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Jul 17, 2024, 06:27AM

This Is a Subway Entrance?

Through mazes of corridors beneath the boroughs of New York.

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The 28th St. station on the Lexington Avenue IRT (e.g., the #6 train) is one of what I call the Original 28—the original 28 stations built by the Interborough Rapid Transit subway company that opened in 1904, running from City Hall up Elm (since renamed Lafayette), 4th Ave., Park Ave., 42nd St. and Broadway north to 145th St. The original line has been divided since the late-1910s into the Lexington, Times Square Shuttle, and Broadway lines, or the #4/5/6, S and #1/2/3 lines.

Courtesy nycsubway.org, I have a couple of views of the original platform layout in photos taken just before the line opened. You can tell from this picture that while the station did feature incandescent lighting, skylights allowed a generous amount of sunlight in, augmented by artificial lighting on cloudy days and at night.

Several elements of the decor remain. The large and small station ID plaques are still there. Many of the round columns with fluted tops and bottoms are in place, and in the last decade or so, the paint scheme you see here has been restored, though it’s impossible to tell from a black and white photo if the same colors are employed. However the filigree on the ceiling has largely disappeared, as have the wood benches.

Here you get a greater sense of what part of the platform benefited the most from the skylighting. On the right is the “fare control” area. In the days before tokens and turnstiles, collecting the fare was a two-man operation, one to sell a ticket from a booth, and the other to take the ticket at the entrance (between the two columns on the right, at the break in the fence) and drop it in a ticket chopper. A couple of these survived in some stations into the 1970s. The approximate view today.

I don’t know what formula Original 28 station designers George Lewis Heins and Christopher Grant LaFarge used to determine what stations got large, decorative identification plaques, but 28th St. was selected to receive some. You can see that they were made of several pieces that were adhered together. There are two each on the uptown and downtown platforms. They’re composed of ceramics made by the Grueby Faience Company of Boston, which closed in 1920. A new mosaic plaque, (poorly) imitative of the originals, was installed a couple of decades ago on the uptown platform.

One of the downtown 28th St. entrances/exits is located beneath New York Life’s “Cathedral of Insurance” building, occupying a full block between Madison and Park Ave. South and East 26th-27th Sts., which celebrated its 85th anniversary in 2013. It was designed by architect Cass Gilbert (who also designed the Woolworth Building on lower Broadway) and was inspired by Britain’s 13th Century Salisbury Cathedral.

New York Life is 40 stories high and contains 2180 windows and 72 gargoyles. It stands on the site of the first Hippodrome and the first and second Madison Square Gardens, which overlooked Madison Square. The gold leaf pinnacle (barely visible from this angle on Park Ave. South) was added in 1967 and was lit at night for the first time in 1985. New York Life Insurance has been the building’s sole tenant and is familiar across the country by a company ad campaign beginning in 1999. But one aspect of the insurance palace I’d not suspected was its subway entrance at 27th and Park Ave. South.

I’d noticed these huge, ornate iron signs out in front, backlit with the words “Interborough Subway.” This is a design that goes to the name of the original subway, Interborough Rapid Transit, the IRT. These signs likely go back to 1928, when the building opened. I thought that the signs pointed out a run of the mill staircase leading down, but that’s not the case.

The wood and brass front doors of NY Life have a stenciled window sign indicating a subway entrance/exit, but only from seven a.m. to seven p.m.. Open the door, walk in, and you’re not in Planet Subway anymore. It’s a sea of polished brass everywhere in the anteroom to one of NYC’s great feats of architecture. These doors lead into the restaurant on the ground floor of the building at E. 27th.

The big discovery for me was the presence of two “SUBWAY” stanchions that appear at both staircases leading down to the station. Note the detail on the sign of what appear to be two barking dogs on either side of a flaming brazier. I tried, without success, to find out if this has anything to do with a former New York Life Insurance logo or symbol. NYLI symbol or not, these are among the handsomest station indicators in the entire system, even though they’re outside the purview of the MTA.

The ceiling treatment is breathtaking, with nine colored reliefs in red, gold and green. A chandelier hangs from the central tile. This treatment appears in front of each down staircase.

Once underground you’re in a maze of corridors, one of which leads to the subway entrance. Note the brass “SUBWAY” sign on the ceiling. 

—Kevin Walsh is the webmaster of the award-winning website Forgotten NY, and the author of the books Forgotten New York (HarperCollins, 2006) and also, with the Greater Astoria Historical Society, Forgotten Queens (Arcadia, 2013)

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