Harlem-125th Street (Metro-North)

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Harlem-125th Street

View from street level.
Station statistics
Address 101 E. 125th Street & 1818 Park Avenue,
New York City, NY 10035
Coordinates 40°48′21″N 73°56′21″W / 40.805949, -73.939147
Lines Metro-North Railroad:
Danbury Branch
Harlem Line
Hudson Line
New Canaan Branch
New Haven Line
Connections MTA New York City Bus:
Bx15, M35, M60 to LaGuardia Airport, M100, M101
New York City Subway:
NYC Subway 4 serviceNYC Subway 5 serviceNYC Subway 6 serviceNYC Subway 6d service at 125th Street
Other information
Opened 1896
Accessible Handicapped/disabled access
Owned by Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Fare zone 1
Services
Preceding station   Metro-North Railroad   Following station
Terminus
Danbury Branch
(limited)
toward Danbury
Harlem Line
toward Wassaic
Hudson Line
(local)
(express)
New Canaan Branch
(limited)
toward New Canaan
New Haven Line

The Harlem-125th Street Metro-North Railroad station serves residents of the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York and commuters who work in Harlem via the Hudson Line, Harlem Line and New Haven Line. It is the only station besides Grand Central Terminal that serves all three lines east of the Hudson River. Trains leave for Grand Central Terminal, the Bronx and the northern suburbs regularly. Harlem-125th Street is seldom used for travel to and from Grand Central. However, it remains possible to do so. On a related note, the station is within the boundaries of the CityTicket program. It is 4.19 miles (6.7 km) from Grand Central, and travel time is approximately ten minutes. One block to the east is 125th Street on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line (4 5 6 <6>) of the New York City Subway. From Harlem, riders can also take the M60 bus to LaGuardia Airport.

[edit] History

The current Harlem-125th Street Station was built in 1896-97 and was designed by Morgan O'Brien, New York Central and Hudson River Railroad principal architect. It replaced an earlier one that was built in 1874, when the New York Central and the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, the ancestors of today's Metro-North, moved the tracks from an open cut, to the present-day elevated viaduct. The original station on the site was built in 1844, when the trains ran at grade-level on what is now Park Avenue. That station was demolished to make way for the open cut.

A recent mid-1990s renovation of the 1897 structure has cleared out a century's worth of neglect and deterioration. The entire Park Avenue viaduct was replaced piece by piece without disturbing Metro-North service for the durration of the renovation. The renovation is considered a replication, rather than renovation, of the original 1930s version of the station being that none of the original structure is visable to the public.

[edit] Appearances in film and on TV

Harlem-125th Street Station has often been used as a setting for film and TV, where it usually stands in for an elevated MTA or similar rapid transit station.

[edit] External links