Tracking the Light on the A Train; A Post Apocalyptic Railway Journey—12 photos.

  • The far-end of this well-known Subway route was among the lines we explored on our epic June 25, 2015 tour of New York City rail-transit.Jack May, Walter Zullig, my father and I, walked from the Long Island Rail Road station at Far Rockaway to the nearby New York City Subway station (located on an elevated structure).
  • At one time this had all been part of the same route, but now there’s several blocks between rail-heads.
    The A Line Deli at Far Rockaway, amidst the sounds of sirens. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    The A Line Deli at Far Rockaway, amidst the sounds of sirens. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.

    Elaborately decorated glass bricks are a feature of the stations on the A Train route.

    NYCTA Station at Far Rockaway is decorated with colored glass. Panoramic composite exposed with Fujifilm X-T1.
    The NYCTA Station at Far Rockaway is decorated with colored glass. Panoramic composite exposed with Fujifilm X-T1.
    Far Rockaway.  Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    Far Rockaway. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.

    As we rolled westward, my father recalled visiting Rockaway Beach decades earlier when there were rows of beach-side bungalows and city streets.

    Once west of the Far Rockaway the scene changes.We got off at 44th Street and took a look around.

  • Much of Rockaway beach seems devoid of structures, with old streets vanishing into the encroaching sand. The Bungalows are just a memory. Yet, massive multistory apartments loom in the distance above the railway structure, like something out of a doomsday film.
    A concrete elevated structure keeps the tracks above the sand covered streets.
    A concrete elevated structure keeps the tracks above the sand covered streets.
    An inbound A Train from Far Rockaway. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    An inbound A Train from Far Rockaway. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    This is a strange place, devoid of people with a mixture of urban decay and encroaching beach. Panoramic composite exposed with a Fujifilm X-T1.
    This place, is largely devoid of people (except for visiting photographers) and features a mixture of urban decay and encroaching beach. Panoramic composite exposed with a Fujifilm X-T1.
    An outbound A train rattles along on the elevated. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    An outbound A train rattles along on the elevated. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
     Fujifilm X-T1 photo looking toward Far Rockaway.
    Fujifilm X-T1 photo looking toward Far Rockaway.
    Nice place for a car chase!  Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    Nice place for a car chase! Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    Outbound train as seen from the inbound platform at 44st Street.  Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    Outbound train as seen from the inbound platform at 44th Street. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    Inbound A train at 44st Street.  Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    Inbound A train at 44th Street. Fujifilm X-T1 photo.
    Colored glass at 44th Street.
    Colored glass at 44th Street.

    It’s a strange place to be. And a stranger place to make photos. This is not the New York City visited by most tourists! Yet the A train continues to JFK Airport and beyond to lower Manhattan and ultimately up-town.

    How long, I wonder, would it take to ride from one end to the other?

    Tomorrow: Broadway Junction in East New York.

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One comment on “Tracking the Light on the A Train; A Post Apocalyptic Railway Journey—12 photos.

  1. Great shots of a great city.

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