place

Chambers Street–World Trade Center/Park Place/Cortlandt Street station

1918 establishments in New York City1932 establishments in New York CityAccessible New York City Subway stationsBMT Broadway Line stationsFinancial District, Manhattan
IND Eighth Avenue Line stationsIRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line stationsNew York City Subway stations in ManhattanNew York City Subway stations located undergroundNew York City Subway terminalsNew York City Subway transfer stationsRailway stations in the United States opened in 1918Railway stations in the United States opened in 1932TribecaUse mdy dates from May 2017World Trade Center
Chambers wall vc
Chambers wall vc

The Chambers Street–World Trade Center/Park Place/Cortlandt Street station is a New York City Subway station complex on the IND Eighth Avenue Line, IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line, and BMT Broadway Line. Located on Church Street between Chambers and Cortlandt Streets in Lower Manhattan, it is served by the: 2, A and E trains at all times W train on weekdays 3, C and R trains at all times except late nights N train during late nightsThe station also connects to the PATH via the World Trade Center Transportation Hub, and to the nearby Fulton Center via the Dey Street Passageway.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Chambers Street–World Trade Center/Park Place/Cortlandt Street station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Chambers Street–World Trade Center/Park Place/Cortlandt Street station
Fulton Street, New York Manhattan

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Chambers Street–World Trade Center/Park Place/Cortlandt Street stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.712655 ° E -74.009657 °
placeShow on map

Address

Chambers Street–World Trade Center–Park Place–Cortlandt Street

Fulton Street
10008 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q16237571)
linkOpenStreetMap (812927889)

Chambers wall vc
Chambers wall vc
Share experience

Nearby Places

195 Broadway
195 Broadway

195 Broadway, also known as the Telephone Building, Telegraph Building, or Western Union Building, is an early skyscraper on Broadway in the Financial District of Manhattan, New York City. It was the longtime headquarters of AT&T as well as Western Union. It occupies the entire western side of Broadway from Dey Street to Fulton Street. The site was formerly occupied by the Western Union Telegraph Building. The current 29-story, 422-foot-tall (129 m) building was commissioned after AT&T's 1909 acquisition of Western Union. It was constructed from 1912 to 1916 under the leadership of Theodore Newton Vail, to designs by William W. Bosworth, although one section was not completed until 1922. It was the site of one end of the first transcontinental telephone call, the first intercity Picturephone call, and the first transatlantic telephone call. Though AT&T's headquarters relocated to 550 Madison Avenue in 1984, 195 Broadway remains in use as an office building as of 2020. Bosworth's design was heavily Greek-influenced: though the facade is made of white Vermont granite, it features layers of gray granite columns in Doric and Ionic styles, as well as various Greek-inspired ornamentation. The northwestern corner of the building was designed similar to a campanile with a stepped roof, which formerly supported the Spirit of Communication statue. The Greek design carried into the large lobby, clad with marble walls and floors, and containing sculptural ornament by Paul Manship and Gaston Lachaise. The exterior and first-floor interior spaces were designated as city landmarks by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 2006.