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The Triboro: Transit For The Boroughs
Read More (Interactive): http://library.rpa.org/interactive/the-triboro/ Quote:
http://i.imgur.com/OBGFQg1.png |
unfortunately the long dreamed about triboro rx will never happen. it serves a constituancy nobody in power cares about.
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behold the new mta subway map.
the w train is back and it has a mythical something called a 2nd ave subway: http://www.amny.com/transit/second-a...map-1.11847457 |
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Though this is another thing to add to the list for when I ever make it back to NYC to visit, make sure to ride the Q to the UES to see the new part of the system. Oh wait, I just noticed they will be running the N train on express during the weekdays, that is nice at least for losing the Q train to Queens. |
http://www.newgeography.com/files/cox-nycmetro-1.png
http://www.newgeography.com/files/cox-nycmetro-2.png http://www.newgeography.com/files/cox-nycmetro-3.png Quote:
http://www.newgeography.com/content/...redible-subway |
LaGuardia terminal's $4 billion revamp will finally begin
http://www.crainsnewyork.com/apps/pb...creen&maxw=770 Quote:
http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article...-finally-begin |
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examples of subway station artwork:
TRANSIT NYC subway art: See photos of stunning and thought-provoking artwork By Lauren Cook June 8, 2016 http://www.amny.com/transit/nyc-subw...rks-1.11891428 http://cdn.newsday.com/polopoly_fs/1...004/image.jpeg |
gridlock!
New York City crippled by congestion, Department of Transportation report says By Vincent Barone vin.barone@amny.com June 9, 2016 The only way out of New York City’s crippling congestion is through a sincere funding of mass transit, officials say. The renewed push comes after the release of the city Department of Transportation’s Mobility Report on Wednesday, which underscores how New York’s rapidly growing population is choking its streets as tightly as its mass transit network below. Buses and taxis are struggling to navigate the gridlock, driving down surface-level transit ridership, while the subway system is buckling under a record number of commuters hoping to avoid the mess above. “The report’s conclusions are clear: as we move forward, policy makers will need to redouble our efforts to chart a course that supports mass transit and other options to keep a growing and thriving New York City moving,” said DOT Commissioner Polly Trottenberg in a statement. In the five-year period from 2010 through 2015, the city added 370,000 more residents, 520,000 more jobs—the equivalent of absorbing Montana’s entire workforce, the report notes—and 10 million more visiting tourists. more: http://www.amny.com/transit/new-york...ays-1.11894858 |
MetroCard’s successor could transform New York City transit
By Vincent Barone vin.barone@amny.com May 25, 2016 The MTA launched a request for ideas forMTA seeking ideas for MetroCard replacement. The turnstile tango is coming to an end. You know the moves: first you fish for the MetroCard in your purse, wallet or pocket. Then you flip the card for proper swipe orientation (a manageable step, sure, but one that can easily stump stumpers like Hillary Clinton and visitors to this city, alike). On a good day, that step will be punctuated with just one “please swipe again.” That daily dance undertaken by millions is one of the reasons why the MTA is pursuing a new payment system. The MetroCard, at 22 years old, has aged poorly compared to the rate of technological advancements in its lifetime. The MTA is essentially managing its own currency and that’s becoming increasingly expensive to maintain. It costs the agency about 15 cents to collect every dollar in revenue. “The MetroCard doesn’t take advantage of the efficiencies of technology that have been introduced in the past 20 years,” said John Raskin, executive director of the Riders Alliance. “If we don’t replace it now, expect a lot more system failures and breakdowns in the coming years.” The MTA hopes to begin a slow phase out of MetroCards in 2018, at a cost of $619 million, after a slew of mobile payment pilots and delays over the past ten years. It’s proven challenging for the MTA to pin its next fare system on technology that’s evolving so rapidly. Certain details are clear. A new, open fare technology will be harnessed in riders’ smartphones, credit cards and pre-paid cards — similar to London’s Oyster card or PATH’s SmartLink. Dips and swipes will be swapped for taps and scans. If properly executed, transit experts say the new technology can transform how New Yorkers traverse their city, as did the MetroCard when it replaced the MTA’s iconic tokens. “Options like free transfers [and] unlimited fares were made possible by the MetroCard. That was huge,” said Rich Barone, vice president for transportation at the Regional Plan Association. “It’s going to be the technology, but really the fare policy that comes with the new technology, that could totally transform transit in New York City.” For the MTA, a key to an open fare payment system is meeting customers where they already are—their phones—and building an inclusive system that will work across all services, like the Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North. Don’t expect drastic changes to turnstiles, yet. The MTA plans to begin the rollout by retrofitting its current infrastructure. The switch over itself, advocates predict, could bring tangible service improvements, especially on buses. more: http://www.amny.com/transit/metrocar...sit-1.11837974 |
lga now comes in at $7b --- w/o the airtrain and ferry service:
http://therealdeal.com/2016/06/14/la...-estimated-7b/ |
^I almost hope the whole thing dies on the vine. LaGuardia needs a fundamental rethinking not a another one of these incremental afterthought band aid solutions. NY needs to stop dicking around and start acting like the alpha city it is and push for a plan more along the lines of the RethinkNYC plan.
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^It's scale of ambition is what I am lauding, not necessarily every detail of their proposal. I realize relocating and absorbing Rikers would probably become the hottest political potato NY has seen in years but I think its doable. I also think we need people proposing as many outside the box ideas, especially those about rail transit expansion and connectivity, as we can --- and that plan does that.
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I'm not knocking out of the box ideas , but there plan is so flawed on many fronts and the fact that people seem to praise it at first drives me nuts... Everyone who looks into it , laughs at it... I did invite the team on here but they seem to have declined...it had a luke warm reception on reddit... Through running is a wonderful idea but there plan makes no sense and is not through running but more like a shuttle point 2 useless points.. There redevelopment plan for Sunnyside and Port Morris is a waste of space...there stations are overbuilt...etc...list goes on and on..
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De Blasio’s $325 Million Ferry Push: Rides to 5 Boroughs, at Subway Price
De Blasio’s $325 Million Ferry Push: Rides to 5 Boroughs, at Subway Price
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2016...-master768.jpg A pier at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, which will eventually be the home port for the expanded ferry service that the city is starting in 2017. Credit Eric Thayer for The New York Times "With New York City’s subway trains jammed to capacity and more people than ever pouring into neighborhoods outside Manhattan, Mayor Bill de Blasio is embarking on an ambitious and expensive plan to create a fleet of city-owned ferryboats that would crisscross the surrounding waterways and connect all five boroughs. At a cost of more than $325 million, Mr. de Blasio’s expansion of ferry service would be one of the biggest bets any city in the world has made on boats as vehicles for mass transit. The mayor predicts that the ferries would carry 4.5 million passengers a year, about twice as many riders as San Francisco’s ferry system handles. Mr. de Blasio has promised New Yorkers that ferries will start running on three new routes, serving South Brooklyn, and Astoria and the Rockaways in Queens, by the end of June 2017, four months before he would stand for re-election. Additional routes to the Lower East Side of Manhattan and to Soundview in the Bronx will be added in 2018..." http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/16/ny...vice.html?_r=0 |
Yay about the W! I live at the Ditmars Blvd stop and am happy to hear that they are bringing it back to replace the Q. Honestly, I thought commute times were faster before with the W so we'll have to see what happens. Plus the Q didn't always run out Astoria on the weekends, instead stopping at 57th Street. I wonder if the W will now do the same?
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Late night R service extension to Manhattan !!!
http://www.mta.info/news-r-r-train-r...ansfers-faster |
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