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Chestertown is a hamlet of the town of Chester, in Warren County, New York, United States. It is located by the junction of Route 8 and U.S. Route 9 , in the Adirondack Mountains . The population was 586 at the 2010 census , which lists the community as a census-designated place .
This category contains New York City Subway station complexes as listed in List of New York City Subway transfer stations.Note that this category is restricted to station complexes, either in one article or multiple articles, and does not include singular stations where express and local services stop or where multiple services operate along a line.
Station complex Individual stations Lines Services Notes 14th Street/Sixth Avenue: 14th Street: IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line 1 2 3 The IND Sixth Avenue Line and BMT Canarsie Line were connected inside fare control in the late 1960s, [citation needed] and a passageway west to the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line opened on January 16, 1978.
Chester is a town in Warren County, New York, United States. It is part of the Glens Falls metropolitan area. [1] The population was 3,086 at the 2020 census. [2] [3] The town is made up by communities of Chestertown and Pottersville. The town of Chester is on the county's northern border.
Port Chester, New York, a village in Westchester County, New York, United States Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name.
[24] [26] [200] The brick facility was opened in 1966 and was operated by Jamaica Buses; the company's original depot was located across the street (114-02 Guy R. Brewer Boulevard) before the land was acquired by New York State in 1958. [41] [200] [36] [201] On January 30, 2006, it was leased to the City of New York and MTA Bus. [4]
U.S. Route 4 (US 4) is a 253-mile-long (407 km) United States Numbered Highway that runs from East Greenbush, New York, in the west to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in the east, traversing Vermont. In New York , US 4 is signed north–south to reflect its alignment in the state.
The highway initially utilized the preexisting New York State Thruway from Albany to Newburgh and in lower Westchester County, and the Major Deegan Expressway in New York City. From Newburgh to the Elmsford area, I-87 was to follow a new highway running parallel to US 9 northward along the eastern bank of the Hudson River to Fishkill. I-87 ...