and a ramp down to the Manhattan bound local track of the active mainline below 128 The unused tunnel has about 750 feet 230 m of trackway Along these trackways trains from the lower level tracks can be seen 129 The never used upper level platform is around 500 feet 150 m only long enough for eight 60 foot 18 m cars rather than the IND maximum of 10 123 The platform itself has been converted to offices and storage 46 130 There is a trackway just east of Roosevelt Avenue that diverges away from the Manhattan bound local track The trackway ramps up to the same level as the two trackways coming from the never used Roosevelt Avenue Terminal 128 making three trackways on the upper level The ramp flies over the mainline tracks along with the two other trackways Between 78th and 79th Streets the three trackways on upper level curve towards the south and ending at the wall at the edge of constructed subway There is a diverging bellmouth next to the Jamaica bound local track several hundred feet north of the station just at the location where the three upstairs trackways are crossing over This bellmouth also curves towards the south and similarly ends on a concrete wall shortly after the start of the bellmouth 131 At the end of the unused tunnel there is an emergency exit 132 that opens out to the south side of Broadway across the street from Elmhurst Hospital Center The four track subway running south was a plan for a line along the Long Island Rail Road right of way to Garfield Avenue and 65th Place The line called the Winfield Spur would have turned along 65th Place to Fresh Pond Road and then along Fresh Pond Road to Cypress Hills Street The line would have merged with the Myrtle Central Avenues Line to the Rockaways proposed in 1929 123 133 134 135 All four trackways end at a concrete wall where they begin to diverge from the excavation for the existing line 46 East of this station next to the southbound track the bellmouth with the ramp ascending to the upper level once had a layup track on it 135 On the Roosevelt Avenue interlocking machine in the station tower there are spare levers for the necessary signals and switches On the southbound local track there is a homeball signal D1 1415 which has the lower portion lenses covered over and now functions as an automatic signal The interlocking machine still shows evidence of the now nonexistent interlocking where the Winfield spur was to have turned off from the D1 track and the D2 track 136 Victor A Moore Bus Terminal editSee also List of bus routes in Queens nbsp The Victor A Moore Bus Terminal attached to the stationThe Victor A Moore Bus Terminal 101 which replaces the earlier building known as the Victor Moore Arcade 47 is located within the station building at Broadway and 74th Street 101 It is named after actor Victor Moore 86 who had funded the construction of the original arcade after winning a wager 103 The original two story bus terminal and arcade located at the triangle formed by Broadway Roosevelt Avenue and 75th Street 47 137 featured a shopping area 47 The terminal designed in the Streamline Moderne 19 or Art Deco style featured bus boarding slips at ground level and offices on the second story 138 The current terminal serve six bus routes 139 Lanes 1 through 3 which serve three of these bus routes are located inside the terminal Lanes 2 and 3 which serve the Q49 and northbound Q70 SBS buses respectively can accommodate one bus each while Lane 1 which serves the Q33 can accommodate two buses The Q32 Q47 and southbound Q70 SBS buses stop on Roosevelt Avenue while the Q53 SBS and southbound Q47 stop on Broadway 139 All buses from the terminal are operated by MTA Bus successors to the Triboro Coach routes except the Q32 which is operated by New York City Bus 139 To accommodate compressed natural gas buses the rebuilt terminal has a higher roof than the original arcade 86 Lane Route Destination 139 1 Q33 East ElmhurstDitmars Boulevard and 94th Street2 Q49 East ElmhurstAstoria Boulevard and 102nd Street3 Q70Select Bus Service Northbound LaGuardia Airport All terminals except Marine Air TerminalBroadwayat 74th Street Q47 Southbound GlendaleThe Shops at Atlas Parkat 81st Street and Cooper AvenueRoosevelt Avenueat 74th Street Q32 Westbound Penn Station Midtown ManhattanWest 32nd Street and 7th AvenueEastbound Jackson HeightsNorthern Boulevard and 81st StreetQ47 Northbound LaGuardia Airport Marine Air TerminalRoosevelt Avenueat 75th Street Q70Select Bus Service Southbound Woodside61st Street and Roosevelt AvenueBroadway at75th Street Q53Select Bus Service Northbound Woodside61st Street and Roosevelt AvenueSouthbound Rockaway ParkBeach 116th Street and Rockaway Beach BoulevardNotes edit One exit through the arcade two at the intersection of Broadway and 75th Street one each at Broadway s intersections with 73rd and 74th Streets and one at the intersection of 73rd Street and 37th Road 67 References edit a b c Glossary Second Avenue Subway Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement SDEIS PDF Vol 1 Metropolitan Transportation Authority March 4 2003 pp 1 2 Archived from the original PDF on February 26 2021 Retrieved January 1 2021 a b c Annual Subway Ridership 2017 2022 Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2022 Retrieved November 8 2023 Raskin Joseph B 2013 The Routes Not Taken A Trip Through New York City s Unbuilt Subway System New York New York Fordham University Press doi 10 5422 fordham 9780823253692 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 82325 369 2 Move for Rapid Transit PDF Newtown Register December 2 1909 p 1 Retrieved September 30 2017 via Fultonhistory com a b Transit Service on Corona Extension of Dual Subway System Opened to the Public The New York Times April 22 1917 p RE1 Retrieved October 2 2011 a b c Corona L Line Opens With Big Celebration Times Union April 21 1917 p 8 Retrieved January 19 2023 Flushing Line Risk Put on the City Interborough Agrees to Equip and Operate Main St Branch but Won t Face a Loss It May Be a Precedent Company s Letter Thought to Outline Its Policy Toward Future Extensions of Existing Lines PDF The New York Times December 4 1913 Archived PDF from the original on May 18 2022 Retrieved September 18 2015 Jackson Heights Built Since 1909 Queensboro Bridge Transformed Farm Land Beyond New Projects in Sight The Wall Street Journal March 16 1931 p 22 ISSN 0099 9660 ProQuest 130916844 Additional Subway Service to Borough of Queens The Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company Starts Running Trains Today Over the Astoria and Corona Branches The New York Times April 8 1923 p RE1 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 103096376 City Transit Unity Is Now a Reality Title to I R T Lines Passes to Municipality Ending 19 Year Campaign The New York Times June 13 1940 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 7 2022 Retrieved May 14 2022 Transit Unification Completed As City Takes Over I R T Lines Systems Come Under Single Control After Efforts Begun in 1921 Mayor Is Jubilant at City Hall Ceremony Recalling 1904 Celebration New York Herald Tribune June 13 1940 p 25 ProQuest 1248134780 Brown Nicole May 17 2019 How did the MTA subway lines get their letter or number NYCurious amNewYork Archived from the original on March 2 2021 Retrieved January 27 2021 Friedlander Alex Lonto Arthur Raudenbush Henry April 1960 A Summary of Services on the IRT Division NYCTA PDF New York Division Bulletin 3 1 Electric Railroaders Association 2 3 Archived PDF from the original on September 14 2020 Retrieved January 27 2021 See Duffus R L September 22 1929 Our Great Subway Network Spreads Wider New Plans of Board of Transportation Involve the Building of More Than One Hundred Miles of Additional Rapid Transit Routes for New York The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 19 2015 Board of Transportation of the City of New York Engineering Department Proposed Additional Rapid Transit Lines And Proposed Vehicular Tunnel dated August 23 1929 Queens Lauded as Best Boro By Chamber Chief The Brooklyn Daily Eagle September 23 1929 p 40 Retrieved October 4 2015 New Subway Routes in Hylan Program to Cost 186 046 000 PDF The New York Times March 21 1925 p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 27 2020 17 146 500 Voted For New Subways Estimate Board Appropriates More Than 9 000 000 for Lines in Brooklyn 6 490 000 For The Bronx Smaller Items for Incidental Work Approves the Proposed Queens Boulevard Route The New York Times October 5 1928 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 4 2016 22 Stations On New Subway Into Queens Five Are Designated Express Stops on Transit Route Which Ends at Jamaica New York Herald Tribune July 23 1933 p H2 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1114650593 a b Polner Robert May 11 2003 How a Garden City Came to Grow Newsday p A7 ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 279727974 a b Hirshon Nicholas Romano Ray January 1 2013 Forest Hills Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 9785 0 Queens Bureau Repairs Detour The Standard Union December 3 1931 p 3 Retrieved October 6 2023 Seeks Early Use of Queens Subway Commerce Chamber Urges Operation of at Last Part of Line Shortly The New York Times September 20 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 Jackson Heights Corner For Bickford Branch Restaurant Chain Secures Subway Corner Space New York Herald Tribune June 2 1932 p 34 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1114518766 a b Two Subway Units Open at Midnight Links in City owned System in Queens and Brooklyn to Have 15 Stations PDF The New York Times August 18 1933 Retrieved November 7 2015 a b New Subway Service to Queens Starts as City Line Opens 2 Links Crowds Storm First Train Over Jackson Heights and Greenpoint Routes Torchlight Parade Marks Event Hailed as Aid to Business Recovery New York Herald Tribune August 19 1933 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1221356307 New Queens Subway Service Will Be Launched Tonight Tunnel From Manhattan Open to Jackson Heights Service Will Eventually Be Extended Through To Jamaica Long Island Daily Press Fultonhistory com August 18 1933 p 20 Retrieved July 27 2016 New Queens Tube To Open Saturday Brooklyn Long Island City Link of City Line Also to Be Put in Operation New York Evening Post Fultonhistory com August 17 1933 p 18 Retrieved July 27 2016 McDougall E A January 31 1937 Rapid Progress In Its Transit Cheers Queens E A McDougall Terms the Impending Express Line Service a Major Factor New York Herald Tribune p D5 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1222363639 Two Subway Links Will Open Aug 19 Both in Queens and One Will Run to 8th Avenue and 50th Street in Manhattan The New York Times August 9 1933 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 2 Queens Units Of City Subway Open Aug 19 One Links Jackson Heights to 8th Av Line Other Joins L I City and Greenpoint New York Herald Tribune August 9 1933 p 17 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1125473350 Cassidy George W August 19 1934 Queens Keyed To Capitalize Jamaica Tube Within 18 Months Subway Will Be Operating to Hillside Avenue Terminal Work Well Advanced Taps County Suitable for Extensive Development New York Herald Tribune p H8 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1125475752 New Retail Areas Created in Queens Growth of Shopping Centers Closely Linked to New Subway Lines The New York Times July 30 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 New Subway Link Benefit to Queens Increased Home Demand Is Predicted in Jackson Heights Area The New York Times June 25 1933 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 12 2016 New Retail Area in Queens Borough Sees Roosevelt Avenue Subway Station as Great Shopping Centre The New York Times July 9 1933 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 12 2016 Subway to Bring New Trade Centre Realty Interests Foresee Intensive Development on Roosevelt Avenue The New York Times May 14 1933 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 The Business Home Of Tomorrow Queen s Retail Growth Not Due To Fair Real Estate Men In Flushing And Jackson Heights Credit Development To Increased Residential Population Women s Wear Daily Vol 55 no 112 December 8 1937 p 27 ProQuest 1653246154 Roger P Roess Gene Sansone August 23 2012 The Wheels That Drove New York A History of the New York City Transit System Springer Science amp Business Media pp 416 417 ISBN 978 3 642 30484 2 City Subway Opens Queens Link Today Extension Brings Kew Gardens Within 36 Minutes of 42d St on Frequent Trains The New York Times December 31 1936 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 26 2016 Mayor Takes 2 000 for a Ride ln Queens Subway Extension Heads Civic Leaders in 10 Car Train Over Route to Kew Gardens That Opens at 7 A M Today Warns of 15 Cent Fare if Unity Plan Fails The Mayor Brings Rapid Transit to Kew Gardens New York Herald Tribune December 31 1936 p 34 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1222323973 Trains Testing Jamaica Link Of City Subway The Brooklyn Daily Eagle April 10 1937 p 3 Retrieved April 24 2018 Jamaica Will Greet Subway PDF The New York Sun April 23 1937 p 8 Retrieved April 24 2018 The New Subway Routes The New York Times December 15 1940 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 16 2018 Retrieved April 15 2018 100 Miles of Subway in New City Project 52 of Them in Queens Transportation Board Gives Out Routes of Second System to Cover Four Boroughs The New York Times September 16 1929 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 Subway Plan Extends Lines By 100 Miles Board Details 438 Million Program With Big Share for Queens and Trunks in Three Other Boroughs Outlines Midtown And Narrows Tubes Crosstown Links to Give Manhattan a Belt Line Outlying Areas Tapped New York Herald Tribune September 16 1929 p 1 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1111661147 Abandoned Stations Roosevelt Ave upper level Columbia University in the City of New York Retrieved October 6 2023 a b c d e f Martin Douglas November 17 1996 Subway Planners Lofty Ambitions Are Buried as Dead End Curiosities The New York Times Retrieved June 27 2015 a b c d e BUS TERMINAL OPENED AT JACKSON HEIGHTS Victor Moore Enterprise in Queens Lauded by Officials The New York Times December 12 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 12 2016 Real Politics Scares L I s Senator Moore Brooklyn Daily Eagle April 13 1941 p 9 Retrieved November 1 2015 via Newspapers com a b Estimate Board Twits Comedian Looking for Gravy Lyons Asks Victor Moore Seeking to Bulld Bus Terminal The New York Times December 20 1940 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 Victor Moore s Bus Terminal Wins Approval Board of Estimate Grants Right to Actor to Build Jackson Heights Station New York Herald Tribune December 20 1940 p 21 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1264413675 Actor in Queens Deal Victor Moore Rounds Out Site for Trade Center The New York Times February 11 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 Area in Jackson Heights Combined Into One Piece Merchandising Center and Bus Terminal Among Projects New York Herald Tribune February 9 1941 p C2 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1265924090 Victor Moore Launches Bus Terminal Project New York Herald Tribune June 18 1941 p 37 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1262398499 This Actor s Horse Won Victor Moore Explains Why He Is Running a Steam Shovel The New York Times June 18 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 Bus Terminal Financed 250 000 Loan Arranged for Jackson Heights Project The New York Times June 29 1941 p RE10 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 106059230 Nine Leases Are Signed For Moore Bus Terminal New York Herald Tribune September 21 1941 p C6 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1264429694 Victor Moore s Bus Terminal Officially Open Actor Grounded in Chicago and Misses Ceremony at Jackson Heights Center New York Herald Tribune December 12 1941 p 43 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1266896191 Bus Terminal Opened at Jackson Heights Victor Moore Enterprise in Queens Lauded by Officials The New York Times December 12 1941 Retrieved November 1 2015 Vic Moore Digs Starts Terminal New York Daily News June 18 1941 Retrieved October 22 2021 Open New Bus Terminal The New York Times November 30 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 19 2023 Transfer Points Under Higher Fare Board of Transportation Lists Stations and Intersections for Combined Rides The New York Times June 30 1948 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on December 9 2021 Retrieved December 24 2020 List of Free and Pay Transfer Points New York Herald Tribune June 30 1948 p 12 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1327387636 Direct Subway Runs To Flushing Astoria PDF The New York Times October 15 1949 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 7 2017 Roosevelt Av Subway El To Have Six Escalators New York Herald Tribune August 29 1951 p 20 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1318295176 Escalator Approved for Queens Transit The New York Times August 29 1951 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 28 2023 Subway Link Expected Escalator Due to Connect IRT and IND at Roosevelt Ave The New York Times July 27 1956 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 27 2023 a b Barstow James S Jr December 25 1956 Fewer Booths Bring More Subway Hiking New York Herald Tribune p 19 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1335742727 Bennett Charles G November 20 1949 Transit Platforms On Lines In Queens To Be Lengthened 3 850 000 Program Outlined for Next Year to Care for Borough s Rapid Growth New Links Are To Be Built 400 More Buses to Roll Also Bulk of Work to Be on Corona Flushing Route Transit Program In Queens Outlined The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 29 2018 37 Platforms On Subways To Be Lengthened All Stations of B M T and I R T in Queens Included in 5 000 000 Program New York Herald Tribune November 20 1949 p 32 ISSN 1941 0646 ProQuest 1325174459 Minutes and Proceedings of the New York City Transit Authority New York City Transit Authority 1955 Archived from the original on September 13 2020 Retrieved August 31 2016 R17s to the Flushing Line New York Division Bulletin 5 6 Electric Railroaders Association M 8 December 1962 via Issu TA to Show Fair Train Long Island Star Journal August 31 1963 Retrieved August 30 2016 via Fulton History A First class Rapid Ride Railway Age Vol 156 no 21 June 1 1964 p 22 ProQuest 895766286 a b Thomas R Brooks June 15 1970 Subway Roulette The Game Is Getting Dangerous New York Magazine Retrieved July 23 2015 Robinson Douglas May 21 1970 Queens IND Crash Kills 2 Injures 71 Car With Rush Hour Crowd Is Split Down the Middle by an Empty Train PDF The New York Times Retrieved October 11 2015 Transit Workers in IND Crash Seek Immunity Before Talking PDF The New York Times May 23 1970 Retrieved October 11 2015 Kronenberger John June 20 1971 How to Get To the Airport For 55 Cents In One Easy Lesson The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2023 Dwyer Jim August 31 1986 In the Subways TA to Try Its stuff on Subway Riders Newsday p 2 ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 285347546 a b c Kalita S Mitra November 23 1999 Station Rehabilitation 74th St revamping will handle crowds better Newsday p A37 ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 279239330 Morrison Dan Anderson Marilyn July 20 2000 Injured Tourist s Condition Improves Building had been certified safe this year Newsday p A7 ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 279351506 Arena Mike October 28 1999 Jackson Heights Transit Revamp Newsday p A8 ISSN 2574 5298 ProQuest 279243205 a b Becker Maki October 1 1999 Landmark Depot May Go Wrecking Ball Eyed for 2nd Busiest Hub New York Daily News p 6 ISSN 2692 1251 ProQuest 313725637 a b Harney James September 20 1999 Rebirth at Roosevelt Hub Station Upgrade in Works New York Daily News p 1 ISSN 2692 1251 ProQuest 313695919 Weir Richard January 23 2000 Neighborhood Report Jackson Heights Elmhurst Arcade Merchants to Lose Their Berth The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 19 2023 a b Cuza Bobby November 30 2000 Finding The Dirt Subway riders trash Queens Roosevelt Avenue station Newsday p A08 ProQuest 279343894 a b c d e Woodberry Warren Jr February 11 2001 Big Lift for Subway Station New Elevators to Be Part of Major Overhaul in Jackson Hts New York Daily News p 5 ProQuest 305566624 O Grady Jim December 24 2000 Neighborhood Report Jackson Heights Despite the Numbers Riders Say Their Station s Still a Mess The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 19 2023 a b Queens Courier Staff May 10 2001 Roosevelt Ave Bus Terminal Closed For Demolition Commuters Scramble For New Bus Stops Qns com Queens Courier Retrieved November 10 2015 Woodberry Warren Jr May 8 2001 Roosevelt Ave Rehab 125m Transit Job Will Take 6 Years New York Daily News p 1 ISSN 2692 1251 ProQuest 305608244 Bertrand Donald September 24 2002 Subway Rehab is Close MTA to Approve 87m Fixup at Roosevelt Ave New York Daily News p 1 ProQuest 305712090 a b DeWeese James March 18 2004 Jackson Heights station facelift is right on track QNS com QNS com Retrieved August 26 2023 Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street Station Renovation Skanska Global corporate website Skanska Global corporate website Skanska Retrieved August 12 2016 a b c DeWeese James March 18 2004 Jackson Heights station facelift is right on track QNS com Retrieved January 19 2023 a b Dromm Peralta and DenDekker Demand MTA Lease Vacant Property at Roosevelt Avenue Transit Hub During Current Economic Crisis MTA Must Pursue Revenue From Valuable Properties PDF THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK OFFICE OF DANIEL DROMM Retrieved August 12 2016 Chamberlain Lisa May 22 2005 The Underground Economy Subway Retailing The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 26 2023 a b Woodberry Warren Jr August 26 2003 Speed Info on Hub Repair MTA is Told New York Daily News p 3 ISSN 2692 1251 ProQuest 305826749 NYC Transit s Goals for 2002 PDF The Bulletin Vol 45 no 10 Electric Railroaders Association October 2002 p 1 Woodberry Warren Jr June 3 2003 Renovation Hub bub Hard on Merchants New York Daily News p 4 ProQuest 305811041 a b Bertrand Donald August 18 2005 Jax Hts Station Gets Phones Back New York Daily News p 1 ProQuest 305967888 Bertrand Donald June 1 2001 Pay Phones a Rail Problem New York Daily News p 5 ISSN 2692 1251 ProQuest 305977909 a b c d e Officials Applaud Opening Of Renovated Bus Terminal Queens Gazette July 20 2005 Archived from the original on March 22 2012 Retrieved November 11 2012 a b c Roosevelt Avenue amp 74th Street Station Rehabilitation Stantec www stantec com Stantec Retrieved August 12 2016 a b Yaniv Oren July 14 2005 Fare Deal for Commuters New Jackson Heights Terminal Open for Biz New York Daily News p 2 ProQuest 305965850 Sozzi Brian April 21 2014 Sozzi The Boring Old Subway is Now Digital and That s Pretty Awesome TheStreet Retrieved March 25 2016 Donohue Pete September 19 2011 MTA s subway iPad may signal new era of better rider relations New York Daily News Retrieved August 26 2023 Honan Katie August 8 2014 Two Escalators at 74th Street Subway Hub Closing for 11 Million in Repairs DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on August 26 2023 Retrieved August 26 2023 Gannon Michael December 22 2022 Lucky 7 riders to get 23 station upgrades Queens Chronicle Retrieved July 1 2023 Robin Joshua November 14 2003 Bright Idea for B klyn Subway Station Innovative solar shield to generate energy Newsday p A04 ProQuest 279755074 a b c d e f Cox Jeremiah 74 Street Broadway 7 Local The SubwayNut www subwaynut com Retrieved August 12 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Cox Jeremiah Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue E F G R V The SubwayNut www subwaynut com Retrieved August 12 2016 Chamberlain Lisa May 22 2005 The Underground Economy Subway Retailing The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 19 2023 Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street Broadway TOM PATTI Passage 2004 web mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority Retrieved August 12 2016 Tom Patti Passage at Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street Broadway station nyc arts org NYC ARTS Retrieved August 12 2016 a b MTA Neighborhood Maps Jackson Heights PDF mta info Metropolitan Transportation Authority 2015 Retrieved August 24 2016 a b c Marrero Robert January 1 2017 472 Stations 850 Miles PDF B24 Blog via Dropbox Retrieved April 27 2018 a b Subway Service Guide PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority September 2019 Retrieved September 22 2019 a b Subway Map PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority September 2021 Retrieved September 17 2021 Tile Colors a Guide in the New Subway Decoration Scheme Changes at Each Express Stop to Tell Riders Where They Are The New York Times August 22 1932 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 1 2022 Retrieved July 1 2022 Carlson Jen February 18 2016 Map These Color Tiles In The Subway System Used To Mean Something Gothamist Retrieved May 10 2023 Gleason Will February 18 2016 The hidden meaning behind the New York subway s colored tiles Time Out New York Retrieved May 10 2023 www nycsubway org Retrieved June 4 2015 Walsh Kevin February 2016 ROOSEVELT AVENUE STATION UPPER LEVEL Forgotten New York Forgotten NY Retrieved August 12 2016 a b c d e Marks Seymour January 19 1959 The Phantom Subway Ideal Spot to Park Underground Long Island Star Journal Fultonhistory com p 2 Retrieved August 12 2016 Pompili Michael December 16 2003 Showing Image 93115 nycsubway org Retrieved August 12 2016 Marks Seymour January 19 1959 The Phantom Subway Ideal Spot to Park Underground Long Island Star Journal Fultonhistory com p 1 Retrieved August 12 2016 Marks Seymour January 20 1959 Phantom Subway Ideal Spot to Park Long Island Star Journal Fultonhistory com p 3 Retrieved August 12 2016 Showing Image 1076 nycsubway org a b Showing Image 1080 nycsubway org Showing Image 1079 nycsubway org Winfield s Revenge LTV Squad July 4 2006 Retrieved August 12 2016 Winfield Scunthole s Lair 2012 LTV Squad April 16 2012 Retrieved August 12 2016 Showing Image 1086 nycsubway org Duffus R L September 22 1929 OUR GREAT SUBWAY NETWORK SPREADS WIDER New Plans of Board of Transportation Involve the Building of More Than One Hundred Miles of Additional Rapid Transit Routes for New York The New York Times Retrieved August 19 2015 Board of Transportation of the City of New York Engineering Department Proposed Additional Rapid Transit Lines And Proposed Vehicular Tunnel dated August 23 1929 a b Raskin Joseph B 2013 The Routes Not Taken A Trip Through New York City s Unbuilt Subway System New York New York Fordham University Press doi 10 5422 fordham 9780823253692 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 82325 369 2 NYC Subway ROOSEVELT Tower GRS Model 5 Interlocking Machine on YouTube January 4 2016 Accessed August 12 2016 Roberts John A September 11 2021 The Roosevelt Avenue Hub The Juniper Park Civic Association Retrieved October 6 2023 Roberts John A September 11 2021 The Roosevelt Avenue Hub The Juniper Park Civic Association Retrieved October 6 2023 a b c d Queens Bus Map PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority August 2022 Retrieved September 29 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street New York City Subway Google Maps Street View nbsp Broadway and 73rd Street entrance nbsp 37th Road entrance nbsp Broadway and 74th Street entrance nbsp Broadway entrance nbsp Roosevelt Avenue entrance nbsp Broadway and 75th Street entrance nbsp Roosevelt Avenue and 75th Street entrance nbsp Mezzanine nbsp Lobby nbsp IND platforms nbsp IRT platformsnycsubway org IRT Flushing Line 74th Street Broadway nycsubway org IND Queens Boulevard Line Roosevelt Avenue nycsubway org Passage Artwork by Tom Patti 2004 Station Reporter 74th Street Roosevelt Avenue Complex Abandoned Stations Roosevelt Avenue Upper Level The Subway Nut Roosevelt Avenue Jackson Heights E F M R Pictures The Subway Nut 74th Street Broadway 7 Pictures MTA s Arts For Transit Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street Broadway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jackson Heights Roosevelt Avenue 74th Street station amp oldid 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