Traffic & Transit
These Bed-Stuy Subway Stops Could Have Platform Doors: MTA
After the deadly Times Square attack, the MTA released a study showing which stations could be fitted with doors—but don't hold your breath.

BED-STUY, BROOKLYN — As pressure mounts on the MTA to install doors on subway platforms to present track-related accidents, a study just released by the agency says that only some of Bed-Stuy's stations could accommodate the barriers.
The MTA shared the enormous, nearly 4,000-page study last week, days after the Jan. 15 shoving attack at Times Square that killed 40-year-old Michelle Go. Prepared in 2019, the study examined every single one of New York's 472 subway stations.
It found that only about a quarter could accommodate the life-saving sliding doors, due to constraints like disability access and columns that stand too close to the platform edge.
Find out what's happening in Bed-Stuyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Critics are skeptical of that finding, noting that cities around the world have platform doors in their subway systems, and arguing that the MTA often exaggerates the difficulty of projects it does not want to undertake.
With pressure from elected officials mounting, MTA top brass have said they'd be open to exploring a platform pilot program for stations where officials deemed them "possible."
Find out what's happening in Bed-Stuyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Patch combed through the study to pick out which stations in Bed-Stuy are on that list.
According to the MTA, only some neighborhood stops could accommodate the doors. The results varied even within each station, including at several A/C stops.
Here's a look:
- Nostrand Avenue (A/C)
- A train platform: Yes
- C train platform: No
- Kingston-Throop Avenue (A/C)
- Yes on all platforms
- Utica Avenue (A/C)
- Yes on all platforms
- Ralph Avenue
- Yes on all platforms
- Broadway Junction
- A train platform: Yes
- C train platform: Yes
- J/Z train platform: No
- Flushing Avenue (J/M)
- No on all platforms
- Halsey Street (J)
- No on all platforms
- Gates Avenue (J/Z)
- No on all platforms
- Kosciuszko Street (J)
- No on all platforms
- Myrtle Avenue-Broadway (J/M/Z)
- No on all platforms
- Myrtle-Willoughby (G)
- No on all platforms
- Bedford-Nostrand (G)
- No on all platforms
- Classon Avenue (G)
- Yes on all platforms
Even if the barriers were implemented, the price tags would be staggering: standard platform screen doors, like those in place at the JFK Airport AirTrain, would cost upwards of $39 million apiece at several Brooklyn stations that could fit them, while shorter, chest-high gates would cost at least $30 million each, the MTA claims.
The platform doors study was released amid a brewing battle between the MTA and local politicians over the issue. On Thursday, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine gathered in Times Square with several City Council members to demand that the MTA install barriers — only for the MTA's CEO to throw water on the idea hours later.
"I ask the politicians not to try to make hay out of this issue, but to work with the MTA for real solutions based on engineering reality," CEO Janno Lieber said in an interview on WNYC.
Related coverage:
- Pols Say Platform Doors Answer To Subway Crisis; MTA Adds Cops
- MTA Honcho Downplays Subway Platform Doors Amid Safety Outcry
- Accused Times Square Subway Shover Held Without Bail
Nick Garber contributed to this report.
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