J/Z (New York City Subway service)
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Nassau Street Express |
The J Nassau Street Express and Z Nassau Street Express (earlier Jamaica Express) are two rapid transit services of the B Division of the New York City Subway. They are colored brown, since they use the BMT Nassau Street Line in Lower Manhattan. The J runs at all times, while the Z only operates during rush hours in the peak direction; both services use the entire BMT Archer Avenue Line and BMT Jamaica Line from Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer over the Williamsburg Bridge to Lower Manhattan. Rush hour service in the peak direction is express west of Myrtle Avenue, and the J and Z form a skip-stop pair east of Myrtle Avenue. During weekdays, the J and Z run to the southernmost station on the Nassau Street Line, Broad Street, but the J is cut back on weekends to Chambers Street. Broad Street and Fulton Street are thus two of the four stations or portions of complexes that are not served full-time (the others are on the IRT Lenox Avenue Line, not served during late nights when the 3 does not run).
The J and Z fleet consists of R42 cars. The J and Z are expected to use R160A-1s when the base order is complete.
Until 1976, the Jamaica Line (over Broadway west of East New York) was also served by the KK Broadway Brooklyn Local (K after 1973), which ran to 57th Street (IND Sixth Avenue Line) via the Chrystie Street Connection after 1968. This was the successor to the original BMT Canarsie Line service, which ran full-time until the 14th Street–Eastern Line was completed to East New York in 1928.
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[edit] History
[edit] Before the Chrystie Street Connection
The Jamaica Line - then known as the Broadway Elevated - was one of the original elevated lines in Brooklyn, completed in 1893 from Cypress Hills west to Broadway Ferry in Williamsburg.[1] It was then a two-track line, with a single local service between the two ends, and a second east of Gates Avenue, where the Lexington Avenue Elevated merged.[2] This second service later became the 12, and was eliminated in 1950 with the abandonment of the Lexington Avenue el.
The second major service on the Broadway Elevated ran between Canarsie and Williamsburg via the BMT Canarsie Line, started on July 30, 1906 when the Broadway and Canarsie tracks were connected at East New York.[3] As part of the Dual Contracts, an extension from Cypress Hills east to Jamaica was completed on July 3, 1918,[4] a third express track was added west of East New York, and express trains began running in 1922.[citation needed]
The Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation numbered its services in 1924,[citation needed] and the Canarsie and Jamaica services became 14 and 15. Both ran express during rush hours in the peak direction west of East New York, and additional 14 trains, between Eastern Parkway (now Broadway Junction) or Atlantic Avenue on the Canarsie Line and Manhattan provided rush-hour local service on Broadway.[5] When the 14th Street–Eastern Line and Canarsie Line were connected on July 14, 1928,[6] the old Canarsie Line service was renamed the Broadway (Brooklyn) Line, providing only weekday local service over the Broadway Elevated west of Eastern Parkway. The Atlantic Avenue trips remained, and rush-hour trains continued to serve Rockaway Parkway (Canarsie), though they did not use the Broadway express tracks.[7] The 14 was later cut back to only rush-hour service.[citation needed]
On the Manhattan end, the first extension was made on September 16, 1908, when the Williamsburg Bridge subway tracks opened.[8] Broadway and Canarsie trains were extended to the new Essex Street terminal, and further to Chambers Street when the line was extended on August 4, 1913.[9] When the BMT Nassau Street Line was completed on May 30, 1931, the 15 was extended to Broad Street,[10][11] and the 14 was truncated to Canal Street.[7] Some 14 trains began terminating at Crescent Street on the Jamaica Line in 1956.[citation needed]
Inbound morning rush hour skip-stop service between Jamaica and East New York was implemented on June 18, 1959.[12] Express 15 trains served "A" stations, while the morning 14 became the Jamaica Local, running between Jamaica and Canal Street, and stopped at stations marked "B".[13] These stations were as follows:[14]
- All trains: 168th Street • Sutphin Boulevard • Elderts Lane • Eastern Parkway
- "A" stations: 168th Street • Sutphin Boulevard • 121st Street • 111th Street • Woodhaven Boulevard • Forest Parkway • Elderts Lane • Crescent Street • Cleveland Street • Eastern Parkway
- "B" stations: 168th Street • 160th Street • Sutphin Boulevard • Queens Boulevard • Metropolitan Avenue • 104th Street • Elderts Lane • Cypress Hills • Norwood Avenue • Van Siclen Avenue • Alabama Avenue • Eastern Parkway
Letters were assigned to most BMT services in the early 1960s. The 15 became the J (express) and JJ (local), and the 14 became the KK.[15]
[edit] Chrystie Street Connection to 1976
When the Chrystie Street Connection opened on November 26, 1967, many services were changed. The two local services - the JJ (non-rush hours) and KK (rush hours) - were combined as the JJ, but without any major routing changes. Thus non-rush hour JJ trains ran between Jamaica and Broad Street, while morning rush hour JJ trains ran to Canal Street, and afternoon rush hour JJ trains ran between Canal Street and Atlantic Avenue or Crescent Street. The rush-hour express J was combined with the weekday QT Brighton Local via tunnel to form the weekday QJ, running between Jamaica and Brighton Beach via the Jamaica Line (express during rush hours in the peak direction), BMT Nassau Street Line, Montague Street Tunnel, and BMT Brighton Line (local). Finally, the RJ was a special peak-direction rush-hour service, running fully local on the Jamaica Line, Nassau Street Line, Montague Street Tunnel, and BMT Fourth Avenue Line to 95th Street in Fort Hamilton. This was an extension of a former rush-hour RR service, and thus ran towards Jamaica in the morning and towards Fort Hamilton in the afternoon.[16]
The next change was made on July 1, 1968, when the Chrystie Street Connection tracks to the Williamsburg Bridge opened. The Jamaica Line portion of the rush-hour JJ was modified to become a new rush-hour KK, running between Jamaica (peak direction) or Eastern Parkway (both directions) and the new 57th Street station on the IND Sixth Avenue Line in Manhattan. The RJ was eliminated, being cut back to an RR variant, and the off-hour JJ was relabeled QJ (but not extended to Brighton Beach). At the same time, the existing skip-stop service was extended to afternoon Jamaica-bound trains, with those QJ trains running express west of Eastern Parkway and service "A" stations east to Jamaica, and those KK trains serving "B" stations. Less than two months later, on August 18, the QJ was extended to Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue.[17][18]
These new services were slowly eliminated in the 1970s due to financial problems.[citation needed] First, on January 2, 1973, the QJ was cut back full-time to Broad Street and renamed the J; the M was extended to Coney Island in its place. At the same time, the KK was cut back to Eastern Parkway and renamed the K,[19] and both skip-stop patterns were carried out by alternate J trains.[citation needed] But that was not enough; the K was discontinued on August 30, 1976,[20] eliminating the J skip-stop and express service east of Myrtle Avenue. (One-way express service remained west of Myrtle Avenue, since the M was switched to the local tracks at that time.)[citation needed]
The following table summarizes the changes that were made between 1959 and 1976.
Morning rush-hour local | Morning rush-hour express | Afternoon rush-hour local | Afternoon rush-hour express | Other local | Other service | |
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1959-67 | 14/KK 168th Street - Canal Street, "B" stops inbound | 15/J 168th Street - Broad Street, "A" stops inbound | 14/KK Crescent Street, Atlantic Avenue, or Rockaway Parkway - Canal Street | 15/J 168th Street - Broad Street | 15/JJ 168th Street - Broad Street | |
1967-68 | JJ 168th Street - Canal Street, "B" stops inbound | QJ 168th Street - Brighton Beach, "A" stops inbound | JJ Crescent Street or Atlantic Avenue - Canal Street | QJ 168th Street - Brighton Beach | JJ 168th Street - Broad Street QJ 168th Street - Brighton Beach, middays and early evenings |
RJ 168th Street - Brooklyn, rush hour non-peak direction only |
1968-1973 | KK 168th Street - 57th Street, "B" stops inbound | QJ 168th Street - Brooklyn, "A" stops inbound | KK 168th Street - 57th Street, "B" stops outbound | QJ 168th Street - Brooklyn, "A" stops outbound | QJ 168th Street - Broad Street or Brooklyn | |
1973-1976 | K Eastern Parkway - 57th Street | J 168th Street - Broad Street, two inbound patterns, one for "A" stops and one for "B" stops | K Eastern Parkway - 57th Street | J 168th Street - Broad Street, two outbound patterns, one for "A" stops and one for "B" stops | J 168th Street - Broad Street |
[edit] 1976 to present
The J was truncated to Queens Boulevard just after midnight on September 11, 1977,[21] and to 121st Street on April 15, 1985,[citation needed] concurrent with the cutting-back of the Jamaica Line. The BMT Archer Avenue Line opened on December 11, 1988, extending the line back east from 121st Street, and the present J/Z skip-stop pattern was implemented.[22]
In 1990, weekend service terminated at Canal Street, but was then extended back to Chambers Street in 1994.
From April 30 to September 1, 1999, the Williamsburg Bridge was closed for reconstruction. J trains ran only between Jamaica Center-Parsons Archer and Myrtle Avenue. J/Z skip-stop service was in both directions between Jamaica Center and Eastern Parkway-Broadway Junction.
After September 11, 2001, R service was suspended. J trains were extended beyond Broad Street via the BMT Montague Street Tunnel to replace the R to Bay Ridge-95th Street at all times except late nights, when it only ran to Broad Street and a shuttle ran in Brooklyn between 95th and 36th Streets. J/Z skip-stop service was suspended. During this time, the J was the longest local line in the system.
[edit] Stations
For a more detailed station listing, see the articles on the lines listed above. For a more detailed station listing, see the articles on the lines listed above.
Station service legend | |
---|---|
Stops all times | |
Stops all times except late nights | |
Stops late nights only | |
Stops weekdays only | |
Stops all times except rush hours in the peak direction | |
Stops rush hours in the peak direction only | |
Time period details |
[edit] References
- ^ "Trains Running This Morning", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, May 30, 1893, p. 10.
- ^ "Better Service on the Brooklyn L", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, December 20, 1893, p. 12.
- ^ New York Times, The BRT Opens Its New Extension for Through Traffic, July 31, 1906, page 12
- ^ New York Times, New Subway Line, July 7, 1918, page 30
- ^ Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation, Map and Guide to BMT Rapid Transit Division, 1924
- ^ New York Times, Celebrate Opening of New B. M. T. Line, July 15, 1928, page 13
- ^ a b Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation, Map and Guide to BMT Rapid Transit Division, 1931
- ^ New York Times, Mayor Runs a Train Over New Bridge, September 17, 1908, page 16
- ^ New York Times, Bridge Loop to Open for One Line Only, August 3, 1913, page 6
- ^ New York Times, Nassau St. Service Outlined by B. M. T., May 21, 1931, page 29
- ^ New York Times, Mayor Drives Train in New Subway Link, May 30, 1931, page 11
- ^ New York Times, Jamaica BMT to Start Speed-Up Tomorrow, June 17, 1959
- ^ New York City Transit Authority, Official New York City Subway Map and Station Guide, 1959
- ^ New York City Transit Authority, Skip Stop on the BMT Jamaica Line, 1959
- ^ Joseph Cunningham and Leonard DeHart, A History of the New York City Subway System Part 2: Rapid Transit in Brooklyn, 1977
- ^ New York City Transit Authority, New York City Rapid Transit Map and Station Guide, 1967
- ^ New York City Transit Authority, Rapid Transit Service Changes, 1968
- ^ New York City Transit Authority, KK - a new service, 1968
- ^ New York Times, Subway Schedules in Queens Changing Amid Some Protest, January 2, 1973, page 46
- ^ New York Times, Transit Agency Drops 215 Runs, August 31, 1976, page 42
- ^ New York Times, A Sentimental Journey on the BMT..., September 9, 1977, page 61
- ^ New York Times, Big Changes for Subways are to Begin, December 9, 1988, page B1
[edit] External links
- MTA NYC Transit - J Nassau Street Express
- MTA NYC Transit - Z Nassau Street Express
- MTA NYC Transit - J–Z schedulePDF (224 KB)
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