Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Wilson Avenue (BMT Canarsie Line)

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Division
  
B (BMT)

Services
  
L  (all times)

Opened
  
14 July 1928

Locale
  
Bushwick

Level
  
2

Line
  
BMT Canarsie Line

Levels
  
2

Borough
  
Brooklyn

Added to NRHP
  
6 July 2005

Tracks
  
2 (1 on each level)

Wilson Avenue (BMT Canarsie Line)

Structure
  
Elevated (southbound) covered at-grade (northbound)

Platforms
  
2 side platforms (1 on each level)

Address
  
Brooklyn, NY 11207, United States

Similar
  
Bushwick, Canarsie–Rockaway Parkway, Bushwick Avenue–Aberdeen Street, Halsey Street, East 105th Street

Wilson Avenue is a station on the BMT Canarsie Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of Wilson Avenue and Moffat Street in Brooklyn, it is served by the L train at all times.

Contents

History

Wilson Avenue opened on July 14, 1928, as part of an extension of the Canarsie Line. This extension connected Montrose Avenue, which had opened four years earlier, to Broadway Junction, which was the western end of the already-operating elevated line to Canarsie.

On September 21, 1984, Irma Lozada, a New York City Transit Police officer, was murdered at an abandoned lot south of the station. Lozada was part of the Plain Clothes Anti-Crime (PCAC) unit when she was gunned down by Darryl Jeter, a chain snatcher that took her service gun as she attempted to arrest him for stealing a necklace from an L train rider. Lozada was the first policewoman to be killed in action in New York City.

Station layout

The station, which was designed by Robert Ridgway and Squire J. Vickers, has some features that are not found elsewhere in the system. It is squeezed in between the Most Holy Trinity Cemetery, to the east, and the New York Connecting Railroad (NYCR) and the Long Island Railroad (LIRR) Bay Ridge Branch, to the west. The two tracks and two side platforms are on different levels, making Wilson Avenue the only station on the Canarsie Line where this occurs. Since the platforms are on different levels, each has a different design. The southbound side sits on a low elevated structure; immediately south of the station, the southbound track passes over Central Avenue before descending into a tunnel toward Bushwick Avenue–Aberdeen Street. The northbound side is immediately below the southbound side, and the station gives the impression of being underground, but it is really at street level.

The southbound (upper level) platform has a canopy along the entire length of the platform, supported by a beige concrete retaining wall with curved green supports extending from the wall at regular intervals. A fence runs along the track side of the southbound platform, separating the subway station from the Most Holy Trinity Cemetery, which is visible directly through the fence. The northbound (lower level) platform has tiling and name plaques, which is typical for a Canarsie Line underground station. A concrete wall closes off the east side of the lower level. The mosaic band is predominantly green at edges with a vivid multicolored design throughout, twenty-eight colors in all. The trackside wall once had tiles that matched those of the platform, but these tiles were removed sometime after 1982, and the trackside wall is currently the same plain, dark color as a typical New York City Subway tunnel wall.

A renovation, costing between three and five million dollars, added handicapped access to the ground-level Manhattan-bound platform under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) via the use of a ramp from the Wilson Avenue entrance. The elevated Canarsie-bound platform was not proposed to get ADA access since it would be much more costly to add an elevator up to the Canarsie-bound level.

Exit

There is one entrance and exit to the station, which is in a dead-end at the foot of Wilson Avenue, just east of Moffat Street. There are five steps leading up to the station entrance, as well as a wheelchair ramp. The entrance feeds directly onto the northbound platform with stairs to southbound service on the upper level.

References

Wilson Avenue (BMT Canarsie Line) Wikipedia