search

MTA subway map

New York MTA subway map. MTA subway map (New York - USA) to print. MTA subway map (New York - USA) to download. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority or MTA manages transit, buses, subways, trains, bridges and tunnels in New York City and surrounding areas including Long Island as its sown in MTA subway map. New York City Transit Subway and Bus Photos MTA New York City Transit is the largest public transportation agency in North America and one of the largest in the world.

New York MTA subway map

printPrint system_update_altDownload
 
MTA New York City Transit is the largest public transportation agency in North America and one of the largest in the world. The MTA subway has a daily ridership of more than five million, and an annual ridership close to 1.6 billion. Our fleet of 6,380 subway cars travels almost 345 million miles a year along 660 miles of track, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, although not all routes operate around the clock (see MTA subway map).
 
In 1965, the New York Legislature established the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Authority (MCTA). In 1968, the name changed to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA subway), but the responsibilities remained roughly the same: regulating all forms of public transportation throughout New York state and absorbing previous branches (see MTA subway map).
 
In 1989, the MTA subway paired with the transit police of the NYCTA to place more officers in and around the subway stations of New York. Once the NYPD joined in a 1990 citywide effort to combat crime, subway crime dropped significantly and the focus again turned to improving the system. The MTA pitched a project in 1982 to reach a "state of good repair" in the subway (see MTA subway map). This project focused on updating the system with upgrades to stations and train cars.
 
In 2003, the MTA subway introduced plans for electronic signs displaying train routes and times, and subway tokens were phased out entirely in favor of the MetroCard (see MTA subway map). On Aug. 27, 2011, the MTA subway temporarily shut down the subway in anticipation of Hurricane Irene, marking the first weather-related shutdown in the subway history.