Every single wheel, motor, brake, axle, wire and door on every subway car gets completely refurbished every six to 12 years at the Coney Island Overhaul Shop in Brooklyn or its sister facility at 207th Street in Manhattan.
The work is part of a scheduled maintenance program, introduced in 1989 and designed to prevent breakdowns before they occur.
The system works much like a scheduled tuneup on an automobile.
Trains roll into the facilities, where they are disassembled, reconditioned to near-factory specifications, and then sent back out into a railroad that functions as New York’s vascular system, pumping more than a billion riders across 345 million miles each year, 24 hours a day, every day.
Locations:
Coney, Brooklyn, Manhattan