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The B41 is a bus route that constitutes a public transit line operating in Brooklyn, New York City, running along Flatbush Avenue between Downtown Brooklyn and Marine Park. The B41 is operated by the MTA New York City Transit Authority. Its precursor was a streetcar line that began operation in 1860, and was known as the Flatbush Avenue Line ...
There are also dollar vans that operate to areas with little mass transit service, or provide an alternative mode of transportation to certain bus routes such as the B41 and B46. [ 81 ] [ 82 ] The vans, some licensed by the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission and some unlicensed, charge a fare of $2.00, lower than the $2.90 fare for MTA ...
The MTA bus network redesign's route type distribution has a new route type called "Crosstown/SBS", which all current SBS routes fall under. The MTA is planning to upgrade some existing routes into the route type (B41 Limited) and create some new ones (B55 (current B35 Limited, but extended to JFK Airport)), and Q98 (current Q58 Limited, but ...
The B41 is a bus route that constitutes a public transit line operating in Brooklyn, New York City, running along Flatbush Avenue between Downtown Brooklyn and Marine Park. The B41 is operated by the MTA New York City Transit Authority. Its precursor was a streetcar line that began operation in 1860, and was known as the Flatbush Avenue Line ...
The entire route was a single line, the B61, until January 3, 2010; [4] the B62 was previously a separate, parallel route between Downtown Brooklyn and Greenpoint, [8] now part of the B43 route. The streetcar line, B61 and the original B62 previously operated from the now-closed Crosstown Depot in Greenpoint.
now the B64 bus (part) Bergen Beach Line: Flatbush: Bergen Beach: Flatbush Avenue and Avenue N August 6, 1930 (east end); March 5, 1951 (whole line) now the B41 bus Cortelyou Road Line: Kensington: Flatbush: Cortelyou Road and 16th Avenue July 23, 1930 Converted to trolley coach on July 23, 1930, then to B23 bus on 10/31/1956.
The only public transportation is the B3, B41, and BM1 bus routes, operated by MTA Regional Bus Operations. [28] The B3 route formerly ran further into Bergen Beach, serving East 73rd and East 74th Streets, but was truncated to Avenue U and East 71st Street in 2010. [73] The B41 route actually has two branches: one to Bergen Beach and one to ...
They converted Bergen Island into a resort. It was accessible via the Flatbush Avenue streetcar, now the B41 bus route. [6] The resort opened in 1893 with a dance hall, concessions, rides and a pier. [7] The Percy Williams Amusement park opened in June 1896, later just called Bergen Beach. [8]