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The Q65 bus route constitutes a public transit line in Queens, New York City.The south-to-north route runs primarily on 164th Street, operating between two major bus-subway hubs: Sutphin Boulevard–Archer Avenue station in Jamaica and Flushing–Main Street station in Flushing.
On November 9, 1936, the North Shore Bus Company restarted service on the route as part of its new franchise for all bus routes in Zone B (Flushing and Northern Queens), except those operated by the New York and Queens Transit Corporation. Bayside business owners and residents had requested the restoration of this route.
In Downtown Flushing is the Flushing–Main Street terminal, where several bus lines, the IRT Flushing Line subway, and the LIRR Port Washington Branch interchange. The Q44 shifts onto Union Street and Parsons Boulevard to 14th Avenue in Whitestone, where some buses terminate.
Q25 service began in 1928, under the operation of the Flushing Heights Bus Company. [11] This route was formally known as Route Q-25, Flushing-Jamaica via Parsons Boulevard Line. [12] On May 25, 1933, Queens–Nassau Transit received a one-year franchise for route "Q-34" from Flushing to College Point. [13] The route began service in April 1933 ...
Buses would run every 15 minutes between 7 a.m. and 7:45 a.m. from Queens, and every 15 minutes from 24th Street and Madison Avenue in the evening between 4:30 p.m. and 5:15 p.m.. Buses would run express along Queens Boulevard and the Queensboro Bridge. [102] Renumbered to X18 in 1976 and current number on April 15, 1990. [99]
A 1996 Nova Bus RTS-06 (9144) on the Ridgewood-bound Q58 bus entering service in Flushing. The streetcar line was operated by the Brooklyn and Queens Transit Corporation , a subsidiary of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (BRT) and later Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) which operated many streetcar lines, and several rapid ...
The Q17 bus route constitutes a public transit line in Queens, New York City, running primarily along Kissena Boulevard, the Long Island Expressway service road (Horace Harding Expressway) and 188th Street between two major bus-subway hubs in the neighborhoods of Jamaica and Flushing. It is one of the busiest local bus routes in Queens. [4]
The route originally operated between Flushing and the Horace Harding Expressway, [9] and was known as the Flushing–Rosewood route. [ 10 ] In 1931, the New York City Board of Estimate was deciding which bus route franchises would be given to which private operators.