'Grand Central–42nd Street' is a major
rapid transit station complex in the
New York City Subway, and was the second busiest station in 1994.
[1] It lies next to and beneath
Grand Central Terminal, which serves all
Metro-North Railroad lines east of the
Hudson River. It is located at the intersection of
Park Avenue and
42nd Street, with parts of the station extending east to
Lexington Avenue. It is an all-
IRT transfer point.
__TOC__
IRT 42nd Street Shuttle platforms
The 'Grand Central' shuttle platforms date from the
original IRT subway, opened in 1904. The station was an express stop with two island platforms between the local and express tracks.
The present configuration of the shuttle has three tracks coming into the station; the old southbound express track was removed. There is no connection between the northbound local track and the other two.
Island platforms are located between both pairs of tracks; the southernmost platform is wide, covering the area where the southbound express track (track 2) had been located. The two platforms connect directly, as tracks 3 and 4 terminate at stopping blocks. The south track (track 1) merges with the southbound local track of the
Lexington Avenue Line. This merge is used to supply rolling stock to the shuttle line, and occasionally during special railfan excursions. The other three original tracks followed similar paths until the Lexington Avenue Line was extended north, turning this part of the line into a shuttle.
This station was used in a famous scene in the 1971 film ''
The French Connection''.
IRT Flushing Line platform
'Grand Central' on the Flushing Line has a single island platform. There is a large round ceiling, making the station similar to the
London Underground,
Paris Metro and systems in
Eastern Europe. Along the platforms are stairs and escalators to other lines and to a mezzanine and passageways under the
Grand Central Terminal concourse. Exits and entrances are located at the center, west and east ends of the platform. There is an
ADA-accessible elevator toward the west end. A newsstand/snack shop is located on the platform towards the east end.
IRT Lexington Avenue Line platforms
'42nd Street–Grand Central' on the
IRT Lexington Avenue Line was also known as the 'Diagonal Station' at time of construction, being oriented 45° from the street grid. It has two
island platforms, one on each side between the local and express tracks, and includes a crossover and a crossunder. The columns and beams here are massive, in order to support part of
Grand Central Terminal and the office towers next to it.
On one wall, there is a stylized steam locomotive mosaic. The northbound platform's side wall includes tile depicting a big passageway; the first room, as seen from the platform, has doors to a second room which appears to be a mechanical room. There is a correctly oriented compass rose inlaid on the floor of the
mezzanine.
The southbound local track south of the station merges into a lead from the
IRT 42nd Street Shuttle; this track was part of the
original four-track IRT subway. This track is now used for moving trains to and from the shuttle and for launching
railfan trips from the shuttle tracks.
Just south of the station, the tracks split, with two on each side of the
1870 New York and Harlem Railroad Park Avenue Tunnel (now used for automobile traffic).
The Grand Central complex is home to the master tower which controls the entire Lexington Avenue Line, located south of the Lexington Avenue Line platforms.
The
New York City Transit Authority had a scheme in the early
1950s to make a lower level to the station, also of four tracks. It would tap into the express tracks beyond the station and be used as an intermediate terminal stop for certain lines. There is room between the station and the
Flushing Line for such a new level.
Gallery
The complex

1918 plan
An east-west passageway connects the mezzanine, above the Flushing Line and Lexington Avenue Line platforms, to the
42nd Street Shuttle and has numerous exits into
Grand Central Terminal, to the street level and directly into several buildings along 42nd Street.
The station has undergone various recent renovations, but some of the passages still require repair or renovation. At the same time, a project was ongoing to air cool the station in conjunction with
Metro-North Railroad's project to cool Grand Central Terminal. However, as of 2006, only the Lexington Avenue Line station is air-cooled, making it the only artificially cooled station in the
New York City Subway. The Flushing Line platforms have been equipped with fans but not an air cooling system.
Original plans for
PATH (at that time the
Hudson and Manhattan Railroad) had it extending north and east from its current northern terminal at
33rd Street/
Sixth Avenue to Grand Central. Space was left for the platforms and line, but it was never built.
Except for the 42nd Street Shuttle (which is inaccessible at its other station at
Times Square), the whole station is
handicapped accessible, as is the connection to
Grand Central Terminal (see
Metro-North Railroad accessibility).
Relative depths
★
Metro-North Railroad upper level, 20 feet below street
★
42nd Street Shuttle, 20 feet
★
Lexington Avenue Line, 50 feet
★ Metro-North Railroad lower level, 60 feet
★
Flushing Line, 80 feet
IRT Third Avenue Line transfers
For a while, free transfers were provided between the subway station and
42nd Street on the
elevated IRT Third Avenue Line. This started on
June 14,
1942, the day after the
IRT Second Avenue Line, which provided access to
Queensboro Plaza and the
IRT Flushing Line, was closed. The Third Avenue Line closed on
May 12,
1955, rendering the transfer obsolete.
[1]
Bus connections
★
M42
★
M98
★
M104
References
1. 'El' Will Cease Saturday, ''New York Times'' June 7, 1942 page 31
External links
★
★
★
★ Station Reporter —
Grand Central Complex
★ Abandoned Stations —
Proposed Grand Central shuttle platform (includes a track diagram)