Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Wall Street station is under the intersection of Wall and William Streets.The 2 train serves the station at all times, [39] while the 3 train stops here at all times except late nights. [40] The station is the southernmost in Manhattan on the Brooklyn Branch of the Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line. [41]
Overnight service short turns at 34th Street–Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan and does not operate to or from New Lots Avenue. The 3 train formerly ran to City Hall or South Ferry in Manhattan, and was later rerouted to Flatbush Avenue–Brooklyn College in Brooklyn. In 1983, it was rerouted to New Lots Avenue.
The Wall Street station is a station on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line of the New York City Subway. The station is located at the intersection of Broadway and Wall Street in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan. It is served by the 4 train at all times and the 5 train at all times except late nights.
50th Street, one of the line's original stations. Also known as the IRT West Side Line, [6] since it runs along the west side of Manhattan, the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line runs from Van Cortlandt Park–242nd Street in the Bronx, close to New York City's border with Westchester, to South Ferry in Lower Manhattan, at the southernmost point in the borough.
The new tunnel measured 100 feet (30 m) wide to accommodate the future reconstruction of the Cortlandt Street station; [34] it was otherwise designed to the same specifications as the original tunnel, with columns placed every 5 feet (1.5 m). [32] The line reopened on September 15, 2002, with trains bypassing the site of the Cortlandt Street ...
Norwalk station (also called Wall Street) was a station on the Danbury and Norwalk Railroad (later the Danbury Branch of the Housatonic Railroad and the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad) located in Norwalk, Connecticut. It opened in 1852 and closed around 1956. A new station at the site has been considered.
We have incredibly high ambitions for this bank and, the train, it’s gonna move fast,” Fraser told Citigroup's 240,000 employees during a company-wide call, according to The Financial Times.
Passageways link this station to three others outside fare control: the World Trade Center PATH station, the WTC Cortlandt station, and the Fulton Street station, all through the Dey Street Passageway underneath the station. The station also contains a free transfer to the Chambers Street–World Trade Center and Park Place stations via the ...