AirTrain JFK

This article is about the intra-airport people mover presently operating at John F. Kennedy International Airport. For the former New York City Subway service between JFK and Manhattan, see JFK Express. For a similar monorail system at Newark Liberty International Airport, see AirTrain Newark. For a proposed people mover system for LaGuardia Airport in Queens, see AirTrain LGA.
AirTrain JFK
Overview
Type People mover
Locale connecting JFK International Airport to various points within Queens, New York City
Stations 10
Services 3
Daily ridership 11,384 (as of June 2006)
Operation
Opening December 17, 2003
Owner Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
Operator(s) Bombardier Transportation
Character Elevated Rail Line
Rolling stock 32 Bombardier Innovia Metro vehicles
Technical
Line length 8.1 miles (13.0 km)
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Electrification ? V third rail
Highest elevation Elevated
Route map
Legend
Long Island Rail Road
toward Long Island

Jamaica
LIRR
toward New York
terminals

Linden Boulevard
Rockaway Boulevard
Belt Parkway
Nassau Expressway
A train
toward 207th Street

Howard Beach
toward Far Rockaway
or Rockaway Park

AirTrain Storage Yards
Lefferts Boulevard
Federal Circle
Terminal 1
Terminal 2
Terminal 8
Terminal 4
Terminal 7
Terminal 5
AirTrain system map

AirTrain JFK is a 3-line, 8.1-mile-long (13.0 km) people mover system and elevated railway in New York City providing service to John F. Kennedy International Airport. It is operated by Bombardier Transportation under contract to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the operator of the airport. The service operates all day, year-round.

Routes and stations

AirTrain connects the airport terminals and parking areas with Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) and New York City Subway lines in Queens. The system consists of three overlapping routes:

Before separating for their final destinations, the Howard Beach and Jamaica routes stop at Federal Circle for car rental companies and shuttle buses to hotels and the airport's cargo areas. Both routes make a counterclockwise loop through the airport and stop at each terminal.

Station guide

All AirTrain JFK stations are fully compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), being wheelchair- and disability-accessible.

Station Lines Connections
Howard Beach[2]
  • Howard Beach Route
Lefferts Boulevard[2]
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Passenger pick-up
  • Long-term parking areas A and B
  • MTA Bus: Q10
  • MTA New York City Transit bus: B15
Federal Circle[2]
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Jamaica Station Route
Jamaica[2]
  • Jamaica Station Route
  • New York City Subway: (E J Z trains at Sutphin Boulevard – Archer Avenue – JFK Airport station)
  • Long Island Rail Road (at Jamaica station)
  • MTA New York City Transit and MTA Bus: Q6, Q8, Q9, Q20A, Q20B, Q24, Q25, Q30, Q31, Q34, Q40, Q41, Q43, Q44, Q60, and Q65
Terminal 1[2]
  • All Terminals Loop
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Jamaica Station Route
Terminal 2[2]
  • All Terminals Loop
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Jamaica Station Route
Terminal 4[2]
  • All Terminals Loop
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Jamaica Station Route
Terminal 5[2]
  • All Terminals Loop
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Jamaica Station Route
  • Terminal 5
  • Yellow parking
  • MTA New York City Transit and MTA Bus: Q3, Q10, and B15
Terminal 7[2]
  • All Terminals Loop
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Jamaica Station Route
Terminal 8[2]
  • All Terminals Loop
  • Howard Beach Route
  • Jamaica Station Route

With the exception of Terminal 4, all AirTrain stations are outside the terminal buildings, sit on the other side of the terminal roadway from each building and are connected to their respective stations through elevated walkways over the roadway. The Terminal 4 station was built inside the terminal as it opened after AirTrain JFK.

Fares

AirTrain JFK is free within the terminal area and to the hotel and car rental shuttle buses at Federal Circle. Entering or leaving the system at the Jamaica or Howard Beach stations costs $5.[3]

The fare must be paid by MetroCard, which can be purchased from vending machines at Jamaica and Howard Beach with cash, credit card, or ATM card. The only reduced fee MetroCard for AirTrain JFK is the $40 Unlimited Ride one. There are two types of this card. One is valid for one calendar month and the other is valid for thirty days after first use. The JFK-AirTrain 10-Trip MetroCard costs $25 and is good for ten JFK Air-Train trips until midnight one year (365 days) after first use. This card is only accepted on AirTrain JFK; one trip is deducted for each use.

Traffic

AirTrain JFK carried 6,487,118 paid passengers in 2014, with another 10 million using the service for free on-airport travel. This is a 247% increase over 2004, the first full year of operation, when 2,623,791 riders paid. The 2014 paid ridership is 12% of the 53.2 million passengers that used JFK that year.[4]

History

Two-car AirTrain seen from Terminal 4
An AirTrain at Federal Circle viewed from a car window
AirTrain viaduct over Van Wyck Expressway

The JFK Express, advertised as The Train to The Plane, was a premium-fare service of the New York City Subway, connecting Midtown Manhattan to John F. Kennedy International Airport that ran from 1978 through 1990 via subway and then transfer to a shuttle bus. There had long been a desire for a rail connection to JFK Airport, which suffered from major traffic congestion on its access roads. However, efforts to build a system took time to bear fruit and the current AirTrain JFK is much smaller than what was originally planned. Plans included:

Ultimately, only the portions linking Jamaica and Howard Beach to JFK Airport were approved and built.

Construction of the AirTrain system began in 1998 and service was to begin at the end of 2002, but was delayed by the derailment of a test train on September 27, 2002, which resulted in the death of the train operator.[6] The system finally opened on December 17, 2003.

The $1.9 billion AirTrain system faced criticism from southeast Queens residents who feared the project could become a "boondoggle", especially after the derailment death. The Port Authority responded to residents' concerns by imposing strict rules regarding disruptive or loud construction activity and implementing a streamlined damage claim process which quickly compensated homeowners who suffered damage to their homes as a result of the construction.

The AirTrain was financed in part by a Federal Passenger Facility Charge (collected as a $4.50 fee on virtually all outbound flight segments), which could only be used for airport-related improvements. The use of this funding required FAA approval. Several airlines challenged the use of the PFC funds for this project and hired a consultant to organize opposition. They also appealed the funding decision in court along with a small number of Ozone Park residents.

The airlines subsequently withdrew from the lawsuit following negotiations with the Port Authority while the residents continued the legal battle, but lost in court. The Port Authority also contributed $100 million toward the renovation of Jamaica, with the state of New York paying for the rest of the $387 million project. The purpose of this renovation was, in part, to facilitate AirTrain connections. The state also spent $75 million to renovate the Howard Beach station, which brought it into ADA compliance and facilitated passengers' transfers to and from the AirTrain.

AirTrain JFK and the rest of the airport, like other Port Authority properties, does not receive subsidies from the state or city for its operating costs, which is one of the reasons cited for its relatively high fare.

The proposed Lower Manhattan – Jamaica/JFK Transportation Project would use the LIRR's Atlantic Branch to Downtown Brooklyn and a new tunnel to Lower Manhattan. This would provide faster service to JFK via a one-seat ride and Long Island Rail Road service to Lower Manhattan via a transfer at Jamaica (i.e. the same plan proposed by the RPA in 1999). Under this proposal, baggage could be checked in Manhattan and transferred directly to planes at the airport.

Rolling stock

AirTrain JFK uses the same Advanced Rapid Transit (formerly Intermediate Capacity Transit System) technology from Bombardier as the SkyTrain in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada and the Kelana Jaya Line in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It draws power from a third rail and a linear induction motor pushes magnetically against an aluminum strip in the center of the track. The computerized trains are automated and operate without conductors or motormen. The 32 individual vehicles are of the Mark II variant of the Bombardier Innovia Metro.

The recorded announcements on AirTrain JFK are by New York City traffic reporter Bernie Wagenblast.[7]

See also

References

External links

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