Atlantic Branch

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Atlantic Branch

Atlantic Branch Map.svg
Overview
Type
Commuter rail
System
Long Island Rail Road
Status
Operational
Locale
Western Long Island, New York, USA
Termini
Atlantic Terminal
Valley Stream
Stations
8 passenger, 1 employee-only
Services

  Atlantic Branch
(City Terminal Zone)


  Far Rockaway Branch


  Long Beach Branch


  Babylon Branch


  West Hempstead Branch


  Belmont Park Branch

Operation
Opened
1836 (west of Jamaica)
1867 (east of Jamaica)
Owner
Long Island Rail Road
Operator(s)
Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Technical
Track gauge
4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Electrification
750 V (DC) third rail

Route map

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Legend








































































































































































































0.0 mi
0 km


Atlantic Terminal


"2" train"3" train"4" train"5" train








"B" train"Q" train"D" train"N" train"R" train"W" train






Atlantic Avenue Viaduct





1.6 mi
2.6 km


Nostrand Avenue


"A" train"C" train










4.0 mi
6.4 km


East New York

"L" train






Woodhaven


closed 1939






Woodhaven Junction


closed 1976






Clarenceville


closed 1939






Morris Park


closed 1939











Boland's Landing


employees only






Dunton


closed 1939









Montauk Branch
to Long Island City








Main Line
to Long Island City & Penn Station






Zone 1
Zone 3










AirTrain JFK
to JFK Airport









9.6 mi
15.4 km


Jamaica


"E" train​ ​"J" train"Z" train










Main Line









Montauk Branch
via St. Albans









Beaver Street


closed 1913










South Street


closed 1922










Cedar Manor


closed 1959









11.7 mi
18.8 km


Locust Manor









Higbie Avenue


closed 1960









13.1 mi
21.1 km


Laurelton








Montauk Branch
via St. Albans




13.8 mi
22.2 km


Rosedale






Queens/Nassau border


Zone 3
Zone 4





15.7 mi
25.3 km


Valley Stream








Far Rockaway Branch
to Far Rockaway








West Hempstead Branch
to West Hempstead








Long Beach Branch
to Long Beach




Babylon Branch
via Montauk to Babylon








Distances shown from Penn Station and Atlantic Terminal.



The Atlantic Branch is an electrified rail line owned and operated by the Long Island Rail Road in the U.S. state of New York. It is the only LIRR line that runs in the borough of Brooklyn.




Contents





  • 1 Description


  • 2 History

    • 2.1 Atlantic Terminal to Jamaica


    • 2.2 Jamaica to Valley Stream



  • 3 Stations


  • 4 See also


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




Description


Partly underground and partly elevated, the Atlantic Branch runs from Atlantic Terminal in Downtown Brooklyn to Valley Stream, in Nassau County, where it becomes the two-track Long Beach Branch with the two-track Far Rockaway Branch splitting southward just east of the Valley Stream station.


The section between Atlantic Terminal and Bedford Avenue is underground along Atlantic Avenue. From there the line is elevated above the median of Atlantic Avenue to Dewey Place (with a stop at Nostrand Avenue) before returning underground.


At East New York the line rises to street level to cross above the north-south, freight only Bay Ridge Branch, then descends once more to Jamaica. Between East New York and Jamaica, the intact but closed station at Woodhaven Junction is visible.


At 121st Street in Richmond Hill, Queens, the line rises to street level and passes the Morris Park Facility before joining the elevated Main Line at Jamaica.


It turns southeast immediately east of Jamaica, ducking beneath the eastward Main Line tracks. It curves parallel to the Montauk Branch after a few miles and continues next to it to Valley Interlocking in Valley Stream.


Atlantic Terminal saw completion in 2010 of $93 million in renovations, including a new entry pavilion.[1]



History


The current Atlantic Branch is the successor to two separate lines: the Brooklyn and Jamaica Railroad (opened 1836) along Atlantic Avenue from Flatbush Avenue to Jamaica, and the South Side Railroad of Long Island (opened 1867) from Jamaica to Valley Stream.





Woodhaven Junction power substation



Atlantic Terminal to Jamaica



The Brooklyn and Jamaica Railroad opened the line from South Ferry to what is now 151st Street in Jamaica on April 18, 1836.


Initially the line turned halfway between Classon and Franklin Avenues, running halfway between Herkimer Street and Schuyler Street (now Atlantic Avenue) along the line of the present Herkimer Place. It turned slightly to the southeast near Howard Avenue, crossing the centerline of Schuyler Street about one-third of the way between Hopkinson Avenue (Thomas Boyland Street) and Paca Avenue (Rockaway Avenue). It crossed into the town of New Lots just beyond Stone Avenue (Mother Gaston Boulevard).[2]


The Atlantic Branch was one of the first lines in the LIRR system slated to be electrified. In anticipation of this the entire line to Jamaica was to be grade separated. Between 1903 and 1905 the line was depressed into a tunnel from Flatbush Avenue to Bedford Avenue, then placed on an elevated viaduct from Bedford Avenue to Ralph Avenue then depressed back into a tunnel until Manhattan Crossing located just west of East New York station. At East New York the line returned to grade level then rose onto another elevated viaduct until Atkins Ave. The rest of the line from Atkins Ave to Morris Park located just west of Jamaica remained at grade level along Atlantic Avenue with numerous grade crossings with the anticipation of grade separating the line later on. Additionally a new terminal and yard was built at Flatbush and Atlantic Avenues. Electric service commenced in 1905 with the line consisting of two tracks between Flatbush Avenue and Woodhaven Junction and four tracks beyond that point to Jamaica.


LIRR then ran two services along the line: the traditional commuter type services from points on eastern Long Island to Flatbush Avenue, along with what was called the "local" rapid transit type service, frequent elevated/subway like service at lower fare between Flatbush Ave and Queens Village (although referred to as a rapid transit type service, standard LIRR cars were used, and the service was operated by railroad rules, as opposed to rapid transit). At this time the line from Jamaica to East New York had many more stations along Atlantic Avenue spaced at closer intervals, much like an elevated/subway rapid transit line. The four tracks between Jamaica and Woodhaven Junction lent itself to this service with rapid transit trains using the outer two tracks while commuter trains used the inner two tracks.


In November 1925 25 "local" trains left Brooklyn each weekday for Queens Village, 12 more ran to Hillside, and 16 more ran to Jamaica. All trains made all stops, 15 of them west of Queens Village. Fare was probably 10 cents for 13 miles Queens Village to Brooklyn, compared to about 40 cents on "express" LIRR trains making six or seven stops (but a monthly ticket good on any train was $7.10).


For a while the LIRR operated joint service along the Atlantic Branch with the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company (BRT) consisting of two connections, one with the Fifth Ave El at Flatbush Avenue, and another with the Broadway and Lexington Avenue els with a connection built at Chestnut Street in Brooklyn. This allowed BRT trains to access the Rockaways and Manhattan Beach, while affording the LIRR a connection into Manhattan to the BRT terminal located at Park Row over the Brooklyn Bridge (this service predated the opening of the East River Tunnels to Penn Station). Nevertheless the Interstate Commerce Commission ended this service in 1916 when they classified different operating standards between rapid transit trains and regular heavy rail railroads which the LIRR was classified as.


By the late 1930s it was clear that the rest of the line needed to be grade separated. Much of the surrounding area along Atlantic Avenue in Ozone Park and Richmond Hill began their suburban development leading to more traffic along Atlantic Avenue which was plagued by the lines many grade crossings. The City of New York along with the LIRR thus allocated the funds to depress the rest of the line from Morris Park to East New York in a tunnel. Building of the tunnel commenced in 1939 (although plans to build the tunnel date back to 1893) with two of the line's four tracks being pulled out of service and the rapid transit service being discontinued.


On December 28, 1942[3] the tunnel was completed and opened with the two remaining at-grade tracks pulled out of service. Around this time Atlantic Avenue was raised over the East New York station via a viaduct that separated the road and the railroad. The elevated trestle from East New York to Atkins Avenue was also demolished as it had been included in the new tunnel to Jamaica. Only one station was included in the new tunnel: Woodhaven Junction, where the Atlantic Branch crossed under the Rockaway Beach Branch. An interlocking and track connection was built just west of the Woodhaven Junction station to connect the two lines, but these closed after the abandonment of the Rockaway Beach Branch between 1955 and 1962.




Replacement of the Atlantic Avenue Viaduct at Nostrand Avenue in July 2011.



Jamaica to Valley Stream



The portion east of Jamaica was opened by the South Side Railroad of Long Island on October 28, 1867, as part of its initial line from Jamaica to Babylon. With the consolidation of the South Side into the Long Island Rail Road system in 1876, all passenger trains were rerouted to use the LIRR main line from Berlin Junction (west of Jamaica) to Rockaway Junction and the LIRR's Rockaway Branch to Springfield Junction, where it crossed the South Side. This change took effect Sunday, June 25, 1876, and resulted in the closure of the South Side's Berlin, Beaver Street (Jamaica), Locust Avenue, and Springfield stations.[4][5] This formed the current configuration, where the Montauk Branch follows this route, mostly ex-South Side, and the Atlantic Branch (then the Old Southern Road) uses the old South Side to Springfield Junction.


The line was soon reopened due to a lawsuit, but closed again by Austin Corbin as of January 6, 1881.[6]


Effective May 17, 1906, when an electrified third track opened alongside the Montauk Division from Springfield Junction to Valley Stream, the Old Southern Road and this new track became part of the Atlantic Division.[7]



Stations

















































































































































































































































































































Zone
Station
Miles (km)
from AT
Date
opened
Date
closed
Connections / notes
1

South Ferry





Henry Street





Clinton Street





Atlantic Terminal Handicapped/disabled access
0.0 (0.0)[8]1877


BSicon SUBWAY.svgNYC Subway: "2" train"3" train"4" train"5" train"B" train"D" train"N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train​ (at Atlantic Avenue – Barclays Center)
Bus transportNYCT Bus: B41, B45, B63, B65, B67

Previously Flatbush Avenue



Vanderbilt Avenue

1877[9]before 1890[10]

Washington Avenue

c. 1878[11]before 1890


Grand Avenue

1877[9]c. 1878[11]

Bedford
1.2 (1.9)[10]c. 1842[12]c.1900[8]Formerly Franklin Avenue; Connected to the Brooklyn, Flatbush and Coney Island Railway

Nostrand Avenue
1.6 (2.5)[10]1877[9]

BSicon SUBWAY.svgNYC Subway: "A" train"C" train (at Nostrand Avenue)
Bus transportNYCT Bus: B25, B44, B44 SBS, B65

Brooklyn Avenue

1877[9]before 1890[13]

Kingston Avenue





Albany Avenue

1877[9]before 1890


Troy Avenue
2.3 (3.7)[10]1877[9][13]c. 1899[10]

Schenectady Avenue

c. 1878[11]before 1890


Utica Avenue
2.6 (4.1)[10]1877[9][13]c. 1899[10]

Rochester Avenue

1877[9]before 1890


Ralph Avenue

1877[9]before 1890


Saratoga Avenue





Hopkinson Avenue

1877[9]c. 1878[11]

Rockaway Avenue

c. 1878[11]before 1890


Stone Avenue

1877[9]c. 1878[11]

East New York
3.4 (6.4)[10]c.1848[14]

BSicon SUBWAY.svgNYC Subway: "L" train (at Atlantic Avenue)
"A" train"C" train"J" train"Z" train (at Broadway Junction)
Bus transportNYCT Bus: B12, B20, B25, B83, Q24, Q56

Originally Manhattan Beach Railroad Crossing



Howard House
4.1 (6.6)[10]c. 1843[15]1905
Originally East New York

Pennsylvania Avenue





Wyckoff Avenue

c. 1878[16]


Bradford Avenue

1899[10][17]


Van Siclen Avenue

c. 1878[18]


Warwick Street
4.9 (7.9)[19]1905
1939[20]

Linwood Street
5.0 (8.1)[10]c. 1878[11]c.1899[10]Originally Van Wicklens

Norwood Avenue
5.3 (8.6)[10]c. 1890[13]1915[21]

Cypress Avenue

c. 1853[22]c.1890[13]

Cypress Hills

c. 1849[23]


Autumn Avenue
5.8 (9.3)[8]1905
1939[21]Originally Railroad Avenue

Adamsville

1872[21][24]1876[21]

City Line





Unionville




Union Course
6.3 (10.1)[8]c. 1842[25]1939[21]

Woodhaven
6.7 (10.8)[10]c. 1848[26]1939[21]Originally Woodville

Trotting Course Lane

1837[21]1842[21]

Woodhaven Junction
7.2 (11.6)[10]c. 1890[13]1977


Chester Park





Clarenceville
7.8 (12.5)[10]c. 1874[24]1939[21]

Lefferts Avenue

c. 1867
1870[21]

Morris Park
8.1 (13.0)[10]c. 1890[13]1939[21]

Morris Grove

1878
1886


Boland's Landing

1889

Also known as the Morris Park Facility, Employee only station

Berlin





Berlin Junction





Montauk Branch converges at Dunton Interlocking

Dunton
8.9 (14.3)[10]1869
1939
Originally Van Wyck Avenue, then Berlin
3

Jamaica Handicapped/disabled access

1836


BSicon BAHN.svgLIRR; Babylon, Belmont Park, Far Rockaway, Hempstead, Long Beach,
Montauk, Oyster Bay, Port Jefferson, Ronkonkoma, and West Hempstead Branches
BSicon SUBWAY.svgNYC Subway: "E" train​ ​"J" train"Z" train (at Sutphin Boulevard – Archer Avenue – JFK Airport)
Bus transportNYCT Bus: Q20A, Q20B, Q24, Q30, Q31, Q43, Q44 SBS, Q54, Q56
Bus transportMTA Bus: Q6, Q8, Q9, Q25, Q34, Q40, Q41, Q60, Q65
Bus transportNICE Bus: n4
BSicon TRAM.svgAirTrain JFK: Jamaica Station Route

Beaver Street
9.6 (15.4)[8]1867
1913
Also known as Jamaica—Beaver Street

South Street

1917
1922


Cedar Manor
10.8 (17.4)[8]1906
1959
Originally Power Place

Locust Manor
11.7 (18.8)[8]1869


Bus transportNYCT Bus: Q3 (to JFK Airport), Q85

Originally Locust Avenue



Higbie Avenue
12.6 (20.3)[8]1908
1960
Originally Springfield

Springfield

1867
1906


Laurelton
13.1 (21.1)[8]1907


Bus transportNYCT Bus: Q77, Q85

Originally Central Avenue



Montauk Branch converges at Springfield Junction

Rosedale
13.8 (22.2)[8]


Bus transportNYCT Bus: Q5, Q85

Originally Foster's Meadow



Queens / Nassau county line
4

Valley Stream Handicapped/disabled access
15.7 (25.3)[8]1869


Bus transportNICE Bus: n1, Elmont Flexi

Trains continue south via the Far Rockaway Branch or east via the Long Beach, Babylon, West Hempstead and Montauk Branches


See also



  • Lower Manhattan-Jamaica/JFK Transportation Project - A defunct proposal to use the LIRR Atlantic Branch in a new direct JFK connection to Lower Manhattan


References




  1. ^ Governor Tours Atlantic Avenue Terminal Improvement Project: $200 Million Project Underway at Terminal Complex in Brooklyn, press release dated July 11, 2002


  2. ^ Joseph Hutchins Colton, Map of the city of Brooklyn, 1849, NYPL Digital Image ID: 434722


  3. ^

    • "NEW RAIL TUNNEL TO OPEN MONDAY; First Trains for Public to Run in the Underground Route in Atlantic Ave" (December 26, 1942). New York Times Company. December 26, 1942. Retrieved April 23, 2015. 


    • "ATLANTIC AVE. TUBE OPEN; First Long Island Train Passes Through at 2:47 A. M." (December 28, 1942). New York Times Company. December 28, 1942. Retrieved April 23, 2015. 


    • "Tunnel Opened on Atlantic Avenue for L.I. Trains; Project Eliminates 20 Hazardous Grade Crossings in Its Run" (PDF) (December 31, 1942). Leader Observer (Queens/Brooklyn, NY). December 31, 1942. p. 1. Retrieved April 23, 2015. 




  4. ^ Vincent F. Seyfried, The Long Island Rail Road: A Comprehensive History, Part One: South Side R.R. of L.I., © 1961


  5. ^ "Railroad Changes". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 27 June 1876. p. 2. 


  6. ^ "Without Railroad Accommodation". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 22 February 1881. p. 4. 


  7. ^ Employee timetable, May 17, 1906


  8. ^ abcdefghijk Employee timetable, May 17, 1906


  9. ^ abcdefghijk "Steam Motors". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 12 August 1877. p. 4. 


  10. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqr Employee timetable, June 28, 1899


  11. ^ abcdefg Employee timetable, November 4, 1878


  12. ^ "Long Island Railroad". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 13 May 1842. p. 2. 


  13. ^ abcdefg Employee timetable, June 24, 1890


  14. ^ Timetable


  15. ^ "Long Island Railroad Co". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 4 March 1843. p. 3. 


  16. ^ "Instructive". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 22 November 1878. p. 4. 


  17. ^ Employee timetable, September 17, 1899


  18. ^ "Shocking". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 14 November 1878. p. 4. 


  19. ^ Employee timetable, September 20, 1905


  20. ^ LIRR Notice for November 1, 1939


  21. ^ abcdefghijk "Long Island Railroad Station History" (PDF). Aug 12, 2012. Retrieved 2012-09-17. 


  22. ^ "Travel". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 16 June 1853. p. 4. 


  23. ^ "The New Cemetery of the Cypress Hills". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 9 April 1849. p. 2. 


  24. ^ ab Timetable, November 8, 1874


  25. ^ "Races, Union Course--Long Island Railroad". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. 3 October 1842. p. 3. 


  26. ^ Timetable, May 1, 1848



External links


Media related to Atlantic Branch (Long Island Rail Road) at Wikimedia Commons



  • 1884 and 1900 Maps of the Atlantic Branch and Vicinity (Arrt's Arrchives)




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