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Accessibility of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority

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An elevator on the sidewalk outside the 66th Street–Lincoln Center station, leading down to the platform
Street elevator serving as an entrance to the underground 66th Street–Lincoln Center station

The physical accessibility of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA)'s public transit network, serving the New York metropolitan area, is incomplete. Although all buses are wheelchair-accessible in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), much of the MTA's rail system was built before wheelchair access was a requirement under the ADA. This includes the MTA's rapid transit systems, the New York City Subway and Staten Island Railway, and its commuter rail services, the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) and Metro-North Railroad. Consequently, most stations were not designed to be accessible to people with disabilities, and many MTA facilities lack accessible announcements, signs, tactile components, and other features.

A state law, the New York Human Rights Law, prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability. Since 1990, elevators have been built in newly constructed stations to comply with the ADA, with most grade-level stations requiring little modification to meet ADA standards. Additionally, the MTA identified 100 "key stations", high-traffic and/or geographically important stations on the subway system, which have been or are being renovated to comply with the ADA.[1][a] One of the key tenets of the Fast Forward Plan to rescue the subway system released in 2018 is to drastically increase the number of ADA-accessible subway stations, adding accessible facilities to 70 stations by 2024.

Background[]

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has been gradually adding disabled access to its key stations since the 1980s, though large portions of the MTA's transit system are still inaccessible. According to the MTA:

In improving services to individuals with disabilities, the MTA identified stations and facilities where compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) would benefit the most people, analyzing such factors as high ridership, transfer points, and service to major areas of activity. These stations were given priority in our station-renovation program. We are continuing to expand accessibility features to more and more locations.[2]

According to the MTA, fully accessible stations have:

  • elevators or ramps[2]
  • handrails on ramps and stairs[2][3]: 254 
  • large-print and tactile-Braille signs[2][3]: 254 
  • audio and visual information systems, including Help Points or Public Address Customer Information Screens[2][3]: 254 
  • accessible station booth windows with sills located no more than 36 inches (91 cm) above the ground[2][4]: F.3 
  • accessible MetroCard Vending Machines[2]
  • accessible service entry gates[2]
  • platform-edge warning strips[2]
  • platform gap modifications or bridge plates to reduce or eliminate the gap between trains and platforms where it is greater than 2 inches (5.1 cm) vertically or 4 inches (10 cm) horizontally[2][4]: F.3 
  • telephones at an accessible height with volume control, and text telephones (TTYs)[2][4]: F.3 
  • accessible restrooms at stations with restrooms, if a 24-hour public toilet is in operation[2][4]: F.3 
    • Note: not all station buildings have restrooms.[2]

Major bus stops are also required to have bus stop announcements under the ADA. The MTA is required to maintain these components under the ADA law; for instance, buses with malfunctioning lifts will be taken out of service.[3]: 254 

History[]

1970s and 1980s[]

Ramp leading to an accessible restroom at the Church Avenue station on the IND Culver Line
Accessible restroom at Church Avenue station on the IND Culver Line

In 1973, the Federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 was signed into law, and one provision of it, Section 504, was initially interpreted to require all public transit systems to become equally accessible to the disabled or risk losing Federal funding. The MTA resisted this interpretation, arguing that making the required improvements would cost more than $1.5 billion. MTA Chairman Harold Fisher argued in favor of a separate transportation system for the disabled since it would be too expensive to make the regular system accessible.[5] The MTA Board, in 1980, voted to ignore the rule in spite of threats from the federal government that the agency would forfeit Federal funding.[6]

On September 27, 1979, the Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association (EPVA) filed a lawsuit in the New York Supreme Court that sought to block subway modernization projects from proceeding unless elevators were installed in stations, as per a state law that required that access for handicapped riders be provided. This was the first lawsuit in New York challenging a state agency for not being in compliance with the Public Buildings Law and the first lawsuit to argue state laws required public transit systems to add wheelchair lifts on buses and elevators in train and subway stations. The lawsuit also charged that the MTA was in defiance of New York's Human Rights Law, which outlaws discrimination, for denying people with disabilities from using public transit facilities. The EPVA decided to go ahead with the lawsuit despite the existence of the Federal regulations because it feared a lawsuit by the American Public Transportation Association (APTA), which sought to overturn the rules as being financially burdensome, might be successful.[5]

In 1981, the Reagan administration reinterpreted Section 504, requiring that transit agencies demonstrate that they were making their best efforts to provide adequate transportation for people in wheelchairs. As a result, the MTA agreed to purchase more than 2,000 buses with wheelchair lifts, which would make 50% of its bus fleet accessible.[6] In 1983, less than a third of the system's 3,600 buses were equipped with these lifts.[7]

In December 1982, the New York State Supreme Court ruled in favor of the EPVA, and on January 4, 1983, the Court judge officially signed an order that barred 10 station renovation projects in the MTA's first Capital Program from proceeding until an agreement was reached regarding accessibility in the New York City transit system, which the MTA appealed. The judge based the ruling on a state law that required wheelchair access to projects that were renovated using state funds. The MTA had argued that it had already provide a transportation option for the disabled by ordering buses with wheelchair lifts, and that the state law in question, the public buildings law, did not apply to subway stations, and that the planned projects were repairs, not renovations.[6]

Work at ten station renovation projects underway were placed on hold, and work at 78 others were shelved by the MTA, which feared that work would again be halted by the courts. Following the decision, the MTA asked the New York State Legislature to exempt the agency from the law requiring transportation be accessible to people with disabilities. MTA Chairman Richard Ravitch said that "the costs of station accessibility are enormous and the benefits illusory", arguing that few people would use the elevators, and noting that it would cost $1 million to make each station accessible, and the high cost of maintenance and security requirements. The MTA had offered the EPVA to set up an on-request paratransit service, which the group rejected, while the EPVA offered to make 27 key stations accessible, including Fordham Road, Forest Hills–71st Avenue, Atlantic Avenue, Times Square–42nd Street, and 125th Street, which was rejected by the MTA.[8]

On December 22, 1983, State Senate Minority Leader Manfred Ohrenstein proposed legislation that would make 27 key stations accessible and provide funding for a paratransit service, allowing renovations at the 88 stations to commence. Following the announcement, the MTA entertained installing elevators at a limited number of stations being renovated for the first time. Senator Ohrenstein estimated that it would cost $25 to 35 million to make the 27 stations accessible, and cost $55 million per year for the paratransit service. $30 million of the cost for paratransit service would be borne by Transit Authority revenues, $7 million would come from fares, and the remainder would come from third party payments like Medicare and Medicaid. The proposed legislation listed ten stations in Manhattan, four in The Bronx, seven in Brooklyn, and six in Queens. The bill also would have required half of buses to be equipped with wheelchair lifts, and created a 15-member Handicapped Transportation Board to oversee the paratransit system.[9]

In March 1984, the MTA, the office of Governor Mario Cuomo, and advocates for the disabled began working on an agreement to permit the agency to begin work on it subway station modernization program. On June 21, 1984, Mayor Ed Koch blocked an agreement that had been reached in principle to resolve the impasse.[10] The agreement would have required the MTA to spend $5 million a year over eight years to make about 40 stations accessible and equipped every bus on the system with wheelchair lifts within fifteen years. He opposed making stations accessible, writing, "I have concluded that it is simply wrong to spend $50 million in the next eight years—and ultimately more—in putting elevators in the subways."[11]

On June 29, 1984, Governor Cuomo and the leaders of the State Assembly and State Senate reached a settlement agreement in spite of Mayor Koch's objections. The agreement amended the New York State Transportation and Building Laws to require the MTA to install elevators in 54 stations, of which 38 were designated in the legislation, while eight were to be chosen by the MTA, with the remaining eight to be chosen by a new 11-member New York City Transportation Disabled Committee. The MTA would be required to spend $5 million a year over eight years to make station accessible and to equip 65 percent of buses wheelchair lifts. At least eight stations had to become accessible within five years of when the legislation took effect. The New York City Transportation Disabled Committeee would develop a plan for a pilot paratransit service within 210 days. The service would have a $5 million annual budget.[12][13]: 1–2  The legislation was signed into law by Governor Cuomo on July 23, 1984 and the MTA Board approved a resolution in agreement with the legislation on July 25, 1984. A settlement agreement was approved on September 24, 1984, allowing the MTA to start work renovating 88 subway stations.[14]

1990s and 2000s[]

Accessible ramp along the eastbound platform of the Bayside Long Island Rail Road station
Rear of the accessible ramp along the eastbound platform of the Bayside Long Island Rail Road station

On July 26, 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 was signed into law, requiring all transit systems to making their services and facilities fully accessible to people with disabilities. A provision of the legislation required all transit agencies to submit a key station plan to the FTA by July 26, 1992. As part of the plan, agencies were required to include the methodology they used to select key stations and a timeline for the completion of the accessibility improvements. Though stations were required to be made accessible by July 1993, transit agencies were granted permission to extend the deadline by as many as thirty years. As part of New York City Transit's key station plan, 54 stations were to be made ADA-accessible by 2010.[13]: 2 

Between 1986 and 1991, the number of handicapped people using buses in New York City increased from 11,000 rides a year to 120,000. In 1991, ninety percent of buses were equipped with wheelchair lifts and ten of the 54 key stations were made wheelchair-accessible; at the time, 20 of 469 subway stations had ramps or elevators.[7] The New York City Transit Authority had also made efforts to improve training for its employees and bus operators to on how to assist people with disabilities and on how to operate wheelchair lifts. At least one train car in each subway train had to be accessible by 1993, and major subway stations were supposed to be retrofitted with elevators or ramps by 1995.[7]

The MTA created the New York City Transit ADA Compliance Coordination Committee (CCC) in June 1992. The committee works to coordinate the MTA's accessibility plan, as well as reaches out to disabled MTA riders.[3]: 253  The MTA also provides training to disabled riders, the families of disabled riders, and mobility specialists. Between 1995 and 2019, it has trained 775 passengers.[3]: 308 

In 1994, amendments were made to the New York State Transportation and Public Building Laws, increasing the key station obligation from 54 stations to a list of 100 stations to be completed by 2020. Of the 100 new stations, 91 were specified immediately, including 37 additional stations that were chosen in accordance with FTA and MTA criteria and discussions at five public forums. The remaining nine stations were to be selected following discussions with the Transportation Disabled Committee and public advocates.[13]: 2  However, this revision also stipulated that the subway and Staten Island Railway were exempt from making accessibility modifications that were, by law, required for other public buildings.[3]: 261  Shortly after this modification, 66th Street–Lincoln Center (1 train) and Prospect Park–Brighton (B, ​Q, and ​S trains) were added to the list of 91 stations. There were also three options for modifying the list of 91 stations. They included adding Broadway–Lafayette Street (B, ​D, ​F, <F>, and ​M trains) and Bleecker Street (6 and <6>​ trains); replacing Broad Street with Chambers Street (both served by the J and ​Z trains) and Church Avenue with Kings Highway (both served by the B and ​Q trains); or modifying dates for several key stations. The public supported all of these options.[3]: 247 

On February 25, 1994, the MTA Board approved the submission of the bill to the Governor to expand the key station obligation from the 54 stations in the plan at the time and 37 additional stations to be completed through 2020. In May 1994, the Board approved the addition of contracts to make seven of the 37 stations accessible during station renovation projects between 1994 and 1996 to the 1992–1996 Capital Program. These stations were 14th Street, Eighth Avenue, 207th Street, Church Avenue, 72nd Street, Lexington Avenue and 47th–50th Streets–Rockefeller Center. The first two were set to be awarded in 1994, the next two in 1995, and the final three in 1996. The contracts were added on the assumption that the bill would be signed so as to not delay the projects and to avoid having to return to the stations after their renovation projects were completed to add elevators. These projects required $60.9 million.[4]: F.1–F.10 

The Federal Transit Administration approved the list of 95 key stations in June 2000. Far Rockaway–Mott Avenue (A train) and East 180th Street (2 and ​5 trains) were added to the 100-station list in 2000 and 2002, respectively. Subsequently, a new South Ferry station (1 train) and the existing Eastern Parkway–Brooklyn Museum station (2, ​3, ​4, and ​5 trains) were respectively selected in 2003 and 2004. The hundredth station was the subject of some debate, but the MTA ultimately decided to choose Bedford Park Boulevard (B and ​D trains).[3]: 261 

The MTA started posting a list of out of service elevators and escalators on its website in August 2007. In December 2007, the MTA Board voted on a $1.3 million contract to connect the system's elevators and escalators to a computerized monitoring system so breakdowns could be dealt with more quickly.[15]

2010s to present[]

On October 13, 2010, the United Spinal Association filed a class action lawsuit against the MTA for not making the Dyckman Street station accessible as part of a station renovation project, arguing that the agency violated the ADA by not allocating twenty percent of the project budget to improving access to disabled people.[16] The MTA had not planned to make the station accessible due to a lack of funds, and as it was not identified by the agency as a key station.[17] On July 21, 2010, the United Spinal Association announced that it had reached a settlement with the MTA to install an elevator to the southbound platform of the station by 2014. An elevator was not installed to the northbound platform as the MTA argued that doing so was not feasible due to the layout of the landmarked station.[18]

As part of the 2015–2019 Capital Program, $300 million was allocated to enhance station access and provide ADA-accessibility at fifteen stations chosen by the city. Four stations were chosen in January 2018: 170th Street (4 train), Broadway Junction (A and ​C trains' platforms), Livonia Avenue (L train), and Queensboro Plaza (7, <7>​​, N, and ​W trains). Four more stations are being evaluated. These stations are the J and ​Z trains' platforms at Broadway Junction, as well as Union Street (R train), Vernon Boulevard–Jackson Avenue (7 and <7>​ trains), and East Broadway (F and <F>​ trains).[19][20] In April 2018, the MTA added an ADA-accessibility project at Westchester Square–East Tremont Avenue (6 and <6>​ trains) as part of the 2015–2019 Capital Program.[21]

The MTA hired Stantec in February 2018 to determine the feasibility and cost of making all subway stations ADA-accessible. The study Stantec completed was used to determine which stations would be made accessible the agency's 2020–2024 Capital Program. It found that it would be impossible to make the southbound platform at the 14th Street–Union Square station on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line accessible due to the station's curvature. In addition, making the Court Street station was not found to be feasible due to the significant amount of conduits that would have to be rerouted.[22]

Accessible ramp leading to the northbound platform of the Irvington Metro-North station
Accessible ramp leading to the northbound platform at the Irvington Metro-North station

In 2018, as part of the MTA's Fast Forward program to improve subway and bus service, an Executive Accessibility Advisor was hired at New York City Transit Authority chief Andy Byford's request, reporting directly to Byford.[23] However, the MTA's efforts were still seen as inadequate. After a woman died in January 2019 from falling down a staircase at Seventh Avenue, a station with no elevators, officials criticized the MTA for not adding enough elevators, and one advocacy group released an unofficial map of stations that should receive accessibility upgrades.[24][25][26]

As of May 2018, ADA-accessibility projects are expected to be started or completed at fifty stations as part of the 2020–2024 Capital Program.[27] This would allow one of every two to four stations on every line to be accessible, so that all non-accessible stops would be a maximum of two stops from an accessible station.[28]: 37  In June 2018, it was announced that the Sixth Avenue station on the L train would receive elevators following the 14th Street Tunnel shutdown in 2019–2020.[29] As part of the plan to add fifty ADA-accessible stations, the MTA surveyed the 345 non-accessible stations for possible ADA-accessibility.[30]: 93–94  After the accessibility report was released in February 2019, the MTA indicated that it might possibly only retrofit 36 of 50 stations because of a lack of funding.[31] However, in the draft 2020–2024 Capital Program released in September 2019, it was indicated that 66 stations might receive ADA improvements.[32] Plans for ADA access at another 20 stations were announced that December.[33][34] The news outlet The City did an analysis of the 2020–2024 Capital Program, and found that the cost of replacing nineteen elevators in the system in had doubled from $69 million to $134 million.[35]

On April 23, 2019, the Suffolk Independent Living Organization filed a class action lawsuit against the MTA for not making the Amityville, Copiague, and Lindenhurst stations on the Long Island Rail Road accessible after the agency spent $5 million renovating escalators at the stations from 2015 to 2016. The MTA reached a settlement with the Suffolk Independent Living Organization on July 10, 2020, agreeing to make the three station fully compliant with the ADA, including the installation of elevators. Work on these projects was to be completed by June 2023, with funding to come out of the MTA's 2020–2024 Capital Program.[36] In December 2020, the MTA Board voted to approve a $149 million contract to install seventeen elevators to make seven subway stations and one Staten Island Railway station accessible, and a fifteen-year $8 million contract for elevator maintenance. The MTA used Federal grant money for the Penn Station Access project that would have otherwise expired. The initial cost to make these eight stations accessible was $581 million. The cost of the project was reduced by planning to make the stations accessible without constructing machine rooms, which require additional excavation and underground utility relocation.[37]

In early 2021, the MTA announced it was proposing a zoning law, Zoning for Accessibility, which would increase the number of subway elevators by placing many of them on private property. Under the proposed legislation, developers of lots adjacent to subway stations would meet with the MTA to determine whether an elevator entrance could be constructed. If such an entrance was included in a building, the developers could receive "density bonuses" that would allow them to add more space in their buildings.[38][39][40]

Criticism[]

The MTA has been criticized for its inaccessibility, particularly in the New York City Subway.[41][42] Only 25% of the city's 472 subway stations were accessible in 2018, among the lowest percentages of any major transit system in the world.[43] There are some lines where two accessible stations are separated by ten or more non-accessible stops.[26] By contrast, Boston's MBTA subway and the Chicago "L", which are as old or older than the New York City Subway, have higher rates of accessible subway stations.[44][45] A report from the New York City Comptroller published in July 2018 found that, out of the 189 neighborhoods officially recognized by the city, 122 have at least one subway station. Of the 122 neighborhoods with subway stations, only 62 have any accessible stations.[45] Some places such as Woodlawn, South Brooklyn, and Stapleton, as well as neighborhoods with large elderly or young populations, do not have any accessible stations.[43][45] The Comptroller's report found that approximately 640,000 young, elderly, or disabled residents in the city did not have access to any nearby accessible stations, while another 760,000 residents did have such access. As a result, the unemployment rate tends to be higher among disabled residents of New York City. Additionally, the 25% labor force participation rate among disabled residents is one-third that of non-disabled residents' labor force participation rate of 75%.[45]

Many transfer stations, such as Broadway Junction on the A, ​C​, J​, L​, and Z trains; Delancey Street/Essex Street on the F, <F>​​, J, M, and Z​ trains; and 14th Street/Sixth Avenue on the 1, ​2, ​3​, F and <F>, ​L​, and M​ trains are not wheelchair-accessible, making it harder to travel between different parts of the city. The Rockaway Park Shuttle has only one accessible station. Several stations also only contain elevators leading from street level to their respective mezzanines.[g] Additionally, some stations on the LIRR are not accessible, including four consecutive stations on the Babylon Branch, which is entirely above ground.[50]

As per the ADA, if a station is significantly modified, at least 20% of the renovation's cost must be spent on ADA improvements, but this is not always the case in the New York City Subway system.[42] For example, the Smith–Ninth Streets station was renovated for two years and reopened in 2013 without any elevators.[51] None of the stations being renovated under the Enhanced Station Initiative, which began in 2017, are proposed to include elevators, except for the stations already equipped with them (e.g. Hunts Point Avenue).[42] There have also been several lawsuits over this issue. In 2011, the MTA added a single elevator at the Dyckman Street station (1 train) after a lawsuit by the United Spinal Association midway during the station's renovation.[52] In 2016, the MTA was sued by another disability rights group for not installing an elevator at the Middletown Road station during a 2014 renovation.[53] Similarly, in 2017, disability rights groups filed a class-action suit against the MTA because the subway in general was inaccessible, which violated both state and federal laws.[54][41] The federal government sued the MTA in March 2018 over a lack of elevators at Middletown Road and the Enhanced Station Initiative stops.[55][56] In March 2019, federal district judge Edgardo Ramos ruled that all subway station renovations that "affect the station's usability" must include upgrades to make the station fully accessible unless it is deemed unfeasible to do so.[57][58]

Several stations that serve major sports venues in the metropolitan area also have little to no accessibility; the Mets–Willets Point subway station, located adjacent to Citi Field (home of the New York Mets), is only accessible through a ramp at a southern side platform, which are only open during special events. Similarly, the connecting Long Island Rail Road station of the same name is not ADA-compliant, nor is the LIRR station serving Belmont Park. The Aqueduct Racetrack subway station, serving the eponymous racetrack in South Ozone Park, was inaccessible until 2013, following a two-year renovation project at the behest of Resorts World Casino, which opened near the racetrack in 2011.[59] Although all New York City buses are accessible, transfers between bus routes, as well as the bus trips themselves, are usually cumbersome because buses run at a much lower frequency than the subway does.[60]

Station count[]

System Accessible station count Overall station count Percentage
SubwayNYC Subway (individual) 0136[61] 0472[62] 029%
SubwayNYC Subway (combined) 108[61] 0424[63][h] 025%
Staten Island Railway 05[61] 021[62] 024%
Long Island Rail Road 0105[61] 0124[64] 085%
Metro-North Railroad 079[61] 0124[65] 064%
Overall system[i] 291 686 42%

Rapid transit[]

New York City Subway[]

An elevator on the sidewalk outside the 231st Street station, leading up to the platform
Elevator at the elevated 231st Street station

As of December 2020, out of 472 total stations in the New York City Subway system, 135 (or 29%) are accessible to some extent;[72][j] many of them have AutoGate access.[73][61] If station complexes are counted as one, then 107 out of the system's 424 stations are accessible to some extent (or 25%). Additionally, there are 21 more non-ADA-accessible stations with cross-platform interchanges, as well as other same-platform transfers, designed to handle wheelchair transfers.[61] The MTA is primarily working to make 100 "key stations" accessible by 2020 to comply with the ADA.[a][74][41] As of December 2020, 97 of these stations are accessible while 2 are under construction and one under design.[3]: 250  It has also retrofitted 34 "non-key stations" and is planning to retrofit 11 more non-key stations.[41][75]

Because of how they were designed, many existing subway stations were built with narrow platforms, as such making it difficult to install wheelchairs in such stations.[76] Eight station complexes in the system have a mix of accessible platforms and non-accessible platforms.[b]

Manhattan[]

As of September 2021, there are 63 ADA-compliant stations in Manhattan out of 151 (42%),[k] or 45 (37%) if stations in complexes are counted as one.[61][l] Stations built after 1990 are marked with an asterisk (*).

Station Services Accessible entrance and notes[61]
First Avenue "L" train
  • Elevator for northbound service at northwest corner of 14th Street and Avenue A.
  • Elevator for southbound service at southwest corner of 14th Street and Avenue A.
14th Street/Eighth Avenue "A" train"C" train"E" train"L" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of 14th Street and Eighth Avenue.
14th Street–Union Square "N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train"L" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 14th Street and Park Avenue South (Union Square East).
    Note: 4, ​5, ​6, and <6> platforms are not ADA-compliant.
23rd Street "4" train"6" train"6" express train
  • Elevator for northbound service at northeast corner of 23rd Street and Park Avenue South.
  • Elevator for southbound service at northwest corner of 23rd Street and Park Avenue South.
28th Street "4" train"6" train"6" express train
  • Elevator at southwest corner of 28th Street and Park Avenue South.
    Note: accessible for southbound trains only.
34th Street–Herald Square "B" train"D" train"F" train"F" express train"M" train
"N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train
  • MTA elevator at Herald Center building on west side of Broadway south of 34th Street.
  • PATH elevator on west side of Sixth Avenue north of 32nd Street.
34th Street–Hudson Yards* "7" train"7" express train
  • Elevator near the southwest corner of Hudson Park & Boulevard and 34th Street.
34th Street–Penn Station "1" train"2" train"3" train
  • Elevator on south side of 34th Street west of Seventh Avenue at LIRR entrance to Penn Station.
34th Street–Penn Station "A" train"C" train"E" train
  • Wheelchair ramp from the LIRR Concourse inside Penn Station (accessible via elevators at northwest corner of 31st Street and Seventh Avenue, and south side of 34th Street west of Seventh Avenue at LIRR entrance).
  • Elevator at southeast corner of 34th Street and Eighth Avenue to uptown A, ​C, and ​E side platform level.
    • Other elevators inside fare control to the lower mezzanine provide access to other two platforms
47th–50th Streets
Rockefeller Center
"B" train"D" train"F" train"F" express train"M" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of 6th Avenue and 49th Street.
49th Street "N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 49th Street and Seventh Avenue.
    Note: accessible for northbound trains only.
50th Street "A" train"C" train"E" train
  • Elevator on northwest corner of 49th Street and Eighth Avenue.
    Note: accessible for southbound trains only.
Lexington Avenue/
51st Street
"4" train"6" train"6" express train"E" train"M" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 52nd Street and Lexington Avenue
57th Street–7th Avenue "N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 55th Street and 7th Avenue.
  • Elevator at southwest corner of 57th Street and 7th Avenue.
    Note: elevator at 57th Street is not ADA-compliant.
59th Street–Columbus Circle "1" train"2" train"A" train"B" train"C" train"D" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Columbus Circle and Central Park West.
  • Elevator at southwest corner of 8th Avenue and Columbus Circle.
66th Street–Lincoln Center "1" train"2" train
  • Elevator for northbound service at southeast corner of 66th Street and Broadway.
  • Elevator for southbound service at southwest corner of 66th Street and Broadway.
  • Wheelchair ramp for southbound service from the lower level of Avery Fisher Hall at southwest corner of Columbus Avenue and 64th Street.
72nd Street "1" train"2" train"3" train
  • Elevators inside station house on north side of 72nd Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue.
72nd Street* "N" train"Q" train"R" train
  • Elevators inside building at southeast corner of Second Avenue and 72nd Street.
86th Street "4" train"6" train"6" express train
  • Elevator on northeast corner of 86th Street and Lexington Avenue.
    Note: accessible for northbound local trains only.[77][78]
86th Street* "N" train"Q" train"R" train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of 86th Street and Second Avenue.
96th Street "1" train"2" train"3" train
  • Elevators inside station house in median of Broadway; entrances on south side of 96th Street and north side of 95th Street.
96th Street* "N" train"Q" train"R" train
  • Elevator in plaza on west side of Second Avenue between 95th and 96th Streets.
125th Street "4" train"5" train"6" train"6" express train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 125th Street and Lexington Avenue.
125th Street "A" train"B" train"C" train"D" train
  • Elevator at southwest corner of 125th Street and Saint Nicholas Avenue.
135th Street "2" train"3" train
  • Elevator for northbound service at northeast corner of 135th Street and Lenox Avenue.
  • Elevator for southbound service at southwest corner of 135th Street and Lenox Avenue.
168th Street "A" train"C" train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of 168th Street and Saint Nicholas Avenue for A and ​C only.
    Note: elevators to 1 platforms are not ADA-compliant.
175th Street "A" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 177th Street and Fort Washington Avenue.
Bowling Green "4" train"5" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Broadway and Battery Place.
Broadway–Lafayette Street/Bleecker Street "4" train"6" train"6" express train
"B" train"D" train"F" train"F" express train"M" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Lafayette and Houston Streets.
Brooklyn Bridge–City Hall/Chambers Street "4" train"5" train"6" train"6" express train"J" train"Z" train
  • Elevator on west side of Centre Street south of Chambers Street.
Canal Street "4" train"6" train"6" express train
  • Elevator for northbound service at northeast corner of Canal Street and Lafayette Street.
  • Elevator for southbound service at northwest corner of Canal Street and Lafayette Street.
    Note: N, ​Q, ​R, ​W, J and ​Z platforms are not ADA-compliant.
Chambers Street "1" train"2" train"3" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Hudson and Chambers Streets.
Cortlandt Street/World Trade Center "N" train"R" train"W" train"E" train
  • Elevators at southwest corner of Dey Street/Broadway and northeast corner on John Street/Broadway, shared by 4 and ​5 trains.
  • Elevator inside World Trade Center Transportation Hub at northwest corner of Church and Dey Streets.
  • Elevator inside 4 World Trade Center on west side of Church Street between Cortlandt and Fulton Streets.
  • Elevator at southeast corner of Church Street and Park Place.
    Note: 2, ​3, A, and ​C platforms are not ADA-compliant.
Dyckman Street "1" train
  • Elevator at southwest corner of Hillside Avenue and St. Nicholas Avenue/Ft. George Hill.
    Note: accessible for southbound trains only.
Fulton Street "2" train"3" train"4" train"5" train"A" train"C" train"J" train"Z" train
  • Elevators at southwest corner of Dey Street/Broadway and northeast corner on John St/Broadway for 4 and ​5 trains, connection to N, ​R, and ​W trains.
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Fulton and Nassau Streets for A, ​C, J and ​Z trains
  • Elevator at southwest corner of Fulton and William Streets for A, ​C, 2 and ​3 trains.
Grand Central–42nd Street "4" train"5" train"6" train"6" express train"7" train"7" express train42nd Street Shuttle
  • Elevator to mezzanine inside main entrance, immediately to the right of Grand Central Terminal entrance (East 42nd Street between Park and Lexington Avenues).
  • Elevator at northwest corner of East 42nd Street and Lexington Avenue.
  • Elevator inside One Vanderbilt at northwest corner of East 42nd Street and Vanderbilt Avenue.
Inwood–207th Street "A" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Broadway and 207th Street.
Lexington Avenue–63rd Street "F" train"F" express train
"N" train"Q" train"R" train
  • Elevator on north side of 63rd Street west of Lexington Avenue.
  • Elevator at northwest corner of 63rd Street and Third Avenue
Roosevelt Island "F" train"F" express train
  • Elevators at station house.
South Ferry* "1" train
  • Elevator at SW corner of Whitehall and State Streets.
    Note: N, ​R, and ​W platforms are not ADA-compliant.
Times Square–42nd Street / Port Authority Bus Terminal "1" train"2" train"3" train"7" train"7" express train
"A" train"C" train"E" train"N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train42nd Street Shuttle
  • Elevator at southeast corner of 7th Avenue and 42nd Street for 1, ​2, ​3​, 7, <7>​​, N, ​Q, ​R, ​W, and S service.
  • Elevator inside north wing of bus terminal at 8th Avenue between 41st Street and 42nd Street, near airport bus ticket office, for A, ​C, and ​E service.
  • South wing entrance for A, ​C, and ​E service is also accessible via elevator and passageway from the north wing of the terminal.
  • Elevator and manually operated lift at southwest corner of 8th Avenue and 44th Street, for A, ​C, and ​E service only.
  • Notes:
    • The passageway ramp used to transfer between 1, ​2, ​3​, 7, <7>​​, N, ​Q, ​R, ​W, and S and A, ​C, and ​E trains is not ADA-compliant.
    • The passageway ramp used to transfer between 1, ​2, ​3​, 7, <7>​​, N, ​Q, ​R, ​W, and S and B, ​D, ​F, <F>, and ​M trains is not ADA-compliant. (The B, ​D, ​F, <F>, and ​M trains' platforms at 42nd Street–Bryant Park are also not ADA-compliant.)
West 4th Street–
Washington Square
"A" train"C" train"E" train
"B" train"D" train"F" train"F" express train"M" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 6th Avenue and 3rd Street.
WTC Cortlandt* "1" train
  • Elevator inside World Trade Center Transportation Hub at southeast corner of Fulton and Greenwich Streets. Leads directly to northbound platform; southbound service accessible via crossunder inside fare control.
  • Elevator at southwest corner of Greenwich and Vesey Streets. Leads directly to southbound platform; northbound service accessible via crossunder inside fare control.
    • Note: Elevator out of service for Port Authority construction until September 2022.

The Bronx[]

As of December 2020, there are 15 ADA-compliant stations in the Bronx out of 70 (21%), or 14 (21%) if stations in complexes are counted as one.[61][l]

Station Services Accessible entrance and notes[61]
Third Avenue–149th Street "2" train"5" train
  • Uptown elevator at southwest corner of 149th Street and 3rd Avenue.
  • Downtown elevator at northwest corner of 149th Street and Melrose Avenue.
161st Street–Yankee Stadium "4" train"B" train"D" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 161st Street and River Avenue.
231st Street "1" train
  • Uptown elevator at southeast corner of 231 Street and Broadway.
  • Downtown elevator at southwest corner of 231 Street and Broadway.
233rd Street "2" train"5" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of White Plains Road and 233rd Street. Northernmost accessible station in the system.
Bedford Park Boulevard "B" train"D" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Grand Concourse (main road) and Bedford Park Boulevard.
East 180th Street "2" train"5" train
  • Elevators inside station house at northwest corner of East 180th Street and Morris Park Avenue (accessible via wheelchair ramp at street level).
Fordham Road "4" train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of Jerome Avenue and Fordham Road.
Gun Hill Road (Seymour Avenue) "5" train
  • Elevators inside station house on south side of Gun Hill Road between Sexton and Dewitt Places.
Gun Hill Road (White Plains Road) "2" train"5" train
  • Elevators inside main entrance in White Plains Road median between Gun Hill Road and 211th Street.
Hunts Point Avenue "6" train"6" express train
  • Elevator on the Monsignor Del Valle Square at the northwest corner of Hunts Point Avenue and Bruckner Boulevard.
Kingsbridge Road "B" train"D" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Grand Concourse and E Kingsbridge Road.
Pelham Bay Park "6" train"6" express train
  • Elevator at back of station beyond escalators, near corner of Westchester Avenue and Bruckner Boulevard
  • Wheelchair ramp overpass crossing over the Bruckner Expressway at the far east side of Bruckner Boulevard.
Pelham Parkway "2" train"5" train
  • Elevator at southwest corner of Pelham Parkway and White Plains Road.
Simpson Street "2" train"5" train
  • Uptown elevator at southwest corner of Simpson Street and Westchester Avenue.
  • Downtown elevator at northeast corner of Simpson Street and Westchester Avenue.

Brooklyn[]

As of December 2020, there are 36 ADA-compliant stations in Brooklyn out of 170 (21%), or 29 (18%) if stations in complexes are counted as one.[61][l]

Station Services Accessible entrance and notes[61]
59th Street "N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of 59th Street and 4th Avenue.[21][30]: 90 
62nd Street/New Utrecht Avenue "D" train"N" train"Q" train"W" train
  • Elevators in station headhouse at southeast corner of 62nd Street and New Utrecht Avenue.[79][80][30]: 92 
86th Street "R" train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of 86th Street and 4th Avenue.[81] Westernmost accessible station in the system.
Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center "2" train"3" train"4" train"5" train
"D" train"N" train"R" train"W" train
"B" train"Q" train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of Pacific Street and Fourth Avenue.
  • Elevators at Hanson Place and Flatbush Avenue in Atlantic Terminal mall; shared with LIRR station.
  • Elevator at southeast corner of Atlantic and Flatbush Avenues, adjacent to the Barclays Center.
Avenue H "Q" train
  • Ramp on north side of Avenue H and East 15th Street for southbound trains.
  • Ramp on south side of Avenue H and East 16th Street for northbound trains.
Bay Parkway "D" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Bay Parkway and 86th Street.
Bedford Avenue "L" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Bedford Avenue and North 7th Street.
Borough Hall "2" train"3" train"4" train"5" train
  • Elevator in front of Supreme Court Building at Court Street and Montague Street for 2 and ​3 and northbound 4 and ​5.
  • Notes:
    • 4 and ​5 southbound platform is not ADA-compliant.
    • The elevators to the N, R, and ​W platform are not ADA-compliant.
Canarsie–Rockaway Parkway "L" train
  • Station at street level.
Church Avenue "2" train"5" train
  • Elevator for northbound service at southeast corner of Church Avenue and Nostrand Avenue.
  • Elevator for southbound service at southwest corner of Church Avenue and Nostrand Avenue.
Church Avenue "F" train"F" express train"G" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Church Avenue and McDonald Avenue.
Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue "D" train"F" train"F" express train​​"N" train"Q" train
  • Elevator and ramps in station house at northeast corner of Surf Avenue and Stillwell Avenue. Southernmost accessible station in the system.
Crown Heights–Utica Avenue "2" train"3" train"4" train"5" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Utica Avenue and Eastern Parkway, in Eastern Parkway median.
DeKalb Avenue "B" train"D" train"N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of DeKalb Avenue and Flatbush Avenue Extension.
Eastern Parkway–Brooklyn Museum "2" train"3" train"4" train
  • Elevator to the south side of Eastern Parkway in front of the Brooklyn Museum
Eighth Avenue "N" train"Q" train"W" train
  • Elevator inside station house at northwest corner of Eighth Avenue and 62nd Street.
    Note: accessible for northbound trains only.
Euclid Avenue "A" train"C" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Euclid and Pitkin Avenues.
Flatbush Avenue–Brooklyn College "2" train"5" train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of Flatbush Avenue and Nostrand Avenue.
Flushing Avenue "J" train"M" train
  • Elevator at southwest corner of Flushing Avenue and Broadway. Elevator to each platform from station house.
Franklin Avenue–Fulton Street "A" train"C" trainFranklin Avenue Shuttle
  • Elevator at southwest corner of Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street (connects to street/mezzanine, Queens-bound A and ​C, Franklin Avenue Shuttle platforms, and footbridge to secondary elevator for Manhattan-bound A and C platform).
Greenpoint Avenue "G" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Greenpoint Avenue and Manhattan Avenue.
Jay Street–MetroTech "A" train"C" train"F" train"F" express train​​"N" train"R" train"W" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Jay and Willoughby Streets, for all train services.
Kings Highway "B" train"Q" train
  • Elevators to platforms inside station house on south side of Kings Highway between 15th and 16th Streets.
Marcy Avenue "J" train"M" train"Z" train
  • Elevator for Queens bound service at southwest corner of Marcy Avenue and Broadway.
  • Elevator for Manhattan bound service at northwest corner of Marcy Avenue and Broadway.
Myrtle–Wyckoff Avenues "L" train"M" train
  • Elevators to platforms inside station house at the triangle formed by Gates, Myrtle, and Wyckoff Avenues.
Park Place Franklin Avenue Shuttle
  • Ramp from Prospect Place west of Franklin Avenue; service in both directions on single track.
Prospect Park "B" train"Q" trainFranklin Avenue Shuttle
  • Entrance ramp on Lincoln Road between Flatbush Avenue and Ocean Avenue; elevators after fare control.
Utica Avenue "A" train"C" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Fulton Street and Malcolm X Boulevard.
Wilson Avenue "L" train
  • Wheelchair ramp at dead-end of Wilson Avenue east of Moffat Street.
    Note: accessible for northbound trains only.

Queens[]

As of March 2021, there are 24 ADA-compliant stations in Queens out of 81 (30%), or 21 (27%) if stations in complexes are counted as one.[61][l]

Station Services Accessible entrance and notes[61]
21st Street–Queensbridge "F" train"F" express train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of 21st Street and 41st Avenue.
61st Street–Woodside "7" train"7" express train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Roosevelt Avenue and 61st Street; shared with LIRR station.
Aqueduct Racetrack "A" train
  • Elevator next to south staircase down to Resorts World Casino Parking Lot.
    The Sky Bridge entrance to the Casino is also accessible.
Astoria Boulevard "N" train"W" train
  • Elevators at southeast corner of Hoyt Avenue South and 31st Street, and northwest corner of Hoyt Avenue North and 31st Street.
Court Square–23rd Street "7" train"7" express train"E" train"M" train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 23rd Street and Jackson Avenue for the 7 train.
  • Elevator at northeast corner of 23rd Street and 44th Drive under Skyline Tower for the E and M trains (southbound platform only).
  • Notes:
    • The E and ​M trains' northbound platform and the G train's platform are not ADA-compliant.
    • The passage between the E and ​M trains' platforms and the G train's platform is not ADA-compliant.
Far Rockaway–Mott Avenue "A" train
  • Elevators to platform level inside station house at northeast corner of Mott Avenue and Beach 22nd Street. Easternmost accessible station in the system.
Flushing–Main Street "7" train"7" express train
  • Elevator on Roosevelt Avenue east of Main Street, north side.
Forest Hills–71st Avenue "E" train"F" train"F" express train"M" train"R" train
  • Elevator on south side of Queens Boulevard between 70th Road and 71st Avenue.
Howard Beach–JFK Airport "A" train
  • Elevators at Coleman Square and 159th Avenue.
Jackson Heights–
Roosevelt Avenue/
74th Street
"7" train"E" train"F" train"F" express train"M" train"R" train
  • Elevator after fare control in station house on Roosevelt Avenue between 74th and 75th Streets,
    or enter on Broadway between 74th and 75th Streets.
Jamaica–179th Street "E" train"F" train"F" express train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of 179th Place and Hillside Avenue.
Jamaica Center–Parsons/Archer "E" train​​"J" train"Z" train
  • Elevator on south side of Archer Avenue at Parsons Boulevard.
Jamaica–Van Wyck "E" train
  • Elevator at corner of 89th Avenue and Van Wyck Expressway south service road, adjacent to Jamaica Hospital.
Junction Boulevard "7" train"7" express train
  • Elevator at northeast corner of Junction Boulevard and Roosevelt Avenue.
Kew Gardens–Union Turnpike "E" train"F" train"F" express train
  • Elevator at southeast corner of Union Turnpike and Kew Gardens Road.
Mets–Willets Point "7" train"7" express train
  • Ramp to overpass on south side of Roosevelt Avenue.
    Note: Only the northbound side-platform is accessible; service at this platform is available only to Main Street-Flushing on Mets baseball game, USTA game, or special events.
Middle Village–
Metropolitan Avenue
"M" train
  • Station at street level.
Ozone Park–Lefferts Boulevard "A" train
  • Elevator at northwest corner of Liberty Avenue and Lefferts Boulevard.
Queens Plaza "E" train"M" train"R" train
  • Elevator at southwest corner of Queens Plaza South and Jackson Avenue.
Rockaway Park–Beach 116th Street "A" trainRockaway Park Shuttle
  • Station at street level.
Sutphin Boulevard–Archer Avenue–JFK Airport "E" train​​"J" train"Z" train
  • Elevator off southeast corner of Sutphin Boulevard at Archer Avenue near elevated LIRR tracks; shared with LIRR station.

Staten Island Railway[]

As of January 2017, there are five ADA-accessible stations on the Staten Island Railway out of 21 (24%). Stations built after 1990 are marked with an asterisk (*).[61]

Station Accessible entrance and notes[61]
St. George
  • North side elevator for bus, taxi, ferry or railway levels.
  • South side elevator for passenger drop-off, or ferry levels.
Dongan Hills
  • Ramps on both sides of the station.
Great Kills
  • Ramps on both sides of the station.
Arthur Kill*
  • Ramps on both sides of the station.
Tottenville
  • Ramp at south end of the station.

Commuter rail[]

As of September 2018, 185 out of the 248 stations (75%) in the entire MTA commuter rail system are accessible by wheelchair. Many of them are ground or grade-level stations, thus requiring little modification to accessibility. A few stations, including the entire Babylon Branch, are elevated or on embankments, but some have been renovated or retrofitted with elevators to meet ADA standards. 57% of the accessible stations in the MTA's railroad system are Long Island Rail Road stations.[61] During the late 1990s, the LIRR began converting much of its low-floor, at-grade stations into high-floor platforms. Rather than renovate to meet ADA standards, ten low-floor stations, including the surviving five on the Lower Montauk Branch were closed on March 13, 1998, due to low patronage, and incompatibility with then-new C3 bi-level coach cars that can only use high platforms.[82] Five of the LIRR's branches are entirely accessible from east of Jamaica: the Long Beach Branch, Montauk Branch, Oyster Bay Branch, Port Jefferson Branch, and Ronkonkoma Branch. The West Hempstead Branch has only one non-accessible station along its line, St. Albans.[61]

On January 8, 2020, as part of the 2020–2024 Capital Plan, the MTA announced the three additional Metro-North stations to receive elevators.[83]

Long Island Rail Road[]

As of February 2020, 106 of the 124 LIRR stations (85%) are accessible by wheelchair ramp and/or elevator. Stations that meet full ADA requirements are marked with an asterisk (*). (Other stations are wheelchair accessible but may be missing some ADA features).[61] Stations built after 1990 are marked with a double asterisk (**).

Metro-North Railroad[]

As of January 2018, 79 of the 124 Metro-North stations (64%) are accessible by wheelchair ramp and/or elevator. Stations that meet full ADA requirements are marked with an asterisk (*). (Other stations are wheelchair accessible but may be missing some ADA features).[61] Stations built after 1990 are marked with a double asterisk (**).

Buses[]

All MTA buses and routes are wheelchair accessible, since all current fleet were built and entered service in the 2000s or later, after the passing of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.[3]: 247  As of May 2019, all of the local-bus fleet consists of semi-low floors with wheelchair ramps,[85] while all express buses have high floors and contain lifts.[86]

Many retired fleet are high-level buses, and many of the fleet built before 1990 do not comply with ADA standards. The federal government started requiring that half of all MTA buses be accessible in 1981. However, the wheelchair lifts on the earliest wheelchair-accessible buses were unreliable.[87] By 1983, less than a third of the 3,600-vehicle MTA fleet were accessible, and it was impossible to tell which routes had accessible buses because they were dispatched randomly. Drivers sometimes refused to pick up handicapped passengers, or they did not carry keys for lift-equipped buses, or the lifts were operated improperly.[88] As part of a disability-lawsuit agreement in June 1984, Governor Mario Cuomo agreed to equip 65% of MTA buses with wheelchair lifts.[12]

The number of handicapped riders on MTA buses rose eleven-fold between 1986 and 1991. By 1991, a year after the ADA law was passed, the bus system saw 120,000 disabled passengers per year. Ninety percent of the fleet was wheelchair-accessible, compared to other cities' transit systems, which had much lower percentages of accessible buses in their fleets.[7] The last non-accessible vehicle in the MTA New York City Bus fleet, excluding routes that later became part of the MTA Bus Company, was retired in 1993.[88][89]

In the calendar year of 2019, the MTA recorded over 1.5 million bus customers who used wheelchair ramps or lifts.[3]: 253  All MTA Bus operators are required to have ADA training. The newest buses have hands-free intercom systems for drivers.[3]: 254 

Access-A-Ride[]

Access-A-Ride logo, consisting of a red apple, a blue wheelchair access icon, and the blue text "Access-A-Ride"
Exterior of an Access-A-Ride cab, with the Access-A-Ride logo
An MV-1 Access-A-Ride cab

The New York City Transit Authority also operates paratransit services branded as Access-A-Ride (AAR) for disabled customers who cannot use regular bus or subway service in New York City, and nearby areas in Nassau and Westchester counties, within MTA's three-quarter mile service area. AAR is available at all times.[90] In addition, AAR has dedicated pickup locations around the city.[91] Passengers are charged the same $2.75 fare on AAR as on regular transit.[92]

The paratransit system began as a $5 million pilot program following the passage of the ADA law.[7] The services are contracted to private companies.[93] In 1993, because many disabled riders were being refused service in violation of the ADA, the MTA announced an expansion of the program. The service was carrying 300,000 yearly riders back then.[94] In 1998, in response to a discrimination lawsuit, the Access-A-Ride program underwent another expansion. At the time, despite having 1 million annual customers the program only had 300 vehicles and Access-A-Ride journeys often took several hours, while only twenty-six subway stations were ADA-accessible.[93]

The paratransit system has come under scrutiny by the media for being unwieldy: rides must be booked 24 to 48 hours in advance; it is costly to operate;[95] and vehicles often show up late or fail to show up at all.[96] AAR vehicles were defined as being "on time" when they arrived within 30 minutes of the scheduled time, and in 2017, two pilot programs were implemented to speed up AAR service.[92] Nonetheless, its operating cost was $461 million per year as of 2015, which is relatively high considering that only 150,000 people use it every year.[95] Howard Roberts, a former high-ranking MTA official, was quoted as saying that "it probably has turned out to be … a hundred times more expensive to go with buses and paratransit than it would have been to bite the bullet and simply rehabilitate the stations and put elevators in."[97] The Access-A-Ride service competes with options such as accessible taxis, although accessible taxis only make up a small percentage of the city's entire taxi fleet.[98] As part of the 2018 MTA Action Plan, the MTA would improve the Access-A-Ride interface to make the ride-hailing, vehicle scheduling, and traveling processes easier.[28]: 42 

Future accessible stations[]

There were several "station groupings" that were proposed by the MTA in February 2019. At least one station in each grouping is slated to receive ADA improvements. In total, 24 groupings were proposed: three each in Queens and Staten Island, four each in the Bronx and Manhattan, and 10 in Brooklyn.[99][100] An internal MTA list in July 2019 narrowed down these choices.[101] These stations were included in the list of 48 stations that were confirmed as being under consideration for ADA-accessibility in an announcement in September 2019.[102]

As of July 2021, numerous stations across the MTA system are slated to receive ADA renovations. Those projects are in various stages of planning, design, or construction. The following listing excludes stations that are already accessible but will receive ADA renovations anyway, including Forest Hills on the LIRR Main Line in Queens.[103]: 201 [104]

Station Current service Location Status[m] Notes/refs.
170th Street "4" train The Bronx Renovation in progress[105] MTA "City Station" candidate[19][30]: 91 [99]: 24:32 to 46:16 
Livonia Avenue "L" train Brooklyn Renovation in progress[105] To be made into a station complex with Junius Street; MTA "City Station" candidate[106][30]: 91 
149th Street–Grand Concourse "2" train"4" train"5" train The Bronx Renovation in progress[107] Bundle awarded in summer 2020.
Tremont Avenue "B" train"D" train The Bronx
7th Avenue "F" train"F" express train"G" train Brooklyn Renovation in progress[107][108] Bundle awarded in December 2020.[109]
  • Northbound platform only for Dyckman Street; southbound platform already accessible[108]
Beach 67th Street "A" train Queens
Dyckman Street "1" train Manhattan
East 149th Street "6" train The Bronx
Grand Street "L" train Brooklyn
Metropolitan Avenue/Lorimer Street "G" train"L" train Brooklyn
New Dorp NYCS-bull-trans-SIR-Std.svg Staten Island
Court Square "G" train Queens Contract award pending[109] Bundle to be awarded after June 2021.[109]
  • Southbound platform only for Eighth Avenue; northbound platform already accessible.[80]
  • Construction to begin after December 2021.[110]
8th Avenue "N" train"Q" train"W" train Brooklyn
Queensboro Plaza "7" train"7" express train​​"N" train"W" train Queens
Westchester Square–East Tremont Avenue "6" train"6" express train The Bronx
Woodhaven Boulevard "J" train"Z" train Queens
181st Street[n] "A" train Manhattan
14th Street/Sixth Avenue "1" train"2" train"3" train"F" train"F" express train"L" train"M" train Manhattan Contract award pending RFP issued May 2021, proposals due August 2021
  • Construction to begin after October 2021.[111]
Grand Central Terminal LIRR: 63rd Street Branch Manhattan Under construction Being built as part of the East Side Access project[112]
Elmont LIRR: Hempstead Branch Queens/Nassau County [113]
MNRR: New Haven Line The Bronx Planned station Planned as part of the Penn Station Access project[114]
116th Street "Q" train Manhattan Planned as a part of phase 2 of the Second Avenue Subway
106th Street
Republic LIRR: Ronkonkoma Branch Suffolk County Proposed station [115]
Sunnyside LIRR: Main Line Queens Planned as part of the East Side Access project[116]
Bay Ridge–95th Street "R" train Brooklyn Contract award pending[117] Construction to begin after June 2022.[117]
68th Street–Hunter College "4" train"6" train"6" express train Manhattan Contract award pending;[118] funding committed[119] Construction to begin after December 2021.[47][30]: 91 RFQ to be issued in 2021
137th Street–City College "1" train Manhattan In Harlem station grouping[101]
Broadway "N" train"W" train Queens [101]
Brook Avenue "6" train The Bronx In Mott Haven station grouping[101]
Classon Avenue "G" train Brooklyn In Bedford–Stuyvesant station grouping[101]
Court Square–23rd Street "E" train"M" train Queens Eastbound platform only; Manhattan-bound platform already accessible[119][33]
Harlem–148th Street "3" train Manhattan [33]
Mosholu Parkway "4" train The Bronx Contract award pending[118] In Woodlawn station grouping[101]
Steinway Street "M" train"R" train Queens Contract award pending;[118] funding on hold[119] In Jackson Heights station grouping[101]
Wakefield–241st Street "2" train The Bronx [33]
Woodhaven Boulevard "M" train"R" train Queens Contract award pending;[118] funding on hold[119] In Rego Park station grouping[101]
Mets–Willets Point LIRR: Port Washington Branch Queens In design [120][121]
77th Street "R" train Brooklyn In planning (design stage funded) [122][30]: 91 
Avenue I "F" train"F" express train Brooklyn In Borough Park station grouping[123]
Broadway Junction "A" train"C" train"J" train"L" train"Z" train Brooklyn MTA "City Station" candidate[19][30]: 91 [99]: 24:32 to 46:16 [124]: 24 
Kings Highway "F" train"F" express train Brooklyn In second Bensonhurst station grouping[125][124]: 24 
Neptune Avenue "F" train"F" express train Brooklyn In second Bensonhurst station grouping[126][124]: 24 
36th Street "D" train"N" train"Q" train"R" train"W" train Brooklyn In planning [99]: 24:32 to 46:16 [101]
Borough Hall "4" train"5" train Brooklyn Southbound platform only; northbound platform already accessible[99]: 24:32 to 46:16 RFQ to be issued in 2021
42nd Street–Bryant Park/Fifth Avenue[c] "7" train"7" express train​​"B" train"D" train"F" train"F" express train"M" train Manhattan [101][128]
Broad Street "J" train"Z" train Manhattan [129][130]
Church Avenue "B" train"Q" train Brooklyn [99]: 24:32 to 46:16 [101]
Delancey Street/Essex Street "F" train"F" express train​​"J" train"M" train"Z" train Manhattan [99]: 24:32 to 46:16 [101]
East Broadway "F" train"F" express train Manhattan Will be developed along with the 247 Cherry, , and skyscrapers[19][131]
Junius Street "2" train"3" train"4" train"5" train Brooklyn To be made into a station complex with Livonia Avenue[99]: 24:32 to 46:16 [101]
Rector Street "R" train Manhattan Downtown platform only[132]
Union Street "R" train Brooklyn [19][101]
Vernon Boulevard–Jackson Avenue "7" train"7" express train Queens [19][21]
Huguenot NYCS-bull-trans-SIR-Std.svg Staten Island In pre-planning; funding committed[119] In Woodrow station grouping[101]
Clifton NYCS-bull-trans-SIR-Std.svg Staten Island In pre-planning; funding on hold[119] In Fox Hills/Rosebank station grouping [101]
Locust Manor LIRR: Atlantic Branch Queens [103]: 201 
St. Albans LIRR: Montauk Branch Queens [103]: 201 
Wakefield MNRR: Harlem Line The Bronx [83]
Third Avenue–138th Street "6" train"6" express train The Bronx In pre-planning [33]
Seventh Avenue "B" train"D" train"E" train Manhattan
18th Avenue "D" train Brooklyn
33rd Street–Rawson Street "7" train Queens
46th Street–Bliss Street "7" train Queens
110th Street "6" train"6" express train Manhattan
167th Street "B" train"D" train The Bronx
57th Street "F" train"F" express train Manhattan [133]
168th Street[o] "1" train Manhattan In Washington Heights/Inwood station grouping[101]
81st Street–Museum of Natural History "B" train"C" train Manhattan [101]
86th Street "4" train"5" train"6" train"6" express train Manhattan In Upper East Side station grouping[101]
96th Street "B" train"C" train Manhattan In Upper West Side station grouping[101]
Amityville LIRR: Babylon Branch Suffolk County As part of a lawsuit settlement[134]
Briarwood[e] "E" train"F" train"F" express train Queens [101]
Burnside Avenue "4" train The Bronx [33]
Copiague LIRR: Babylon Branch Suffolk County [103]: 201 
Hollis LIRR: Main Line Queens
Hoyt–Schermerhorn Streets[f] "A" train"C" train"G" train Brooklyn [101]
Hunterspoint Avenue LIRR: Main Line Queens [103]: 201 
Jefferson Street "L" train Brooklyn [33]
Kings Highway "N" train Brooklyn In first Bensonhurst station grouping[101]
Kingsbridge Road "4" train The Bronx [33]
Lexington Avenue/59th Street "4" train"5" train"6" train"6" express train"N" train"R" train"W" train Manhattan
Lindenhurst LIRR: Babylon Branch Suffolk County As part of a lawsuit settlement[134]
Ludlow MNRR: Hudson Line Westchester County [103]: 27, 209 
Myrtle Avenue "J" train"M" train"Z" train Brooklyn In Bushwick station grouping[101]
New Lots Avenue "3" train Brooklyn In second East New York station grouping[101]
Northern Boulevard "M" train"R" train Queens [33]
Norwood Avenue "J" train"Z" train Brooklyn In first East New York station grouping[101]
Nostrand Avenue "A" train"C" train Brooklyn [33]
Parkchester "6" train"6" express train The Bronx In Parkchester/Soundview station grouping[101]
Parsons Boulevard "E" train"F" train"F" express train Queens [33]
Rockaway Boulevard "A" train Queens In Ozone Park station grouping[101]
Sheepshead Bay "B" train"Q" train Brooklyn In Brighton Beach station grouping[101]
Van Cortlandt Park–242nd Street "1" train The Bronx [101]
Williams Bridge MNRR: Harlem Line The Bronx [83]
Woodlawn MNRR: Harlem Line The Bronx

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b The 100 key stations include 97 subway stations and three Staten Island Railway stations. They also count several station complexes as separate stations: for example, Times Square–42nd Street/Port Authority Bus Terminal is counted five times.[3]: 248–250 
  2. ^ a b The seven station complexes, along with their inaccessible services, are:[61]
  3. ^ a b The 42nd Street–Bryant Park/Fifth Avenue station already has elevators between ground and mezzanine, but none to any of the platforms.[127]
  4. ^ The 57th Street–Seventh Avenue already had an elevator between the ground and mezzanine.[46] This elevator is not part of the current accessible entrance.[47][30]: 90 
  5. ^ a b The Briarwood station already has an elevator between ground and mezzanine, but none to either of the platforms.[135]
  6. ^ a b The Hoyt–Schermerhorn Streets station already has an elevator between ground and mezzanine, but none to any of the platforms.[136]
  7. ^ These stations include:
  8. ^ A list of all station complexes is given at List of New York City Subway transfer stations. The MTA denotes each station with a station ID, and if the station is part of a complex, also denotes a separate complex ID.[62]
  9. ^ When conforming to international standards, there are six commuter rail stations that have a direct connection to subway services (i.e., a connection could be made without exiting the structure, or traveling along the street). This count was conducted by condensing all subway and rail stations with direct connecting infrastructure as one complex. This excludes stations that are close in proximity, but have no share mezzanine or connecting passageway (E.g. The subway and rail stations along Main Street in Flushing, Queens requires a walk on street level, and has no connecting infrastructure or passageway between the separate stations, and thus does not count as a connecting complex). The six rail stations that currently share connecting infrastructure with seven subway stations are as follows: With the exception of Mets–Willets Point, these rail stations and their corresponding subway stations are all fully or mostly ADA-accessible.[61]
  10. ^ This includes station complexes but excludes some non-accessible platforms at such complexes.
  11. ^ Canal Street (Broadway) and Chambers Street–World Trade Center both contain separate local and express platforms and are both part of a larger station complex. However, both are counted by the MTA as one station within their respective complex.[62]
  12. ^ a b c d Several station complexes are counted as one station by both MTA and international standards.[63]
  13. ^ The following notations apply to this table:
    • Renovation in progress: Station is currently undergoing renovations to put it in compliance with ADA standards
    • Under construction: Station is currently being built; all new stations must be compliant with ADA standards
    • Contract awarded: Station will undergo renovations, and has contract for renovations awarded
    • Proposed station: Station to be built on existing lines
    • Contract award pending: Station will undergo renovations to put it in compliance with ADA standards once a contract for these renovations has been awarded
    • In design: Station is currently being planned to receive ADA improvements, and a design process for an elevator or ramp installation is underway
    • In planning (funded): Station is currently being planned to receive ADA improvements, but a design process for an elevator or ramp installation is not yet underway. However, funding is available for the design and potential construction of such improvements in the next five-year capital program (as of 2019, this would be the 2020–2024 program).
    • In planning: Station is currently being planned to receive ADA improvements, but a design process for an elevator or ramp installation is not yet underway
    • In pre-planning: Station has tentatively been identified as a candidate to receive ADA improvements, but a design process for an elevator or ramp installation is not yet underway
  14. ^ The 181st Street station already has elevators between a lower and upper mezzanine, but no ground level or platform access.[48]
  15. ^ The 168th Street station already has elevators between a lower and upper mezzanine, but none to either of the IRT platforms.[48] There is also an elevator between ground level and the upper mezzanine, serving the IND platforms, which are fully accessible.[61]

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