Fifth and Madison Avenues Line

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M1 / M2 / M3 / M4
M1 LTD / M2 LTD / M4 LTD
Fifth and Madison Avenues Line
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Overview
System MTA New York City Bus
Operator New York City Transit Authority
Garage Manhattanville
Vehicle Daimler Chrysler Orion VII
Began service 1832 (trolley)
1886 (bus)
1966 (current alignment)
Route
Locale Manhattan
Start M1-M3: East Village8th Street
M4: MidtownPenn Station
End M1: Harlem147th Street
M2: Washington Heights168th Street
M3: Fort George193rd Street
M4: Fort Tryon ParkThe Cloisters
Length 8 miles (13 km) (M1)[1]
Service
Operates 24 hours (M2)
4:50 AM- 12:50 AM (M1)
5:40 AM-12:00 AM (M3)
5:35 AM-11:20 PM (M4)
Fare $2.75 (MetroCard or coins)
Cash Coins only (exact change required)
Transfers Yes
Timetable M1 M2 M3 M4
← B110 (Brooklyn) M5 →

The M1, M2, M3, and M4 are four local bus routes that operate on the Fifth and Madison Avenues Line – along one-way pair of Madison and Fifth Avenues in the Manhattan borough of New York City. Though the routes also run along other major avenues, the majority of their route is along Madison and Fifth Avenues between Greenwich Village to Harlem.

The routes are the successors to the New York and Harlem Railroad's Fourth and Madison Avenues Line, which began operations in 1832 as the first street railway in the world, and several lines of the Fifth Avenue Coach Company, a bus operator that started running on Fifth Avenue in 1886.

Description

The M1, M2, M3, and M4 all run between Midtown or Lower Manhattan and Upper Manhattan, while the Q32 runs from Midtown north along Fifth and Madison Avenues and east over the Queensboro Bridge to Jackson Heights, Queens. The M4 and Q32 begin at Penn Station, joining Madison Avenue at 32nd Street (northbound) and Fifth Avenue at 34th Street (southbound). Thus, all five routes are on Fifth and Madison Avenues north of 34th Street.

M1

The M1 begins its route in the East Village at the intersection of 4th Avenue and 8th Street. It starts north along 4th Avenue to Union Square, where it changes names to Union Square East. Union Square East continues past Union Square as Park Avenue South. The M1 turns off Park Avenue South at East 25th Street for one block, and then immediately turns right onto Madison Avenue. The M1 follows Madison Avenue all the way to East 135th Street, where it again turns left for one block, and then immediately turns right onto Fifth Avenue (becoming a two-way at this point). It travels up Fifth to West 139th Street, turns left for a block, and turns right onto Lenox Avenue to its terminus at 148th Street. The M1 travels south the same route, but entirely on Fifth Avenue between 139th Street and 8th Street. The bus uses 8th Street (St. Marks Place) to travel between 5th and 4th Avenues.

For a period from 2010 until January 6th, 2013, weekend M1 service did not operate into Midtown, instead terminating at 106th Street. After numerous requests to restore many of the unpopular 2010 service cuts, of which the short M1 weekend trip was one, in January of 2013, the MTA wisely restored many of these. The M1 once again goes to 8th Street on the weekends too and no longer halts at an arbitrary end of the line at 106th Street.

The M1 has a peak direction limited stop service on weekday rush hours; it is local at all other times.[2] The M1 is the replacement of the Fourth and Madison Avenues Streetcar Line

Proposals are also underway to re-extend this line back down to South Ferry or Worth Street, replacing the M5 route which will have its southern terminal cut-back from South Ferry to West 37th Street, due to its long length and constant unreliability from Washington Heights - 178th Street all the way down to South Ferry.

M2

The M2 follows the same route as the M1 north until East 110th Street, where it turns west. It travels around Frawley Circle and along Central Park North to Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard and turns right (north). The M2 follows 7th Avenue (as it is locally known) until West 155th Street, where it turns left and then turns right onto Edgecombe Avenue. The M2 follows Edgecombe Avenue to West 165th Street, and terminates at West 168th Street and Audubon Avenue. It follows the same route south, except using Fifth Avenue instead of Madison.

The M2 runs as a limited-stop service, with no local service during the daytime. At other times, it runs local only.[3]

M3

The M3 follows the same route as the M2, except it continues west past Powell Boulevard along West 110th Street to Manhattan Avenue. It follows Manhattan Avenue, which becomes St. Nicholas Avenue, to its terminus at St. Nicholas Avenue and West 193rd Street in the Fort George section of Washington Heights.[4]

M4

The M4 begins at Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan. It travels east along 32nd Street and west along 34th Street to Madison and Fifth Avenues. The M4 follows the same route as the M3 from here, except it continues west past Manhattan Avenue along West 110th Street (it's known as Cathedral Parkway west of Central Park West) to Broadway. The M4 turns north onto Broadway and travels along Broadway to West 165th Street. At 165th Street, the M4 turns left and then immediately turns right onto Fort Washington Avenue. The M4 continues up Ft. Washington Avenue to the entrance of Fort Tryon Park. When The Cloisters Museum is open, the M4 continues north along Margaret Corbin Drive to the entrance to the museum.

The M4 has a peak direction limited stop service weekday rush hours; it's local at all other times.[5] The M4 was the first route to get limited-stop service, in 1973.[citation needed]

History

The Fourth and Madison Avenues Line

The New York and Harlem Railroad was the first railroad in Manhattan, opening from City Hall north along Centre Street, Broome Street (northbound trains were later moved to Grand Street), the Bowery, Fourth Avenue, and Park Avenue to Harlem in the 1830s, and was extended southwest along Park Row to Broadway in 1852. A branch opened along 42nd Street and Madison Avenue to 73rd Street in 1870, and the NY&H began to operate streetcars along this route; it was later extended to Harlem. Buses were substituted for streetcars by the Madison Avenue Coach Company in March 1936. The New York City Omnibus Corporation took over operations in 1951, and changed its name to Fifth Avenue Coach Lines in 1956; the Manhattan and Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority took over operations in 1962.

When the bus that replaced the Lexington and Lenox Avenues Line was terminated, the Madison Avenue bus was extended west on 139th Street and north on Lenox Avenue to 147th Street. When Madison Avenue became one-way northbound, southbound traffic was moved to Fifth Avenue, replacing the original route of the Fifth Avenue Coach Company. The Fifth Avenue Transportation Company (later the Fifth Avenue Coach Company) began operating stages on Fifth Avenue between 11th Street and 59th Street on January 23, 1886.[6] The company was formed because the wealthy residents of Fifth Avenue did not want a street railway.[7][8] The route was later extended south to Washington Square Park and north to 89th Street,[citation needed] and in 1900 the company was authorized to extend north to 135th Street, and to operate on other streets including 110th Street and Riverside Drive to 124th Street.[9] More extensions, on 32nd Street from Fifth Avenue west to Seventh Avenue (Penn Station) and north from 110th Street on Seventh Avenue and Manhattan Avenue/St. Nicholas Avenue to 155th Street, were soon authorized.[citation needed] After the company's horse cars were replaced with motor buses in July 1907, it began operating these extensions,[citation needed] and assigned them numbers in 1916 or 1917:[10][11]

  1. Fifth Avenue to 135th Street
  2. Fifth and Seventh Avenues to Polo Grounds (155th Street and St. Nicholas Place)
  3. Fifth and St. Nicholas Avenues to Polo Grounds
  4. Fifth Avenue and Riverside Drive via 110th Street to 135th Street and Broadway
  5. Fifth Avenue and Riverside Drive via 57th Street to 135th Street and Broadway
  6. 72nd Street Crosstown via 57th Street

The Fifth Avenue Coach Company (FACCo) obtained a permit on July 1, 1925 and on July 9 began operating its 15 and 16 routes.[12] The 15 began at Fifth Avenue and 25th Street at Madison Square Park, and traveled north on Fifth Avenue, east via 57th Street to the Queensboro Bridge, and along Queens Boulevard, Roosevelt Avenue, and 25th Street (now 82nd Street) to Northern Boulevard in Jackson Heights, Queens. The short 16 (Elmhurst Crosstown), later named Q89,[citation needed] began at Roosevelt Avenue and 82nd Street and used Baxter Avenue and Broadway to reach Queens Boulevard in Elmhurst.[13]

Even before the Fifth Avenue company began operating its coaches, the New York and Harlem Railroad was operating its Fourth and Madison Avenues Line of horse cars, later trolleys, mainly on Fourth Avenue below and Madison Avenue above 42nd Street (Grand Central Terminal). The Madison Avenue Coach Company, a New York Railways subsidiary,[14] started operating replacement buses on February 1, 1935. Several changes were made to the route: instead of the Bowery, a shorter alignment via Centre Street and Lafayette Street was used, and a variant stayed on Madison Avenue south to 26th Street and short-turned at Astor Place.[15] As part of the New York City Omnibus Corporation system (NYCO; also a New York Railways subsidiary), these two routes were numbered 1 (via Park Avenue) and 2 (short-turn via Madison Avenue).[16]

Extensions and combinations

A M4 bus in Midtown Manhattan.

On July 17, 1960, Lexington Avenue and Third Avenue became a one-way pair. The NYCO's 4, which had traveled along Lexington Avenue, 116th Street, and Lenox Avenue to northern Harlem, was discontinued. To cover this travel pattern, the 1 was extended west on 135th Street and north on Lenox Avenue, and the 2 was realigned to turn west on 116th Street and north on Lenox Avenue.[17] The path of the 1 and 2 south of Union Square was changed on November 10, 1963 to use Broadway rather than Fourth Avenue and Lafayette Street, due to Lafayette Street becoming one-way northbound and Broadway becoming one-way southbound.[18]

Fifth and Madison Avenues became one-way streets on January 14, 1966, and the four FACCo routes on Fifth Avenue past Central Park and the two NYCO routes on Madison Avenue were combined into four routes on both avenues. In particular, the following changes were made:[19][20]

  • The NYCO's 1 and FACCo's 1 were combined. The northbound route of the new 1 followed the old NYCO 1 along Park Avenue, 39th Street, Madison Avenue, 135th Street, and Lenox Avenue, and the southbound route used Lenox Avenue and 135th to join the old FACCo 1 at Fifth Avenue. Buses left the old FACCo route at 40th Street, heading south on the old NYCO route on Park Avenue and Broadway.
  • The NYCO's 2 and FACCo's 2 (since extended to 168th Street via Edgecombe Avenue) were combined. Again, the southbound route generally followed the FACCo's 2, and the northbound route was the NYCO's 2. North of 110th Street, the combined route had two variants, watching the two divergent routes. One followed the FACCo's 2 along 110th Street and Seventh Avenue, while the other used 116th Street and Lenox Avenue to 147th Street (NYCO's 2), continuing along Seventh and Edgecombe Avenues to 168th Street.
  • The FACCo's 3 (since extended to Fort George via St. Nicholas Avenue), 4 (since extended to Fort Tryon Park via Fort Washington Avenue, and ending at Penn Station in the south), and 15 were essentially moved northbound from Fifth Avenue to Madison Avenue south of 110th Street. Where it made a difference, the NYCO's 2 was more closely followed.

References

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  2. M1 bus schedule MTA Regional Bus Operations.
  3. M2 bus schedule MTA Regional Bus Operations.
  4. M3 bus schedule MTA Regional Bus Operations.
  5. M4 bus schedule MTA Regional Bus Operations.
  6. New York Times, Fifth-Avenue Stages Running, January 24, 1886, page 2
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  10. New York Times, Remember Figures Better than Colors, June 25, 1916, page XX9
  11. Brooklyn Daily Eagle Almanac, 1916 and 1917
  12. New York Times, Listing of Routes Hit by Strike, March 5, 1962, page 47; New York Times, Buses Running, March 23, 1962, page 21
  13. New York Times, Plans to Link All Suburban Transit, July 10, 1925, page 19
  14. New York Times, Bus Grants Asked on 8th and 9th Avs., February 7, 1935, page 3
  15. New York Times, Swift Buses Oust Madison Trolleys, February 1, 1935, page 23
  16. New York City Omnibus Corporation Motor Coach Routes, ca. 1940
  17. New York Times, One-Way Bus Schedules Given For Lexington and 3d Avenues, July 12, 1960, page 37
  18. New York Times, City to Extend One-Way Traffic To 3 Manhattan Routes Sunday, November 5, 1963, page 1
  19. New York Times, Barnes Suggests Express Bus Runs, January 17, 1966, page 1
  20. New York Times, One-Way Avenues Slow Bus Traffic, January 26, 1966, page 32

External links

  • Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons