New Yorkers rejoice at opening of new subway line on first day of 2017
Eleven-year-old Bobby Graves may have only caught the tail end of a century’s worth of deferred promises on New York’s Second Avenue subway. But he’s already seen enough to treat the project with extreme scepticism.
“I thought it was some sort of joke when I heard it was going to open Sunday,” he said, as he waited with his parents outside the entrance of the 96th Street station.
But it was no joke. At exactly noon on Sunday, Graves and hundreds of other New Yorkers took the inaugural ride on the Second Avenue subway, a trip that whisked them through three brand-new stations that cost US$4.5 billion and serve as the transit system’s first major expansion project in half of a century.
The new stations are located at 72nd, 86th and 96th streets, and provide an extension of the Q line that will now connect the Upper East Side in Manhattan directly with Brooklyn and Coney Island. There are three more phases planned for the project.
But in addition to the improved transit connections - now, Upper East Side residents can reach Times Square without swapping trains - the debut of the new stations has been hailed for the unconventional design of the stations. They’re spacious, airy, with high ceilings, an expansive mezzanine level, and ambitious public art installations.