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Park Row station

Coordinates:40°42′44″N74°0′16″W / 40.71222°N 74.00444°W /40.71222; -74.00444
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromPark Row (BMT station))
Former BMT elevated station (closed 1944)

Park Row
Park Row station,c. 1905
General information
LocationBrooklyn Bridge & Centre St
Brooklyn Bridge Promenade
Park Row,New York
Coordinates40°42′44″N74°0′16″W / 40.71222°N 74.00444°W /40.71222; -74.00444
LineBMT Myrtle Avenue Line
Platforms3island platforms (2 main terminal, 1 west end)
4side platforms (2 main terminal, 2 west end)
Spanish solution (West End)
Tracks6 (4 main terminal, 2 West End)
Construction
Structure typeElevated
History
OpenedJune 18, 1898; 127 years ago (June 18, 1898)[1]
ClosedMarch 5, 1944; 81 years ago (1944-03-05)[1]
Former services in 1939
Preceding stationBMT LinesFollowing station
Terminus12: Lexington AvenueSands Street
13: Fulton StreetSands Street
Location
Map

ThePark Row station was a majorelevated railway terminal constructed on theManhattan side of theBrooklyn Bridge, across fromNew York City Hall and the IRT's elevatedCity Hall station.[2] It served as theterminal forBMT services operating over theBrooklyn Bridge Elevated Line from theBMT Fulton Street Line,BMT Myrtle Avenue Line, and their feeders. Until the opening of the nearbyWilliamsburg Bridge to elevated train traffic in 1913, it was the only Manhattan station available for elevated trains from Brooklyn and the only elevated station in Manhattan to be owned by a company other than theIRT or its predecessors.

Early history

[edit]
Park Row seen from the top of the Brooklyn Bridge

For the first fifteen years of its existence, it was used exclusively by trains of the New York and Brooklyn Bridge Railway, a cable-hauled line that spanned the length of the bridge between Park Row and another terminal at the Brooklyn end of the bridge.[3]

On June 18, 1898, elevated trains running on theMyrtle Avenue line of theBrooklyn Elevated Railroad, a predecessor theBMT began using the station during off-peak hours, while the cable-hauled shuttle continued to run at rush hours.[3]: 15  A similar setup was opened for theKings County Elevated Railway'sFulton Street line on November 1 that year.[4] Traffic at the station peaked in 1907, during what was known as the "Brooklyn Bridge crush", and additional stairways from the street to the terminal station were built.[5] On January 27, 1908, the shuttle was eliminated and elevated trains began running to Park Row at all times.[6]

At its height, Park Row Terminal had four platforms on four tracks in the main part of the terminal, and another three platforms on two tracks beyond (west of) the main train shed. This resulted in very complex scheduling and track shifting, so that most trains discharged their passengers at dedicated exit platforms and then were transferred to tracks on other platforms for loading of outgoing passengers.[3]

Services

[edit]

From 1898 until 1913, the following lines were hosted at least part-time at Park Row:

Gradual decline

[edit]
Circa 1911 view ofCity Hall Park, with the terminal at right

As new bridges and new subways took the pressure off the Brooklyn Bridge services, ridership at Park Row gradually declined. In 1913, BMT built the nearbyChambers Street subway station below the yet to be completedManhattan Municipal Building, although nine years earlier IRT had built theBrooklyn Bridge subway station at Center Street and Park Row.[3]: 16–17 

October 27, 1913, was the last day of Sea Beach elevated service, in preparation for the new grade-separated line that began to use theBMT Fourth Avenue Line on June 22, 1915. On June 23, 1916, West End trains began using the Fourth Avenue subway exclusively. This was followed by the withdrawal of Brighton Beach service on August 1, 1920, when Brighton Beach trains began using a new connection to theBMT Broadway Line subway, severing its connection with the Fulton Street Line. On May 30, 1931, some Culver trains were rerouted to the Fourth Avenue subway and theBMT Nassau Street Line when the latter line opened.[3]: 18 

In 1936, Park Row was reconfigured to two tracks total (the two southern main shed tracks) due to declining use and to simplify operations. On May 31, 1940, in preparation for theNew York City takeover of theBMT system, the Fifth Avenue and Bay Ridge lines and services were abandoned, which also ended remaining Culver elevated service via those lines. The main line of the Fulton Street line was abandoned at the same time and, on June 1, a new service, Fulton–Lex, was introduced, bringing trains from the surviving outer portion of the Fulton Street Line to Park Row over the Broadway, Lexington and Myrtle Avenue Lines.[3]: 19 

On March 5, 1944, all remaining elevated lines stopped using Park Row, and the Myrtle Avenue, Lexington Avenue, and Fulton–Lex services were cut back to the Bridge Street station indowntown Brooklyn.[3]: 20 Brooklyn Bridgestreetcars were shifted to the elevated tracks and used them until 1950, when all public transit was removed from the bridge.[3]: 20 [7] The streetcars did not use the Park Row terminal, but continued to use the trolley loops beneath the train shed, which was torn down.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Brooklyn Bridge Train Service Ends Today -- Trolley Cars Stay On".The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. March 5, 1944. p. 11. RetrievedOctober 22, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.Open access icon
  2. ^City Hall / Park Row Complex
  3. ^abcdefghSmall, Charles S. (1957). "The Railway of the New York and Brooklyn Bridge".The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin (97):7–20.ISSN 0033-8842.JSTOR 43520182.
  4. ^"KINGS CO. L BEGINS ITS BRIDGE SERVICE".Brooklyn Eagle. November 1, 1898. p. 16. RetrievedDecember 31, 2025.
  5. ^"Bridge Terminal to Be Razed Soon; Extension of Brooklyn Span Station at Park Row to Be Closed March 31".The New York Times. March 4, 1935.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedMay 13, 2023.
  6. ^Cudahy, Brian (2002).How We Got to Coney Island: The Development of Mass Transportation in Brooklyn and Kings County. Fordham University Press. p. 168.
  7. ^"Brooklyn Bridge Traffic Will Undergo Changes".The New York Times. March 3, 1950.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedJune 27, 2019.
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