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The new 42nd Street connector between Bryant Park and Times Square is now visible on the subway map. (MTA) The three curved train tracks that formerly defined the Times Square end of the shuttle ...
On the real-time map, the MTA uses its existing data feeds to show the locations of trains, depicted by darker bars moving along each respective subway route. Clicking on a station would also give information on the status of escalators and elevators in a station. Unlike similar apps, the real-time map does not use the Google Maps platform.
Both the app and the website, new.mta.info, show commuters the nearest subway and bus stops as well as real-time arrival information, which is currently displayed on subway countdown clocks...
The subway normally operates 24 hours a day with five different service patterns: rush-hour, midday, evening, weekend and late-night. Each service has a table in its article to show what tracks are used and when.
NEW YORK CITY — The coronavirus pandemic may have changed how New Yorkers ride the subway and bus, but a ranking of the busiest stations still looks familiar. Times Square-42nd Second subway ...
In 2012, real-time station information for the "mainline" IRT, comprising all the IRT services except the 7 train, was made available to third party developers via an API, through MTA's Subway Time mobile app and as open data. In early 2014, data for the L train were also given to developers.
NYC Subway Delays: 9 Lines Running Behind The 7 train was partly suspended Monday morning, while seven other lines ran with delays, officials said.
It added train arrival "countdown clocks" to most A Division stations (except on the IRT Flushing Line, serving the 7 and <7> trains) and the BMT Canarsie Line (L train) by late 2011, allowing passengers on these routes to see train arrival times using real-time data.
Find out what's happening in New York City with free, real-time updates from Patch. Subscribe Northbound R/W trains resumed making local stops from Canal Street to 34th Street, officials said.
In 2012, the MTA officially released the Subway Time app, which uses subway countdown clock data to determine the next-train arrival times on seven services. Real-time station information for the "mainline" A Division (numbered routes) , comprising all numbered services except the 7 train, was made available to third-party developers via an API .