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Cypress Hills (BMT Jamaica Line)

Cypress Hills
"J" train
New York City Subway rapid transit station
Cypress hills station.jpeg
The station, middle trackbed and a R42 train stopped.
Station statistics
Address Hemlock Street & Jamaica Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11208
Borough Brooklyn
Locale Cypress Hills
Coordinates 40°41′23″N 73°52′23″W / 40.68972°N 73.87306°W / 40.68972; -73.87306Coordinates: 40°41′23″N 73°52′23″W / 40.68972°N 73.87306°W / 40.68972; -73.87306
Division B (BMT)
Line BMT Jamaica Line
Services       J all times (all times)
Transit connections Bus transport NYCT Bus: B13, Q56
Structure Elevated
Platforms 2 side platforms
Tracks 2
Other information
Opened May 30, 1893; 123 years ago (1893-05-30)
Rebuilt May 28, 1917; 99 years ago (1917-05-28)
Former/other names Cypress Hills Cemetery
Traffic
Passengers (2015) 452,936 Increase 0.5%
Rank 410 out of 422
Station succession
Next north 75th Street – Elderts Lane: J all except rush hours, peak direction
(J rush hours, peak direction skips to 85th Street – Forest Parkway)
Next south Crescent Street: J all times

Cypress Hills is a skip-stop station on the BMT Jamaica Line of the New York City Subway, located on Jamaica Avenue in the Cypress Hills neighborhood of northeastern Brooklyn. It is served by the J train at all times. The Z train bypasses it when it operates.

This is the northernmost station in Brooklyn on the BMT Jamaica Line. The next stop, 75th Street – Elderts Lane, is in Queens.

The original Cypress Hills station, opened on May 30, 1893, had two tracks and one island platform and was located along Crescent Street, reaching the cemetery. This station was the terminal for the Jamaica Line when it opened. It formerly had an island platform and stub-end located directly along Crescent Street just south of Jamaica Avenue that can still be seen approaching the cemetery east of the station. The rebuilt station was constructed under the Dual Contracts and was opened on May 28, 1917. The rebuilt station has two tracks and two side platforms. The removal of the island platform resulted in a space between the tracks. This space would allow for an express third track, but one was never built. Both platforms have beige windscreens and green canopies with brown roofs that run along the entire length.

Just west of this station are two sharp curves that trains must navigate at <15 mph. For this reason, a train must take more time to transverse this section than other sections of the line.

The 1990 artwork here is called Five Points of Observation, by Kathleen McCarthy. It affords a view of the street from the platforms and resembles a face when seen from the street. This artwork is also located in four other stations on the Jamaica Line.


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Wikipedia

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