Second Ave. Sagas
  • About
  • Contact Me
  • 2nd Ave. Subway History
  • Search
  • About
  • Contact Me
  • 2nd Ave. Subway History
  • Search
Second Ave. Sagas

News and Views on New York City Transportation

Service Advisories

Two weekends without 1 trains

by Benjamin Kabak September 17, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 17, 2010

For the next two weekends, 1 train riders will be without service from 11:30 p.m. on Friday evening until 5 a.m. on Monday morning. In order to accommodate work on a series of projects — the Dyckman St. rehab, track panel installation at 215th St., signal cable replacement north of 96th St. and work on the box at the World Trade Center site — the entire line must be shuttered.

While shuttle bus service will be in place, Transit is urging riders to take the 2 and 3, which will be running local, the A train or the M103 bus. The shuttle buses will run in four sections, making stops along the 1 line. One bus will run from 242nd St. to 215th St. with a connection to the A at 207th St.; another will run on St. Nicholas Ave. from 191st St. to 168th St.; the third will run between 168th St. and 96th Sts. with both express and local service; and a fourth will run from Chambers St. to South Ferry in Lower Manhattan.

The service advisory poster, which you can click to enlarge, is below. Obviously, leave extra time to travel if you need the 1 line this weekend.

September 17, 2010 6 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
AsidesFare Hikes

At hearings, few comment on hike proposals

by Benjamin Kabak September 17, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 17, 2010

Over the last few weeks, I’ve written extensively about the MTA’s competing fare hike proposals and the need for a rigorous discussion on the alternatives during the fare hike hearings. Unfortunately, the hearings have offered anything but that. As Tom Namako notes in a brief piece in The Post, riders are turning the fare hike hearings into a circus. Instead of talking about the desire for a capped card or the love of unlimited options, speakers have chosen “instead to rail about recent service cuts, layoffs and other sore topics.” I’ll be at the Brooklyn hearing next week, but I can’t say I’m too surprised that most people have chosen to ignore the purpose of the fare hikes. As the city’s politicians take the time to bash the MTA on unrelated matters, so too do the people, and that’s just disappointing.

September 17, 2010 6 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
AsidesMTA

Praising the MTA’s first responders

by Benjamin Kabak September 17, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 17, 2010

We often forget the scope of the rescue work in which the city engaged in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001. While the day itself will forever be memorialized, the weeks after the Towers fell saw thousands of people sacrifice their time, energy and health to participate in the rescue mission. Allan Rosen, writing at Sheepshead Bites, discusses the ceremony and praises the MTA and its employees who went above and beyond during the trying weeks after the attacks. He writes: “From the MTA employees who guided people to safety to the heavy lifters searching for survivors and later for bodies, to the bus drivers shuttling rescue workers and victims’ families, each did their part exceedingly well. As one of the speakers put it, there was no one giving orders, and if you paid these people a million dollars, they could have not worked any harder.”

Rosen attended a small ceremony earlier this week for those at the MTA who put themselves in the line of duty on the day of and the days after the attacks. He talks about the people who were driving trains south of Manhattan when the planes struck and urges us all to remember how “in times of crisis, the agency excels.” As the ninth anniversary of the attacks passed last Saturday, it is well worth a minute or two to salute those who did their all to help cope with the aftermath and keep casualties as low as possible.

September 17, 2010 3 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Fare Hikes

The thinking behind the fare hike proposal

by Benjamin Kabak September 17, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 17, 2010

When the MTA issues a fare hike proposal, they usually do so with little to no transparency. The numbers are presented to the public generally as an across-the-board hike put forth to raise revenue by a certain percentage. When the fares went up in 2009, that’s exactly how it played out, and the MTA reached its target of a 7.5-percent revenue increase through a straightforward set of higher fares and a lesser pay-per-ride discount.

This time around, the fare hike proposals are more complicated. The MTA has issued two separate proposals, and each, in addition to including higher rates, has its drawbacks. In one plan, riders would be paying over $100 per month for a 30-day Unlimited ride card. In the other, the 30-day card would no longer be unlimited. Instead, for $99 the card would be capped at 90 rides or three swipes per day.

With these two proposals on hand, many have wondered how the MTA arrived at these two proposals. This week, in a letter, Jay Walder explained his thinking. Generally, he says, the authority is looking for ways to keep the fare increases lower for those lower-income riders while raising the rates for those who can afford to pay. Walder notes that “the median household income for people who buy monthly passes is nearly 75% higher than the median household income for people who pay the base fare of $2.25 [with the pay-per-ride discount] or purchase weekly passes. At the same time, the current fare discounts for the monthly pass users with the highest median income far exceed the discounts offered for the fare products used by lower-income riders.”

To put this in context, the MTA CEO and Chairman offered up some numbers. The average 30-day card user has a household income of $63,000, and if he or she uses the current card 90 times a month — which only seven percent of all 30-day card owners do — the cost per ride is $0.99, a full 56 percent lower than the base fare. If a seven-day card user takes 22 rides — the proposed cap for that card — right now, the price per ride is $1.23. People who can afford to pay more and buy in bulk for a longer period of time benefit under the current scheme, and Walder would prefer to raise those fares to a greater extent.

Under the capped proposal, the fares would begin to reach parity, but those who pay for 30-day cards would still benefit. A seven-day card with a 22-ride cap for $28 would lead to costs per ride as low as $1.27 while a 30-day card with a 90-ride cap for $99 could bottom out at $1.10 per swipe with the uncapped $104 card would offer $1.16 per ride on 90 rides.

With this socioeconomic justification for raising the upper echelons of the time-limited MetroCards more so than the lower, Walder also explains why he is proposing capping rides when no other transit agency does so. Since, he says, only seven percent of 30-day card users exceed 90 rides, the rest of us are subsidizing those riders. A cap would allow the MTA to price the cards $5 lower, and thus, he says, the 93 percent of riders who never reach the cap would save $60 per year.

The final piece of this equation in the debate over a capped vs. a true unlimited card is the impact a capped card would have on ridership. The MTA estimates that the decline in ridership would be negligible as the city’s improving economy will bolster transit ridership anyway, and Walder offers his take on the psychology of a capped card. He believes that if the cap is instituted and “the turnstiles are modified to indicate the number of trips remaining (the exact design is being developed), customers will be more aware of the number of trips they are taking and therefore make informed choices that meet their needs.”

I don’t know if informed choices is the right conclusion to draw here or if we should assume that people would be less willing to use the subway earlier in the 30-day period. If I’m granted a limited number of swipes, will I save them for the latter part of the month to make sure I don’t need to buy a new card before the 30 days are up? Will I simply use all 90 and then purchase another card when I need do? Will a counter telling me how much I’ve used or how much I have left discourage frequent ridership or simply redistribute when we ride based upon how many days and rides are left on my MetroCard? Those are questions I — and seemingly the MTA — can’t answer right now.

So for now, these are the ideas behind the MTA’s proposals. The Board won’t make a decision on which hike to endorse until the public comment period is over, and so we the riding public can still influence the debate. The hike may be a foregone conclusion, but what shape it takes will depend on how we want to ride.

September 17, 2010 19 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
AsidesSelf Promotion

One last time: SAS talk tonight

by Benjamin Kabak September 16, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 16, 2010

For the final reminder: I’ll be speaking tonight at Gelf Magazine’s Anatomyof the Big Apple event in DUMBO. For all the information about the event, check out the Facebook invite (and follow Second Ave. Sagas on Facebook while you’re at it). The doors at JLA Studios open at 7 p.m., and the talks will start at 7:30 p.m. I’ll be giving a brief presentation on a few subway-related topics, and then I’ll take questions afterward.

Additionally, as part of the build-up to the event, I took part in an interview with Eric Yun. We talked about Jay Walder’s tenure, the upcoming fare hikes and the perceptions and political role of the MTA in New York City. Check it out here, and hopefully, I’ll see you tonight.

September 16, 2010 3 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Subway Maps

A glimpse of the subway map past

by Benjamin Kabak September 16, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 16, 2010

Vignelli Map Unearthed

An artifact of the subway system pokes through at 57th St. (Photo via flickr user Nicholas Hall)

The subway station at 57th St. and 6th Ave. is an oddity in midtown. Opened in 1968 as part of the massive Chrystie St. project, it served as the northern terminal for the Train to the Plane, a Grand St. shuttle and various other Sixth Ave. locals until 1988 when the 63rd St. station finally opened. Today, it is one of Midtown’s lesser trafficked stations and the system’s 105th most popular station with only 4,237,742 passing through its turnstiles last year, and it plays home to a unique piece of history.

The above image was captured earlier this week, and it shows one of — if not the — system’s last remaining Vignelli maps still on a Transit billboard. While the map is worse for the wear, it appears to be from the mid-1970s, and one Subchatter puts it from 1974. Based on the damage to the map, my guess is that it resurfaced after Transit workers peeled another advertisement off of the board.

In related news, the Design Observer is celebrating Vignelli Week, and as a part of their coverage, they reran a 2004 piece Michael Bierut wrote on the Vignelli map. He offers it up as an ode to the artistry of Vignelli but highlights its shortcomings as a map:

In 1968, Unimark International was commissioned to design a sign system for the subways, and out of this chaos came order. Two Unimark designers, Bob Noorda and Massimo Vignelli, developed a signage plan based on a simple principle: deliver the necessary information at the point of decision, never before, never after. The typeface they recommended, the then-exotic, imported-from-Switzerland Helvetica Medium, was unavailable; they settled for something at hand in the New York City Metropolitan Transit Authority train shop called Standard Medium. The designs they proposed assumed that each sign would be held in place at the top with a black horizontal bracket; the sign shop misinterpreted the drawings and simply painted a black horizontal line at the top of each sign. And so the New York City subway signage system was born.

Four years later, Vignelli introduced a new subway map. It was based on principles that would be familiar to anyone who appreciated the legendary London Underground map designed in 1933 by Henry Beck. Out with the complicated tangle of geographically accurate train routes. No more messy angles. Instead, train lines would run at 45 and 90 angles only. Each line was represented by a color. Each stop represented by a dot. What could be simpler?

The result was a design solution of extraordinary beauty. Yet it quickly ran into problems. To make the map work graphically meant that a few geographic liberties had to be taken. What about, for instance, the fact that the Vignelli map represented Central Park as a square, when in fact it is three times as long as it is wide? If you’re underground, of course, it doesn’t matter: there simply aren’t as many stops along Central Park as there are in midtown, so it requires less map space. But what if, for whatever reason, you wanted to get out at 59th Street and take a walk on a crisp fall evening? Imagine your surprise when you found yourself hiking for hours on a route that looked like it would take minutes on Vignelli’s map.

The problem, of course, was that Vignelli’s system logical system came into conflict with another, equally logical system: the 1811 Commissioners’ Plan for Manhattan. In London, Henry Beck’s rigorous map brought conceptual clarity to a senseless tangle of streets and neighborhoods that had no underlying order. In New York, however, the orthoginal grid introduced by the Commissioners’ Plan set out its own ordered system of streets and avenues that has become second nature to New Yorkers. Londoners may be vague about the physical relationship of the Kennington station to the Vauxhall station: on the London underground map, Vauxhall is positioned to the northwest of Kennington when it’s actually to the southwest, and it doesn’t seem to bother anyone. On the other hand, because of the simplicity of the Manhattan street grid, every New Yorker knows that the 28th Street number 6 train stops exactly six blocks south and four blocks east of Penn Station. As a result, the geographical liberties that Vignelli took with the streets of New York were immediately noticable, and commuters without a taste for graphic poetry cried foul.

Today, Vignelli’s map is but a museum piece. Out of commission for 31 years, his map still inspires debate about the proper role of a subway map, and those on eBay sell for a pretty penny. Yet, one exists, in bits and pieces, on display for now, in the subway system. Catch it before it’s all gone.

After the jump, a view of this map via Max S. from July. Clearly, Transit has losed an opportunity to preserve some of this bit of New York City subway history. Perhaps the Transit Museum should have stepped in.

Continue Reading
September 16, 2010 16 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
ARC Tunnel

For Christie, a wavering ARC commitment

by Benjamin Kabak September 16, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 16, 2010

These tunnels, the only way into or out of New York City for NJ Transit, aren't going to cut it. (Photo courtesy of NJ Transit)

When news broke over the weekend that New Jersey was suspended work on the ARC tunnel for 30 days to review, New Jersey Transit’s Executive Director James Weinstein appeared as the public face of the shutdown. Yet, when a state opts to freeze its part of an $8.7-billion megaproject, someone else is clearly pulling the strings. Yesterday, Gov. Chris Christie admitted his role in the affair, and his comments have many fearing for the future of the project.

At a press conference this week, Christie claim to voice his conditional support for the tunnel, but his comments were clearly aimed at the immediate future of the ARC tunnel. “If I can’t pay for it, then we’ll have to consider other options,” he said, before levying a charge of politicking at the Corzine Administration. “It went from $5 billion to $8.7 billion in what was clearly a rush by the Corzine administration to have gold shovels and put them the ground and try to get Corzine re-elected. That obviously was less than successful, and I’m concerned that their evaluations of price of this project was as successful as his re-election campaign was.”

As ARC supporters rushed to defend the project, noting that it was in the planning stages years before Jon Corzine was New Jersey governor, the Tri-State Transportation Campaign dug up a letter from Gov. Christie. Written in April of 2010 and addressed to US Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, Christie’s missive notes how the ARC tunnel is “critical for the transit riders of New Jersey and the region.”‘

I want to restate my commitment of those funds controlled bv the State of New Jersey, specifically funding from the New Jersey Turnpike Authority (NJTA), the Federal Highway Administration and the New Jersey Transportation Trust Fund (TTF). Also attached is a reconfirmation of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ) $3 billion commitment to the project…

With respect to the reauthorization of the TTF as it relates to the recapitalization of the transit system, the State of New Jersey has a long history of reauthorizing the TTF on time and I will not let the TTF expire on my watch.

Now that the TTF is running dry and Christie has pledged to keep taxes in New Jersey low, he’s running into quite the pickle. He could quash a badly-needed train tunnel or he could renege on his pledge to keep taxes down. Based on the region’s lackluster embrace of transit expansion plans, would it surprise me to see him embrace the ARC tunnel if it costs even $1 more than current projections? Yes, it would.

TSTC, meanwhile, again voiced its support for the project. Noting the planning criticism surrounding it (and responding in turn), Steven Higashide reports on a letter sent to Christie, co-signed by the heads of the TSTC, New Jersey Future and the RPA. “Stalling ARC,” the three warn, “will only lead to higher expenses later and could mean New Jersey would have to refund the federal government hundreds of millions of dollars and miss out on thousands of desperately needed, well-paying jobs.”

These are trying economic times for the country’s states as debt limits are maxed out and budgets are running in the red by no small amount. Yet, to see a project of this magnitude and importance shelved would be a blow to the area’s transportation infrastructure and the regions economy. Gov. Christie should swallow hard and continue to support the ARC tunnel no matter what this 30-day review says.

* * *
Update (10:50 a.m.): Andrea Bernstein over at Transportation Nation wrote a similar overview of the state of the ARC project today. She compares Christie’s stance on the tunnel with his ideological entrenchment against the highway trust fund and doesn’t see a bright future for this project. “If he sticks with his ideological commitment — and he’s known for that — the ARC project,” she concludes, “is in deep, deep trouble.”

The Star-Ledger, in an editorial today, urges Christie to keep this project on pace. Comparing it to the New Jersey governor’s failed Race To The Top bid, the paper notes that this tunnel is “widely recognized as vital to the region’s economy” and highlights how the initial price estimate was a collaboration between a Bush official who now works for Christie and then-Gov. Corzine’s office. It isn’t, in other words, as cut-and-dry as Christie’s politicking makes it sound. “Throwing stones,” the paper says, “at Corzine is not the leadership we need. It’s a cop out.”

September 16, 2010 28 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
AsidesSelf Promotion

Reminder: Second Ave. Sagas live and in person

by Benjamin Kabak September 15, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 15, 2010

Just a brief reminder that you have a chance to see my live and in the flesh tomorrow. I’ll be speaking Thursday at Gelf Magazine’s Anatomyof the Big Apple event in DUMBO. For all the information about the event, check out the Facebook invite (and follow Second Ave. Sagas on Facebook while you’re at it). The doors at JLA Studios open at 7 p.m., and the talks will start at 7:30 p.m. I’ll be giving a brief presentation on a few subway-related topics, and then I’ll take questions afterward.

Additionally, as part of the build-up to the event, I took part in an interview with Eric Yun. We talked about Jay Walder’s tenure, the upcoming fare hikes and the perceptions and political role of the MTA in New York City. Check it out here, and hopefully, I’ll see you tomorrow night.

September 15, 2010 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
AsidesBrooklyn

A critique of the Brooklyn trolley plan

by Benjamin Kabak September 15, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 15, 2010

Last week, I reported on a trolley-based transit-oriented development plan for Red Hook and the Brooklyn waterfront. Spurred on by years of advocacy by the Brooklyn Historic Railway Association, the NYC Department of Transportation will spend $500,000 on a feasibility study that will examine a proposal to send a trolley from Downtown Brooklyn to Red Hook via Atlantic Ave. and Columbia St. For an area of Brooklyn that doesn’t enjoy ready access to the subways, such a route could connect a disconnected neighborhood.

While a streetcar nostalgia with an emphasis on 21st Century transit-oriented development appeals to some, others see the flaws in the BHRA’s plans. Over at The Transport Politic, a site that has long advocated for an extensive Brooklyn streetcar network, Yonah Freemark questions the city’s goals here. Latching onto the aspect of the BHRA proposal that would restore old trolleys to the borough’s streets, Freemark condemns the plan: “These mobile museums are more about tourism than they are about meeting typical commuting needs. Unlike modern buses, these old streetcars are not handicap-accessible, nor are they air conditioned. Even more problematically, they often carry fewer passengers than the buses they’re supposed to replace.”

On a macro scale, Freemark wants the city to address some fundamental questions: ” How can the existing transit network be improved? What routes are missing or need to be reinforced? Where should future development be oriented?” Basically, he says, “if streetcars cannot provide improved operations over typical buses, why should cities spend millions of dollars installing them?” With an appropriate nod to Bob Diamond’s tireless and badly-needed advocacy work, Freemark notes that streetcars can certainly be useful in improving transit access, but a modern rolling stock and a sense of purpose behind the route might be required before the city should restore streetcars to Brooklyn.

September 15, 2010 8 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Subway Maps

Building a better subway map: frequency diagrams

by Benjamin Kabak September 15, 2010
written by Benjamin Kabak on September 15, 2010

I live in an area of Brooklyn rich in transit options. If I want to get into Manhattan, I could take the 2 or 3 from Flatbush Ave. or the B and Q also from Flatbush Ave. I could walk to 4th Ave. and grab the R (and then switch to the D or N one stop later) or I could head south to catch the F at 7th Ave. If I’m going to the Village or Midtown, none of these four rides are that much quicker than any other. How then do I know which ride is the best?

The answer to that question is an easy one for people familiar with the subway system and a complicated one for underground novices. From experience, I know that F and R are the worst options, that the B and Q dump me into Midtown quickly and that the 2 and 3 are usually the best bet. Perhaps someone not used to the system could eliminate the F and R based on the map, but the current subway map doesn’t hold the key to my decisions. That key is frequency.

The 2 and 3 are generally my trains of choice into and out of Brooklyn because of their frequencies. During peak hours, the trains each run every four-to-six minutes during the peak hours, and no train is ever that far behind. The B and Q, on the other hand, each run only every eight-to-ten minutes during peak hours, and thus, the wait is longer. Because it generally takes the same amount of to get to, say, 34th St., it makes sense for me to take the train that arrives more frequently, but only those with a close familiarity with the subway system will know that.

Last month, Jarrett Walker at Human Transit considered the frequency map. He is critical of the way maps do not differentiate between routes based on frequency. “A transit map,” he writes, “that makes all lines look equally important is like a road map that doesn’t show the difference between a freeway and a gravel road.” While my example in this post marks the difference of only a minute or two, Walker’s point applies more to service that runs less frequently than every 15 minutes, bus routes and the way subways and buses can interact. He writes:

I contend that transit agencies have an obligation to push back against that complexity, to make their systems look as simple as possible, to give their citizens (not just their riders) the clearest possible image of how their system works. We may not need this understanding to follow your website’s directions, but it will help us if our trip is disrupted and we have to improvise, and it’s essential if we ever want to feel free to use the transit system spontaneously, for our own purposes.

OK, but how to we decide which routes are “major”?

This question may sound like a recipe for decades of focus groups, but in my experience, the answer may not be so complicated if we just consider the basics: frequency, span of service, speed, reliability and ease of access.

The rest of Walker’s post explores the theory in detail and applies it to the Minneapolis-St. Paul transit system. A few weeks ago, Cap’n Transit offered up his frequency map of Queens’ bus routes. It is a very simple idea that brings clarity to what can be a very confusing aspect of the transit system. Have you ever tried to make heads or tails of the Brooklyn bus map? It’s nearly incomprehensible.

For subway maps — and, in particular, for New York City subway maps, a frequency map could strike at the heart of the current version’s biggest shortfall: It provides a schematic of only peak-hour and midday service. It’s true that the map admits as much in the upper corner, but Transit doesn’t make available a map of weekend or overnight service. The changes — from shuttered lines and shortened routes to express trains making local stops — are significant enough to warrant one. A frequency map would be a great step in the right direction as the subway map would become even more user-friendly.

September 15, 2010 17 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Load More Posts

About The Author

Name: Benjamin Kabak
E-mail: Contact Me

Become a Patron!
Follow @2AvSagas

Upcoming Events
TBD

RSS? Yes, Please: SAS' RSS Feed
SAS In Your Inbox: Subscribe to SAS by E-mail

Instagram



Disclaimer: Subway Map © Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Used with permission. MTA is not associated with nor does it endorse this website or its content.

Categories

  • 14th Street Busway (1)
  • 7 Line Extension (118)
  • Abandoned Stations (31)
  • ARC Tunnel (52)
  • Arts for Transit (19)
  • Asides (1,244)
  • Bronx (13)
  • Brooklyn (126)
  • Brooklyn-Queens Connector (13)
  • Buses (291)
  • Capital Program 2010-2014 (27)
  • Capital Program 2015-2019 (56)
  • Capital Program 2020-2024 (3)
  • Congestion Fee (71)
  • East Side Access Project (37)
  • F Express Plan (22)
  • Fare Hikes (173)
  • Fulton Street (57)
  • Gateway Tunnel (29)
  • High-Speed Rail (9)
  • Hudson Yards (18)
  • Interborough Express (1)
  • International Subways (26)
  • L Train Shutdown (20)
  • LIRR (65)
  • Manhattan (73)
  • Metro-North (99)
  • MetroCard (124)
  • Moynihan Station (16)
  • MTA (98)
  • MTA Absurdity (233)
  • MTA Bridges and Tunnels (27)
  • MTA Construction (128)
  • MTA Economics (522)
    • Doomsday Budget (74)
    • Ravitch Commission (23)
  • MTA Politics (330)
  • MTA Technology (195)
  • New Jersey Transit (53)
  • New York City Transit (220)
  • OMNY (3)
  • PANYNJ (113)
  • Paratransit (10)
  • Penn Station (18)
  • Penn Station Access (10)
  • Podcast (30)
  • Public Transit Policy (164)
  • Queens (129)
  • Rider Report Cards (31)
  • Rolling Stock (40)
  • Second Avenue Subway (262)
  • Self Promotion (77)
  • Service Advisories (612)
  • Service Cuts (118)
  • Sponsored Post (1)
  • Staten Island (52)
  • Straphangers Campaign (40)
  • Subway Advertising (45)
  • Subway Cell Service (34)
  • Subway History (81)
  • Subway Maps (83)
  • Subway Movies (14)
  • Subway Romance (13)
  • Subway Security (104)
  • Superstorm Sandy (35)
  • Taxis (43)
  • Transit Labor (151)
    • ATU (4)
    • TWU (100)
    • UTU (8)
  • Triboro RX (4)
  • U.S. Transit Systems (53)
    • BART (1)
    • Capital Metro (1)
    • CTA (7)
    • MBTA (11)
    • SEPTA (5)
    • WMATA (28)
  • View from Underground (447)

Archives

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram

@2019 - All Right Reserved.


Back To Top