Quantcast

The DNAinfo archives brought to you by WNYC.
Read the press release here.

Here's How to Get Around During the M Train Shutdown Coming in July

By Gwynne Hogan | May 18, 2017 4:05pm
 An MTA New York City transit subway M train. Aug. 13, 2013.
An MTA New York City transit subway M train. Aug. 13, 2013.
View Full Caption
DNAinfo/Michael Ip

BUSHWICK — A series of buses will shuttle commuters around during the M train shutdown, according to the MTA's alternate service plans presented to residents Wednesday night.

Starting this July, the M train won't run between the Myrtle-Broadway stop in Bushwick and Middle Village in Queens for 10 full months while the MTA rebuilds two sections of deteriorating above-ground tracks.

PHASE 1: July 1 to August 31

This July and August, during the first phase of repair work, there will be no trains between Myrtle Avenue and Middle Village. During that time M trains will be rerouted to Broadway Junction and all J, M and Z trains will be making local stops along that route.

Instead the MTA will run free shuttle buses along three different routes 24 hours a day.

One shuttle bus will run from Middle Village to the Jefferson Avenue L train stop and then to the Flushing Avenue J, M, Z train stop. Two other buses will run between Middle Village and Myrtle-Wyckoff and Myrtle-Wyckoff and Myrtle-Broadway. 

PHASE 2: September 1 2017 through April 30, 2018

During the second phase of repair work which will last eight months from September to April of 2018, a section of the M train will reopen between Middle Village and Myrtle-Wyckoff and shuttle trains will run along it. Shuttle buses will connect Myrtle-Wyckoff with Myrtle-Broadway. 

The MTA has to tear down and repair two sections of tracks in advance of the 15-month L train shutdown, slated to begin in April of 2019.

Several dozen residents of apartment buildings and homes around the Bushwick Cut, a concrete spur of the M train line that juts off of Broadway and links up to the tracks on Myrtle Avenue, will have to leave their homes for the 10-month period while the track is rebuilt.

All homeowners will return after the repair work except one, who decided to sell their house to the MTA, officials said.