Woodhaven Boulevard
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New York City Subway rapid transit station | |||||||||||
Forest Hills- and Jamaica-bound platform
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Station statistics | |||||||||||
Address |
Woodhaven Boulevard & Queens Boulevard Queens, NY 11373 |
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Borough | Queens | ||||||||||
Locale | Elmhurst | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 40°44′00″N 73°52′13″W / 40.73347°N 73.870397°WCoordinates: 40°44′00″N 73°52′13″W / 40.73347°N 73.870397°W | ||||||||||
Division | B (IND) | ||||||||||
Line | IND Queens Boulevard Line | ||||||||||
Services |
E (late nights) M (weekdays until 11 p.m.) R (all hours except late nights) |
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Transit connections |
NYCT Bus: Q59, Q88 MTA Bus: Q11, Q21, Q29, Q38, Q52, Q53, Q60, QM10, QM11 |
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Structure | Underground | ||||||||||
Platforms | 2 side platforms | ||||||||||
Tracks | 4 | ||||||||||
Other information | |||||||||||
Opened | December 31, 1936 | ||||||||||
Wireless service | |||||||||||
Former/other names | Woodhaven Boulevard–Slattery Plaza Woodhaven Boulevard–Queens Mall |
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Traffic | |||||||||||
Passengers (2015) | 7,120,037 0.1% | ||||||||||
Rank | 60 out of 422 | ||||||||||
Station succession | |||||||||||
Next north | 63rd Drive–Rego Park: E M R | ||||||||||
Next south | Grand Avenue–Newtown: E M R | ||||||||||
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Woodhaven Boulevard is a local station on the IND Queens Boulevard Line of the New York City Subway, consisting of four tracks. Located in the Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens, it is served by the R train at all times except nights, when the E train takes over service. The M train provides additional service here on weekdays except nights. The station serves the adjacent Queens Center Mall, as well as numerous bus lines.
Woodhaven Boulevard was opened on December 31, 1936, as Woodhaven Boulevard–Slattery Plaza. At the time, the station was part of the Independent Subway System. The plaza was demolished in the 1950s, but the name tablets displaying the station's original name were kept. In the 1980s, the Woodhaven Boulevard station was renamed after Queens Center, an adjacent shopping mall. The station was renovated in the 1990s after years of deterioration.
The Queens Boulevard Line was one of the first lines built by the city-owned Independent Subway System (IND), and stretches between the IND Eighth Avenue Line in Manhattan and 179th Street and Hillside Avenue in Jamaica, Queens. The Queens Boulevard Line was in part financed by a Public Works Administration (PWA) loan and grant of $25,000,000.
During the station's construction, the main road of Queens Boulevard was depressed into underpasses at the intersections with Woodhaven Boulevard and Horace Harding Boulevard (also known as Nassau Boulevard). The easternmost underpass now carries Queens Boulevard below the Long Island Expressway (LIE), which replaced Horace Harding Boulevard. On December 31, 1936, the IND Queens Boulevard Line was extended by eight stops, and 3.5 miles (5.6 km), from its previous terminus at Roosevelt Avenue to Union Turnpike, and the Woodhaven Boulevard station opened as part of this extension. As a result of the extension, areas in Elmhurst were accessible by subway.