Gregg St. Loop (SEPTA)

Much like the Bells Corner Loop, the Gregg St. Loop is used as a turnback for a bus. In this case, SEPTA’s route 66.

Signage!

The loop is pretty much copy-pasted, with layover facilities as well as shelter and seating for passengers. Despite the name of the stop, I could not find Gregg Street nearby. However, there is just not a lot to remark about this place, maybe aside from the fact one of its connections goes to FOUR SEASONS TOTAL LANDSCAPING. (iykyk). Otherwise, it’s just a bus loop in suburbia. Where do the aforementioned connections go? Well, the 66 goes to the Frankford TC and to the City Line Loop (check out that post!), and almost into Bensalem Township. Meanwhile, the 70 goes to the Fern Rock TC via Tacony and Cottman Avenue, and the 88 that is so much a mess it’d take a while to figure out.

Bus connection!
EXPRESS?! haha nice 69…
Every amenity at this loop is pictured here.
I think this might be a substation of some kind
Driver layover facilities
Buses
Trolleybuses

The good: It exists, and buses can short-turn here without blocking traffic.

The bad: Eh? It’s a bus loop, kinda hard to mess it up. No heating would be a pain in the winter, though.

Nearby points of interest: WAWA. And, if you walk an hour, FOUR SEASONS TOTAL LANDSCAPING. There’s also a playground and a bigass golf course. Also, housing. Lots of it.

Transit connections:
SEPTA bus (66, 70, 88)

Overall, eh. Nothing to remark. Ranya also wrote a review of this loop, so I suggest checking that out.

Rating: 6.5/10

Tottenville (SI Railway)

Tottenville is the southern end of the Staten Island Railway and as such is technically the southernmost and westernmost subway station on the system. It’s also a rather wealthy neighborhood on Staten Island.

Signage!

The station, while technically accessible, is questionably so as it lacks many features of a standard accessible station. I mean, yes, you have step-free access to the platform. However, the platform is rather narrow and there isn’t really any tactile strip. But, given this is hardcore MAGA country, I can’t say I expected anything more. You do have countdown clocks that are dubiously accurate, and there are stairs to street level on both Ellis and Utah/Main Streets, while the southern end of the platform has a ramp to Bentley Street. The ramp, however, does look to be wide enough for a mobility device like a wheelchair. Lastly, while there is parking, I suspect it’s for SI Railway operators only. But, if not, you have a park & ride here! (barely)

Looks a tad narrow…
FUNNY WEED NUMBER
This clock turned out to be total dogshite
The train
While this looks narrow, it technically is accessible!
It was an overcast late morning
In terms of straight-line distance, this is closer to the NJCL than it is to the next station up the line
Street level!
Operator facilities
Welcome to Tottenville!
Another shot of a station entrance
REALLY NARROW PASSAGE
This felt claustrophobic to a degree
The yard
Overpass shot
And towards the station
Another street

The good: It exists, and serves the neighborhood. It’s also technically accessible??? And there’s parking???

The bad: Accessibility is questionable. No tactile strips. Countdown clocks are dubious. The overpass is narrow as hell.

Nearby points of interest: There’s actually a few restaurants and shops on Main St. and Amboy Rd., if you want to walk the half-mile or so. There’s also a rather upscale Italian restaurant at the station itself, but it gives off more the kind of energy one’s grandparents would bring their family to for a night out, and everyone is expected to show up in something formal. Yeah, you know what I’m talking about. Also, a lot of Italian MAGA supporters live around here, so if you happen to be a minority of any kind (socioeconomic or ethnic), do heed a degree of caution.

Transit connections:
SI Railway
MTA bus (S74, S78, both on Arthur Kill Rd.)

Overall, this station is weird. It exists, and it’s cool it serves such a “should not be NYC” part of NYC. But, also, it’s MAGA country. That stuff aside, this station is also dubiously accessible and somehow also manages to be, in straight-line distance, closer to the nearest NJCL stop than to the nearest SI Railway stop.

Rating: 4/10

Beach 105th St. (Rockaway Shuttle)

Or, “Beach 105th St.-Seaside”. This is the least-used station on the entire MTA subway system, so let’s look at it!

Signage!

Throughout most of the day, this station is served either only by the Rockaway shuttle to either Beach 116th or to Broad Channel. However, at street level, you also have the Q22 to the LIRR and the QM16 to Midtown, and if you come by at the right time, you’ll also find school tripper Q11s (which, for reference, normal Q11s terminate in Hamilton Beach). The station itself has your standard amenities and even has an OMNY machine, however the land use is not the greatest. Yes, you have a beach within a 5 minute walk on one side, but you also have a wastewater treatment plant right next door. There’s also a ferry dock somewhat close by, a school, and some high rises. Neat!

Honaj and the R46
The grey S
Towards Manhattan and Hammel’s Wye
The other platform
Stained glass!
Stairs
Station mezzanine and OMNY-powered exit
Beyond the gates
This map kinda sucks.
Ancient clock
A normal exit
EWWWW
This is fine.
CONCRETE VIADUCT!!!
This didn’t feel right
Shuttle.
CUTAWAY VAN!!!

The good: It exists and serves nearby beaches and high-rise developments! There’s also a ferry terminal nearby. Land use surprisingly isn’t as terrible as I expected it to be.

The bad: YUCK. IT REALLY SMELLS HORRID THOUGH. *vomits from wastewater scent*. Also, it’s not accessible.

Nearby points of interest: The beach, high rises, the wastewater treatment plant, and a school mainly.

Transit connections:
Rockaway Shuttle (aka the IND shuttle)
8th Ave. (A, limited service)
MTA bus (Q11 school trippers, Q22, QM16)

Overall, while it’s clear that it’s the least-used subway station, it’s surprisingly not as terrible as I was expecting. And, despite that, it very much does have a use case – even if other adjacent stations fill that use better. It does kinda stink though.

Rating: 6.5/10

Bell’s Corner Loop (SEPTA)

The Bell’s Corner bus loop is at the end of SEPTA’s route 59 bus. It’s nothing too remarkable, with overhead wires for the buses, benches, shelters, and facilities for operators. There are no subway, no trolley, or commuter railroad connections nearby, either. The 58, however, does serve the loop indirectly – with stops on Bustleton Avenue. As for land use, it’s actually not that bad, with a housing complex nearby, along with an elementary school. It’s still suburbia though, complete with strip malls, but it could certainly be much worse. Also, there’s a Wawa nearby. Neat.

Ad for SEPTA Metro rebranding
An E40LFR!
The layover facility
A bus nearby
A bus boarding
THE PROPHECY!!! Also, hi Honaj.
A bus laying over
The loop
Someone boarding the bus
Hi!

The good: It exists, and it’s a smart move to turn a turnback mechanism into a bus stop (this also historically was a trolley loop, presumably). Furthermore, it’s got the amenities one would expect for a bus turnback.

The bad: The 58 doesn’t directly serve it, but that’s not a fault of the loop itself. As for faults with the loop, I don’t really have many issues.

Nearby points of interest: There’s a few green spaces, an elementary school, a Wawa, and a housing complex. Also, suburbia.

Transit connections:
SEPTA bus (59, 58 on Bustleton Avenue)

Overall, it’s serviceable, it’s nothing too crazy, but it’s not a miserable place either.

Rating: 6.5/10

Jamaica-Van Wyck (Line E)

Jamaica-Van Wyck is a station on the E line’s Archer Avenue extension – of which, most of which is shared with the J line. However, Jamaica-Van Wyck is a bit of an oddball in a couple of ways. Let’s get into it.

Station signage!

So, how is this station unusual? Well, for one, remember the Archer Avenue extension? This station, while part of it, is the only one served exclusively by the E – and, for that matter, the only station exclusively served by the E as of writing this. Also unusual for a NYC subway station, it’s built in the middle of a highway (the namesake Van Wyck Expressway). As for station amenities, you have a rather offputting talking escalator, benches, wastebaskets, countdown clocks, OMNY machines, a station booth, the Van Wyck Expressway, and bus connections. There’s also elevators. In terms of connections, the closest ones are the Q54 and Q56 that will bring you to the Williamsburg Bridge, Fresh Pond, and sometimes Broadway Junction. All of these buses will also bring you deeper into Jamaica. There’s, of course, also the E (which cannot run via the J – without reversing at W. 4th among other operational nightmares), which will go to the World Trade Center and to Jamaica Center via Queens Boulevard. Did I also mention this place was so barren when I was here – at 9am on a weekday, no less, it may as well have been a liminal space?

Train!
This is weird.
This feels very liminal…
Only one soul in sight…
Still very liminal
A walkway to the exit
A lengthy – and unusually clean tunnel
The creepy talking escalator
Street level!
The headhouse! There were some signs of life.

The good: It replaces two former stations – the old Metropolitan Avenue and Queens Boulevard stops on the J (before the Archer Avenue extension was built), so essentially this is a case of stop consolidation. Furthermore, there’s buses to the Williamsburg Bridge, Fresh Pond, Broadway Junction – and if you walk a bit, buses to College Point and Lenox Hill. It’s also relatively modern and accessible.

The bad: THAT DAMN HIGHWAY. Maybe that’s why it may as well be classified as a liminal space. FUCK YOU, ROBERT MOSES!!!

Nearby points of interest: Aside from some housing and businesses, the Jamaica Hospital Medical Center is nearby, as well as a playground that’s equally as close to here as it is from Jamaica/JFK. There’s also a cemetery, however (from what I can find), Briarwood is considerably closer. If you’re a highway foamer, the Van Wyck Expressway is also a thing.

Transit connections:
8th Ave. (E)
MTA bus (On Jamaica Ave.: Q54, Q56; on Queens Blvd.: Q20, Q60)

Overall, it’s a weird place, with rather unfortunate placement (UNDER A HIGHWAY???? IN NYC?!). It may as well be legally classed as a liminal space on the side. But, it’s not a bad station by any means, though. Just weird, and sometimes weird isn’t bad.

Rating: 8/10

Herald Square (Lines B, D, F, M, N, Q, R, W, PATH)

So, for simplicity’s sake, I’m just going to call this entire station complex Herald Square. Yes, the MTA section’s full name is 34th St.-Herald Square. Yes, PATH uses an adjacent street name (33rd St.). No, I don’t care. With that in mind, here’s Herald Square.

Simple enough!

Herald Square, on both the IND (BDFM) and BMT (NQRW) lines, is an express stop with two island platforms on each. The platforms all have your standard amenities of countdown clocks, benches, the usual. The station mezzanine is a little livelier than most, with convenience stores occupying some retail spaces. There’s also MetroCard (at the time of photographing – as of writing this, MetroCard is going the way of the dodo) and OMNY machines as well as station agents staffing the place. Also, helpfully, it’s accessible! Overall, not a terrible- oh, there’s also a PATH station. Let’s talk about that next.

An R68!
The other platform
Platform shot
IND tiling
The R!
BMT tiling
BMT platform!

The PATH station is pretty standard. However, it’s a terminus for the Blue and Orange Lines (or, more commonly known as HOB-33 and JSQ-33). There’s ticketing machines, benches, wastebaskets, countdown clocks, and three tracks. There really isn’t much to ring home about here. Yeah, sorry. However, it IS the only other accessible PATH station in Manhattan (aside from the World Trade Center). Lastly, there’s buses at street level. Unsurprisingly.

Headhouse signage!
Bus connection!
MANHATTAN!!!
Herald Square itself
A passageway
Thank you for riding NYC Transit!
Oh lord
ILLEGAL!!!
ILLEGAL PLATFORM SHOT!!!
PATH signage!

The good: It serves Herald Square, is accessible, and has both local and express trains as well as service to New Jersey! There’s also a decent amount of bus connections here, as well. It’s also a block away from Penn Station, so there’s that.

The bad: Eh, not a lot. I mean, it is possible to get lost. But the fact this is the only accessible Midtown PATH station is a concern.

Nearby points of interest: Herald Square itself. But, more famously, the Empire State Building is a short walk, and Macy’s flagship store is here as well.

Transit connections:
BMT-Broadway (Lines N, Q, R, W)
IND-6th Ave. (Lines B, D, F, M)
PATH (Blue, Orange)
MTA bus (M4, M5, M7, M34-SBS, M34A-SBS, M55, Q32, BxM2, QM1, QM2, QM4, QM5, QM6, QM10, QM11, QM12, QM15, QM16, QM17, QM18, QM20, QM24, SIM1C, SIM3, SIM3C, SIM10, SIM23, SIM24)

Overall, it’s a centrally located subway station around a few major points of interest, is close to Penn Station, and has direct access to Jersey City and Hoboken. Sweet!

Rating: 8/10

46th-Bliss St.’s (Line #7)

So, I’ve covered both 33rd and 40th St. on this blog. Now, let’s look at the last of the 3 stations on the concrete viaduct over Queens Boulevard. Meet: 46th Street.

It was about 10PM when I was here, so apologies for it being a tad dark.

The station largely copies 33rd and 40th Streets in terms of design, right down to oversized bridgeplates to accommodate local service on the express track (due to trackwork on the viaduct near Woodside Station, to rehabilitate the century-old piece of infrastructure). This also means they have the same general amenities: benches, countdown clocks, and whatnot. There’s also no free crossover, and the bus connections are even the same. However, though, since I wrote the blog entries for 33rd and 40th, there HAS been a major proposed change to this station (& as far as I can find, is actually in progress – this also goes for 33rd Street!) – being that there are actually accessibility-centric renovations in progress, up to and including installing an elevator. Woohoo! As for the local neighborhood, it’s Sunnyside. There’s also a sign that reads “SUNNYSIDE”, and the underside of the station is even pedestrianized a bit! Though, I do hope the parking going under the rest of the viaduct goes away sometime and the whole thing becomes pedestrianized as well. Anyways, not a bad station! And, you even get some nice shots of LIC from here!

This goes kinda hard.
Oversized platform!
Fare control!
Street level
The stairs looking down
I see…a skyline.
A nighttime shot
…a diamond 7???? Oh, right, it’s the super-express 7 that they run on Mets game nights
And a normal 7 to Flushing

The good: It serves the local neighborhood! It’s also being rebuilt to be accessible!

The bad: Not a lot, mainly coming down to the lack of free crossovers. Queens Boulevard also isn’t the most pedestrian-friendly street.

Nearby points of interest: There’s a graveyard nearby! Sunnyside, overall, is pretty diverse, and you can find several East, South, and Southeastern Asian restaurants nearby (e.g. Nepali, Indian, Korean, Thai, etc.). There’s, of course, also other cuisines nearby as well. It’s also pretty residential overall, but despite this, there aren’t many parks nearby.

Transit connections:
Flushing Line (Line #7)
MTA bus (Q32, Q60 on Queens Blvd., B24 on Greenpoint Ave./47th St., Q104 at 47th & Queens Blvd.)

Overall, it’s not a bad station. I don’t really have much new to remark about it. But, holy CRAP, are these stations photogenic at night.

Rating: 6.5/10

Broad St. (NJ Transit)

Wait, didn’t I just write about this? Ah, but there’s a SECOND one in the NYC sphere of influence – in Newark. Well, whatever…

SPONSORED BY AUDIBLE?!

Ah, yes. So, Broad Street. It’s the end of the Broad Street branch of the Newark Light Rail, and it’s also a stop on the Morris & Essex County, Gladstone, and Montclair-Boonton Lines. So, the station is not as grandiose as Penn Station is, but it’s certainly not an awful one. The platforms have countdown clocks, level boarding, the usual. There’s stairs, and a heated waiting area. There’s also a station building (which I did not look inside, however given it’s Newark, I have cause to believe it might be staffed). There’s also elevators down to street level. As for the Newark Light Rail, you have ticketing machines, and two platforms. Service through here is one-way, with trains coming from Penn Station serving one set of stops, and trains heading back serving a different set. Lastly, there’s also frequent buses through here. Yippee! Overall, not a terrible station in of itself.

Towards the hinterlands
And looking towards NYC/Hoboken and I-280
I can faintly see the NYC skyline!
The station house
It was HOT
Updated schedules. Also, hi Honaj.
Something operating out of PSNY is running late
Difficult to photograph
Stairs!
There’s some parking, I guess
HISTORY
CLOCK TOWER!!!
Light rail station!
Looks standard-issue to me
Train shot
See ya!

The good: It serves the northern edges of downtown! Furthermore, it has the NLR connection to link it and Penn Station, and it’s also within walking distance of a few colleges. There’s also many a bus connection.

The bad: I can’t really think of many. Though, why was the heated waiting area’s heating mechanism powered on? It wasn’t winter.

Nearby points of interest: Rutger’s Newark campus and NJIT are both close by! There isn’t much nearby, sadly.

Transit connections:
NJT Rail (Morris & Essex Co., Montclair-Boonton, Gladstone)
Newark Light Rail
NJT bus (11, 28, 29, 30, 41, 72, 76, 78, 108)

Overall, it’s a nice little station. I mean, yeah, there’s parking, but it’s not obscene – especially given there’s a bajillion surface lots nearby anyways. Bleh.

Rating: 7/10

Broad St. (Line J)

Broad Street is the end of the line, presently, for the J. Located in the heart of lower Manhattan, it’s unusual as far as termini go with its 2 side platform setup, and as such its turnaround mechanism is more akin to Ashmont or Wonderland on the MBTA (where trains pull past the station and into a pocket track, then cross back the other way). However, is Broad Street any good like those two stations? Let’s find out.

BMT mosaic!!!

Broad Street isn’t accessible. Not at present, anyways. However, a proposed skyscraper includes plans to install elevators directly to the platforms, which would in turn make the station accessible (on a line that REALLY lacks accessibility – where the only accessible stops in Manhattan are Brooklyn Bridge/Chambers St., and Fulton St.). The station mezzanine has your usual stuff: ticketing machines, a station agent staffing the place, faregates, the usual. However, there was something I learned about after the fact that I completely missed: there’s an out-of-system transfer between here and Wall Street on the 4/5 lines via a passageway under Pine Street. As for within fare control, J train pulls in, leaves into a pocket track (the tracks also continue through to the Montague Street tunnel, meeting with the R), pulls back out on the uptown platform. There isn’t really anything noteworthy beyond the usual stuff. Yeah, sorry. But, there are some cool things at street level nearby. I’ll talk about it in the “nearby points of interest” section.

The headhouse signage – the J and…..a sideways N?
Exit
Station lobby
The stairs down to the platform
A waiting area
The platform
UPTOWN. LOCAL. J. TRAIN.
Not a Z.
Street level – indeed, that is the NYSE.

The good: It serves the deepest parts of the Financial District! While it may not be as functionally critical as the likes of South Ferry or the World Trade Center station complex, it is in a more central location geographically. However, the area very much does hold significant U.S. history as well.

The bad: I think the worst is that this station isn’t accessible. It’s not useless, as for a considerable amount of people, it’ll get them close to their job as needed, and there ARE touristy places nearby.

Nearby points of interest: The big one is the NY Stock Exchange – which, if you’re into following the stock market (I don’t know how many people reading this do that), it’s kind of a mission-critical place. Also, for the history buffs, this is also the closest station to Federal Hall – which was the location where George Washington was sworn in as the US’s first president in 1789. Unfortunately, it’s not the original building as that got demolished in 1812. Eventually, a custom house would be built on the site, and in 1939 it was deemed a national historic site by the Interior Secretary at the time, and eventually the National Park Service took it over from the Subtreasury. As for other things nearby, well, you have Trinity Church (but the 4, 5, 1, R, and W can get you closer), as well as a bunch of skyscrapers.

Transit connections:
Nassau St./Jamaica (J)

There’s not really much in the way of buses closer to this station than any other, but I’ll talk about the closest bus connections when I cover Wall St. on the 4/5. Yeah, sorry.

Overall, it’s not a bad station. The usefulness is pretty high up there, even if there’s relatively few points of interest unique to this station. But, with how tightly packed lower Manhattan is, everything is ultimately a short walk away anyways.

Rating: 7/10

SCREW YOU, CAPITALISM!!!

Harrison (PATH)

Harrison is a PATH station located on the Northeast Corridor, a stone’s throw from Newark Penn. It’s also one of the newer PATH stations as far as rebuilds go, being rebuilt in 2018-2019. With that in mind, let’s take a look at it.

Signage! We’ll get to what “To Stadium” means in a little bit.

The station sits atop the 5-track Northeast Corridor (2 of which are used for PATH), and consists of two side platforms. The Newark-bound and Manhattan/Jersey City-bound sides are largely the same, with no free crossovers. The platforms consist of countdown clocks, benches, wastebaskets, the usual stuff, along with modern glass headhouses. The station, having been rebuilt in 2018-19, is fully accessible as well, and it’s even a stone’s throw from Sports Illustrated Stadium. The station’s mezzanine is also modern, with ticketing machines, faregates, TAPP readers, and there’s even a bus connection outside (to a bus that has an identity crisis, though at worst is hourly). It’s also a pretty nice place to railfan the Corridor, and you even have the giant imposing drawbridge that doesn’t open much (if ever) not that far upstream. Neat!

WEEWOO WEEWOO
what the fuck are those funky-looking signals
I spy…..a giant imposing metal drawbridge
And the corridor, looking towards Manhattan and Hoboken
ILLEGAL PHOTOGRAPHY!!!
oh you’ve got to be SHITTING me! (not all hope is lost at least – Gotham FC calls this place home!)
The escalators. I didn’t go to street level because I really did not want to TAPP back in.
There were no Gotham FC games today – this is all pure park & ride traffic. Also, the SKYLINE VIEW FROM HERE
NJ TRANSIT!!!
ALP FOURTY FIVE DEE PEE
And a full bilevel set!
NJT bilevel #7059
Next stop: Newark!
GET ME OUTTA HERE!!!

The good: It’s a modern and relatively very new station! It’s accessible, looks cool, has a decent amount of parking, and the area nearby has been facing redevelopment in recent years (by the looks of things). There’s even a bus connection!

The bad: PATH only shows up every 20 minutes, the bus sometimes has an identity crisis in frequency (sometimes every 15, sometimes hourly), and there’s several bigass parking lots. Now, I get that every system invariably needs that one station that’s a parking sink, and this unfortunately got the short end of the stick on that front, but c’mon, can’t Newark fill that job with its parking garage instead?

Nearby points of interest: Sports Illustrated Stadium, home of Gotham FC of the NWSL. Wait, there’s someone else calling that stadium home, too? Ugh, okay, I guess I’m supposed to acknowledge the existence of the Red Bulls… I think I’m gonna go puke now. Fuck the Red Bulls, NYCFC or bust. Am I allowed to slander their supporter group as a casual NYCFC enjoyer? Anyways, what else is nearby? Oh, a strip mall and a Seabra. Whatever.

Transit connections:
PATH (Red/WTC-NWK)
NJT bus (40)

Overall, I’LL TELL YOU HOW I FEEL ABOUT THE BLOODY RED BULLS! SHITTY ENERGY DRINK, SHITTY MLS TEAM!!! THEY COULDN’T EVEN MAKE IT INTO THE PLAYOFFS! As for the station itself, it’s actually quite nice and rather modern.

Rating: 8.5/10

FUCK THE RED BULLS! (Gotham FC is alright, though!)