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!)

Journal Square (PATH)

Journal Square is a station located in the namesake Journal Square neighborhood of Jersey City, located at the intersections of JFK Boulevard, Pavonia Avenue, Sip Avenue, and Bergen Avenue. The area itself is named after the Jersey Journal newspaper, which used to be headquartered here for about 100 years, before leaving in 2013 (& subsequently ceasing publication entirely earlier in 2025). Also of note is PATH’s headquarters being located here, inside the station house built above the tracks. Let’s look at it.

Station signage from an angle

The platforms are pretty well-lit and, given it’s PATH, are clean. You have countdown clocks, ad displays, benches, wastebaskets, and the usual. The track configuration is a little unusual given it’s PATH, being two island platforms. However, this works out quite well for operational reasons, as trains to Midtown terminate/originate here. There’s, from what I’ve observed, timed connections between trains to Newark (/Lower Manhattan) and Midtown trains that seem to be guaranteed? At least, the transfer is a simple “across the platform” transfer. Per Wikipedia (I forgot in the few months since being here), Midtown trains use the inner tracks, while Newark/Lower Manhattan trains use the outer tracks. Also of note, is there’s a grade crossing with gates here, for whatever reason. Anyways, moving on!

Lower Manhattan-bound train!
I think this platform is for PATH workers only?
Pole signage!
Countdown clocks!
It does not smell like piss!
Mezzanine shot!
out of service?!
A shot of a train going to Midtown
Platform shot
The train rolls in (also, shoutout to the foamer who recognized me!)
Escalator shot!

Moving on, the station mezzanine has TAPP-enabled gates, TVMs, among other things. With this being PATH HQ, there’s also a Port Authority PD precinct, and there’s also a bit of a shopping center in the station (albeit not to the same degree as the World Trade Center). Lastly, there’s a busway for NJT buses going out to Newark, Secaucus, Bayonne, Exchange Place, Greenville, and even the PABT. Neat! While it may not be Exchange Place or Newport, as far as density, it’s still pretty well built-up and does have a couple high rises of its own. Overall, though, not a bad station!

Escalators outside
The shopping center in the station
The busway
That’s a LOT of bike parking
neat!
Welcome to Jersey City!
JOLLIBEE?!

The good: It’s accessible! Operationally, cross-platform transfers seem to be a thing here, as well, which is nice. There’s a busway, for bus connections without having to go hunting down the correct stop at street level. PATH’s headquarters are located here, as well. Furthermore, it’s well-lit, and the fact it’s built in a trench makes for some cool-ish train photos.

The bad: I can’t really think of much. I mean, the outside gives the station an identity crisis, kinda? But does that really matter?

Nearby points of interest: There’s a theater across the street! PATH HQ is also here! There’s also a history museum close by, as well as an MVC office. Hudson Co. Community College is also near here! There’s also a Jollibee (not many in the US). And, I turned to Avery for some more guidance on this, and he noted that there’s a Jackie Robinson statue in the area, along with the nearby Four Corners neighborhood being Little Manila, India Square having the highest concentration of Indians in the Western hemisphere, and there’s also a thriving Arab community, as well. And, lastly, there’s also the Newkirk house, which is the oldest building in the city (built in 1690!!!)

Transit connections:
PATH (Orange/JSQ-33, Red/WTC-NWK)
NJ Transit bus (1, 2, 6, 10, 16, 80, 83, 84, 87, 88, 125, 319)

Overall, it’s a pretty nice station. It’s relatively modern, has a decent amount of bus connections, and I do hope the area gets more dense as the years progress. Also, shoutout to Cryorig_Transit05 (on IG)! Nice running into you here.

Rating: 9/10

Manhattanville/125th St. (Line #1)

This station is a rather high-up elevated station ….in the West Side? Huh, interesting. Well, meet 125th on the #1 subway line.

Station signage!

Located over Broadway at 125th Street, this station is a local stop on the #1 line with a few bus connections. The station is a pretty standard IRT local station, with the usual amenities, and a station agent in the underside of the tracks. There’s also escalators going down to street level, along with (if memory serves) an OMNY machine. There really isn’t much to remark about this elevated station, as it’s rather similar to many other IRT elevateds. Yeah, sorry. Now, the station IS still rather unique – both stations adjacent are underground yet the tracks are level. It was done this way for a good reason, owing to Manhattanville’s weird topography (it’s in a rather large valley). You can’t really dig beneath the streets without issues here.

Over to the Hudson…
An R62!
Towards 137th Street
The other track was OOS
Towards 116th St.-Columbia University!
EXPRESS, EXPRESS, NEXT STAHP 137TH STREET!!!
Into the station mezzanine
Still elevated
The station house
Escalators!
A long way up
Street level signage!
The station house as seen from outside
INSANELY OVERSIZED ARCH!!!
Street level!
The Hudson looms…
One final shot

The good: It exists to serve the local neighborhood and has bus connections! It also sees pretty decent usage.

The bad: It’s not really accessible, and the nearest accessible stations in each direction are 96th Street and Dyckman Street – both of which are a ways away. However, if you’re willing to use a local bus to get here, the A/B/C/D stop at 125th and St. Nicholas is accessible, though! (albeit via the M125, which is kinda bad).

Nearby points of interest: There’s a memorial honoring President Grant nearby, a few housing developments, the southernmost sections of City College, and (for those who are bus enjoyers) the Manhattanville bus depot.

Transit connections:
7th Ave. (Line #1)
MTA bus (M4, M60-SBS, M104, M125)

Overall, it’s not terrible, and the topography makes the station kinda cool! But, it’s really annoying when the nearest accessible station is either 96th Street or 3 miles away to the north (in the Bronx, barely!). Yuck.

Rating: 6/10

FUCK YOU, EVIL ANDREW!!!!!!!

Q38 (Rego Park/Fresh Pond – aka the bus that used to take 50 minutes to go half a mile)

The Q38 is an anomaly of a bus, and quite possibly one of the few that was saved by being severed in two during the bus network redesign changes. For those who don’t know, the Q38 used to form a U shape that took 50 minutes to, essentially, go half a mile. The deviation index? 24.34. YEP. However, for the purposes of this blog, I’m only really going to count the new Q38’s routing towards the scoring (that has been unchanged aside from being severed into this and the Q14 near Middle Village station). With this, welcome to the former most deviatory bus in NYC.

Bus stop!
The beginning of the madness

The Q38 in its current form didn’t change much from when I rode it, up to Metropolitan & Eliot Avenues. With that said, the route is a straight shot down 62nd Drive, a turn down Queens Boulevard with a connection to the M/R lines, and then things get SLOW. The route weaves through the streets of Middle Village, going down Penelope Avenue, Woodhaven Boulevard (briefly), Juniper Valley Road, and eventually Metropolitan Avenue, ending at Metropolitan & Eliot. In terms of scenery, it’s mostly residential, although you do have various shops near Queens and Woodhaven Boulevards. Certainly, it could be a bigger stinker as far as land use goes.

Residential!
Section 8?
Burlington!
The rather wide Queens Boulevard
Taco Bell!
A church
More density!
Woodhaven Boulevard!
HOUSING STOCK!!!
More housing, less density
Even more. Oh my.
Now we’re doing row housing?
There’s this.
The M!
BJ’s!

In terms of the section axed, it’s a return back up to Corona via a straight shot up Eliot Avenue and Woodhaven Boulevard, serving the M/R again, going into the Queens Center Mall, and then turning towards the Horace Harding Expressway (I-495), terminating around there.

Something.
I believe this was the Lower Montauk line
Suburbia!
A graveyard
Ooh, you can see (what I think is) the LIC skyline!
Back to this stuff again
Another bus
I think this one is the Bay Ridge line (eventually to be the Interborough Express!)
Street parking galore
This reeks of suburbia
Under the LIRR mainline
The Queens Center Mall, my maligned
Queens Boulevard!
Housing
More stuff
Even more housing stock
AND EVEN MORE!!!
I did it…
I BLOODY SURVIVED THE QUEENS ROUTE 38.

The good: It’s (now) a mostly normal straight line between Rego Park and Middle Village! It serves the local neighborhood and at a rather frequent 10-20 minute headway. It also connects the M on both ends, so it conceivably could be faster than taking the M in a giant circle.

The bad: I think the biggest stinker for this route comes down to Queens traffic patterns. Which, isn’t the worst, but can still be unbearable at times. It also doesn’t run overnight to connect the M shuttle to the E/F more directly.

Nearby points of interest: I think the Best Buy, Burlington, and Queens Center Mall are the biggest ones. There’s also a park, graveyard, and a Costco.

Overall, it’s a funny route (historically), and it does well to connect the two segments of the M.

Rating: 8/10

Routing gore, for history’s sake.

Christopher St. (PATH)

Wait, didn’t I already cover this? Well, yes, but also no. Meet: PATH’s Christopher Street.

PATH signage

The station is served by trains to Journal Square and Hoboken, coming from Herald Square. There is a singular island platform, with benches, stairs, and whatnot. There’s also turnstiles and a staircase up to street level. As for the headhouse, it’s pretty unassuming, much like 9th Street (the next station up). However, also much like 9th Street, it’s not accessible. If you need accessibility, your best bet would be to take the M8 to the BDFM and change at Herald Square instead. Yeah, sorry, but PATH in Midtown isn’t known for accessibility.

Platform shot
FUCK YOU, PORT AUTHORITY! I’LL PHOTOGRAPH AS I DAMN WELL PLEASE!
Tunnel shot
Bikeshare!
PATH
The headhouse
I forgot what this was
Another street level photo

The good: It exists. It also serves the West Village and gives a direct connection to Jersey City and Hoboken.

The bad: It’s inaccessible. There’s buses but it’s out of the way to get to an accessible station. The platforms are narrow as hell. NIMBYism even led to an entrance rebuild being cancelled. Bloody NIMBYs…

Nearby points of interest: You have a pier, a relatively quiet part of Greenwich Village (but remember, this is Greenwich Village, so quiet by that standard still isn’t really quiet – especially during Pride month), and while further than the 1’s stop, the Stonewall inn.

Transit connections:
PATH (JSQ-33rd St., Hoboken-33rd St./Yellow, Blue)
MTA bus (M8, M20)

Overall, this station is really old and actually kinda sucks. Especially for accessibility.

Rating: 5/10

Dyckman St. (Line #1)

Dyckman Street is a station in the upper reaches of Manhattan located at a weird-looking intersection where Nagle Ave. converges with the namesake Dyckman Street, alongside Hillside Avenue and a road going up Fort George Hill. It’s also a local stop on the #1 line (not to be confused with the A line stop of the same name). It’s also the first non-underground stop past 125th, located at the mouth of the tunnel.

Tiling!
More standard signage

It’s an accessible station, which means there’s elevators down to the street-level headhouse. The platforms have your standard A division amenities (countdown clocks, benches, wastebaskets, lighting), and the station house is pretty standard with a station agent, a NYPD presence, faregates, OMNY machines (I think I saw a MetroCard machine too?), and nothing else to note other than the Pride decorations. Neat. The station’s primary bus connection is to the M100, which runs between 125th and 220th St.’s, via Amsterdam Ave., Broadway, and Dyckman Street. There isn’t too much to remark specifically about this station. However, PLEASE BE CAREFEUL with saying the name – because if you forget to say part of the name, that’s how you get either another term for a sea wall (dike). Either way, it’s not a bad station. Yippee!

Bye!!!
HELP!!!
The tunnel
Another train
CAHS
GAY TRAIN! GAY TRAIN! GAY TRAIN!
Decently well-used!
Hostility!
Stairs?
A decently long walk down
Station agent booth
Prideful!
EVEN THE F*CKING ELEVATOR IS GAY!
Street-level shot
The station from beneath
Curvy!

The good: Other than the fact it’s well-used, it’s at the base of Fort George Hill. It’s also accessible. The station is also pretty close to Fort Tyron Park, however the A line station is considerably closer, and 190th St. (also on the A) gets you into the park directly. There’s also buses with the M100. Furthermore, if you’re a railfan, the shots from the tunnel portal and the curve are both pretty cool.

The bad: I guess the only real issue is the fact that the area is a topographical nightmare – but that’s no fault of the station itself. I just don’t have much of anything negative to say about the station, especially given it’s accessible.

Nearby points of interest: Fort Tyron, if you want to hike a little. There’s also green spaces considerably closer, on Fort George Hill.

Transit connections:
7th Ave. Lines (1)
MTA bus (M100)

Overall, it’s a pretty good station, and it’s also easily one of the more charming stops (I think) on the system. Not bad!

Rating: 9/10

Yankees-East 153rd St. (Metro-North)

The New York Yankees are the Republican Party of baseball in the northeastern US. That’s to say, they are absolutely vile and evil. At least they didn’t get a mainline rail station until 2009 when the present Yankee Stadium opened???

I think I’m gonna puke.

But, since I have to be relatively objective in these reviews, I’ll save the slander for after I drop the score. That aside, the station is built pretty large, and may seem overbuilt. But, remember, the Yankees are a MLB team – and, to a lesser extent, New York City FC also calls Yankee Stadium home, so this station presumably gets that ridership on game days too. As such, the station is designed with game-day crowds specifically in mind, and with mechanisms for trains to terminate here from both the New Haven and Harlem Lines. Yet, in spite of this, you still have elevators (for accessibility), benches, wastebaskets, and all that. You even have a rather long concourse out to 153rd and 157th Streets, and into a park that you can walk by to reach the stadium. There’s also vending machines in said concourse, and it’s also not exactly well-suited for hot days. Yikes. As for bus connections, you’re gonna be walking to River Ave. for the Bx13. Overall, though, it’s not a poorly designed station whatsoever, given its primary usecase.

TRAIN!
it’s too hot…
Highways galore!
Platform shot!
The concourse
Designed for game day crowds
The passageway to street level
It felt like a sauna out here
Artwork!
…parking?
Entrance!

The good: It’s well-designed to manage crowds in particular. It’s also close to where while you can theoretically make a connection to the B, D, and #4 lines, it’s not a good location for that (or any connection to the subway – Marble Hill has a better connection, albeit to the #1 line, despite not being accessible).

The bad: The rather poor connection to the B, D, and 4 lines primarily. Also, the Yankees. It can also feel like you’re in Hell here on a hot day.

Nearby points of interest: The Yankees. Duh.

Transit connections:
Metro-North (Hudson Line)
MTA bus (Bx13, at River Ave.)

Overall, it’s a pretty well-designed station with large crowds in mind. Certainly, a lot better than some other stadium-centric stations I’ve seen.

Rating: 8.5/10 (ignoring the fact the Yankees exist – otherwise it becomes a 0/10 just because the Yankees exist at all)

Anyways, on to the Yankees slander. The Yankees suck. They’re evil. They are not named the Evil Empire for nothing. They’re literally the embodiment of the Republican Party, both socially and financially. They embody greed (buying all the talent out rather than developing it in-house), they PROBABLY fund the Republican Party (but conservatives oftentimes like to LARP as Yanks fans), they’re literally owned by Satan himself. Actually, no, I don’t think Satan would be a Yankees fan. That’s an insult. THEY EVEN HELD A MOMENT OF SILENCE AFTER CHARLIE KIRK WAS SHOT IN THE NECK AND KILLED?!

They also buy their way into the World Series – however, given they only seem to win in years Democrats are in power, maybe they’ll fall at the hands of the Red Sox given they’re duking it out in the wildcard stage of the MLB playoffs. You know, maybe I can respect Mets fans for the mutual hatred of the Yankees. More like Dankees.

YANKEES SUCK!!!

Newark-Penn Station (Amtrak/NJ Transit/PATH)

Penn Station is a major station located in NYC- wait, we already did Penn Station? What’s this then?! Oh, oh oh….this is NEWARK Penn. Alrighty. So, this is Newark’s Penn Station, located pretty much within downtown Newark. Let’s look. Buckle down, as this one’s a doozy.

PATH signage!

So, starting off with the PATH part of the station – it’s, surprisingly, directly connected to the Northeast Corridor platforms. It’s also the only thing to serve the upper level of the station. Discharge only, however. As such, it’s barren with only turnstiles to exit. But, you do have signage pointing downwards, departure boards for NJT and Amtrak, and even a connection to One Gateway and signage pointing towards …the Prudential Center?! Hey, give Boston their landmarks back! oh….this is a DIFFERENT one. Okay, I see, and the Jersey Devils play here?! Sick! Well, I’m not exactly one to follow hockey much, so I’ll instead let the hockey fans duke it out in the comments. (I loosely follow the Boston Bruins, I’ll cheer them on, but I’m not exactly as diehard a fan as I am for Rhode Island FC). Alrighty, so moving on, the concourse has a waiting room that’s staffed with NJT staff, another office for Amtrak, Dunks, among other things. There’s also a bus terminal which, quite bluntly, looks dingy as shit. The NJT Rail/Amtrak platforms are okay, there’s a lot of natural light, though I have to ask: why are the track numbers weird? Why is there a Track A, why are the express tracks numbered 2 and 3, WHY IS TRACK 1 NOT THE INNERMOST NORTHBOUND TRACK?! Anyways, I digress. Uniquely, one NJT Rail line terminates here at rush hour, forcing transfers either to a PSNY-bound train or to PATH (Raritan Valley Line trains terminate here due to capacity restrictions in the tunnels ahead) This is also quite a popular spot for railfanning, despite the fact there’s no high-speed action. Moving on, though, in the basement is the Newark City Subway (the Newark Light Rail) stop. This one’s a balloon loop with two lines: the main line, and the Broad Street branch. It’s actually quite a fine little station, with tiling and all that, but it’s rather quiet – and eerily so, a stark contrast to the station above. There’s also, weirdly, no fare gates here for the NLR, nor were there fareboxes on the buses. Does NJT just expect people to fare evade? Did I also mention there’s music playing in the station at all times seemingly? I genuinely don’t think there’s any other station I’ve reviewed where music is a part of the experience. Now, I won’t say it’s bad because it isn’t – whoever chooses the soundtrack doesn’t blast the same garbage crap that Mr. John Doe on the #2 subway line will blast while everyone is stuck on a delayed train in the Bronx or Harlem, and shoutout to NJT for that. With that out of the way though, this really isn’t too terrible a station! I mean yeah, it feels a tad sketchy at times, but it really isn’t too terrible.

End of the line
An exit area
An overpass to One Gateway
WELCOME!
Stairs
NJT TVMs!
Statues!
The NLR station!
Looks empty to me…
Tiling!
NLR station signage!
Micky D’s – and what looks like someone DoorDashing with a bicycle
The main concourse
Access to the bus terminal
A tad dingy…
Dear god…
NJ Transit: The Way To Go???
The station from outside
Another station shot
HERE’S YOUR DAMN FLIXBUS!!!
Gigantic and very imposing drawbridge
A zoomed in shot, I think I was trying to catch a PATH train?
That’s a bit easier to see
A passageway
DUNKS!
The waiting room
Up to the NEC!
The NEC!
Another shot of the NEC
Waiting room?
NEC platform signage
…backwards-facing consist???
holup-
HERITAGE LOCOMOTIVE?!
ERIE LACKAWANNA
ACELAAAA
THERE SHE IS!
an ALP46!

The good: It’s in downtown Newark! You also have a bunch of bus connections and almost every NJT Rail line (certainly, every Newark Division line except the Atlantic City Line). You also have PATH, while it isn’t as frequent however. You also have music playing in the station at pretty much all times, which is pretty nice.

The bad: It can be a tad sketchy at times. Also, does NJT expect fare evasion on the NLR? Also, be prepared for a bull to escape and wreak havoc on your morning commute. Also, your commute could easily be killed (regardless if you take PATH or the NEC) should the gigantic imposing drawbridge have to be opened.

Nearby points of interest: A lot. The Prudential Arena, Rutger’s Newark campus, along with NJIT.

Transit connections:
Amtrak (Acela, Cardinal, Carolinian, Crescent, Keystone, Palmetto, Pennsylvanian, Silver Meteor, Northeast Regional, Vermonter)
PATH (Red Line/NWK-WTC)
NJT Rail (Northeast Corridor, North Jersey Coast, Raritan Valley)
Newark Light Rail (Grove St. Line, Broad St. Branch)
NJT bus (1, 5, 11, 21, 25, 28, 29, 30, 31, 34, 39, 40, 41, 44, 62, 65, 66, 67, 70, 71, 72, 73, 76, 78, 79, 108, 319, 361, 375, 378)

Overall, it’s not a bad station. It’s a bit sketchy, yeah, but it’s also downtown Newark. Despite being stupidly close to Penn Sta.-NY, it’s still an important station in its own right. Also, that oversized imposing drawbridge admittedly looks sick, all things considered. I do wonder though, if it ever opens.

Rating: 8.5/10

Hi, Stormy Kara.