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The New York City Transit Authority (trading as MTA New York City Transit) provides bus, subway, and paratransit service throughout New York City.
The New York City Subway is a rapid transit system that serves four of the five boroughs of New York City, New York: the Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens. Its operator is the New York City Transit Authority, which is itself controlled by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority of New York.
The Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center station is one of three express stations in the New York City Subway system to have side platforms for local services and a center island platform for express services.
Maintenance of a safe and clean customer environment. Reporting of quality-of-life issues. Here's what the new Customer Service Centers look like.
Here’s the latest from the MTA: The 1, 3, 7, C, E, B, D, F, M, J, Z, L, Q, R, W, and F and R shuttles are running normally, with no active alerts. 4 trains are serving all stations but service ...
The MTA announced in late 2022 that it would open customer service centers at 15 stations; the centers would provide services such as travel information and OMNY farecards. The first six customer service centers, including one at 34th Street–Penn Station, were to open in early 2023.
2 Trains run every 12 minutes days and early evenings Feb 26, Sat, 8:00 AM to 10:00 PM and Feb 27, Sun, 7:30 AM to 8:00 PM. 2 service runs on a modified schedule because southbound 23 and 4 trains ...
The MTA announced in late 2022 that it would open customer service centers at 15 stations; the centers would provide services such as travel information and OMNY farecards. The first six customer service centers, including one at the 161st Street–Yankee Stadium station, were to open in early 2023.
From 3:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, June 9, 1 service is suspended in both directions between 137 St and 242 St due to track replacement. For alternate service take the A, M3, M100...
MTA Bus – service previously administered by the New York City Department of Transportation and operated by seven companies at the time of the takeover, mostly concentrated in Queens, with some routes in the Bronx and Brooklyn, and most express service from Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx to Manhattan.