Marcy Avenue
2 miles
Marcy Avenue is a station on the BMT Jamaica Line of the New York City Subway. Locate...
Reviews
LOVED this place! It is a easy walk from Brooklyn to NYC, and there are really easy accesses to the metro in the nearby. The views are gorgeous! Everbody should do this walk!
A large train station that is suitable for those who want to get to the Brooklyn Bridge, but probably more for locals who need to get to the shopping area. Either way, a train station that does nothing more than move from one place to another.
There is an Hiden station old one if you take the end of the line 6 its really nice to see it. Just stay in the metro and you will see it when it will change from down to uptown. Don't be afraid that all passengers leave
This is a fancy looking building to exit it from the subway. Shame the line below is not as grand. Functional but nothing special. Needs better signage for the exits and some maintenance on the beautiful tiles that have seen better days years ago
It's v the train what more can I say. It runs its usually on time
This is so convenient from 125 Worth Street to the train station for 4 or 5 train and we did took the cab before and the driver drop us off in the wrong location and we were lost. Subways save our lives and taxi are very expensive. I want to move back to Manhattan again in the future and super convenient then Staten Island.
It was my first time visiting the Brooklyn Bridge, it was crowded by people but that didn't diminish the great experience I had. I recommend visiting this iconic place, keep it clean and I believe it is forbidden to put locks on the fences of the bridge.
Wow! Built in 1909. And without the modern tools we take for granted. It must have been backbreaking. Beautiful building. Hollow on the inside. The 4 and 6 trains run beneath it. They just don't make buildings like this anymore. This spot is also convenient to go anywhere. World Trade is about 5 or 6 blocks from and so is Chinatown and Little Italy.
Pretty much big station.. Neat and clean. Everything seems fine.
City Hall Loop, opened in 1904, was once a lavish terminal station that served around 600 passengers a day. Passenger travel through this station was discontinued after 40 years of operation due to the dramatic increase in New York’s population. Today, you can only visit the station during very specific times of the year. It used to be a popular destination where locals and travelers could look at the intricate designs of the past, but it closed due to security reasons in the mid-20th century.