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BMT Sea Beach Line

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The Sea Beach Line is a rapid transit line of the Template:BMT division of the New York City Subway, connecting the BMT Fourth Avenue Line subway via a four-track wide open cut to Coney Island. It has at times hosted the fastest express service between Manhattan and Coney Island, but now carries only local trains, and doesn't even reach Coney Island due to reconstruction.

Extent and service

The Sea Beach Line currently carries only Template:NYCS N trains over the two local tracks. The southernmost section, between Gravesend-86th Street and Stillwell Avenue-Coney Island, is closed for reconstruction.

The line begins as a split from the BMT Fourth Avenue Line at a flying junction south of 59th Street. Between the station and the split, double crossovers are provided between the local and express tracks of the Fourth Avenue Line, and then the express tracks curve east under the northbound local track to become the beginning of the Sea Beach Line. The line quickly widens to the width of four tracks, but the southbound express track is no longer in service. All stations have two side platforms, with no access to the express tracks anywhere but the ends of the line.

Just before Kings Highway, most of the way to Coney Island, the southbound express track begins at a crossover from the northbound express track. On both sides of Kings Highway, crossovers exist to allow express trains to switch to the local tracks before the station, or to allow local trains to switch to express after the station.

The express tracks end south of Gravesend-86th Street as the line becomes double-tracked, and cuts diagonally through the Coney Island Yards. After several yard connections, the line ends at the Stillwell Avenue-Coney Island terminal.

History

Like the other lines to Coney Island, the Sea Beach Line was once a steam-powered excursion railroad, named the New York and Sea Beach Railway. It was organized on September 25, 1876, and first opened for business on August 1, 1879, connecting the Bay Ridge Ferry from Whitehall Street, Manhattan with the Sea Beach Palace on Coney Island. Except at its two ends, the railroad used the same route as the current transit line. At the Bay Ridge end, the railroad ran just north of the Long Island Rail Road's Bay Ridge Branch, ending at the Bay Ridge Channel around 64th Street. The current line joins this alignment near Fifth Avenue. The old railroad crossed the Bay Ridge Branch with a pronounced S-curve just east of Seventh Avenue; the crossing is now much straighter, with the Bay Ridge Branch in a deeper cut. On the Coney Island end, the original path curved left soon after the curve to the right at the northern edge of the Coney Island Yards, ending at the combined Sea Beach Palace hotel and depot, on the north side of the BMT Brighton Line at around 10th Street.

In early 1896 the company went bankrupt, and it was reorganized on August 14, 1896 as the Sea Beach Railway. The Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (BRT) bought it on November 5, 1897, along with the short elevated Sea View Railway on Coney Island, and assigned it by lease to the Brooklyn Heights Railroad. It was soon fitted with overhead lines for electric operation as a branch of the BMT West End Line from Bath Junction to Coney Island, with trains coming from Park Place in Manhattan via the Brooklyn Bridge and BMT Third Avenue Line. Streetcars ran over the rest of the line to Bay Ridge. The realignment to West End Depot was built in 1907.

Part of a 1915 brochure for the line

On June 22, 1915, the new four-track open cut was completed, and subway trains started running between Coney Island and Chambers Street in lower Manhattan. The express tracks were finished several weeks later. When the BMT Fourth Avenue Line was extended south from the Sea Beach Line on January 15, 1916, the Sea Beach trains were shifted to the express tracks on Fourth Avenue, with Fourth Avenue trains providing local service.

The tracks over the north side of the Manhattan Bridge opened on September 4, 1917, along with part of the BMT Broadway Line. All Sea Beach service was moved to the new line, ending at 14th Street-Union Square. This was extended to 42nd Street-Times Square on January 5, 1918; it continued to end there for a long time.

In 1924 the Template:BMT assigned numbers to its services; the Sea Beach Line service became the 4. This has since become the N; see those pages for details on service. In general, Sea Beach service has always run express in Manhattan, ending at 42nd Street and later 57th Street. The NX was begun in 1967 as a "super-express" from Brighton Beach on the BMT Brighton Line through Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue and along the Sea Beach Line express tracks to 57th Street with only seven stops between Stillwell Avenue and 57th Street, three in Brooklyn and four in Manhattan. This service was canceled quickly due to low ridership; no regular trains have used the Sea Beach express tracks since.

In later years the N has been extended from 57th Street, first to Forest Hills-71st Avenue via the 60th Street Tunnel Connection and later to Astoria-Ditmars Boulevard, where it still terminates.

Station listing

Station Tracks Services Opened Transfers and notes
splits from the BMT Fourth Avenue Line (Template:NYCS N always, Template:NYCS R always)
Eighth Avenue local Template:NYCS N always
Fort Hamilton Parkway local Template:NYCS N always
New Utrecht Avenue local Template:NYCS N always D (BMT West End Line)
18th Avenue local Template:NYCS N always
20th Avenue local Template:NYCS N always
Bay Parkway local Template:NYCS N always
Kings Highway local Template:NYCS N always
Avenue U local Template:NYCS N always
Gravesend-86th Street local Template:NYCS N always
Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue all no regular service Q (BMT Brighton Line)
F and <F>​ (IND Culver Line)
D (BMT West End Line)

See also

Template:NYCS lines

References