Puneet Varma (Editor)

Parkside Avenue (BMT Brighton Line)

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Division
  
B (BMT)

Services
  
Q  (all times)

Former/other names
  
Woodruff Avenue

Borough
  
Brooklyn

Locale
  
Prospect-Lefferts Gardens

Line
  
BMT Brighton Line

Platforms
  
2 side platforms

Opened
  
1907

Structure
  
Cut

Tracks
  
4

Parkside Avenue (BMT Brighton Line)

Transit connections
  
New York City Bus: B12, B16

Address
  
Brooklyn, NY 11226, United States

Similar
  
Church Avenue, Cortelyou Road, Newkirk Plaza, Beverley Road, Avenue H

Parkside Avenue is a local station on the BMT Brighton Line of the New York City Subway. Located at Parkside Avenue and Ocean Avenue in Flatbush, Brooklyn, it is served by the Q train at all times.

Contents

History

This station opened in 1907 as a two-track station named Woodruff Avenue.

This portion of the line was rebuilt from a two-track open cut to a four-track open cut in 1919.

After August 1, 1920, through service was shifted from the current BMT Franklin Avenue Line to a new subway alignment under Flatbush Avenue, which permitted direct access to Manhattan via the Manhattan Bridge and the Montague Street Tunnel.

During the 1964–1965 fiscal year, the platforms at Parkside Avenue, along with those at six other stations on the Brighton Line, were lengthened to 615 feet to accommodate a ten-car train of 60-foot IND cars, or a nine-car train of 67-foot BMT cars.

Station layout

This station currently has four tracks and two side platforms. The two center express tracks are used by the B train when it operates on weekdays.

The original southern two-thirds of the platforms are in a tunnel underneath cross streets and buildings, while the remaining northern one third is in an open cut. The extreme north ends of the platforms, which were extensions built in the 1960s, have no canopies and curve to the north. The southbound platform has its concrete wall painted beige while the northbound one is carved within the Earth's crust. Here, the station signs are the standard black plates in white lettering. The rest of the open cut has a concrete canopy with red columns. The remainder of the platforms in the tunnel has red columns and a red trim line and mosaic name tablets reading "PARKSIDE AVE." in gold Times New Roman font surrounded by diamonds.

The 1994 artwork here is called Brighton Clay Re-Leaf by Susan Tunick. It features ceramic tiles portraying leaves in the station house within fare control. This artwork can also be found at the Prospect Park station.

Exits

The station's main entrance/exit is a street level station house on the northern end of the tunnel above the platforms and tracks. Two staircases from each platform go up to a waiting area/crossover, where a turnstile bank provides entrance/exit from the system. Outside fare control, there is a token booth and two sets of doors, one leading to Parkside Avenue and Ocean Avenue and the other to the southern entrance of Prospect Park.

The Coney Island-bound platform has an exit-only at the extreme south end. A single platform-level turnstile leads to a short tunnel, where a staircase goes up to the southwest corner of Woodruff and Ocean Avenues. The extreme south end of the Manhattan-bound platform has an employee-only facility.

References

Parkside Avenue (BMT Brighton Line) Wikipedia


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