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{{Short description|New York City Subway service}}
{{
{{Use mdy dates|date=
{{Infobox NYCS service
| service = Q
| name = Second Avenue/
| image1 =
| caption1 = A
| north term = [[96th Street (Second Avenue Subway)|96th Street]]
| south term = [[Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue (BMT Brighton Line)|Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue]]
| stations = 29<br />34 (late night service)
| depot = [[Coney Island Yard]]
| started = {{start date and age|1878}} (predecessor, along with current Franklin Avenue Shuttle)<br>{{start date and age|1920|08|01}} (current
| map = {{Q (New York City Subway service)}}
| map_state = collapsed
}}
The '''Q Second Avenue/Broadway Express/Brighton Local'''<ref name="timetable">{{NYCS const|timetable|Q}}</ref> is a [[rapid transit]] service in the [[B Division (New York City Subway)|B Division]] of the [[New York City Subway]]. Its route emblem, or "bullet", is colored {{NYCS const|color|yellow}} since it
The
The
==History==
===1878–1920: Original railroad===
The predecessor to the subway service known as the
On August 19, 1878, service was extended north from Prospect Park along what is today the [[BMT Franklin Avenue Line]] used by the [[Franklin Avenue Shuttle]], to Atlantic Avenue west of Franklin Avenue, a location known as <!--Bedford Terminal of the BB&CI and--> Bedford station on what is today the [[Atlantic Branch]] of the [[Long Island Rail Road]] (LIRR).<ref name="
In 1896, a short elevated extension of the Brighton Beach Line (since reorganized as the Brooklyn & Brighton Beach Railroad) opened to the corner of [[Franklin Avenue–Fulton Street (New York City Subway)|Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street]] in the north. This extension connected to the [[BMT Fulton Street Line|Fulton Street Line]] of the [[Kings County Elevated Railroad]], allowing [[rapid transit]] trains on Fulton Street to operate along the Brighton Line. These trains ran from Brighton Beach, up the Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street lines to the Brooklyn side of the [[Brooklyn Bridge]], where walking or transferring to a [[cable car (railway)|cable car]] service connection over the bridge allowed access to [[New York City Hall]] at Park Row in Manhattan. In 1900, elevated trains were through-routed to [[Park Row (BMT station)|Park Row]] without need to change trains.<ref name="
In 1908, a massive grade crossing elimination project was completed with a 4-track line from south of Church Avenue station to Neptune Avenue near the [[Coney Island Creek]], permitting true local and express service, as pioneered on the New York City Subway that opened in 1904.<ref name="
===1920–1950: Subway service begins===
<div class="thumb tright">
{| style="width:90px;"
|[[File:R1 BMT 1.gif|110px]]
|-
|<div class="thumbcaption">Original
|}
</div>
On August 1, 1920, subway service on the [[BMT Brighton Line]], then owned by the [[Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Corporation]] (BMT), officially began with the openings of a two-track underground subway between Prospect Park and [[DeKalb Avenue (BMT Fourth Avenue Line)|DeKalb Avenue]] and the [[Montague Street Tunnel]] between Brooklyn and Manhattan.<ref name="Derrick 2002" />{{Rp|285}}
In 1921, PM rush hour express service was extended from Kings Highway to Brighton Beach. In 1923, Brighton express service operated via the Montague Tunnel and ran local on the Broadway Line. The BMT held a vote to see which route riders preferred on August 30, 1923. Passengers voted to have Brighton expresses run from Brighton Beach to Times Square via the Manhattan Bridge and the express tracks on the Broadway Line. This change took effect on about October 1, 1923. This subway service was labeled 1 by the BMT starting in 1924, with the remnant service to Franklin Avenue becoming the 7. 1 Brighton Express service operated during rush hours and Saturday afternoons. During the evening rush hour and on Saturday afternoons, trains skipped Canal Street.<ref name="Linder 2003">{{Cite journal |last=Linder |first=Bernard |date=May 2003 |title=Brighton Line Schedule Changes |url=https://erausa.org/pdf/bulletin/2000s/2003/2003-05-bulletin.pdf |journal=The New York Division Bulletin |publisher=Electric Railroaders' Association |volume=46 |issue=5 |pages=2–4}}</ref>
The span of express service was extended by 90 minutes until 8:27 p.m. leaving Times Square in 1929. Express service began operating between the AM rush hour and noon on Saturday mornings in April 1930. Express service began operating middays on May 30, 1931, replacing short-line local service. In September 1937, Brighton express service ran between Brighton Beach and Times Square rush hours, middays, and early evenings weekdays and Saturdays.
During the 1930s, limited morning rush hour service ran via the south side tracks of the Manhattan Bridge and the [[Nassau Street Loop]] to [[Chambers Street (BMT Nassau Street Line)|Chambers Street]] on the [[BMT Nassau Street Line]]. On June 29, 1950, trains began running there during the evening rush as well.
On October 17, 1949, the [[BMT Astoria Line|IRT Astoria Line]] in Queens, up to this point operated by the [[Interborough Rapid Transit]] (IRT), was converted to BMT operation.
===1950s===
On April 27, 1950,
The [[60th Street Tunnel Connection]] opened on December 1, 1955, connecting the Broadway Line to the [[IND Queens Boulevard Line]].
A December 1957 strike shut down much of the BMT Division. Brighton Local
On May 28, 1959,
===1960–1987: Lettered variants and Chrystie Street Connection===
<div class="thumb tright">
[[File:r27endq.gif|90px]]|[[File:r27endqb.gif|90px]]|[[File:r27endqt.gif|90px]]
<div class="thumbcaption">R27/R32 rollsigns for the
</div>
On November 15, 1960, with the arrival of the [[R27 (New York City Subway car)|R27 subway cars]],
Service between Brighton Beach and Franklin Avenue was merged into the Franklin Avenue Shuttle service on October 14, 1961, and all non-shuttle service between was discontinued in February 1963. The [[R (New York City Subway service)|Fourth Avenue Local (
On April 21, 1962,
<!-- On April 2, 1962, Brighton Locals once again ran as locals on the Brighton Line, as at all other times. -->From February 10 to November 2, 1964, the Brighton Express tracks were closed
<div class="thumb tright">
{|
|[[File:QB Train (1967-1979).svg]]
|-
|<div class="thumbcaption">1967–1979 bullet</div>
Line 86 ⟶ 82:
</div>
On November 26, 1967, the [[Chrystie Street Connection]] opened, connecting the Brighton Line in Brooklyn to the [[IND Sixth Avenue Line]] in Manhattan via the [[Manhattan Bridge]]. The bridge's south side tracks, which formerly connected to the [[BMT Nassau Street Line]], were now connected to the Broadway Line express tracks
On August 19, 1968, one AM rush hour QB train began running to Ditmars Boulevard. From January 2, 1973, no QB trains ran in service to Ditmars Boulevard, though two trains ran light to Ditmars Boulevard from 57th Street in the AM rush, and one train ran light to 57th Street in the PM rush. On January 19, 1976, morning rush hour QB trains began running in service to Ditmars Boulevard, and most evening rush hour trains entered service at Queensboro Plaza, with only one evening rush hour train running from Coney Island to 57th Street. All but the first QB morning QB trip, which entered RR service, were cut back from Ditmars Boulevard to 57th Street on August 30, 1976. Evening rush hour trains only ran in service between Coney Island and 57th Street. The last PM rush hour QB train started at Ditmars Boulevard, having previously made a trip in RR service. The first two morning rush hour QB trains ran to Ditmars Boulevard as of May 7, 1978, returning in service as RR trains to 36th Street. The last two evening rush hour QB trains entered service at Ditmars Boulevard, with the final trip having previously made an RR trip from 36th Street.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Linder |first=Bernard |date=April 2003 |title=Brighton Line Schedule Changes |url=https://erausa.org/pdf/bulletin/2000s/2003/2003-04-bulletin.pdf |journal=New York Division Bulletin |publisher=Electric Railroaders' Association |volume=46 |issue=4 |pages=2–3}}</ref><ref name="Linder 2005" />
In 1979, the MTA released a revised coloring scheme for subway routes based on trunk line; the
{| width="90"
|[[File:QB Train (1979-1985).svg]]
|-
|<div class="thumbcaption">1979–1985 bullet</div>
Line 96 ⟶ 93:
</div>
Starting on April 26, 1986, the Brighton Line's local tracks underwent reconstruction between Prospect Park and [[Newkirk Plaza (BMT Brighton Line)|Newkirk Avenue]], requiring the suspension of express service; at the same time, reconstruction of the [[Manhattan Bridge]] started, which would disrupt subway service until 2004.
The bridge's north side tracks (leading to the Sixth Avenue Line) closed. The Q now ran rush hours between 57th Street–Seventh Avenue and Brighton Beach, using a yellow diamond bullet. Because the Manhattan Bridge's north side tracks closed, the D and Q ran on the bridge's south side tracks, both running via Broadway Express to 57th Street–Seventh Avenue. To substitute for the suspended Brighton Line express service, the Q ran [[skip-stop]] service with the D between Newkirk Avenue and [[Sheepshead Bay (BMT Brighton Line)|Sheepshead Bay]]. D trains served [[Neck Road (BMT Brighton Line)|Neck Road]], [[Avenue M (BMT Brighton Line)|Avenue M]] and [[Avenue H (BMT Brighton Line)|Avenue H]]; the Q skipped those stops, serving [[Avenue U (BMT Brighton Line)|Avenue U]] and [[Avenue J (BMT Brighton Line)|Avenue J]], while both lines served [[Kings Highway (BMT Brighton Line)|Kings Highway]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thejoekorner.com/brochures/index-bmt-ind-1986-details.html|title=Brighton Line Riders: Your Guide To Service Changes On The D Q M During Rehabilitation Work April 26 Through October 26, 1986|date=1986|website=thejoekorner.com|publisher=New York City Transit Authority|access-date=February 8, 2018}}</ref> By 1987, as reconstruction on the Brighton Line progressed, the weekday skip-stop pattern expanded to Prospect Park, with D trains serving [[Beverley Road (BMT Brighton Line)|Beverley Road]] while Q trains served [[Cortelyou Road (BMT Brighton Line)|Cortelyou Road]] and [[Parkside Avenue (BMT Brighton Line)|Parkside Avenue]], with [[Church Avenue (BMT Brighton Line)|Church Avenue]] as a mutual station.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://stewartmader.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/1987mta-e1433450745867.jpg|title=May 24, 1987 New York City Subway Map|date=May 24, 1987|website=stewartmader.com|publisher=New York City Transit Authority|access-date=May 6, 2018}}</ref>
<div class="thumb tright">
{| style="width:90px;"
|[[File:NYCS-bull-trans-Q orange.svg|75px]]
|-
|<div class="thumbcaption">
|}
</div>
==== 1988–2001: Sixth Avenue service ====
On December 11, 1988, the Bridge's north side tracks reopened and the south side tracks closed, and the reconstruction project on the Brighton Line ended. The '''Q''' became the weekday Brighton Express to Brighton Beach and was rerouted via the north side of the bridge and the [[IND Sixth Avenue Line]] to [[57th Street (IND Sixth Avenue Line)|57th Street]], [[Midtown Manhattan]]. Because it ran on the Sixth Avenue Line in Manhattan, the route now used an orange bullet. On October 29, 1989, the [[63rd Street Lines|IND 63rd Street Line]] opened and the '''B''', '''Q''', and [[JFK Express]] were extended to [[21st Street–Queensbridge (IND 63rd Street Line)|21st Street–Queensbridge]] in [[Long Island City, Queens|Long Island City]]. Weekday evening service terminated at [[Broadway–Lafayette Street (IND Sixth Avenue Line)|Broadway–Lafayette Street]] in Manhattan instead of Brooklyn; these trains relayed at [[Second Avenue (IND Sixth Avenue Line)|Second Avenue]] in order to change direction. A special '''{{NYCS|F}}'''/'''Q''' service ran during late nights; in the northbound direction, '''F''' trains would operate along its normal route from Coney Island to [[47th–50th Streets–Rockefeller Center (IND Sixth Avenue Line)|47th–50th Streets–Rockefeller Center]], then turn into a '''Q''' and operate to [[21st Street–Queensbridge (IND 63rd Street Line)|21st Street–Queensbridge]]; in the southbound direction, '''Q''' trains would operate from 21st Street to 47th–50th Streets. then turn into an '''F''' train and operate along its normal route to Coney Island..<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/127872292@N06/16569240412/in/album-72157652636594213/|title=October 1989 Map|last=|first=|date=October 1989|work=Flickr|access-date=October 7, 2018|publisher=New York City Transit Authority|language=en-us}}</ref> The weekday evening shuttle was replaced by the '''B''' on September 30, 1990. The '''{{NYCS|F}}''' replaced the late night shuttle in 1993.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.subwaynut.com/brochures/1990servicechanges.pdf|title=Service Changes September 30, 1990|last=|first=|date=September 30, 1990|website=subwaynut.com|publisher=New York City Transit Authority|access-date=May 1, 2016}}</ref>▼
On December 11, 1988, the Bridge's north side tracks reopened and the south side tracks closed, and the reconstruction project on the Brighton Line ended. The Q became the weekday Brighton Express to Brighton Beach and was rerouted via the north side of the bridge and the [[IND Sixth Avenue Line]] to [[57th Street (IND Sixth Avenue Line)|57th Street–Sixth Avenue]], [[Midtown Manhattan]]. Because it ran on the Sixth Avenue Line in Manhattan, the route now used an orange bullet on maps. One AM rush hour train from Brighton Beach terminated at [[168th Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line)|168th Street]] in Manhattan instead of 21st Street; this trip last ran on September 28, 1990.<ref name="Linder 2003" />
▲
In January 1991, a reduction of service along the Central Park West corridor to remove excess capacity was proposed. Initially, Q service would operate between [[Inwood–207th Street (IND Eighth Avenue Line)|207th Street]] and [[Brighton Beach (BMT Brighton Line)|Brighton Beach]] during weekday rush hours and middays, making express stops along its entire route. The service plan was later amended to eliminate the Q designation and replace it with an orange [[A (New York City Subway service)|A]], assuming the same service pattern that was proposed for the Q. This service change would have been implemented in October 1991, pending approval from the MTA board.<ref>{{cite web |title=1991 Service Capacity Plan |url=http://www.laguardiawagnerarchive.lagcc.cuny.edu/pages/FileBrowser.aspx?LinkToFile=FILES_DOC/QUEENS_FILES/03.012.0231.030147.2.PDF#undefined |publisher=New York City Transit Authority |access-date=September 18, 2024 |pages=197-198 |date=January 4, 1991}}</ref>
On February 6, 1995, Q trains began running local south of Kings Highway due to rehabilitation work on the Brighton Line.<ref name="Linder 2003" /> On April 30, 1995, the north side of the [[Manhattan Bridge]] closed during middays and weekends, in addition to the already-closed south side. During these hours,
On February 22, 1998, construction on the [[63rd Street Lines|IND 63rd Street Line]] cut
==== 2001–2004: Brighton express variant ====
<div class="thumb tright">
{| style="width:90px;"
|[[File:NYCS-bull-trans-Qd-Std.svg|75px]]
|-
|<div class="thumbcaption">Bullet used
|}
</div>
On July 22, 2001, the [[Manhattan Bridge]]'s north side tracks closed and the south side tracks reopened. There were now two
After the [[September 11 attacks]], Broadway Line service through Lower Manhattan, and
From April 27<ref>{{Cite journal |date=July 2003 |title=New BMT-IND Schedules |url=https://erausa.org/pdf/bulletin/2000s/2003/2003-07-bulletin.pdf |journal=The New York Division Bulletin |publisher=Electric Railroaders' Association |volume=46 |issue=7 |pages=20}}</ref> to November 2, 2003, the south side of the Manhattan Bridge was closed on weekends and
On February 22, 2004, reconstruction of the [[Manhattan Bridge]] was completed and the north side tracks reopened. The
===2005–present: Extensions to Astoria and Second Avenue===
[[File:Second Avenue Subway Map vc.jpg|thumb|right|Map of the full Second Avenue Subway (SAS), showing the planned uptown portion of the
On June 28, 2010, the
On December 7, 2014, late night
On November 7, 2016, weekday
On January 1, 2017, the first phase of the [[Second Avenue Subway]] opened; the
===Future===
The second phase of the Second Avenue Line will [[
==Route==
=== Service pattern ===
The following table shows the lines used by the Q, with shaded boxes indicating the route at the specified times:<ref>{{NYCS const|serviceguide}}</ref><ref name="96N">{{cite web |date=July 19, 2021 |title=86 St – OpenMobilityData |url=https://transitfeeds.com/p/mta/79/latest/stop/N10N/20210726 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210719222837/https://transitfeeds.com/p/mta/79/latest/stop/N10N/20210726 |archive-date=July 19, 2021 |access-date=July 19, 2021 |website=transitfeeds.com}}</ref><ref name="96S">{{cite web |date=July 19, 2021 |title=86 St – OpenMobilityData |url=https://transitfeeds.com/p/mta/79/latest/stop/N10S/20210726 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210719222837/https://transitfeeds.com/p/mta/79/latest/stop/N10S/20210726 |archive-date=July 19, 2021 |access-date=July 19, 2021 |website=transitfeeds.com}}</ref><ref name="96R">{{cite web |date=July 19, 2021 |title=7:36 AM – 8:40 AM 96 St – OpenMobilityData |url=https://transitfeeds.com/p/mta/79/latest/trip/BSP21GEN-N093-Weekday-00_045650_N..N63R |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210719222837/https://transitfeeds.com/p/mta/79/latest/trip/BSP21GEN-N093-Weekday-00_045650_N..N63R |archive-date=July 19, 2021 |access-date=July 19, 2021 |website=transitfeeds.com}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable collapsible" style="width:auto; font-size:95%"
! rowspan=2 | Line
! rowspan=2 | From
! rowspan=2 | To
! rowspan=2 | Tracks
! colspan
|-
! width=40 | all<br />ex.<br />nights
! width=40 | late<br />nights
|-
Line 178 ⟶ 177:
| rowspan=2 | [[Canal Street (BMT Manhattan Bridge Line)|Canal Street]]
| express
|-
| local
Line 186 ⟶ 184:
| colspan=3 align=center | [[Manhattan Bridge]]
|south
| rowspan=4 style="background:gray" |
|-
| rowspan=3 | [[BMT Brighton Line]] (full line)
Line 192 ⟶ 190:
| [[Prospect Park (BMT Brighton Line)|Prospect Park]]
| all
|-
| [[Parkside Avenue (BMT Brighton Line)|Parkside Avenue]]
| [[Ocean Parkway (BMT Brighton Line)|Ocean Parkway]]
| local
|-
| [[West Eighth Street–New York Aquarium (New York City Subway)|West Eighth Street–New York Aquarium]]
| [[Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue (BMT Brighton Line)|Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue]]
Line 209 ⟶ 207:
| nightsonly = show
| nightsweekends =
| weekdaysonly = show
| allexceptrush =
| rushonly =
| rushpeak = show▼
|
▲| rushpeak =
| custom_icon_1 = rushonly
| custom_text_1 = Stops rush hours only (limited service)
}}
{| class="wikitable collapsible" style="font-size:90%" summary="Service information for the Q train and its stations, including service times, ADA-accessibility, subway transfers, and non-subway connections."
! width=3% | [[File:NYCS-bull-trans-Q-Std.svg|20px|Q service to 96 St]]<br>▼
▲! width=3% | [[File:NYCS-bull-trans-Q-Std.svg|20px|Q service]]
! style="width:3%;"| {{Access icon}}
▲! width=28% | Stations
! style="width
▲! width=30% | Connections and notes
|-
|
|-
|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Second southbound weekday|time=show|exclude=Q}}
| [[M15 (New York City bus)|M15 Select Bus Service]]
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Second|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 247 ⟶ 239:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Second|time=show|exclude=Q}}
|-
|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS 63rd Lexington|time=show|exclude=Q}}<br>Out-of-system transfers with [[MetroCard
|
|-
|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center |
| {{NYCS Broadway north|time=show|exclude=Q}}
|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|nightsonly}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}} ↑
| {{NYCS Broadway night|time=show|exclude=Q}}
| Station is [[Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990|ADA-accessible]] in the northbound direction only
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Broadway|time=show|exclude=Q}}<br>{{NYCS Broadway-Seventh|time=show}} ([[IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line]])<br>{{NYCS Flushing south|time=show}} ([[IRT Flushing Line]])<br>{{NYCS Eighth south|time=show}} ([[IND Eighth Avenue Line]] at
| [[Port Authority Bus Terminal]]<br>[[M34A (New York City bus)|M34A Select Bus Service]]
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Broadway|time=show|exclude=Q}}<br>{{NYCS Sixth|time=show}} ([[IND Sixth Avenue Line]])
| [[M34 (New York City bus)|M34 / M34A Select Bus Service]]<br>[[Port Authority Trans-Hudson|PATH]] at
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|nightsonly}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Broadway local night|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 293 ⟶ 285:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|nightsonly}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Broadway local night|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 299 ⟶ 291:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Broadway|time=show|exclude=Q}}<br>{{NYCS Canarsie|time=show}} ([[BMT Canarsie Line]])<br>{{NYCS Lexington|time=show}} ([[IRT Lexington Avenue Line]])
Line 305 ⟶ 297:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|nightsonly}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Broadway local night|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 311 ⟶ 303:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|nightsonly}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Broadway local night|time=show|exclude=Q}}
|
|-
|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | [[File:Aiga elevator.svg|20px|alt=Elevator access to mezzanine only]]
| {{NYCS Broadway|time=show|exclude=Q}}<br>{{NYCS Lexington local|time=show}} ([[IRT Lexington Avenue Line]])<br>{{NYCS Nassau north|time=show}} ([[BMT Nassau Street Line]])
| Stops on the lower level.
|-
|
|-
|
|-
| align="center" | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align="center" | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS DeKalb|time=show|exclude=Q}}
|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Brighton|time=show|exclude=Q}}<br>{{NYCS Fourth center Pacific|time=show}} ([[BMT Fourth Avenue Line]])<br>{{NYCS Eastern west|time=show}} ([[IRT Eastern Parkway Line]])
| [[Long Island Rail Road|LIRR]] [[Atlantic Branch]] at [[
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Brighton north|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 347 ⟶ 339:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Brighton north|time=show|exclude=Q}}<br>{{NYCS Franklin|time=show}} ([[BMT Franklin Avenue Line]])
Line 353 ⟶ 345:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
Line 359 ⟶ 351:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Brighton|time=show|exclude=Q}}
| Coney Island-bound trains do not stop here because of an accessibility project until fall 2024.
|▼
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
Line 371 ⟶ 363:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
Line 377 ⟶ 369:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Brighton|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 383 ⟶ 375:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
▲|
|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
Line 395 ⟶ 387:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
Line 401 ⟶ 393:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align=center | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS Brighton|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 407 ⟶ 399:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
▲|
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
Line 419 ⟶ 411:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Brighton|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 425 ⟶ 417:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Brighton|time=show|exclude=Q}}
Line 431 ⟶ 423:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
|
Line 437 ⟶ 429:
|-
| align=center | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
|
| {{NYCS Culver IND south|time=show}} ([[IND Culver Line]])
|
|-
| align="center" | {{NYCS SSI|alltimes}}
|
| align="center" | {{Access icon}}
| {{NYCS
|
|}
==References==
Line 456 ⟶ 445:
==External links==
{{
* [http://web.mta.info/nyct/service/qline.htm MTA NYC Transit – Q Broadway Express]
* {{NYCS const|traintime|Q}}
* {{NYCS const|timetable|
{{NYCS navbox}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Q (New York City Subway Service)}}
[[Category:
[[Category:New York City Subway services]]
|