TheNew York City Transit Authority operates 24rail yards for theNew York City Subway system and one for theStaten Island Railway.[1][2][3] There are 10 activeA Division yards and 11 activeB Division yards, two of which are shared between divisions for storage and car washing. In addition, there is one yard for theStaten Island Railway and three non-revenue (Maintenance of Way, or MoW) Division-independent yards. Many of the system's yards are used for off-peak storage, whereas some have inspection facilities where basic routine maintenance is carried out. Of these yards,rolling stock are assigned to seven A Division yards and seven B Division yards. Within the yards are 14 maintenance facilities, whereas two yards (207th Street and Coney Island) perform major overhaul and car rebuilding work.[2]
TheA Division's yards consist of the 239th Street, 240th Street, Corona, East 180th Street, Jerome, Livonia, and Westchester maintenance yards, plus three other non-maintenance storage yards. A total of 2892 cars are assigned to the seven maintenance yards.[4]
Cars in the A Division may be loaned to other yards if necessary maintenance prevents access.
The137th Street Yard is an undergroundrail yard located between145th Street and137th Street–City College on theIRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line, the latter of which is the yard's namesake.[5] The yard has five tracks surrounding the three mainline tracks, with three tracks located on the west (southbound side) and two tracks located on the east (northbound side).[5][6] The yard is used to store some1 trains outside of rush hours. Each track can hold two full-length trains, so a total of 10 trains can be stored there at any given time.[7] Because the tracks are on a 1% downgrade in the southbound direction, each of the layup tracks are equipped with a derail to protect the main line from a runaway train in the event a train placed on any one the storage tracks is not properly secured.
40°49′22″N73°57′11″W / 40.82278°N 73.95306°W /40.82278; -73.95306 (137th Street Yard)

The239th Street Yard is the northernmost rail yard in the system, located at 4570 Furman Avenue in theWakefield section of the North Bronx, and is home to theR142s assigned to the2. There is also considerable fleet interoperability with the5, as 5 trains are based out of the nearby East 180th Street Yard and share a similarly sized fleet. 5 trains use the upper portion of the yard for off-peak storage. Opened in 1916, it is one of the oldest yards in the system.
Ten cars are inspected each day as part of preventative scheduled maintenance. A wheel truing machine was installed here to minimize damage to rail cars and tracks caused by flat wheels. This shop was also used as a facility to retrofit all R26s, R28s, R29s, R33s (except single unit Worlds Fair cars) and R36s (both Mainline and Worlds Fair types) married pairs IRT type cars with the installation of new Stone-Safety 10 ton Air Conditioning systems between 1976 and 1981. Also, during this period, all cars assigned to the2 were inspected and maintained at the East 180th Street Yard shared with the5. It re-opened as an inspection and maintenance facility for the2 in 1982. A car wash operates at this yard facility to serve cars assigned to the 2, in addition to cars assigned to the1,3,4 and 5 routes.
The yard consists of a seven-track inspection shop and 38 layup tracks. The layup tracks are arranged on two levels; the only other yard in the system to share this trait is the East New York Yard. Access to the yard is provided to and fromNereid Avenue only.[6]
On February 3, 1998, two out-of-service trains collided at the yard lead after the motorman of one train passed out at the helm and his train crashed into the one in front of it.[8]
40°54′03″N73°50′58″W / 40.90083°N 73.84944°W /40.90083; -73.84944 (239th Street Yard)
The240th Street Yard is located at 5911 Broadway in theRiverdale section ofthe Bronx, serving theIRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line near the line's northern terminus. The yard consists of six inspection tracks in the shop and 15 additional layup tracks. The yard is home to theR62A[9] subway cars assigned to the1. The shop was built in 1906 to support theoriginal IRT subway. Work constructing the yard and inspection shed was 60 percent complete in June 1910, and was estimated to be completed by January 1, 1911.[10] The inspection shed went into service on May 1, 1911.[11]
The yard and shops are entirely on an elevated structure. There is no car washer at this yard; the trains occasionally go to the 239th Street or Westchester Yard to be washed, but they usually go to the nearby 207th Street Yard instead. Ten cars undergo 10,000 mile SMS inspections per day, since their entire fleet has been unitized into five-car sets.[6][12]
As part of the 2020–2024 Capital Plan, the shop will be rebuilt with more space in between track and the replacement of pits with elevated tracks.[13]
40°53′18″N73°54′05″W / 40.88833°N 73.90139°W /40.88833; -73.90139 (240th Street Yard)
Corona Yard serves as the home yard of theIRT Flushing Line (7 and <7> trains). It is located south ofMets–Willets Point, atFlushing Meadows–Corona Park nearCiti Field, theNational Tennis Center, and the site of the1939 and1964 World's Fairs.
Corona Yard opened in 1928 and maintains theR188s used on the7 and <7> services. It is adjacent to theCasey Stengel Bus Depot. Because the Flushing Line is isolated from the rest of the A Division and its only track connection to the rest of the system is via the B Division, cars that need to undergo or are returning from heavy maintenance are escorted on and off the line by suitably-equipped lead cars via the sole connection to the rest of the system just east (railroad north) of the upper levelQueensboro Plaza station.
On August 16, 2006, the original 1928 shop building was demolished and replaced by a new, modern shop. With more track mileage to cover and tighter spacing between trains as part of CBTC implementation on the Flushing Line, the MTA announced plans to expand the yard with a second loop and six layup tracks, which would be located on the former right of way of the Long Island Rail Road's Whitestone Branch. Plans for this expansion are on an indefinite hold, however.
40°45′10″N73°50′46″W / 40.75278°N 73.84611°W /40.75278; -73.84611 (Corona Yard)

TheEast 180th Street Yard is situated at 1145 East 180th Street in theWest Farms neighborhood ofthe Bronx, just east of theBronx Zoo. The yard consists of seven storage tracks (numbered 4 thru 10) and an adjacent 6-track (numbered 11 thru 16) shop building with a connection to the nearby 19-track Unionport Yard, which lies to the northeast of East 180th Street Yard.[6][14] Additionally, there are two storage tracks (identified as A and B) immediately north of the shop building. Track A ends in a bumper block and track B is accessible from the southbound track of the White Plains Road line. The yard is the home of theR142s for the5. There is considerable fleet interchange with the2. All engineering acceptance testing for newly delivered IRT-type cars is performed here. A new shop building replacing the original 1918 vintage shop building opened in 1999, just in time for acceptance testing of new R142s, which Bombardier started delivering to this facility on November 16, 1999. On October 11, 1923, additional tracks in the yard went into service.[15]
40°50′33″N73°52′22″W / 40.84250°N 73.87278°W /40.84250; -73.87278 (East 180th Street Yard)

TheJerome Yard, or Mosholu Yard, is located at 3191 Jerome Avenue in theJerome Park neighborhood ofthe Bronx. The yard was built in 1925. Five tracks went into service in the yard on February 7, 1923.[16]
This yard is home to theR142s andR142As for the4. It is one of the three yards in the system to be under a housing complex (Pitkin Yard and Lenox Yard are the others). Rail access to the yard is by a pair of tracks that branch off of the elevatedIRT Jerome Avenue Line just north ofBedford Park Boulevard–Lehman College station. The riveted steel pylons that support the elevated branch tracks give way to stone pylons just north of 205th Street before they enter the yard. The yard is surrounded by a wall and covered by a parking deck used by residents of theTracey Towers housing complex. The yard has four inspection tracks, one utility track and 18 layup tracks. Trains are washed at the nearby Concourse Yard.[6][12]
40°52′44″N73°53′16″W / 40.87889°N 73.88778°W /40.87889; -73.88778 (Jerome Yard)

Lenox Yard, formerly the Lenox Avenue Shops,[17] is located near 148th Street and Lenox Avenue inHarlem. This 22 track yard is only used for storage of theR62s that operate on the3, and has no maintenance facility, although the yard had been the first overhaul shop for theIRT when it opened with the rest of thenew subway in 1904.[5][18] The original IRT subway cars were lowered from the street via inclines into the yard, where they continued into theWest Side Main Line.[19] The inspection shed was lengthened to fit ten-car trains in Fiscal Year 1910.[10] On September 9, 1958 the Transit Authority announced that it was planning to abandon the Lenox Avenue Shops. All IRT and IND repairs would then be done at the 207th Street Shops by June 1959. The TA estimated that this would result in a saving of $1 million a year.[20] Formerly extending between 147th and 150th Streets, in the 1960s the yard was downsized from 26 acres to seven acres, which eliminated the repair shops and NYCT offices. The land was sold to a developer.[21][22] Around that time, a public school building (currently housingFrederick Douglass Academy) and the Esplanade Gardens apartment complex were constructed onpilotis above the formerly open-air yard.[18][21] Two tracks were taken from the yard for theHarlem–148th Street station, which opened in 1968 as the current northern terminal for the 3.[21][23][24][25]
40°49′22″N73°56′07″W / 40.82278°N 73.93528°W /40.82278; -73.93528 (Lenox Yard)
TheLivonia Yard is located at 900 Hegeman Avenue inEast New York, Brooklyn on an entirely elevated structure at the east end of theIRT New Lots Line. Located between Elton and Linwood Streets, the yard extends from Hegeman Avenue south to Stanley Avenue, passing overLinden Boulevard. One of the smallest maintenance yards in the system, it is where theR62s on the3 and theR62As on the42nd Street Shuttle are inspected and maintained.[23]
The yard, built in 1922 and opened in 1923, Livonia Yard is the onlyIRT yard inBrooklyn. Livonia Yard consists of 4 inspection tracks inside the Livonia shop and 15 layup tracks.[23] A signal tower is located at the northwest corner of the yard. Many3 trains are stored in the Lenox Yard inUpper Manhattan, as Livonia is not very large.[23][6]
Livonia, along with 240th Street Yard, are on entirely elevated structures and are in need of rehabilitation due to not meeting the configuration standards for "current industry practices".[1][2] An extension of the New Lots Line has been proposed up to the end of the yard, or through the yard right-of-way toFlatlands Avenue, to serve the developingSpring Creek area.[23][26][27]
Additionally, a large amount of space within Livonia is used for the storage of someR142s andR142As for the2,4 and5 trains.
40°39′51″N73°52′45″W / 40.66417°N 73.87917°W /40.66417; -73.87917 (Livonia Yard)

Unionport Yard is associated with the nearbyEast 180th Street Yard, and is used primarily as a lay-up facility for2 and5 trains.[14][28] It is named after Unionport Road, which lies just east of the yard. There are no shop or wash facilities at this yard, which was expanded in the 1990s from five tracks to its present 19 (numbered 19 to 37). All but one track ends at bumper blocks. The newly expanded yard became fully operational in 1997. The yard connects to theIRT White Plains Road Line to the south and theIRT Dyre Avenue Line (track 22 connecting to track Y2) to the north.[6]
40°50′42″N73°52′12″W / 40.84500°N 73.87000°W /40.84500; -73.87000 (Unionport Yard)
TheWest Farms Yard was an elevatedrail yard that was located adjacently to theWest Farms Square–East Tremont Avenue station, at the time called 177th Street. It had eight storage tracks and five inspection barn tracks. It was demolished in 1950; the redundant180th Street–Bronx Park station was closed down and demolished two years later.[29] In addition to servingManhattan Elevated Railway cars, it was also used to service cars assigned to the2 and5 routes.

TheWestchester Yard, also known as the Pelham Yard, is located inthe Bronx and has 45 layup tracks. The yard maintains and stores theR62As used on the6, as well asMaintenance of Way diesel trains for both theA Division andB Division. It is connected to theIRT Pelham Line in both directions betweenWestchester Square–East Tremont Avenue andMiddletown Road stations.[6]
There is a four-track inspection shed for electric trains and a two-track diesel repair shop.[30] Pelham Yard also has a car wash used by the entire A Division.[6]
The Westchester Yard was expanded between 1946 and 1949 and the scope of the project included a new signal tower, signal installations, and the elimination of the grade crossings between the yard and the Pelham Line north of the Westchester Square station. All of these projects would allow for sped up main line service and train movements in and out of the yard. The grade separation allowed trains to enter Westchester Yard without crossing the express track or the downtown local track and it allowed for the possibility of the extension of express service toPelham Bay Park, which would save four more minutes.[31] The increased capacity of the yard allowed the yard to store 358 additional subway cars. With the additional storage space, it would no longer be required to lay up trains on the middle track of the line between East 177th Street and Pelham Bay Park, and it would allow for full day express service. The construction of substations would improve voltage conditions and allow for longer trains to be operated on the line. The work was projected to cost $6,387,000 and be completed in 1950.[32]
40°50′38″N73°50′31″W / 40.84389°N 73.84194°W /40.84389; -73.84194 (Westchester Yard)
TheB Division's yards are the 207th Street, Concourse, Coney Island, East New York, Jamaica and Pitkin maintenance yards, plus five other non-maintenance storage yards. The six maintenance shops are responsible for performing daily subway car maintenance and inspection of 3,523 subway cars.
The 207th Street and Concourse yards are shared with the A Division and are listed in Yards in both divisions.
The174th Street Yard is an underground rail yard on theIND Eighth Avenue Line that is used to storeC trains. The yard has five tracks to the east of the two mainline passenger service tracks. The yard is located six blocks north of168th Street and adjacent to175th Street. The inner tracks at 168th Street lead towards the yard and are used by terminating C trains.[6] This yard can hold only four trains of ten 60-foot cars or eight 75-foot cars and one four-car train of 60-foot cars among the five tracks. The northern end of the yard is against a concrete wall and a cinder-block wall adjacent to theTrans-Manhattan Expressway, as the line was originally intended to go over theGeorge Washington Bridge's lower level as a part of a possible extension to Fort Lee, New Jersey.[33][34]
40°50′45″N73°56′23″W / 40.84583°N 73.93972°W /40.84583; -73.93972 (174th Street Yard)
TheCanarsie Yard (also known as AY or Atlantic Yard from itstelegraphy letters) is located on the south end of theBMT Canarsie Line adjacent toCanarsie–Rockaway Parkway. Opened on October 26, 1917,[35] it is the primary layup yard for theR143s andR160s on theL and hosts the only car wash for the BMT Eastern Division.
New signals were installed in 2003 in conjunction with theBMT Canarsie Line automation project.[6]
40°38′48″N73°54′05″W / 40.64667°N 73.90139°W /40.64667; -73.90139 (Canarsie Yard)
TheChurch Avenue Yard is an underground rail yard on theIND Culver Line that is used to store trains for theG. It is composed of four tracks directly under the four main line tracks above. This yard is directly connected through the line'sChurch Avenue station which is the southern terminus for G service. At least one of the yard's four tracks is in continuous use to reverse equipment to the opposite direction. There are two ramps between each local and express track south of Church Avenue station for access. Each track can hold one full-length train between thebumper blocks and the crossovers.[6][36][37][38][39][40]
40°38′31″N73°58′45″W / 40.64194°N 73.97917°W /40.64194; -73.97917 (Church Avenue Yard)
TheConey Island Rapid Transit Car Overhaul Shop, often shortened toConey Island Complex, is the largestrapid transit yard in the state of New York, and one of the largest in North America.[23] Located in theGravesend neighborhood ofBrooklyn,New York, it covers 74 acres (300,000 m2) and operates24/7.[23] The complex was built in 1926 on formermarshlands that, along withConey Island Creek, used to separateConey Island from the main body of Brooklyn.[23] Much of this land had originally been proposed for use as aship canal andport facility.
A car washing machine was installed in the yard at the end of 1964.[41]
Regular scheduled maintenance is performed here for a fleet of nearly 800 cars ofR46s,R68s,R68As,R211As, andR211Ts serving theB,G,N,Q,W, andFranklin Avenue Shuttle. R68s on theD, andR160s on theF andR, are stored at the yard but are not maintained or inspected here. The shop facility, along with the 207th Street Shops, performs inspections, heavy maintenance and overhaul for every one of the approximately 6,000 cars in the subway system, including theStaten Island Railway, and also contains car washing and painting facilities.[23]
In addition to heavy maintenance facilities and track facilities for cars undergoing maintenance and overhaul, the complex includes three related railroad storage yards.[23] The main yard facility, known asConey Island Yard, includes direct connections to the adjacentBMT Sea Beach Line (N and W trains) and a two-track elevated structure to theBMT West End Line (D, R, and W trains). The main yard also serves trains on theBMT Brighton Line (B and Q trains) via tracks C & D (also known as 3 & 4, respectively) ofConey Island–Stillwell Avenue station. The adjacent but separateCulver Yard (also called City Yard or Avenue X Yard) connects to theIND Culver Line (F and <F> trains) at the eastern border of the yard complex, holding cars for the F service. Another yard, theStillwell Yard, used mainly for off-peak train storage, is located across the Sea Beach Line from the main yard complex in awye between the divergent Sea Beach and West End Lines.
In addition to the maintenance shop and yards, there is a Health Center (gym) and medical center for Transit Authority employees, a firing range for theNew York City Police Department (NYPD)'s Transit Division, and a firefighting training school.[23] The range was originally built for theNew York City Transit Police Department, which was merged with the NYPD in 1995.
TheConey Island Yard Electric Motor Repair Shop andConey Island Yard Gatehouse were listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 2006.[42]
40°35′10″N73°58′40″W / 40.58611°N 73.97778°W /40.58611; -73.97778 (Coney Island Complex)
Coney Island Yard Gatehouse | |
Coney Island Yard Gatehouse, May 2009 | |
| Location | SW corner of Shell Rd. and Avenue X,Brooklyn,New York |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 40°35′22″N73°58′28″W / 40.58944°N 73.97444°W /40.58944; -73.97444 |
| Area | less than one acre |
| Built | 1929 |
| Architect | Ridgeway, Robert |
| Architectural style | Bungalow/Craftsman |
| MPS | New York City Subway System MPS |
| NRHP reference No. | 06000017[42] |
| Added to NRHP | February 9, 2006 |
Coney Island Yard Gatehouse is a historicgatehouse located at the Coney Island Complex. It was built about 1929 and is a small masonry building with prominent clay tile roof with deep overhanging eaves.[43]
It was listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 2006.[42]
Coney Island Yard Electric Motor Repair Shop | |
From Avenue X station | |
| Location | SW corner of Avenue X and Shell Rd.,Brooklyn, New York |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 40°35′23″N73°58′31″W / 40.58972°N 73.97528°W /40.58972; -73.97528 |
| Area | less than one acre |
| Built | 1927 |
| MPS | New York City Subway System MPS |
| NRHP reference No. | 06000016[42] |
| Added to NRHP | February 9, 2006 |
TheConey Island Yard Electric Motor Repair Shop is a historic motorrepair shop for subway trains located at the Coney Island Complex. It was built between 1925 and 1927 and is a simple two-story, box-shaped brick-clad building lit by multiple banks of large, multi-paned windows and a massivesawtooth skylight.[44]
It was listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 2006.[42]
East New York Yard (also known as DO (District Office) Yard from itstelegraphy letters) is primarily used to store 4-car sets ofR143s,R160s, andR179s used on theJ/Z,L andM. Subway equipment is inspected and maintained here on a regular basis.[23][45][46]
It is located at the junction of theCanarsie andJamaica Lines near the intersection of Broadway and Jamaica Avenue inEast New York, Brooklyn. A separate part of the facility houses theEast New York Bus Depot, formerly atrolley depot.[23][45] The yard is entirely equipped with hand-operated switches. Only the Fresh Pond Yard and 36th–38th Street Yard share this characteristic.
Portions of the yard date back to 1885 and theLexington Avenue Elevated and the yard predates the rebuilding of nearbyBroadway Junction, which used to be known as Manhattan Junction orEast New York Loop.[23] This yard's layup tracks are situated on 2 different levels, just like 239th Street Yard.
The yard and its main lead configuration remained the same before and after the extensive elevated line rebuilding nearby, but additional track and structure was built, so that, at its peak, East New York Yard had direct connections to the Broadway Elevated going west, Jamaica Line going east, Canarsie Line going east, andFulton Street Elevated both east and west.[6]
40°40′44.3″N73°54′6.1″W / 40.678972°N 73.901694°W /40.678972; -73.901694 (East New York Yard)
TheFresh Pond Yard inRidgewood, Queens is located to the back (east) of theFresh Pond Bus Depot, which was formerly atrolley depot.[47] Opened with an extension of theBMT Myrtle Avenue Line in 1906,[47] it is normally used for storing theR160s andR179s that run on theM. General maintenance of the cars is performed at East New York Yard. It is located betweenFresh Pond Road andMiddle Village–Metropolitan Avenue on theBMT Myrtle Avenue Line, but it is only accessible from the latter station. Trains must first platform there and then reverse into the yard. The yard is entirely equipped with hand-operated switches. Only East New York Yard and 36th–38th Street Yard share this characteristic.
40°42′26″N73°53′36″W / 40.70722°N 73.89333°W /40.70722; -73.89333 (Fresh Pond Yard)

Jamaica Yard is located inForest Hills, Queens at the southern end ofFlushing Meadows–Corona Park near theKew Gardens Interchange. It has served as the primary storage yard for theIND Queens Boulevard Line since its opening in 1936. The yard connects to the Queens Boulevard Line at a three-wayflying junction just geographically north of theKew Gardens–Union Turnpike station. The yard is at surface level, and the four-track approach includes a bridge over theGrand Central Parkway; though the Queens Boulevard Line is underground, the yard lies at a lower elevation than the subway.[48][49][50]
The property on which the yard sits used to belong to the Department of Water Supply, Gas, and Electricity, and it was transferred to theNew York City Board of Transportation on April 2, 1930. The property was used as a pumping station, and once the Board of Transportation acquired the property, wells that were abandoned on the property were disturbed. These wells were connected to the water mains serving Forest Hills, Kew Gardens, and part of Flushing. $50,000 was appropriated to replace these water wells and mains by theBoard of Estimate.[51] Originally, the yard was intended to be built in the vicinity of South Elmhurst and Rego Park at Grand Street and Queens Boulevard. Once the location near Union Turnpike was decided, the communities of Forest Hills and Kew Gardens objected to it, arguing that the values of their properties would go down and the growth of the communities would end.[52][53] Chairman of the Board of Transportation, John H. Delaney, overruled them, as the yard's location was not near any homes.[54]
The yard was built for theIndependent Subway System in the 1930s.[55] Work was half finished on Jamaica Yard in April 1935, and the total cost of Jamaica Yard and storage sheds was approximately $560,000.[56] Jamaica Yard served as the south end of theIND World's Fair Line which served the1939 New York World's Fair from 1939 to 1940.[57] In August 1964 it was planned that Jamaica Yard have car-washing machines installed in May 1965.[58] The yard is home to the 5-car sets ofR160s assigned to theE,F, andR whose carwash, interior cleaning, grease and minor repair services are provided at the yard.[49][59][60][61] Some R160s andR179s for theM are stored here during weekdays, but are not maintained here, as the M uses shorter, four-car sets maintained at East New York Yard.[6]
There are more subway cars assigned to Jamaica Yard than to any other rapid transit yard in the city. As a result, there is chronic overcrowding at the existing facility. TheMetropolitan Transportation Authority plans to enlarge this yard due to this overcrowding; many trains are stored on the IND Queens Boulevard mainline express tracks east of71st Avenue and the179th Street station's relay yard during off-peak periods. This expansion will double the storage capacity of the facility.[2][49][62][63][64] The expansion project has been planned since the 1982–1986 MTA Capital Program.[61] The four yard leads will also be equipped withcommunications-based train control (CBTC) as part of theinstallation of CBTC on the Queens Boulevard Line.[65]
40°43′12″N73°49′41″W / 40.72000°N 73.82806°W /40.72000; -73.82806 (Jamaica Yard)
Pitkin Yard is located inEast New York, Brooklyn. It holds the Pitkin Shops, which maintain theR46s andR211As used on theA,C, andRockaway Park Shuttle.
Track connections from the yard connect bothwest (railroadnorth) toEuclid Avenue andeast (railroadsouth) pastGrant Avenue on theIND Fulton Street Line. This allows trains to be added or removed from service in either direction.[6][57][66]
The site for Pitkin Yard was approved by the Board of Estimate on February 8, 1940 in order to serve the extension of the Fulton Street Line. The total cost for the acquiring the property for the yard was estimated to be $773,000 for 30 acres.[67] The yard opened on November 28, 1948 along with the extension of the IND Fulton Street Line to Euclid Avenue.[57][68] Previously an open-air yard,[32][69] from 1972 to 1973, the Linden Plaza & Towers Apartment Complex, consisting of several 15-to-17-story apartment buildings, was constructed on a concrete deck on top of this yard.[70][71][72]
40°40′21″N73°51′54″W / 40.67250°N 73.86500°W /40.67250; -73.86500 (Pitkin Yard)

Rockaway Park Yard is located inRockaway Park, Queens. It is an eight-track layup yard for theR46s,R179s andR211As on theA and theRockaway Park Shuttle. General maintenance of the cars is performed at Pitkin Yard. Seven tracks lie geographically north of the station platform, while another lies geographically south.[6]

This yard is adjacent toRockaway Park–Beach 116th Street. Like theIND Rockaway Line itself, the Rockaway Yard was originally a yard for theRockaway Beach Branch of theLong Island Rail Road. It included a water tower and a roundhouse.
40°34′52″N73°50′8″W / 40.58111°N 73.83556°W /40.58111; -73.83556 (Rockaway Park Yard)



The207th Street Yard is located inInwood in Upper Manhattan betweenTenth Avenue and theHarlem River north of theUniversity Heights Bridge. The outdoor yard, which was originally constructed for the B Division, extends north from 207th Street to 215th Street.[73][74] The yard is home to theR179s that are used on theA andC. There is a car wash here.[6][75][76]
The 207th Street Shop is one of two heavy overhaul shops in the New York City Subway system (the other being the Coney Island Yard in Brooklyn) and it provides for the overhaul and rebuilding of someA Division cars as well as mostB Division rolling stock.[75] The yard stores cars that are being retired or awaiting scrapping, and it also restores cars designated for theNew York Transit Museum.[76] It also contains a garbage transfer station.[75] Formerly, the retired cars that were stored at the yard were stripped of usable parts such as seats and doors, historic memorabilia such asrollsigns, and toxic materials such as lubricants andasbestos, after which the cars were scrapped or sunk intoartificial reefs such asRedbird Reef.[73][77]
South of the yard, connecting tracks lead to theIND Eighth Avenue Line. A separate connecting track and flyover leads to theIRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line.[6][75]
A major rehabilitation project for the yard took place in 2016.[78]
40°52′0″N73°55′0″W / 40.86667°N 73.91667°W /40.86667; -73.91667 (207th Street Yard)
Concourse Yard Entry Buildings | |
| Location | W. 205th St., bet. Jerome and Paul Aves.,Bronx, New York |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 40°52′35″N73°53′20″W / 40.87639°N 73.88889°W /40.87639; -73.88889 |
| Area | less than one acre |
| Built | 1933 |
| Architect | Ridgeway, Robert |
| Architectural style | Art Deco |
| MPS | New York City Subway System MPS |
| NRHP reference No. | 06000014[42] |
Concourse Yard Substation | |
| Location | 3119 Jerome Ave.,Bronx, New York |
| NRHP reference No. | 06000013[42] |
| Added to NRHP | February 9, 2006 |
TheConcourse Yard is located in the northernBronx near the intersection of 205th Street and Jerome Avenue.[79] The yard was built on the old site of theJerome Park Reservoir. The Reservoir was planned to have two basins, an eastern basin and a western basin. The western basin opened in 1906. The two basins are divided by Goulden Avenue, and land for the eastern basin was cleared and partially excavated in anticipation of construction. The two-basin plan was abandoned in 1912, and the excavated area for the eastern basin was filled and graded. In addition to the building of the subway yard on that site,Lehman College, three high schools, a park, and several public housing developments were also built there.[80] The yard was built at a depressed grade, 18 feet below grade, to allow for the yard to be roofed over to allow for the construction of buildings. The tracks were spaced apart to permit the placing of stable foundations and columns to support buildings that can could be erected atop the proposed roof of the yard. The yard was originally bounded by Navy Avenue (now Paul Avenue), Jerome Avenue, 205th Street, and Bedford Park Boulevard. Provisions were made to extend the yard south to 198th Street.[81]
In the 1960s, the City University of New York planned to build a new campus forBronx Community College by constructing a deck over the yard. In 1970, ground was broken for the $61 million, 13-acre campus, which was going to rest on 800 columns between the yard tracks. The platform over the yard was expected to be completed in July 1971. The project was abandoned after the City discovered that the pillars were built slightly too short, which would have prevented subway cars from entering and leaving the yard had the project been finished. The possibility of building atop the yard was brought back by BronxBorough PresidentRuben Diaz Junior in 2015. In a report, the yard was found to have great potential for development, allowing for the building of mixed-income housing, retail space, and an expansion of Lehman College. The low-end cost for the construction of the deck is projected to be $350 to $500 million.[82]

This yard is home to theR68s assigned to theD. Some R68s,R68As, andR211As assigned to theB are also washed and stored here, but not maintained or inspected here. TheR142s andR142As assigned to the4 are washed and stored here as well. The yard contains three tracks for maintenance, and 36 storage tracks. The yard itself can store 255 cars, and the inspection shed can accommodate 30 cars.[81] The yard also contains a car wash, which also washes cars from the nearby Jerome Yard. Connecting tracks lead north from the yard to theIND Concourse Line and south to theIRT Jerome Avenue Line. Concourse Yard is spanned across its middle by Bedford Park Boulevard West, and at its northern end by a 205th Street viaduct.[79] The Jerome Yard used by the IRT Jerome Avenue Line lies to the north of 205th Street.[6]

The Concourse Yard Entry Buildings and Concourse Yard Substation were listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 2006.[42] The former consists of two, three-story brick buildings with only the top story visible from the street that are built next to one another to form agateway to the Concourse Yard. They feature ornamentallimestone columns andaluminum doors. The buildings are connected by an iron bridge that retains its original Art Decobalustrade.[83] The latter is a one-story brick building measuring 50 feet by 100 feet and featuring a brickparapet with ornamentallimestone andaluminum doors.[84]
40°52′28″N73°53′25″W / 40.87444°N 73.89028°W /40.87444; -73.89028 (Concourse Yard)

The36th–38th Street Yard, sometimes referred to as simply the38th Street Yard,[85][86][87] is located between Fifth and Seventh Avenues inSunset Park, Brooklyn, adjacent to theJackie Gleason Bus Depot and theNinth Avenue station of theBMT West End Line.Green-Wood Cemetery lies to the north of the yard.[23][88] This yard is not normally used for revenue-service train maintenance.[89][90] Its primary function is to store diesel and electrically powered maintenance-of-way and other non-revenue service rolling stock. It is also used to transfer trash from garbage collector trains to trucks via platforms inside the yard just south of 37th Street.[23][64][86][89] There is a control tower for the West End Line at the south end of the yard.[89][91] The yard is entirely equipped with hand-operated switches.[89] Only Fresh Pond Yard and East New York Yard share this characteristic.[6]
TheMetropolitan Transportation Authority plans to enlarge, and modernize this yard to accommodate, inspect and maintain additional revenue service trains here, due to chronic overcrowding at their other existing main facilities,[64][89] as many trains are stored on theBMT Fourth Avenue Line's mainline express tracks during off-peak periods.[49] The expanded yard will also provide much-needed storage space for futureSecond Avenue Subway trains.[64][89][90] Up to twelve storage tracks would be added along with power switches, with some non-revenue trains relocated to other areas.[64][89] Plans to expand the yard for revenue service trains have existed since the late 1980s.[61]
This southern part of the yard used to be the center of theSouth Brooklyn Railway (owned by theBrooklyn Rapid Transit Company), which extended fromBush Terminal through the north part of the yard, then down Gravesend Avenue and into the Coney Island Yard.[23][92][93] What is now the Jackie Gleason Bus Depot (formally Fifth Avenue Depot) was previously the site of a train inspection shed.[87]
40°38′52″N73°59′48″W / 40.64778°N 73.99667°W /40.64778; -73.99667 (36th-38th Street Yard)

Linden Shops is a track shop, where track switches and other components are assembled. It has track connections to theIRT New Lots Line and theBMT Canarsie Line, but nothird rail, restricting the facility to diesel-powered trains only. There is also a track connection to theLong Island Rail Road'sBay Ridge Branch. This connection is one of two from the subway to the mainline United States rail network (the connection between theBMT West End Line and theSouth Brooklyn Railway is the other).[6]
40°39′13″N73°54′16″W / 40.65361°N 73.90444°W /40.65361; -73.90444 (Linden Shops)

TheClifton Yard is the sole yard on theStaten Island Railway, and is located next to theClifton station. Heavy maintenance of equipment is performed at the Clifton Yard.[94] As there is no connection from the passenger portion of the Staten Island Railway to the mainline U.S. railroad network or the subway, theR211Ss that run on the Staten Island Railway[1] must be trucked over theVerrazzano-Narrows Bridge toConey Island Yard if they need maintenance that Clifton Yard cannot perform.[23] Additional storage for revenue trains is located adjacent to theTottenville station at the south end of the line, while maintenance of non-revenue trains is performed at a Maintenance of Way shop near theTompkinsville station.[6][94]
On December 7, 2022, the yard's rebuilt maintenance shop was completed. It had undergone major damage following Superstorm Sandy in 2012. The new 93,220 square-foot facility also included offices and support buildings. The shop was built with four tracks for cleaning, repairs and inspections. An overhead lifting system was installed to enable roof-mounted air conditioning units to be replaced. The new shop was constructed to withstand a three-foot storm surge and winds up to 110 miles per hour (a Category 2 hurricane). As part of the project, switches and tracks were reconfigured, utilities and traction power equipment were relocated, existing systems, including underground diesel, were removed, asbestos and lead abatement work took place, and underground storage tanks for fuel were removed. The $165 million project was funded by the Federal Transit Administration.[95]
40°37′17″N74°04′17″W / 40.6215°N 74.0715°W /40.6215; -74.0715 (Clifton Yard)
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