New Lots Avenue (BMT Canarsie Line)

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New Lots Avenue
NYCS-bull-trans-L.svg
New York City Subway rapid transit station
New Lots Av BMT jeh.JPG
Southbound platform
Station statistics
Address New Lots Avenue & Van Sinderen Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11207
Borough Brooklyn
Locale East New York
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Division B (BMT)
Line       BMT Canarsie Line
Services       L all times (all times)
Transit connections 20 airtransportation.svg Bus transport NYCT Bus: B15 to JFK Airport
Structure Elevated
Platforms 2 side platforms
Tracks 2
Other information
Opened December 28, 1906; 117 years ago (December 28, 1906)
Traffic
Passengers (2014) 1,583,983[1]Increase 5.6%
Rank 291 out of 421
Station succession
Next north Livonia Avenue: L all times
Next south East 105th Street: L all times

New Lots Avenue is a station on the BMT Canarsie Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of New Lots and Van Sinderen Avenues in East New York, it is served by the L train at all times.

Station layout

P
Platform level
Side platform, doors will open on the right
Westbound NYCS-bull-trans-L.svg toward Eighth Avenue (Livonia Avenue)
Eastbound NYCS-bull-trans-L.svg toward Canarsie – Rockaway Parkway (East 105th Street)
Side platform, doors will open on the right
M Mezzanine Fare control, station agent, MetroCard vending machines
G Street Level Exit/ Entrance

This elevated station, opened on December 28, 1906, has two tracks and two offset side platforms. The platforms have windscreens and canopies at their centers and woven-wire fences with dark gray steel frames at either ends.

The station's only entrance is via a ground-level station house beneath the tracks on the southwest corner of Van Sinderen and New Lots Avenues. Inside is a token booth, turnstile bank, and two staircases to the Canarsie-bound platform and one to the Manhattan-bound one, all at their centers.

This station was renovated in 2006–7, which included new platform edges with yellow tactile warning strips, beige windscreens and red canopies (both with green frames), and installation of an artwork called 16 Windows by Eugene Tung.

The artwork features eight stained glass windows on each platform windscreen. The ones on the Manhattan-bound platform depict people doing morning activities like eating breakfast and tooth brushing while those on the Canarsie-bound platform depict people doing evening activities like eating dinner and getting ready for bed. This coincides with normal peak direction rush hour service in the subway as most people board trains on the northbound platform going to Manhattan in the morning and disembark from trains on the southbound platform coming from Manhattan in the evening.

To the south, the Canarsie Line becomes an open cut to East 105th Street and Canarsie – Rockaway Parkway. To the north, it becomes an elevated structure to Livonia Avenue until Broadway Junction.

References

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External links