TheEighth Avenue Line is apublic transit line inManhattan,New York City, running mostly alongEighth Avenue fromLower Manhattan toHarlem. Originally astreetcar line, it is now theM10bus route and theM20bus route, operated byMaBSTOA as a subdivision ofMTA Regional Bus Operations. The M10 bus now only runs north of 57th Street (nearColumbus Circle), and the M20 runs south of 66th Street. The whole line was a single route, the M10, until 2000 when the M20 was created.
The M10 and M20 bus routes serve the northern and southern halves of the Eighth Avenue corridor, respectively. The routes intersect in UpperMidtown Manhattan, betweenLincoln Center andColumbus Circle.[5] Until 2000, the two routes were a single M10 route, running 10 miles (16 km) between Harlem and Lower Manhattan.[6]

The M10 bus begins inHarlem at Frederick Douglass Boulevard (Eighth Avenue) roughly where 158th Street would be located, on the east side of thePolo Grounds Towers housing complex. There is no actual intersection with 158th Street at this point. The route travels south on Frederick Douglass Boulevard, which becomes Central Park West atWest 110th Street andFrederick Douglass Circle. At West 63rd Street in Lincoln Center, southbound buses turn west, then turn south onBroadway, terminating at 57th Street and Broadway just south of Columbus Circle. Northbound buses travel along the entire length of Eighth Avenue towards Harlem.[5][7] Prior to 2010, the M10 continued south toPenn Station at 34th Street.[8]: 79

The M20 begins service at Broadway and West 63rd Street in Lincoln Center, atDante Park. Southbound, the route travels through Columbus Circle, east along 59th Street, and south alongSeventh Avenue, which becomes Seventh Avenue South and then Varick Street. At the end of Varick Street inTribeca, the M20 runs south onWest Broadway, then west alongChambers Street past West Street intoBattery Park City. The route then travels along North End Avenue,Vesey Street, a short stretch of West Street, South End Avenue, Battery Place, and State Street. The route terminates atWhitehall Street along theStaten Island Ferry Whitehall Terminal bus loop.[5][9]
Northbound M20 buses follow essentially the same route through Battery Park City, except using Murray Street instead of Vesey Street. At Chambers Street and West Street, the route turns north onto West Street, east on Harrison Street, then north ontoHudson Street. AtAbingdon Square Park andBleecker Park, Hudson Street feeds into Eighth Avenue, which the M20 follows into Midtown. At West 66th Street, the M20 turns west, then turns south on Broadway, terminating at West 63rd Street.[5][9]

The Eighth Avenue Railroad opened the line from the north end of the trackage shared with theSixth Avenue Railroad'sSixth Avenue Line atCanal Street andVarick Street along Canal Street,Hudson Street, and Eighth Avenue to51st Street on August 30, 1852.[1] It was eventually extended north to 159th Street, with a branch along Macomb's Lane to 154th Street, and another branch to the south along Canal Street east toBroadway.[citation needed]

Buses were substituted for streetcars by theEighth Avenue Coach Corporation in March 1936, a company owned byFifth Avenue Coach Company.[2][10]
The New York City Omnibus Corporation took over operations of the route, known as Route 10, in 1951, and in 1956 it was renamedFifth Avenue Coach Lines; theManhattan and Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority replaced it in 1962.
On June 6, 1954, with the conversion of several streets to one-way streets, the route of the 10 was modified. Eighth Avenue was made one-way northbound between Abingdon Square and Columbus Circle, and Hudson Street was made one-way northbound between Chambers Street and Abingdon Square. Seventh Avenue was made one-way southbound between 47th Street and Houston Street, and Varick Street was made one-way southbound between Houston Street and Leonard Street. Southbound 10 service was rerouted along Broadway from Columbus Circle to Times Square, Seventh Avenue to West Broadway and West Broadway to Leonard Street. Initially, New York City Omnibus planned to reroute northbound Route 8 buses along Seventh Avenue to Hudson Street and Eighth Avenue for its entire route between 59th Street and Canal Street, and reroute a portion of southbound service from Times Square's east side to the west side starting at 47th Street on June 12, 1954.[11][12] Instead, at the request of T. T. Wiley, the Traffic Commissioner, Route 8 was discontinued and combined with Route 10 on June 13. This change eliminated a u-turn at Central Park South and Seventh Avenue.[13][14][15][16]
In 1962, when the Surface Company bought the route they put one bus service for the entire length. This was given the route number 10, which then became bus M10.[citation needed] In Fiscal Year 1963, the route was modified due to the conversion of some two-way streets to one-way streets. Service began running north along Hudson Street and south along Seventh Avenue.[17] On January 16, 1966, the branch of the M10 to Cortlandt Street was cut back to Vesey Street in anticipation of the demapping of several streets for the construction of theWorld Trade Center.[18] Service used a terminal loop of West Broadway, Vesey Street, Church Street and Reade Street, with the terminal being located at Park Place.[19] Previously service had traveled south along West Broadway, west on Cortlandt Street, north on the West Side Highway, east on Dey Street, and north on Church Street.[20]
On May 9, 1977, weekday limited-stop service began on the M10, operating northbound between 4 p.m. and 5:20 p.m., and southbound between 6:40 a.m. and 8:30 a.m..[21]
The New York City Transit Authority proposed officially eliminating M10 Limited service along 145th Street and Lenox Avenue to Esplanade Gardens at 147th Street on December 30, 1986. Two southbound trips and three northbound trips had operated to this terminal, but due to passenger confusion and low ridership, this service was ended in late 1986 by the Surface Operations Department. The official change would reroute these trips to the usual northern terminal at 159th Street, and would take effect in March 1987.[22]
On April 22, 1987, the New York City Transit Authority proposed several modifications to bus routes in Lower Manhattan to serveBattery Park City to the MTA Board, including the extension of the M10. Southbound service was extended south along West Broadway, west along Vesey Street, south along West Street, west on West Thames Street, and north on Sound End Avenue to the terminal at Liberty Street. Northbound service then ran north along South End Avenue, east along Liberty Street, north on West Street, east on Harrison Street and north via Hudson Street before returning to the existing route. This change eliminated service at four stops along Church Street and Reade Street, and service along Hudson Street between West Broadway and Harrison Street, affecting fewer than 100 riders, and removed a bottleneck at Reade Street. This change was implemented at the end of 1987.[23]

In January 1999, the MTA issued a performance report on the M10 route, calling the route "extremely long and unreliable", with long headways between buses.[6] On January 16, 2000, the M10 was split into two routes, with the northern section from Harlem to Penn Station still operating under the M10 designation, and the southern segment fromColumbus Circle toBattery Park City being renamed the M20.[6] The two routes overlapped between Penn Station and Columbus Circle. Riders transferring between the M10 and the M20 were given an additional free transfer. Since the M10 no longer served Abingdon Square, westbound M14 service was increased during the afternoon.[24]
After theSeptember 11 attacks in 2001, M20 service was initially revised to terminate in the northern section of Battery Park City without entering the southern section of the neighborhood. 700 riders a day headed to the northern section of the neighborhood during this period. On May 6, 2002, the M20's previous route was restored.[25] In December 2002, the MTA announced plans to reroute the M20 from West Street to serve the northern portion of Battery Park City. West Street was difficult to cross, and the M20 could not stop on West Street southbound due to high curbs. Northbound service would travel north via West Street, west via Murray Street, north of North End Avenue, and east on Chambers Street before heading back to its previous route, while southbound service would head west on Chambers Street, south on North End Avenue, east on Vesey Street, and south on West Street, before resuming its previous route. The change was estimated to cost $160,000 annually, and would take effect in January 2003.[26]
Due to budget constraints during theGreat Recession, M10 buses' southern terminus was truncated to Columbus Circle on June 27, 2010. On the same day, the M20 was extended to South Ferry, replacing the section of theM9 south ofCity Hall.[8]: 73, 74, 79 The truncation, which saved $1.1 million annually, resulted in a significant drop in ridership on the M10, with riders instead using the M7, the M20, and the subway. M20 ridership increased with the truncation of M10 service and its extension to South Ferry.[27]: B-38, 39, 46 On April 3, 2011, however, M10 service was extended by two blocks to57th Street, with the final southbound stop at 58th Street and Broadway and the first northbound stop at 57th Street and Eighth Avenue.[28][29]