Burke Avenue (IRT White Plains Road Line)

Burke Avenue
New York City Subway rapid transit station

Southbound platform
Station statistics
Address Burke Avenue & White Plains Road
Bronx, NY 10467
Borough The Bronx
Locale Allerton
Division A (IRT)
Line IRT White Plains Road Line
Services       2  (all times)
      5  (rush hours, peak direction)
Connection
Structure Elevated
Platforms 2 side platforms
Tracks 3
Other information
Opened March 3, 1917; 94 years ago (March 3, 1917)
Traffic
Passengers (2010) 1,060,008[1]  1.2%
Rank 344 out of 422
Station succession
Next north Gun Hill Road: 2  5 
Next south Allerton Avenue: 2  5 

Burke Avenue is a local station on the IRT White Plains Road Line of the New York City Subway. Located in the Bronx at the intersection of Burke Avenue and White Plains Road, it is served by the 2 train at all times, and the 5 train during rush hours in peak direction.

This elevated station, opened on March 3, 1917, has three tracks and two side platforms. It was renovated in 2004-05 at a cost of approximately $12.2 million USD.

Both platforms have beige windscreens and red canopies with green outlines, frames, and support columns in the center and black, waist-high steel fences at either ends with lampposts at regular intervals. The windscreens have mesh fences at various points. The station signs are in the standard black name plates with white lettering.

This station has one elevated station house beneath the center of the platforms and tracks. Two staircases from each platform go down to a waiting area. The back of the token booth faces this crossunder with a steel fences on either side. On the Wakefield-bound side, there are two exit only turnstiles. On the Manhattan-bound side, there is an emergency gate and a bank of three turnstiles. Outside fare control, two staircases go down to the northwest and southeast corners of Burke Avenue and White Plains Road. The station house has windows.

The 2006 artwork here is called Bronx Literature by Béatrice Coron. It consists of stained glass panels on the platform windscreens featuring scenes from various works of literature written by four authors, Sholom Aleichem, James Baldwin, Nicholasa Mohr, and Edgar Allan Poe, all of whom have lived in or wrote about the Bronx.

References

  1. ^ "Facts and Figures: 2010 Annual Subway Ridership". New York City Metropolitan Transportation Authority. http://mta.info/nyct/facts/ridership/ridership_sub_annual.htm. Retrieved 2011-05-26. 

External links