The G train is finally back to full service following a painful summer shutdown.
The Crosstown Line returned to its full route between Court Square in Long Island City, Queens and Church Avenue in Kensington, Brooklyn at 5 a.m. on Sept. 3. The line had been shuttered in phases since late June so the MTA could perform major capital work to modernize the route’s signal system, replacing a nearly 100-year-old analog system with modern Communication-Based Train Control, allowing trains to run faster and closer together.
Since June, the G has been outfitted with 100 miles of new cable, while 17 switches and six relay rooms were replaced, MTA construction chief Jamie Torres-Springer said on Tuesday. Ten stations were also deep-cleaned while service was shuttered.
The full $368 million project won’t be completed until 2027, but further work will not require any more 24/7 shutdowns, and by the time it’s finished the MTA expects reliability on the G to rocket upwards.
“We’ve got immediate benefits that our riders are seeing today,” Torres-Springer said. “There’ll be a smoother ride, we’ve cleaned up the stations, we’ve improved a lot of track. We’re going to be providing frequent and reliable service. And when we complete this project over the next couple years and fully re-signal, we’ll have even more reliable, faster service for our G train riders. So again, we are very appreciative of the patience of folks who put up with this outage over the last couple of months.”
The G is the only direct train connection between Brooklyn and Queens that doesn’t bypass through Manhattan, and in some parts of its route it’s the only train line available, especially in Greenpoint.
The MTA provided free shuttle bus service along the closed G corridor, which riders reviewed as decent for what it was, but still a significant inconvenience.
“I did them once or twice, and they actually were pretty okay,” said Bushwick resident Addison Boucher, who noted she traveled much less frequently during the shutdown, especially to Greenpoint. “They were air-conditioned. I couldn’t complain, they came quickly. It was fine, but, I mean, it’s still annoying to have to take the bus and go through city traffic instead of the subway.”
Others, however, sought to avoid the shuttle bus entirely. Ben Grube, who works in Gowanus, said he started taking the L to Manhattan and transferring to the F this summer, adding about 20 extra minutes to his daily commute.
“I luckily didn’t have to do it for that long,” said Grube as he waited for a Church Avenue-bound train at Metropolitan Avenue. “But I was happy to see that the G was running today and back in service, because it’ll carve like 20 minutes off my commute.”
Others, like local City Council Member Lincoln Restler, opted to make their trip on two wheels.
“I have biked through extreme heat waves, up and down from Greenpoint to Downtown Brooklyn, many dozens if not hundreds of times this summer to get around our district,” said Restler, who represents much of the G corridor in North Brooklyn. “It was not fun, I would have rather been on an air-conditioned train, but it’s what needed to get done.”
Restler and state Sen. Kristen Gonzalez had mostly positive things to say about the MTA’s handling of the shutdown — particularly regarding shuttle bus service and communication with riders. They expressed dismay, however, that the city had not constructed a dedicated lane so shuttle buses could move faster.
CBTC is a computer-based signaling tech that allows trains to be run closer together than the Great Depression-era analog signals used in much of the system. That means trains arrive faster and more can be run, providing more reliable service. Being nearly 100 years old, analog signals also break down frequently and are one of the primary drivers of subway delays and poor reliability.
The L and 7 lines are the only two routes in the system already fully equipped with CBTC, which has caused reliability to jump on both lines, something riders have noticed.
Jennyfer Ogarro, who works in Long Island City and lives in Williamsburg, said the L has improved noticeably in the 30 years she’s lived in the area; she takes the L and the G on her morning commute.
“I’ve lived around here for 30-odd years, and when I started living around here, the L train was really horrible. It has gotten a lot better,” said Ogarro. “So I’m just trusting that [the G] will get a lot better as time goes on. It’s a work in process.”
Besides the G, the MTA has CBTC projects underway on the Queens Boulevard Line serving the E/F/M/R, the Culver Line serving the F in Brooklyn, and the 8th Avenue Line serving the A/C/E in Manhattan.
Further signal modernization, however, is now on ice due to the pause on congestion pricing. In the MTA’s current capital plan, revenue from the Manhattan toll was going to fund re-signaling on the Fulton Street Line serving the A/C in Brooklyn and the 6th Avenue Line serving the B/D/F/M in Manhattan, but those projects are now suspended.
The MTA is set to propose its 2025-29 capital plan this month, and without expected congestion pricing money, it’s unclear how much re-signaling work the agency will be able to do in the coming years.
“When we invest more resources in the MTA, we can do more projects just like this,” said Restler. “So I really hope that we can get congestion pricing back on track and other forms of investment to make sure that we have the most robust MTA capital plan ever, so that they can continue to do great projects just like this one that our neighbors and New Yorkers rely on so much.”
This story first appeared on Brooklyn Paper’s sister site amNewYork.
During the mayor’s weekly wide-ranging press conference, he cast the incident, which left one man dead and another critically wounded, as an anomaly among a mostly “peaceful” parade and the preceding J’ouvert celebration.
“Let’s be clear: one nut shot five people, one,” Adams said. “When you look at that one person, who we’re going to find, that shot five people, you remove them from the equation. You got hundreds of thousands of people that were out this weekend and really heard the call of a peaceful J’ouvert and a peaceful West Indian Day.”
However, the mayor said his administration “always evaluates” its security measures following the annual parade. His chief adviser, Ingrid Lewis-Martin, added that there will be an “assessment” of what—if anything—the city could have done differently.
“[The] NYPD, a number of people from the community, a number of people from different agencies will sit down and have a discussion on what additional means if any are necessary?” Lewis-Martin said. “We have to do an assessment, which the team will do. And they talk about what worked this year and what steps we can do better.”
Police believe the incident, which occurred Monday afternoon along the parade route on Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights section, involved one shooter firing into a crowd of spectators. NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell said the gunman, whom cops believe to be in their 20s, had a target in mind when they shot into the crowd and did not care who else was hit.
One of the victims, a 25-year-old man, died from a gunshot to his abdomen at Kings County Hospital on Monday night. The other four victims were wounded and three have already been released from the hospital.
The shooting took place amid stepped-up NYPD security along the parade route this year, including thousands of cops, aerial drones and police officers wanding parade-goers for concealed weapons at points of entry. The heightened security came as the event has been marred by several violent incidents in recent years.
Outside of the shooting, Adams insisted the NYPD took a “proactive approach” to the parade’s security this year that led to the department capturing 25 guns ahead of the J’ouvert celebration and an additional 10 along the parade route. He also pointed to his administration’s previous move to shorten J’ouvert so it no longer runs all night as another way to decrease the chance of violence.
Additionally, he said many community-based organizations were involved in de-escalation to ensure safety during this year’s festivities.
But Adams appeared to concede there was no way the NYPD could have stopped the one shooter, when asked several times what else the cops could do to prevent similar incidents in future years.
“How do you stop a nut from taking a gun and shooting into a crowd?” the mayor said. “We were proactive, 25 guns removed off the street…So no [there’s] telling how many shootings we prevented.”
Congratulations to Lee Fredette of East Moriches and the entire wheelchair rugby team on their silver medal in Paris! New York is so proud of you🗽 https://t.co/7aSl0gmN7Z
НЬЮ-ЙОРК — Бывшая помощница губернатора Нью-Йорка Кэти Хочул была арестована во вторник утром в своем доме на Лонг-Айленде и обвинена в деятельности в качестве тайного агента […]
СТЕЙТЕН-АЙЛЕНД, Нью-Йорк — В среду удалось предотвратить «кошачью катастрофу» после того, как котенок был спасен из ливневой канализации на Статен-Айленде. Соседи по улице Томас в районе […]
How BBC Open Source Journalists Investigate, Analyze, and Verify Information from Gaza – Global Investigative Journalism Network https://t.co/AN8Fo9aJ0w