- AirTrain JFK
Infobox rail line
name = AirTrain JFK
color =
image_width = 250px
caption =
type =People mover
system =
status =
locale = JFK Airport andQueens ,New York
start =
end =
stations = 10
routes = 3
ridership = 11,384 (as ofJune 2006 )update after |2007|01|01
open =December 17 ,2003
close =
owner =
operator =Bombardier Transportation
character = Serves non-sterile airport traffic
stock = 32Bombardier Advanced Rapid Transit vehicles
linelength = 8.1mile s (13 km)
tracklength =
notrack =
gauge =
el =
speed =
elevation = ElevatedAirTrain JFK is an 8.1-
mile (13-km)people mover system inNew York City that connectsJohn F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) to the city's subway and commuter trains, and airport parking lots. It is operated byBombardier Transportation under contract to thePort Authority of New York and New Jersey , which also operates the airport andAirTrain Newark .Routes and stations
AirTrain connects the airport terminals and parking areas with
Long Island Rail Road andNew York City Subway lines at Jamaica and Howard Beach stations inQueens . The system consists of three overlapping routes:* The Howard Beach route ends at the Howard Beach-JFK subway station served by the
IND Rockaway Line (NYCS Rockaway north). It stops at Lefferts Boulevard for shuttle buses to long term parking lots A and B, & the airport employee parking lot as well as the B15 bus to Brooklyn.* The Jamaica Station route ends at Jamaica Station on the
Long Island Rail Road , adjacent to the Sutphin Boulevard–Archer Avenue-JFK subway station served by theArcher Avenue Line (NYCS Archer). Jamaica Station and the two-level subway stations are connected by a centralelevator bank, allowing passengers to transfer conveniently between them.
Before separating for their final destinations, both routes stop at Federal Circle for car rental companies and shuttle buses to hotels and the airport's air cargo area. Both routes make a counterclockwise loop through the airport and stop at each terminal.* The All Terminals loop is an airport terminal circulator, which serves the six terminal stations (Terminal 1, Terminals 2 / 3, Terminal 4, Terminals 5 / 6, Terminal 7, and Terminals 8 / 9), but operates in the opposite direction, making a clockwise loop.
Station guide
Using AirTrain
AirTrain is free within the terminal area and to the hotel and car rental shuttle buses at Federal Circle. Entering or leaving AirTrain at the Jamaica or Howard Beach stations costs $5.
The fare must be paid by MetroCard, which can be purchased with cash, a credit card or an ATM card. There are
vending machines at Jamaica and Howard Beach stations where one can pay for the AirTrain and also pay subway and Long Island Rail Road fares. According to AirTrain, the only reduced fee MetroCard for AirTrain is the $40 Unlimited Ride MetroCard. There are 2 types of $40 Unlimited Ride MetroCard, both allow an unlimited number of rides. One is valid for one calendar month and the other is valid for 30 days since first use. According to MTA, another reduced fare ticket is offered, the JFK-AirTrain 10-Trip MetroCard. It costs $25 and is good for 10 JFK Air-Train trips until midnight six months after first use. 1 trip is deducted for each use. Only accepted for AirTrain trips.There are flight status displays in many AirTrain stations, including Jamaica and Howard Beach. All station stops are announced via recorded messages.
Connections
After exiting the Airtrain, the fastest trip time to
Manhattan is via theLong Island Rail Road at the Jamaica AirTrain connection. From Jamaica to Penn Station in midtown Manhattan on the LIRR takes 20 minutes. Departures are very frequent, up to every 3 minutes during rush hour, due to Jamaica Station's position as a hub on the LIRR system (except for the Port Washington line). The fare to/from Manhattan Penn Station is $7 (peak hours), $5 (off peak), or $3 (weekends, "Cityticket"). The NYC subway also serves the Airtrain terminals. Taking the subway can double the travel time, but is less expensive and serves the east side of Manhattan and Brooklyn ($2 fare).Travelers to
Long Island orBrooklyn can use the Long Island Rail Road from Jamaica; subway trains from both Howard Beach and Jamaica also serve Brooklyn. Dozens of local bus lines serving Queens and Brooklyn stop at or near Jamaica as well.Additional connecting transit services
The Long Island Rail Road serves Penn Station in midtown Manhattan, where connections to
New Jersey Transit andAmtrak trains are available. The completion ofEast Side Access , expected in2012 , will offer AirTrain passengers connecting to the LIRR a direct route toGrand Central Terminal in midtown Manhattan.Wheelchair accessibility
All AirTrain JFK stations are fully compliant with the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), and are, therefore, wheelchair accessible, as well as having other features designed to assist passengers who have a visual or hearing impairment. The Howard Beach subway and Jamaica Long Island Rail Road stations it connects with are also ADA-compliant. SeeNew York City Subway accessibility andLong Island Rail Road accessibility for connection information.History
Planners have long desired a rail connection to JFK airport, which suffers from traffic congestion on its access roads. However, efforts to build a system was slow and the final system deviated from the original plan.
The line was to begin in midtown Manhattan, at the foot of the
Queensboro Bridge . The Airtrain would cross the East River using the side roads on the lower level of the bridge. It would use theSunnyside Yards as a right-of-way towardsLaGuardia Airport . From this airport, the Airtrain would follow theGrand Central Parkway and theVan Wyck Expressway south towards Jamaica, with a station connecting to theIRT Flushing Line . Ultimately, only the portions linking Jamaica and Howard Beach to the JFK Airport were approved and built.The connection to La Guardia was never implemented, leaving that airport the only one of the Port Authority's commercial airports, serving scheduled airlines, which lacks rail service (the Port Authority also operates
Teterboro Airport inNew Jersey , which servesgeneral aviation and charter flights).Construction of the AirTrain system began in 1998 for completion in 2002, but was delayed by the derailment of a test train on
September 27 ,2002 , killing 23-year-old operator Kelvin DeBourgh, Jr. [cite news | last =Tarek | first =Shams | title =Following AirTrain Accident, A Community Mourns | publisher =Southeast Queens Press | date =2002-10-04 | url =http://queenspress.com/archives/coverstories/2002/1004/coverstory.htm | accessdate =2007-08-06] The system finally opened after a 14 month delay onDecember 17 ,2003 .The $1.9 billion AirTrain has become a success that defied critics who feared the project could become a
boondoggle because of some southeastern Queens residents' vocal complaints, the death of a worker during a test run, early problems with the doors and delays leading up to its December 2003 launch. The Port Authority responded to residents' concerns by imposing strict rules regarding disruptive or loud construction activity, such as pile driving, and by implementing a streamlined damage claim process which quickly compensated homeowners who suffered damage to their homes, such as foundation cracks, as a result of construction.The AirTrain project was financed using federal Passenger Facility Charge revenue (collected as a $3 fee on each outbound flight ticket), which can only be used for airport-related improvements. The use of this funding required FAA approval. Several airlines challenged the use of the PFC funds for this project, and hired a consultant to organize opposition to the project. They also appealed the funding decision in court, along with a small number of residents of Ozone Park. The airlines subsequently withdrew from the lawsuit following negotiations with the Port Authority; the residents continued the legal battle but lost in court. The Port Authority also contributed $100 million toward the renovation of Jamaica Station, with the State of New York paying for the rest of the $387 million project. The purpose of this renovation was, in part, to facilitate AirTrain connections. The state also spent $75 million to renovate the Howard Beach station, which brought it into ADA compliance and facilitated passengers transfers to and from AirTrain. AirTrain JFK, which is operated by Bombardier as a contractor to the Port Authority, does not receive subsidies from the state or city for its operating costs, which is one of the reasons cited for its relatively high fare.
The proposed
Lower Manhattan-Jamaica/JFK Transportation Project would use the Long Island Rail RoadAtlantic Branch todowntown Brooklyn and a new tunnel to lower Manhattan. This would provide faster service to JFK via a one-seat ride, as well as Long Island Rail Road service to lower Manhattan via a transfer at Jamaica. Under this proposal baggage could be checked in Manhattan and transferred directly to planes at the airport. Trains with hybrid propulsion systems that can run on the AirTrain, subway and Long Island Rail Road tracks might be required. The proposal may gain some momentum with the passing of theTransportation Bond Act in 2005.The
East Side Access project, now under construction and projected to open in 2013, will provide direct service between Jamaica station andGrand Central Terminal , with connections toMetro-North Commuter Railroad .The recorded announcements on AirTrain JFK are by New York City traffic reporter,
Bernie Wagenblast .Rolling Stock
AirTrain JFK uses the same Advanced Rapid Transit (formerly Intermediate Capacity Transit System) technology from
Bombardier as the SkyTrain in Vancouver, Canada and the Putra LRT inKuala Lumpur , Malaysia. It draws power from athird rail , and alinear induction motor pushes magnetically against analuminum strip in the center of the track. The computerized trains are automated and operate without conductors or motormen. The 32 individual vehicles are of the Mark II variant.Ridership
About 11% of all travelers arriving at or departing from JFK use AirTrain, according to the Port Authority, which operates AirTrain and JFK.
Daily paid ridership on the system has been steadily rising. Ridership increased from 7,700 per day in June 2004 to nearly 11,300 per day in June 2006.
Meanwhile, nearly four times as many people are taking AirTrain for free each day to travel between the airport's seven active terminals and parking lots.
The growing popularity of AirTrain also reflects a passenger boom at JFK airport. The number of people passing through the airport jumped from 31.7 million in 2003 to an estimated 41 million in 2006.
Roughly 4 million people rode the train to JFK in 2006, an increase of about 15% over 2005. [cite news |title=Manhattan: Train-to-Plane Use Sets Record |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/17/nyregion/18mbrfs-record.html?_r=1&oref=login |publisher=
New York Times |date=January 17 ,2007 |accessdate=2007-11-08 ]ee also
*
Lower Manhattan-Jamaica/JFK Transportation Project - Proposal to run the AirTrain over theLIRR Atlantic Branch in a new direct JFK connection to Lower Manhattan
*List of rapid transit systems
*List of airport circulators
*AirTrain Newark
*JFK Express
*Train-to-the-plane
*Transportation to New York City area airports with additional information on travel connections.External links
* [http://www.panynj.gov/airtrain/ Port Authority's official AirTrain JFK web pages]
* [http://www.mta.info/mta/planning/lmlink/ Lower Manhattan-Jamaica-JFK Transportation Project website]
* [http://groups.google.com/group/misc.transport.urban-transit/browse_thread/thread/28b7fac65dfbeac6/818623f3d404bccc JFK Airtrain: Good News, Bad News, Good News and Bad News] : AUsenet poster's review of using AirTrain, the Subway and the LIRR onGoogle Groups * [http://www.subwaynut.com/sounds/airtrain/ Recordings of AirTrain's announcements]
* [http://www.nynewsnetwork.com/Article.php?article=Port+Authority+Announces+AirTrain+Extension+to+Lower+Manhattan.xml New York News Network - Port Authority Announces AirTrain Extension to Lower Manhattan]
* [http://www.gothamist.com/archives/2003/12/18/the_airtrain_to_the_train_to_the_plane.php Opening Day Coverage (includes 'test' to see if AirTrain is faster than a taxi)]
* [http://www.bombardier.com/en/1_0/include/loadPDF.html?pdf=/en/1_0/pdf/AirTrain_JFK.pdf Complete system specs from Bombardier website]References
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