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The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority (officially the GCRTA, but historically and locally referred to as the RTA) is the public transit agency for Cleveland, Ohio, United States and the surrounding suburbs of Cuyahoga County. RTA is the largest transit agency in Ohio, with a ridership of 22,431,500, or about 78,200 per weekday as of ...
In 2007, the American Public Transportation Association named Cleveland's mass transit system the best in North America. [4] Cleveland is the only metropolitan area in the Western Hemisphere with its rail rapid transit system having only one center-city area rapid transit station (Tower City-Public Square).
Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority: Locale: Cuyahoga County, Ohio: Transit type: Rapid transit Semi-metro: Number of lines: 1 rapid transit: Red 3 light rail: Blue, Green, Waterfront [1] Number of stations: 18 rapid transit 34 light rail [1] Daily ridership: 9,200 (rapid transit, weekdays, Q3 2024) 1,700 (light rail, weekdays, Q3 2024 ...
In 2019, Coney Island announced that it was getting rid of its rides to focus on its Sunlite Pool water park area. This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Ohio water park Coney ...
The rapid transit platforms of the Culver Depot after its 1904 renovations, showing the platform gates. Culver Depot, also called Culver Terminal [1] or Culver Plaza, [2] was a railroad and streetcar terminal in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York City, United States, located on the northern side of Surf Avenue near West 5th Street.
Tri-C–Campus District station [3] is a station on the RTA Rapid Transit system in Cleveland, Ohio, serving the Red, Blue, and Green Lines. It is located just east of East 34th Street near the intersection of East 34th and Broadway, on the north side of the CSX railway tracks, and below the bridge that carries East 34th Street over the railway tracks.
One of the goals of Mayor John Hylan's Independent Subway System (IND), proposed in the 1920s, was a line to Coney Island, reached by a recapture of the BMT Culver Line. [3] [4] As originally designed, service to and from Manhattan would have been exclusively provided by Culver express trains, while all local service would have fed into the IND Crosstown Line. [5]
There are several public parks in Coney Island, operated by the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. Parks within the main Coney Island neighborhood include: [244] The Abe Stark Skating Rink, located on the south side of Surf Avenue between West 19th and West 20th Streets, adjacent to the boardwalk. It opened in 1970. [245]