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    MTA - High St Subway Station

    2.8 (6 reviews)

    MTA - High St Subway Station Photos

    MTA - High St Subway Station - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
    MTA - High St Subway Station - Escalators are working! MTA-A train Station High Street/Brooklyn Bridge.  DUMBO. - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
    MTA - High St Subway Station - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
    MTA - High St Subway Station - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
    MTA - High St Subway Station - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
    MTA - High St Subway Station - B63 Bus - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
    MTA - High St Subway Station - B61 Bus - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
    MTA - High St Subway Station - B52 Bus - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
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    MTA - High St Subway Station - B26 Bus - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York
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    MTA - High St Subway Station - B69 Bus - Public Transportation Near Me - Brooklyn, New York

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    Steve A.

    High Street has an MTA station in downtown Brooklyn. It looks like one of the scummiest stations. You should never touch a thing. Bad smells in here. There's always some creep hanging and it's trashy. Annoying to get inside. It serves the A and C Trains. This place gets so windy. Hold onto everything. There's a few attractions that help make this station look better than it is. First, there's parkland. The Brooklyn Heights Promenade is really close, and so are other parks. It sucks getting here. Lots of tourists. The station is pretty dirty but outside it's cleaner though.

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    5 days ago

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    10 months ago

    I love the High Street station! It's much better than it was in the 90s. First and last stop in Brooklyn!

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    3 years ago

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    6 years ago

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    8 years ago

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    12 years ago

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    MTA - Bedford Avenue Subway Station

    MTA - Bedford Avenue Subway Station

    3.2(17 reviews)
    2.2 miWilliamsburg - North Side

    The Bedford Avenue station is a very busy subway station in Williamsburg. It is the second busiest…read morestation in Brooklyn. It first opened 100 years ago in 1924. Imagine how many people have ridden on the L Line as one of the first segments of the underground Canarsie Line over the past 100 years. Amazing! No Less Than Everything Comes Together. Going back and forth from Williamsburg to Prospect Heights meant a lot of trips from this station through Manhattan. I don't think I'll ever understand why there still isn't a way to get from Brooklyn to Brooklyn without going through Manhattan. Yet, it allowed me to discover a series of beautiful mosaics by Marcel Dzama. The Sun. The Moon. The Sky. All connected in No Less Than Everything Comes Together by Marcel Dzama. The mosaics are so interesting and detailed. Dzama cites that he was influenced by the great Dada movement artist, Marcel Duchamp, but the mosaics remind me more of the Catalan architect, Antoni Gaudi. Either way, the mosaics are so fun and playful. Take a few minutes on your vacation or your daily commute to enjoy the whimsical dancers, the sun, the moon and a few historical characters that all play a part in the mosaics in the underground Bedford Avenue Subway.

    This was one of the funner stations as it had some killer mosaics. Despite many of the reviews, the…read morerare, elusive Hipsters were nowhere to be found. It was an average level of dirty for the subway but was otherwise okay. It was disappointing that I could not spot any migratory hipsters but I am sure there were plenty above ground with soul patches and drinking PBR

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    MTA - Bedford Avenue Subway Station
    MTA - Bedford Avenue Subway Station - Marcel Dzama

    Marcel Dzama

    MTA - Bedford Avenue Subway Station

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    MTA - Canal Street Subway Station - At Canal St. Station

    MTA - Canal Street Subway Station

    2.8(34 reviews)
    1.5 mi

    As the main station in the center of Chinatown, I'm regularly using Canal Street for going to or…read morefrom this neighborhood. Shopping, eating, it's just a super place to be! That being said, despite all it's in-station transfer options for the J,N,R,Q,W,Z and 6 trains, can't think of when I've actually used this station to change trains. Also not sure how convenient it is for many since it's a giant labyrinth, plus it has extremely limited ADA-compliance. Accessibility improvements for the full station are on the way in the present prioritized Capital Plan. That being said, Canal Street Station's 1998 "Empress Voyage" tile mosaics around the station by China-born artist Bing Lee tie into the American merchant ship, Empress of China, which on a pioneer voyage returned in 1794 to the city with treasured trade cargo: silk, tea, porcelain. There's a full-wall mosaic displaying playful icons, but on platforms you'll find different Chinese symbols in stylized interlocked teapots. As elsewhere in Chinatown, there's bilingual signage - passengers can read the station's name as "Canal Street" or the Chinese character for Chinatown.

    Clean, functional, plus a great place for a photo op…read more Artistically, the installation ("A Gathering", 2001) by Walter Martin and Paloma Muñoz transformed the Canal Street Station into a subterranean aviary with 174 bronze sculptures of grackles and blackbirds, and seven crows, perched on railings and gates. But keep your eyes open for other kinds of birds, too. Potential jailbirds. Because on 1/1/25, a 31-year-old man was stabbed in the arm and back while riding a southbound 6 train approaching Canal Street, and in 5/24, a 69-year-old man was attacked on the southbound R platform at Canal Street. The assailant placed the victim in a chokehold, punched him repeatedly, and robbed him before fleeing on foot. ​ In 3/24, a male individual reportedly threatened a female at the Canal Street subway station.

    Photos
    MTA - Canal Street Subway Station - Nasty Motherfu*ker peeing inside the subway station, before he boards the train That's why always carry my hand sanitizer people are just ew

    Nasty Motherfu*ker peeing inside the subway station, before he boards the train That's why always carry my hand sanitizer people are just ew

    MTA - Canal Street Subway Station
    MTA - Canal Street Subway Station

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    MTA - Prince Street Subway Station

    MTA - Prince Street Subway Station

    3.9(7 reviews)
    1.8 miSoHo

    This Prince St. Subway Station in SoHo at Broadway is serviced by BMT Broadway Line trains (i.e.,…read morethose marked yellow between Brooklyn and Queens or Uptown) when they're running local in Midtown Manhattan. [That service, subject to change for multiple reasons, presently includes: R at all times except night, W on weekdays, N weekends and nights, as well as Q at night.] Spanning both platforms, Brooklyn artist Janet Zweig and figurative artist Edward del Rosario's collaboration 2003 "Carrying On" tile, steel, and slate mosaic depicts 194 silhouetted New York figures along with the many assorted things they carried on the street above. The artists utilized photographs of actual anonymous individuals in motion around the city to create the figures. Each figures unique fine details tell a different story, easy to overlook if you rush through the station. Begun just before 9/11 and finished a couple years afterwards, the title also gives a nod to New Yorkers continuing afterwards plus their outgoing personalities and lively nature. Given this always busy Prince Street station provides close subway access to the SoHo shopping district, it could benefit from MTA installing elevators! People who cannot easily navigate the stairs, such as with strollers, carriages, or wheelchairs cannot easily use this subway station! MTA, make this Prince Street Subway Station accessible to everyone!

    I do love this station. To me it's a cool Subway Station. I always enjoyed using it when I worked…read moreclose enough. I found it to be clean for the most part. I have seen a rat or two back in the day. They have cleaned it up since then. The neighborhood is a shoppers paradise. There's so much to see. You have plenty of food options when you exit the subway also. There are cheap eats if you look in the right places. You won't get confused or lost here. Pretty straight forward Subway Station. There's old tiles from days gone by and new decor too. I'm definitely going back soon. I need to see if some of my favorite delis and restaurants are still open. Check it out.....

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    MTA - Prince Street Subway Station
    MTA - Prince Street Subway Station
    MTA - Prince Street Subway Station

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    MTA - 14 St - Union Square Subway Station - Union Square Subway Station (4,5,6,L,N,Q,R.W) -  Mary Miss "Framing Union Square" 1998, Overlooking IRT Tracks

    MTA - 14 St - Union Square Subway Station

    2.8(75 reviews)
    2.6 miUnion Square, Flatiron

    Union Square Subway Station is one of the major hubs in NYC. All the Yellow lines (N, Q, R, W) ,…read moreGreen line (4, 5, 6 trains), and Grey line (L train) to Brooklyn traverse there. Very busy station during rush hour so stay behind the yellow line. Easy to connect from train to train if one gets the timing down without train delays. They boards are helpful with train times now with the upcoming trains and delays. So need to rush if trains are packed, there is another one right behind it. Station does need an uplift and cleaning though... Depending where you need to go, follow the correct exit when leaving the station. It can get a bit confusing but follow the signs or ask someone.

    This 14th Street-Union Square Subway Station, presently serviced by the Lexington Avenue Line…read more(4,5,6 trains), Broadway Line (N,Q,R,W trains), and Canarsie Line L train, provides a great place to either change trains or reach all the great stuff going on at Union Square, with one exception: access to those Lex Ave. trains is not ADA compliant,... but when you're down there, you can see why. What's now the Lexington Avenue Line station here was one of the original 28 IRT stations that opened up in 1904 as the city's first subway line! It's where the narrow tracks curve as they shift between 4th Avenue and Park Avenue South. In fact, you'll find or Downtown-bound Local 6 trains a retractable moving platform system that closes a gap that appears when trains arrive. So, heed the warnings! For your safety, pay attention to the postings and stand clear of the moving platform! Although the Broadway Line here opening in 1917 and Canarsie Line in 1924, all the lines were combined into one complex in 1948. As subway service expanded, Union Square, surrounded by stores and assorted buildings, became a big transportation hub. It's placed in the National Register of Historic Places. The public art highlights those original architectural elements by Heins & LaFarge, contracted in 1901 to design the original station. American artist and designer Mary Miss cleverly created "Framing Union Square," bright red metal frames that bring attention to what remains, pointing your attention to those historic features, as if taking you on a archeological journey to marvel at what remains from the past. What's funny to me is what appears to be a couple combination "Love Locks" added to rebar emerging from those beautiful columns on the Mezzanine announcing 14th Street. All in all, Miss's work highlights those lasting things we should appreciate.

    Photos
    MTA - 14 St - Union Square Subway Station - Union Square IRT Local Retracted Moving Platform

    Union Square IRT Local Retracted Moving Platform

    MTA - 14 St - Union Square Subway Station - Union Square Subway Station (4,5,6,L,N,Q,R.W) -  Mary Miss "Framing Union Square" 1998, Original Column Love Lock

    Union Square Subway Station (4,5,6,L,N,Q,R.W) - Mary Miss "Framing Union Square" 1998, Original Column Love Lock

    MTA - 14 St - Union Square Subway Station - Union Square IRT Local Train at Moving Platform

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    Union Square IRT Local Train at Moving Platform

    MTA - Bleecker Subway Station - Broadway-Lafayette and Bleecker St Subway Stations (B,D,F,M,6) - Mel Chin "Signal" 1998, Lower Mezzanine

    MTA - Bleecker Subway Station

    3.5(13 reviews)
    1.9 miNoHo

    This Bleecker Street/Broadway-Lafayette Street Subway Station greatly improved after the 2012…read moreupgrade which finally enabled in-station transfers with the Bleecker Station Uptown Platform for the Lexington Avenue Local 6 train and provided the full complex ADA-compliant accessibility. That being said, I personally rarely have the need to make that type of transfer, although I do use the Broadway-Lafayette Platforms on occasion to easily switch between various 6th Avenue trains (B,D,F,M) heading in the same Uptown or Downtown direction. The Bleecker Street Subway Station was part of the original 28 IRT stations opened in 1904. In fact, the original interior portion of that station is a New York City Landmark and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Broadway-Lafayette Subway Station opened in 1936, but the in-station transfer with the Bleecker Downtown Platform only opened in 1957. Two public art pieces that now decorate the station: + In 1998, MTA installed multimedia artist Mel Chin's "Signal" includes colored tiles that may look like early pixelated digital video game graphics but that's not their significance, along with metal conal sculptures surrounding the column base in the Broadway-Lafayette Mezzanine Concourse. Chin collaborated with Seneca tribe member Peter Jemison, so the tiles represent figures from the six nations of the Haudensaunee (the Iriquois Confederacy, New York State's original inhabitants who still live here) with arms stretched out to each other. The metal represents campfires with lower level tiles smoke for signaling to each other. Apparently, lights under the metal cone perforations respectively brighten and dim as subway trains enter and leave the station. That being said, I've never noticed that happening, so don't know if it's functioning. + In the 2012 renovation at the Bleecker Street Uptown Platform above the new area for transfer to the other lines, MTA added the New Mexico artist Leo Villareal's "Hive (Bleecker Street)" cool hexagonal honeycomb LED light sculpture. Constantly 24/7 the cells shift color. (If you're a fan of the fluorescent light artist Dan Flavin like me, you'll note his influence.)

    Use this subway stop for Little Italy and Chinatown. Both are good sized neighborhoods…read more This was another transfer point for us.

    Photos
    MTA - Bleecker Subway Station - Broadway-Lafayette and Bleecker St Subway Stations (B,D,F,M,6) - Mel Chin "Signal" 1998, Plaque

    Broadway-Lafayette and Bleecker St Subway Stations (B,D,F,M,6) - Mel Chin "Signal" 1998, Plaque

    MTA - Bleecker Subway Station - Broadway-Lafayette and Bleecker St Subway Stations (B,D,F,M,6) - Leo Villareal "Hive (Bleecker St)" 2012

    Broadway-Lafayette and Bleecker St Subway Stations (B,D,F,M,6) - Leo Villareal "Hive (Bleecker St)" 2012

    MTA - Bleecker Subway Station

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    MTA - High St Subway Station - publictransport - Updated June 2026

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