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[189] [190] As part of the redesign, all of the existing bus routes would be discontinued and replaced with new routes with a "SIM" prefix on August 19, 2018. [29]: 188–189 The "SIM" prefix was chosen to reduce confusion with the "X"-prefixed routes they replaced, but deviate from the "S" prefix used by local Staten Island bus routes.
At Greenwich Avenue, the bus runs west along West 9th Street and east along West 8th Street. These become East 9th and East 8th Streets, respectively, east of Fifth Avenue (east of Third Avenue, East 8th Street is known as St. Mark's Place). At Avenue A, both directions cross over to East 10th Street to avoid Tompkins Square Park. The route ...
The northbound route of the new 1 followed the old NYCO 1 along Park Avenue, 39th Street, Madison Avenue, 135th Street, and Lenox Avenue, and the southbound route used Lenox Avenue and 135th Street to join the old FACCo 1 at Fifth Avenue. Buses left the old FACCo route at 40th Street, heading south on the old NYCO route on Park Avenue and Broadway.
East Side Omnibus Corporation bus route (M15) replaced Second Avenue Railroad's Second Avenue Line streetcar and began running route (M13) on First Avenue on June 26, 1933. The routes were combined as a one-way pair on June 4, 1951, and kept the number M15.
The B70 bus route is a public transit line in Brooklyn in New York City, running mostly on 8th Avenue and 39th Street between Sunset Park and Fort Hamilton. [2] [3] The route was originally a streetcar line known as the Eighth Avenue Line, and is currently operated by MTA New York City Bus.
East 14th Street: NYC Bus: M15 Local to East Harlem, M15 SBS to East Harlem NYC Subway: train at First Avenue. Avenue A East 14th Street: NYC Subway: train at First Avenue. M14A only East 11th Street Avenue A: Bidirectional NYC Bus: M8 at East 10th Street East 5th Street Avenue A: East Houston Street Avenue A: NYC Bus: M9, M21. Delancey Street ...
A 2018 XN60 (1108) on the B35 local at Flatbush’s Church Avenue/East 18th Street in January 2019, set to short-turn at McDonald Avenue. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) operates a number of bus routes in Brooklyn, New York, United States; one minor route is privately operated under a city franchise.
Originally a streetcar line, it is now the M10 bus route and the M20 bus route, operated by the Manhattan and Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority. The M10 bus now only runs north of 57th Street (near Columbus 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.