23rd Street–Ely Avenue (IND Queens Boulevard Line)

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23rd Street–Ely Avenue
NYC Subway E service NYC Subway V service

New York City Subway station

Station information
Line IND Queens Boulevard Line
Services E all times (all times)
V weekdays until midnight (weekdays until midnight)
Transfers 7 all times <7>weekdays until 10:00 p.m., peak direction at 45th Road–Court House Square (IRT Flushing Line) (MetroCard only)
G all times at Long Island City–Court Square (IND Crosstown Line)
Platforms 2 side platforms
Tracks 2
Other
Borough Queens
Opened August 28, 1939[1]
Next north Queens Plaza: E all times V weekdays until midnight
Next south Lexington Avenue–53rd Street: E all times V weekdays until midnight

23rd Street–Ely Avenue is a station on the IND Queens Boulevard Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of 23rd Street, Ely Avenue, and 44th Drive in Queens, it is served by the E train (all times) and by the V train (weekdays). This is the western-most railroad south station on the Queens Boulevard Line.

Each end of the station has a crossover. The full-time south end leads to 21st Street and has the original IND signs "Manhattan" and "Jamaica" still inside fare control. The North end connects to the passageway to the G train, which was built by Citibank when their Court Square building was built. This passageway has a glass finish at the escalators near the building entrance and the only moving walkways (horizontal escalators) in the subway system.

An out-of-system transfer with a MetroCard is available to the 45th Road–Court House Square station (7 <7>). Construction of Citigroup’s second building in Long Island City is expected to be completed in the near future. The company plans to improve the connection between the G and 7 subway stations by constructing an escalator and elevator that will allow passengers to transfer between both services without having to exit the subway and then re-enter the 7 line elevated station.

There are two sets of artwork here. One was made in 1992 by Frank Olt and is called Temple Quad Reliefs. The other was made in 2001 by Elizabeth Murray and is called Streams. It is desribed as "whimsical boots stride over the city skyline paired with mosaic images of both sun and rainclouds which float along the walls of the transfer mezzanine."

[edit] References

  1. ^ Feinman, Mark (2000). The History of the Independent Subway. Retrieved on 2006-07-03.

[edit] External links