The Jay Street–MetroTech station is a
New York City Subway
The New York City Subway is a rapid transit system owned by the government of New York City and leased to the New York City Transit Authority, an affiliate agency of the state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA). Opened on October 2 ...
station complex on the
IND Fulton Street,
IND Culver, and
BMT Fourth Avenue lines. The complex is located in the vicinity of
MetroTech Center
Brooklyn Commons, formerly MetroTech Center, is a business and educational center in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City.
Location
Brooklyn Commons lies between Flatbush Avenue Extension and Jay Street, north of the Fulton Street Mall and south o ...
(near Jay and Willoughby Streets) in
Downtown Brooklyn. It is served by the:
*
A,
F, and
R trains at all times
*
C train at all times except late nights
*
N train during late nights only
* A few rush-hour
W and
<F> trains in the peak direction
The complex consists of two distinct, perpendicular stations. The Jay Street–Borough Hall station was built by the
Independent Subway System (IND) in 1933, while the Lawrence Street–MetroTech station was built by the
Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) in 1924. Despite being one block away from each other, the two stations were not connected for 77 years. As part of a station renovation completed in 2010, the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) built a passageway to connect the two stations and made the complex fully compliant with the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. Both stations also contain "money train" platforms, which were formerly used to deliver MTA token revenue to neighboring
370 Jay Street
370 Jay Street, also called the Transportation Building or Transit Building, is a building located at the northwest corner of Jay Street and Willoughby Street within the MetroTech Center complex in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City. The site is b ...
.
Station layout

The station consists of three underground levels. Just below ground is the IND mezzanine, then the IND platforms, followed by the BMT platform on the deepest level.
The two stations connect to each other via a stair, two escalators, and an elevator at the west end of the BMT station. The BMT station also has its own mezzanine at its eastern end.
The stations are located one block away from each other.
In 1981, the
MTA had listed the IND portion of the station among the 69 most deteriorated stations in the subway system. However, in 2005, planned renovation of twelve subway stations, including the Jay Street and Lawrence Street stations, was delayed indefinitely.
The stations were separate from each other since the IND station's opening, despite their proximity. In March 2007, a contract was finally awarded for the renovation of the stations.
The MTA constructed a transfer passageway as part of its 2005–2009 Capital Program.
The $164.5 million project also brought the stations into compliance with the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and cosmetically improved the upper mezzanine.
With the opening of the transfer on December 10, 2010, the complex was given its present name.
The transfer was projected to benefit an estimated 35,000 daily passengers.
The 2009 artwork in this station is called ''Departures and Arrivals'' by Ben Snead. It consists of a long glass mosaic depicting animals including starlings, sparrows, lion fish, parrots, tiger beetles, and koi fish. It was installed as part of the
MTA Arts for Transit program during the station complex's renovation.
Entrances and exits
The full-time IND/BMT entrance is at the center and has a
turnstile bank, token booth, and a single street stair leading to the northeast corner of Willoughby and Jay Streets, while a set of staircases and escalators and one
ADA-accessible
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 or ADA () is a civil rights law that prohibits discrimination based on disability. It affords similar protections against discrimination to Americans with disabilities as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, ...
elevator lead to the northwest corner underneath
370 Jay Street
370 Jay Street, also called the Transportation Building or Transit Building, is a building located at the northwest corner of Jay Street and Willoughby Street within the MetroTech Center complex in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City. The site is b ...
, the former headquarters of the
Independent Subway System.

The other two entrances/exits are unstaffed. The one at the north end has a weekday-only turnstile bank and token booth,
full height turnstiles, and a wide staircase to
MetroTech Center
Brooklyn Commons, formerly MetroTech Center, is a business and educational center in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City.
Location
Brooklyn Commons lies between Flatbush Avenue Extension and Jay Street, north of the Fulton Street Mall and south o ...
and another stair and four escalators to the former
New York City Transit Headquarters,
a mostly vacant 13-story building at 370 Jay Street.
These escalators were installed as part of a 1952 improvement, as were the squarish "Subway" entrance lamps that are found only in a few other places in the system. These were designed in
Art Deco/
Art Moderne style.
The building itself has a memorial to New York City Transit workers who died in
World War II.
The entrance/exit at the south end has only full height turnstiles and two staircases leading to either side of Jay and Fulton Streets.
The full-time BMT-only entrance is at Lawrence and Willoughby Streets near the west end. It has two platform stairs facing the opposite direction, a small turnstile bank, token booth, and four stairs to the two eastern corners of the aforementioned intersection. The stairs serve the BMT platform directly.
There is an additional
full-height turnstile entrance at the east end. It formerly contained a booth and has two street stairs to Bridge and Willoughby Streets, high turnstiles, and two platform stairs. This fare control area was the first in the system to have its service gate converted to an emergency exit. An exit-only escalator on the BMT platform also leads to the southeast corner's entrance/exit.
In 2016, a new entrance to the BMT portion of the station was built as part of the
AVA DoBro
AVA DoBro, also known as Avalon Willoughby West and by its address of 100 Willoughby, is a residential high-rise building in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City. A large building, it has 826 units over 57 floors. As part of the development, a new ...
residential high-rise building. This entrance replaces an earlier entrance at the southeast corner of Willoughby and Bridge Streets, the corner where the building is located.
The entrance, which contains stairs and an elevator, opened in June 2016 and connects to the eastern, full-height turnstile entrance.
The MTA was hopeful that this instance would encourage developers to build other entrances to other subway stations, since AVA DoBro's developer paid for the entrance in its entirety.
Unlike the elevator entrance at Jay and Willoughby Streets, this elevator entrance is not ADA-accessible.
The station has a total of 16 staircase/escalator entrances and 2 elevator entrances.
Full-time entrances are indicated in green, and part-time entrances are indicated in red.
IND platforms
The Jay Street–MetroTech station (formerly Jay Street–Borough Hall station before the construction of the station complex) is an express station on both the IND Fulton Street and Culver lines. It has four tracks with two
island platforms. Fulton Street Line trains use the center "express" tracks, while Culver Line trains use the outer "local" tracks.
Although current service patterns route all
IND Eighth Avenue Line trains to the Fulton Street Line and all
IND Sixth Avenue Line
The IND Sixth Avenue Line is a rapid transit line of the B Division of the New York City Subway in the United States. It runs mainly under Sixth Avenue in Manhattan, and continues south to Brooklyn. The B, D, F, and M trains, which use th ...
trains to the Culver Line,
diamond crossovers north of the station permit Eighth Avenue–Culver or Sixth Avenue–Fulton Street service; these switches are only used during service disruptions.
The station has blue
I-beam columns on the Manhattan-bound platform and white concrete tile columns on the Brooklyn-bound one. Before renovation, the trim line on the platform walls was two-tone cobalt blue with "JAY" tiled in white lettering on a black background underneath.
As part of the renovation, new tiling was placed on the trackside walls. After the renovation, the blue trim-line was widened and a double border of Heather Blue and black was added. The new blue tile in the centre of the trim-line is also somewhat darker than the original, the new color being shown as "Midnight Blue".
Each platform has six staircases and one elevator leading up to the full-length
mezzanine
A mezzanine (; or in Italian language, Italian, a ''mezzanino'') is an intermediate floor in a building which is partly open to the double-height ceilinged floor below, or which does not extend over the whole floorspace of the building, a loft ...
. Before renovation, the entire mezzanine was inside fare control, but the mezzanine was split into two separate parts during the renovation.
Now, the mezzanine has a larger southern section connecting to the southern exits, the central exits, and the transfer to the BMT platform; as well as a smaller northern section connecting to the northern exits only. The two parts of the mezzanine are cut off by a large white wall.
History
The Jay Street–Borough Hall station was part of a three-stop extension of the IND Eighth Avenue Line from
Chambers Street in
Lower Manhattan
Lower Manhattan (also known as Downtown Manhattan or Downtown New York) is the southernmost part of Manhattan, the central borough for business, culture, and government in New York City, which is the most populated city in the United States with ...
.
Construction of the extension began in June 1928.
The extension opened to Jay Street on February 1, 1933.
The outer tracks first saw service on March 20, 1933, when the IND Culver Line opened.
The IND Sixth Avenue Line to
West Fourth Street–Washington Square
West or Occident is one of the four cardinal directions or points of the compass. It is the opposite direction from east and is the direction in which the Sun sets on the Earth.
Etymology
The word "west" is a Germanic word passed into some ...
opened on April 9, 1936, and the Fulton Street Line to
Rockaway Avenue opened the same day.
Until 1969, a free transfer was available to/from the
BMT Myrtle Avenue Line at
Bridge–Jay Streets and also issued at stations from
Sumner Avenue on south. When the Myrtle Avenue Line south of
Myrtle Avenue closed, the transfer was issued to the B54 bus, which ran along the former route. Today, the
MetroCard provides free transfer between bus and subway throughout the system.
Experimental installations and programs
In 1955, the city decided to experiment with placing raised safety disks on the edges of the platforms, in order to increase passenger safety. Compared to the painted orange-and-yellow stripes on the platforms, the disks, which were painted yellow and spaced one foot apart from each other, were expected to last about five times as long. The northbound platform's disks were in diameter, and the southbound platform's were .
In 1957, the city conducted another experiment, this time placing an automatic token dispenser in the station.
In September 1987, the station was the site of yet another experiment; the station's turnstiles were converted to allow new fare payment, consisting of "laminated polyester fare cards." (This would later become the MetroCard, which was not widely released until 1993.)
Another experimental program began in May 2005, when the station's token booths were shuttered and its station agents were deployed elsewhere in the station to answer passengers' queries. This experiment was also tested at seven other stations.
In October 2019, the MTA unveiled an accessible station lab at Jay Street–MetroTech station, which was to run until the end of the year. The lab includes over a dozen features including Braille signs, tactile pads, wayfinding apps, diagrams of accessible routes, and floor stickers to guide passengers to the correct routes.
Gallery
File:NYC Subway Track Geometry Car TGC3.jpg, Track geometry car on northbound track from IND Culver line
File:Jay St IND NB plat demolition jeh.jpg, Demolition in progress
File:Jay Street Borough Hall Subway Station by David Shankbone.jpg, Column and sign on the IND platform, prior to renovation
BMT platform
The Jay Street–MetroTech station (formerly Lawrence Street–MetroTech station before the construction of the station complex) is a local station on the
BMT Fourth Avenue Line with two tracks and one narrow island platform. Unlike in the IND station, there are no tiles on the track walls.
A narrow mezzanine above the platform connects the station's two easternmost
fare control areas. It still has its original directional signs labeled as "to Lawrence Street" and "to Bridge Street".
The platform formerly had a narrow up-only escalator that bypassed the Lawrence and Willoughby Streets fare control, and led to a small landing with two high exit-only gates. A short staircase then connected to the landing of the southeast street stairs to that intersection.
History
After the contract was approved for the
Montague Street Tunnel and the associated subway line, the planners realized there should have been a station at Lawrence Street. The station was not in the original plans for the line, but in 1916, an additional station at Lawrence and Willoughby Streets was proposed. The original contract was modified in July 1917 and a provision for the station was added.
[
On May 16, 1918, the New York Public Service Commission approved a report by the Chief Engineer requesting that work on the construction of the station stop due to a wartime shortage of materials and men due to World War I. Only one ninth of the labor estimated to be required to allow the construction of the station to be completed along with the rest of the line was available. With this reduced labor force, work on this station could not be completed before July 1919, and work on the Court Street station could not be finished before April 1919, following the completion of the Montague Street Tunnel. It was decided to postpone work to complete this station, and use the labor force working on this station and concrete material intended to be used at the station to complete work on the Court Street station, accelerating the estimated completion of that station to January 1919, allowing service through the tunnel to operate in early 1919 as opposed to late 1919. Construction stopped on May 18, when about half the station was completed. Service running through the Montague Tunnel and this station began on August 1, 1920, with the station being constructed alongside in-service trains.] The line was called the Montague Street Tunnel Line.
Construction resumed on May 18, 1922. The scope of work included excavation from the street to provide an entrance, the construction of an island platform between the two cast iron-lined tunnels covered by a steel and concrete roof, and the construction of a passageway, mezzanine and entrances. On June 11, 1924, the Lawrence Street station opened with the Lawrence Street entrances; the Bridge Street entrances opened later.
On March 29, 1993, Lawrence Street was renamed Lawrence Street–MetroTech to celebrate the revival of Downtown Brooklyn with the opening of the MetroTech complex. In response to increased ridership at the station from traffic MetroTech generated, new directional signs were installed, a wall that blocked the view of the token booth clerk was removed to improve security, a part-time token booth was added, and lighting was upgraded.
Gallery
File:Lawrence Street Escalator.jpg, Exit-only escalator from the BMT platform, permanently closed and removed
File:Lawrence Street-MetroTech.jpg, Inside the BMT station; exit-only on the left (permanently closed) and main entrance on the right
File:Lawrence Willoughby BMT sta sunny jeh.jpg, Entrance from street
Money train platforms
Formerly, " money trains" collected the tokens that were used to pay fares at each of the subway stations and deposited them into a special door that led to a money-counting room under 370 Jay Street. The platforms were built in 1951, the same year the building opened, though "money trains" had been in use on the system since 1905. The platforms were placed next to 370 Jay Street because it was a convenient location near where all three subway companies had tunnels. Tokens became New York City Transit fare media in 1951. Tokens were last used in the entire New York City Transit system, including the subway, in 2003. This meant that the money trains were no longer used, and in December 2006, the platforms were closed. The money trains were also retired, though for a different reason: they moved slowly, and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority was concerned that the money trains would delay train traffic. The money train later became part of the collection of the nearby New York Transit Museum, and in October 2015, the museum started hosting another exhibit, ''The Secret Life of 370 Jay Street'', that chronicled the building's varying uses.
Each of the three former companies that made up the current New York City Subway (the Independent Subway System, Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Company, and Interborough Rapid Transit Company) had their own money train platforms. IND money trains made their deposits from the southbound IND Culver line track, and the still-visible door on the wall is where they connected to the vaults above before armored trucks replaced them. For the BMT, there was a second platform just west of the station, after a diamond crossover between the two tracks; this was the deepest of the three money train platforms. A third platform is also in the IRT Eastern Parkway Line tunnel that passes through this area for the same purpose.
Nearby points of interest
* New York City College of Technology
* NYU Tandon School of Engineering
* MetroTech Center
Brooklyn Commons, formerly MetroTech Center, is a business and educational center in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City.
Location
Brooklyn Commons lies between Flatbush Avenue Extension and Jay Street, north of the Fulton Street Mall and south o ...
* Brooklyn Borough Hall
* Brooklyn Supreme Court
* Fulton Mall
* Brooklyn Tabernacle
Brooklyn Tabernacle is an evangelicalism, evangelical non-denominational megachurch located at 17 Smith Street at the Fulton Mall in downtown Brooklyn, downtown Brooklyn, New York City. The senior pastor is Jim Cymbala.
History
The Brooklyn Tab ...
* New York Transit Museum
References
External links
*
*
* nycsubway.org �
Departures and Arrivals Artwork by Ben Snead (2009)
* MTA.info �
Welcome to the New Jay Street/MetroTech Station!
Made December 10, 2010.
Station Reporter:
* Station Reporter �
* Station Reporter �
* Station Reporter �
* Station Reporter �
* Station Reporter �
The Subway Nut:
* The Subway Nut �
Jay Street–Borough Hall Pictures
* The Subway Nut �
Lawrence Street–Metro Tech Pictures
Google Maps Street View
Willoughby and Jay Streets entrance
Willoughby and Bridge Streets entrance
Myrtle Avenue entrance near MetroTech
Fulton Mall entrance
Lawrence Street entrance
BMT platform
IND platforms
IND mezzanine
{{DEFAULTSORT:Jay Street - MetroTech (New York City Subway)
BMT Fourth Avenue Line stations
IND Culver Line stations
IND Fulton Street Line stations
New York City Subway stations in Brooklyn
New York City Subway stations located underground
New York City Subway transfer stations
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1933
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1924
Downtown Brooklyn
1933 establishments in New York City
1924 establishments in New York City