When Riverbank State Park is closed, the M11 terminates at 133rd Street and Broadway, turning left on 133rd Street from Amsterdam Avenue, making a left on Old Broadway, and a right onto 131st Street and Broadway, ending at 133rd Street before the intersection. The southbound M11 runs up Broadway until 135th Street, making a right turn there and resuming the regular route.
School Trippers
School trippers operate on weekdays from Booker T. Washington School at 108th Street and from M.S. 297 at Barrow Street/Hudson Street to either 34th Street or 66th Street. These trips are out of the Michael J. Quill Depot, and use Xcelsior Diesel and All-Electric buses as well as the Nova Bus LFS HEVs.
History
The Ninth Avenue Railroad was given a franchise in December 1853 to build from the Battery north to 51st Street and beyond to the Harlem River via Greenwich Street, Ninth Avenue, Broadway, and Amsterdam Avenue, and to return via Gansevoort Street and Washington Street instead of Greenwich Street. By 1854, the company had laid tracks from Canal Street north to 54th Street, but, due to legal complications on the route south of Canal Street, it could not complete and open the line. The city passed a resolution on July 2, 1859, allowing the company to connect to the Hudson River Railroad's tracks in Canal Street, and run over any part of the lines of the Hudson River Railroad, Sixth Avenue Railroad, and Eighth Avenue Railroad in and below Canal Street.[1][7] The line opened in late July 1859,[8][9] using the shared trackage of the Sixth and Eighth Avenue Railroads from Broadway and Barclay Street along Barclay Street, Church Street (northbound only), Chambers Street (northbound only), and West Broadway to Canal Street.[10]
The line was later extended south along Washington and Greenwich Streets and east on Fulton Street to Broadway, and north from 54th Street to 59th Street. The beginning of a lengthy extension to the north opened on March 9, 1884, along Ninth Avenue, Columbus Avenue, Broadway, and Amsterdam Avenue from 59th Street to 74th Street. It was extended further to 110th Street on April 26, 1884,[11] later to LaSalle Street,[12] and finally to the Fort Lee Ferry via LaSalle Street, Broadway, and 130th Street.[citation needed]
In 1908, the Third Avenue was released from the bankrupt Metropolitan. The Metropolitan introduced the Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue Line on February 17, 1908,[13][14] connecting the Broadway Line to the Ninth and Amsterdam Avenues Line via 53rd Street.[15] The Ninth and Columbus Avenues Line was later discontinued, and all Ninth Avenue cars, then beginning at both the Cortlandt Street and Christopher Street Ferries, were truncated to the intersection with 53rd Street, where passengers could transfer to the Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue Line, Sixth and Amsterdam Avenues Line, and Broadway and Columbus Avenue Line.[citation needed]
In 1919, the Ninth Avenue Railroad was separated from the bankrupt New York Railways, which had replaced the Metropolitan, and the Ninth Avenue and Amsterdam Avenue tracks were again linked by a single line, only shared with New York Railways cars (of the Broadway and Columbus Avenue Line) between 53rd Street and Broadway.[citation needed] The Ninth Avenue Railroad merged with the also-separated Eighth Avenue Railroad in December 1926 to form the Eighth and Ninth Avenues Railway.[16]
Bus service
Buses were substituted for streetcars by the Eighth Avenue Coach Corporation, a New York Railways subsidiary,[17] on November 12, 1935,[2][18][19] and assigned the number M42.[20] It was subsequently labeled 11 by the New York City Omnibus Corporation when it gained control in 1936.[21][22]
In its first 30 years in bus service, the 11's northern terminus was at La Salle Street and Broadway. On June 20, 1965, it was extended to 132nd Street and Broadway.[23] On May 9, 1977, service was extended along Amsterdam Avenue to 135th Street.[24] On June 26, 1994, the route was extended along 135th Street and Riverside Drive to Riverbank State Park during park hours–7 a.m. to 11 p.m.[25] During other times, the route terminated at its previous terminal at 132nd Street and Broadway. This extension added service along Riverside Drive between West 135th Street and West 145th Street, and provided access to the park from the south. The M11's previous terminal required a U-turn on Broadway, and the extension removed the safety hazard. After six-months, ridership on the extension was lower than expected, and the route extension was to be reevaluated after summer 1995.[26]
On January 9, 2005, M11 and M14 service was rerouted to run via 14th Street instead of 15th Street between Ninth Avenue and Tenth Avenue to avoid congestion.[27]