The MTA had on its website that the Fulton Center hub would "take its place among New York City's great public spaces," akin to a downtown Grand Central.
Our favorite tile signs and illustrations that can still be seen in NYC subways from the early 1900s when it was still the Interborough Rapid Transit Company.
From Broadway to St. Mark's Place to Park Avenue, the names of some of NYC's most notable streets get repeated throughout the city. How/why does this happen?
In the hallway of the Hoyt-Schermerhorn subway station in Brooklyn, the letter "L" repeated in blue and yellow tile reveal the history of a department store
While the majority of New York City's subway entrances have the same mundane look, there are others that still have details from an earlier era.