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The Alabama Avenue station is an elevated station on the BMT Jamaica Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of Alabama Avenue and Fulton Street in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn , [ 5 ] it is served by the J train at all times and the Z train during rush hours in the peak direction.
The Brooklyn City Rail Road opened a line along Fulton Street from Fulton Ferry on July 6, 1854; [4] it reached East New York by 1874. [5] Buses were substituted for streetcars on August 10, 1941. [citation needed] In 1998, the line was extended further into DUMBO to Water Street and Main Street during the daytime hours on weekdays. [6]
The J-only stops while skip-stop was operating were 111th Street, Forest Parkway, Cypress Hills, Cleveland Street, Alabama Avenue, Halsey Street and Kosciusko Street. The Z-only stops were 121st Street, 102nd Street, Elderts Lane, Norwood Avenue, Van Siclen Avenue, Chauncey Street and Gates Avenue. [40]
The Fulton Street station has historically ranked among the New York City Subway's ten busiest stations. [220] The Fulton Street station recorded 19.502 million entries in 1963, which had declined to 15.805 million in 1973. [221] During the 2000s, an estimated 225,000 people either entered, exited, or transferred at the station on an average day.
This page was last edited on 14 January 2025, at 06:39 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
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U.S. Route 72 (US 72) is an east–west United States highway that travels for 317.811 miles (511.467 km) from southwestern Tennessee, throughout North Mississippi, North Alabama, and southeastern Tennessee.
The structure above Broadway and Fulton Street is now part of the BMT Jamaica Line. The original structure east of Alabama Avenue in East New York still exists, although it has been rebuilt to support subway cars, which are heavier than the former elevated cars. The remaining elevated structure is the oldest such structure in the subway system.