
42nd Street Lower is a very well know, oddly constructed subway station.
It wasn’t until the late 1990s were the entrances to this station from the platform above completely sealed. At the time it showed signs of homeless encampments and frequent use by all manner of unsavory characters. The walls were decorated with a scattering of graffiti, mostly scrawled tags and throwies..
The station consists of a single track platform, built along with the rest of the station in 1932. The stations only documented use was from 1959 to 1981 for a special train that ran to Aqueduct Race Track, as well as some downtown express E trains. The race track trains apparently required extra fare, utilizing gates that allowed boarding the train via a single door where the extra fare was collected.
Severed Connection
The tracks to the north of the station were original configured so that only downtown E trains could access the platform. This however changed a few years ago, when the connector track was realigned and the switch taken out entirely, leaving the station isolated from the rest of the 8th avenue line.
7 Line & The Future
Some speculate that the station was built directly in the path of the 7 train so that the IRT could not extend this line past it’s terminal at Times Square. Currently there is much speculation that the 7 train will be extended west to the Javits Center, presumably bifurcating this unused station. Update: This did end up happening, with this station & trackway split apart now)
Graffiti
It seems that much graffiti was removed from the walls after the entrances to the platforms above were sealed up with actual doors, but that hasn’t kept others from tagging up here since then, namely Toper & Scope. These guys were active in the late 1990s, so one can assume the station was cleaned up sometime in the mid 1990s…
The Sea Honk
What is the sea honk? The Sea Honk is strangely referred to in graffiti all around the NYC Subway system. You’ve go to look close to really notice it though, since it’s not the most well known graffiti down here. So what is a Sea Honk? Some mysteries of the subway are best left to the imagination.
Only time will tell the fate of this desolate station. Presently, it is a dimly lit, dark and almost entirely forgotten space.










Leave a Reply to Mitch45 Cancel reply