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34th Street station may refer to: Current stations. 34th Street station (Market–Frankford Line), a rapid transit station in Philadelphia; 34th Street station (SEPTA Route 15), a trolley stop in Philadelphia; 34th Street–Herald Square (New York City Subway), a station complex; 34th Street–Hudson Yards (IRT Flushing Line)
The addition of elevators in the station was announced in SEPTA's 2021–2032 Capital Program proposal; the station platforms would be rehabilitated and made accessible to passengers with disabilities by 2030 at an estimated cost of $30 million. [1]
34th Street may refer to: 34th Street Magazine, a weekly arts and entertainment magazine by The Daily Pennsylvanian, the student newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania; 34th Street (Manhattan), a major cross-town street in New York City; 34th Street station (disambiguation), stations of the name; See also. Miracle on 34th Street ...
In the late 2000s, the MTA began construction on an extension of the IRT Flushing Line to 34th Street, which would require demolishing the lower level of the 42nd Street–Port Authority Bus Terminal station.
The 34th Street–Herald Square station (also signed as 34th Street) is an underground station complex on the BMT Broadway Line and the IND Sixth Avenue Line of the New York City Subway.
30th Street Station, officially William H. Gray III 30th Street Station, is a major intermodal transit station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It is metropolitan Philadelphia's main railroad station and a major stop on Amtrak's Northeast and Keystone corridors.
34th Street Herald Square; serving the B, D, F, <F>, M , N, Q, R, and W trains. 33rd Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line); serving the 4, 6, and <6> trains. In addition, the following PATH station serves 34th Street: 33rd Street; serving the JSQ–33, JSQ–33 (via HOB), and HOB–33 trains.
The station, which is 125 feet (38 m) below street level, and 108 feet (33 m) below sea level in total, is the third deepest subway station in the entire system, behind 190th Street and 191st Street stations; as a result, nine escalators were installed at the station.
The newest New York City Subway stations are part of the Second Avenue Subway, and are located on Second Avenue at 72nd, 86th and 96th streets. They opened on January 1, 2017. Stations that share identical street names are disambiguated by the line name and/or the cross street each is associated with.
The 34th Street station was an express station on the demolished IRT Ninth Avenue Line in Manhattan, New York City. It was originally built on July 30, 1873 by the New York Elevated Railroad Company, and had two levels. The lower level was built first and had two tracks and two side platforms.