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LEXINGTON AVENUE (MANHATTAN)

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View of Lexington Avenue facing South from 50th street. The Chrysler Building rises in the background.

View of Lexington Avenue facing North from the top floors of the Chrysler Building.

'Lexington Avenue' is an avenue on the East Side of the borough of Manhattan in New York City that carries southbound one-way traffic from East 131st Street to Gramercy Park at East 21st Street. Along its 5.5 mile (8.9 km), 110-block route, Lexington Avenue runs through Harlem, Carnegie Hill, the Upper East Side, Midtown, and Murray Hill to a point of origin that is centered on Gramercy Park. South of Gramercy Park, the axis continues as Irving Place to East 14th Street.

Contents
History
Public transportation
See also
Sources
External links

History


Lexington Avenue was not one of the streets included in the Commissioners' Plan of 1811 street grid, and thus does not also have a numerical designation, and the addresses for cross streets do not start at an even Hundred number. The portion of Lexington Avenue below 42nd Street dates from 1832, when Samuel Ruggles, a lawyer and real estate developer, established Gramercy Park, and established the street to provide north-south access[1].
The portion above East 42nd Street was reconstructed at the same time as the IRT Lexington Avenue Line of the New York City Subway. The widened street and the subway line both opened on July 17, 1918.[2]
Parallel to Lexington Avenue lies Park Avenue to its west and Third Avenue to its east. New Yorkers often abbreviate Lexington Avenue as "Lex". The avenue is largely commercial at ground level, with offices above. There are clusters of hotels on Lexington Avenue in the "30s" and "40s" (from Lexington's intersection with 30th Street through to its intersection with 49th Street, roughly) and apartment buildings farther north.
Lexington Avenue is named for the 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord, the first battle of the American Revolutionary War.
The July 18, 2007 New York City steam explosion sent a geyser of hot steam up from beneath the avenue at 41st Street resulting in one death and more than 40 injuries.

Public transportation


'Above ground'
General cab service is available for hailing. The following buses use Lexington Avenue (northbound buses run along 3rd Avenue):

M98: To East 34th Street

M101: To East 6th Street

M102: To East 6th Street

M103: To City Hall
'Underground'
The IRT Lexington Avenue Line of the New York City Subway runs under Lexington Avenue north of 42nd Street (at Grand Central Terminal); south of Grand Central this subway line runs under Park Avenue until 14th Street.

See also



Lexington Avenue bombing

Sources


1. 'Henry Moscow:''The Street Book'''; Fordham University Press 1978. P.69.
2. 'Cunningham, Joseph and DeHart, Leonard: ''A History of the New York City Subway System'''; 1993 - John Schmidt, Robert Giglio and Kathleen Lang P.51.

External links



A short history of Lexington Avenue

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