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Brighton Beach station (BMT Brighton Line)

1878 establishments in New York (state)1907 establishments in New York CityBMT Brighton Line stationsBrighton BeachNew York City Subway stations in Brooklyn
New York City Subway stations located abovegroundNew York City Subway terminalsRailway stations in the United States opened in 1878Railway stations in the United States opened in 1907Use mdy dates from May 2017
Brighton Beach Coney Island Bound Platform
Brighton Beach Coney Island Bound Platform

The Brighton Beach station is an elevated express and terminal station on the BMT Brighton Line of the New York City Subway. It is located over Brighton Beach Avenue between Brighton 5th Street and Brighton 7th Street in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn. The station is served by the Q train at all times and is the southern terminal for the B train on weekdays only.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Brighton Beach station (BMT Brighton Line) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Brighton Beach station (BMT Brighton Line)
Brighton Beach Avenue, New York Brooklyn

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Brighton Beach station (BMT Brighton Line)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.577598 ° E -73.961565 °
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Address

Brighton Beach Avenue 523
11235 New York, Brooklyn
New York, United States
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Brighton Beach Coney Island Bound Platform
Brighton Beach Coney Island Bound Platform
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Brighton Beach Race Course
Brighton Beach Race Course

The Brighton Beach Race Course was an American Thoroughbred horse racing facility in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, New York, opened on June 28, 1879 by the Brighton Beach Racing Association. Headed by real estate developer William A. Engeman, who owned the Brighton Beach Hotel, the one-mile race track was located in back of the hotel and bounded by Ocean Parkway on the west, Neptune Avenue on the north, Coney Island Avenue on the east, and Brighton Beach Avenue on the south. An instant success, the race track drew wealthy patrons from New York City, and harness racing was introduced there in 1901.Among its most important Thoroughbred horse racing events were the Brighton Derby for three-year-olds and the Brighton Handicap that was open to older horses. On July 17, 1900, James R. Keene's horse Voter set a new World Record of 1:38.00 for a mile on dirt at the Brighton Beach Race Course.The track prospered until 1908 when the New York Legislature passed the Hart–Agnew Law banning gambling in New York State. Motor racing events were held at the facility in an attempt to keep the track from closing but even after horse racing returned to New York it was too late to save the track. At the time it ceased horse racing operations, the Brighton Beach Race Course was the oldest horse track in steady use in the New York City area. The former racetrack, later known as the Brighton Beach Motordrome was then used for automobile racing for a time and after other measures failed to make it viable, the facility was finally torn down and by the 1920s replaced by residential housing.