Grand Central Station & Terminal are located at East 42nd Street between Park and Lexington Avenues. Grand Central Station is the subway station, where you can catch the 4-5-6 (the dark green line, aka the Lexington Avenue Line) or the S shuttle train to Times Square. Grand Central Terminal is the railroad terminal, for trains that are not part of the New York City subway system (like MetroNorth commuter trains).
No. Trains to White Plains originate at Grand Central/42nd St. You can walk up to Grand Central (42nd St/Park Avenue), it will take about 20 minutes or take the subway - UPTOWN 1, 2 or 3 train to Times Square-42nd St (one stop), then transfer to the 42nd St Shuttle (S) to Grand Central. Use the staircase at the front of the platform at Grand Central, exit thru the turnstiles, make left then a right. The doors to Grand Central Terminal will be on the left. Fare $2.25
Yes, the A train stops at the Port Authority Bus Terminal. All three of the trains on the blue line (the A, the C and the E) stop at 42nd Street-Port Authority Bus Terminal. There is also an underground tunnel connecting the 42nd Street-Port Authority stop on the A-C-E line to the 42nd Street-Times Square Station (since the A-C-E runs up and down 8th Avenue, while the Times Square Station is at 7th Avenue), so you can walk underground from the 42nd Street-Port Authority Station to the 42nd Street-Times Square Station, without exiting the subway system.
Penn Station is closer. Penn Station is less than half a mile south of Times Square, while Grand Central is a little over a mile east of Times Square.
New York is a state in the Northeastern region of the United States. Many interesting places in new york like Statue of Liberty, Times Square, The Brooklyn Bridge, Central Park, Grand Central Terminal, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Its all places is too amazing.
The S shuttle train (color code grey) runs between Grand Central Station (at East 42nd Street) and the Times Square Station (at West 42nd Street).
Take the S shuttle train (color code grey) west across 42nd Street, from Grand Central Station (East 42nd) to the Times Square Station (West 42nd).Then walk through the tunnel that connects the 42nd Street-Times Square Station to the 42nd Street-Port Authority Bus Terminal Station.
According to Wikipedia and the MTA themselves, 77 of New York City's subway stations have working bathrooms, and 28 of these stations are in Manhattan. However, according to the Related Link (see below), in Manhattan, only 8 of these stations are actually functioning and open to the public (9 including "the developer-financed wonder bathroom at the Times Square Station"). The only one on the 6 line is the Brooklyn Bridge-City Hall Station. There are also bathrooms at Grand Central Terminal, downstairs, near the food court. The 4-5-6 line stops at 42nd Street-Grand Central Station, but Grand Central Station is the subway station, while Grand Central Terminal is the railroad station. So, you would have to exit the subway system to use the bathroom, and then pay another fare to get back on the subway.
From the best available data - New York City is #1, particularly with Times Square (with 41,900,000 visitors last year), Central Park (with 40,000,000 visitors last year) and Grand Central Terminal (with 21,600,00 visitors) being 3 of the top 5 tourist destinations in the USA.
From the best available data - New York City is #1, particularly with Times Square (with 41,900,000 visitors last year), Central Park (with 40,000,000 visitors last year) and Grand Central Terminal (with 21,600,00 visitors) being 3 of the top 5 tourist destinations in the USA.
No, they are two separate subway stations.
take the Shuttle or 7 train from Grand Central to Times Square and transfer to the 1 train uptown to 59th Street/Columbus Circle