When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. IRT Flushing Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IRT_Flushing_Line

    The IRT Flushing Line is a rapid transit route of the New York City Subway system, ... as the Flushing Line was built to IRT clearances, ...

  3. Flushing–Main Street station (IRT Flushing Line) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flushing–Main_Street...

    The IRT Flushing Line was to be one of two Dual Contracts lines in the borough, and it would connect Flushing and Long Island City, two of Queens's oldest settlements, to Manhattan via the Steinway Tunnel. When the majority of line was built in the early 1910s, most of the route went through undeveloped land, and Roosevelt Avenue had not been ...

  4. History of the New York City Subway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_New_York...

    The Astoria Line and Flushing Line were built at this time and were for some time operated by both companies. Under the terms of Contracts 3 and 4, the city would build new subway and elevated lines, rehabilitate and expand certain existing elevated lines, and lease them to the private companies for operation.

  5. 42nd Street–Bryant Park/Fifth Avenue station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/42nd_Street–Bryant_Park...

    The Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) built the Flushing Line platform, which opened in 1926 as the first part of an extension of the Queensboro Subway (today's Flushing Line) from Grand Central to Times Square. The Sixth Avenue Line platforms opened in 1940, completing construction of the first phase of the Independent Subway System ...

  6. Mets–Willets Point station (IRT Flushing Line) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mets–Willets_Point...

    When the majority of the line was built in the early 1910s, most of the route went through undeveloped land, and Roosevelt Avenue had not been constructed. [6]: 47 Community leaders advocated for more Dual Contracts lines to be built in Queens to allow development there. [7] The Flushing Line west of 103rd Street opened in 1917. [8]

  7. 111th Street station (IRT Flushing Line) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/111th_Street_station_(IRT...

    The IRT Flushing Line was to be one of two Dual Contracts lines in the borough, along with the Astoria Line; it would connect Flushing and Long Island City, two of Queens's oldest settlements, to Manhattan via the Steinway Tunnel. When the majority of the line was built in the early 1910s, most of the route went through undeveloped land, and ...

  8. 82nd Street–Jackson Heights station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/82nd_Street–Jackson...

    The IRT Flushing Line was to be one of two Dual Contracts lines in the borough, along with the Astoria Line; it would connect Flushing and Long Island City, two of Queens's oldest settlements, to Manhattan via the Steinway Tunnel. When the majority of the line was built in the early 1910s, most of the route went through undeveloped land, and ...

  9. Steinway Tunnel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steinway_Tunnel

    The Steinway Tunnel's Queens portals at left; to the right are the East River Tunnels' portals. Pictured in April 1974. In 1900, the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT), headed by August Belmont Jr., was awarded the contract for construction and operation of the city's subway line and a few years later the IRT engineered a takeover of Manhattan's elevated railways, thus gaining a monopoly ...