New York Subway Goes the Way of Lehman Brothers
By Scott Reeves Jun 25, 2009 3:05 pm
Stand clear of the closing deals, please.
New York's cash-strapped Metropolitan Transportation Agency -- the behemoth that oversees the operation of the city's subways, buses, and commuter rail lines -- has sold the naming rights to one of the busiest subway stops in Brooklyn, and may do the same with stations throughout the system.
Barclays (BCS) will soon add its name to the Atlantic Avenue-Pacific Street station in Brooklyn, a major stop where 10 subway lines and the Long Island Railroad converge. The hook: There are plans to build a huge housing development and sports complex nearby, boosting the area’s prestige -- and the number of people passing through the station each day.
If the Brooklyn project succeeds, don't be surprised if express stops on the West Side line become Starbucks (SBUX), formerly known as 14th Street station; General Electric (GE), formerly 33rd Street-Penn Station; or McDonald's (MCD), formerly 42nd Street-Times Square.
The possibilities are almost endless: There are 468 stations along the system’s 26 lines and 722 miles of track. Advertisers already turn the inside of the subway’s 6,400 cars into rolling billboards. So why shouldn't there be illuminated signs on the tracks saying: “This rat-infested hellhole brought to you by Clorox"?
Sponsored stations are hardly what the subway's creators had in mind. Opened in 1904, the subway was originally intended as an ad-free public space.
More than 100 years ago, when the subway was first introduced, its technology was as new and intriguing as the Internet would be in the 1990s. It was the Steam Age, and electric propulsion was as-yet unproven. At the time, there were no commercial power companies, so the Interborough Rapid Transit Company built what was then the world's largest generating plant on a spot overlooking the Hudson River.
Engineers had to devise new tunneling techniques and equipment to handle the city’s varied geology. But they got the outlines of the system so exquisitely right that today few of the 4.5 million daily riders give the subway a second thought on their way to and from work.
Barclays (BCS) will soon add its name to the Atlantic Avenue-Pacific Street station in Brooklyn, a major stop where 10 subway lines and the Long Island Railroad converge. The hook: There are plans to build a huge housing development and sports complex nearby, boosting the area’s prestige -- and the number of people passing through the station each day.
If the Brooklyn project succeeds, don't be surprised if express stops on the West Side line become Starbucks (SBUX), formerly known as 14th Street station; General Electric (GE), formerly 33rd Street-Penn Station; or McDonald's (MCD), formerly 42nd Street-Times Square.
The possibilities are almost endless: There are 468 stations along the system’s 26 lines and 722 miles of track. Advertisers already turn the inside of the subway’s 6,400 cars into rolling billboards. So why shouldn't there be illuminated signs on the tracks saying: “This rat-infested hellhole brought to you by Clorox"?
Sponsored stations are hardly what the subway's creators had in mind. Opened in 1904, the subway was originally intended as an ad-free public space.
More than 100 years ago, when the subway was first introduced, its technology was as new and intriguing as the Internet would be in the 1990s. It was the Steam Age, and electric propulsion was as-yet unproven. At the time, there were no commercial power companies, so the Interborough Rapid Transit Company built what was then the world's largest generating plant on a spot overlooking the Hudson River.
Engineers had to devise new tunneling techniques and equipment to handle the city’s varied geology. But they got the outlines of the system so exquisitely right that today few of the 4.5 million daily riders give the subway a second thought on their way to and from work.
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2009-06-25 15:15:06
The golden state of ............Blackrock
How about auctioning the naming rights of this state to get it out of bankruptcy?!
2009-06-25 15:40:40
NYC Subway
The MTA can re-name stations all it wishes. The real riders will always use the old (REAL) name. Besides, how is a corporate name at all useful indicating where a station is located?
Reminds me of "Ave of the Americas." I and everyone else I know will always call it 6th Avenue, regardless of its "official" name.
Reminds me of "Ave of the Americas." I and everyone else I know will always call it 6th Avenue, regardless of its "official" name.
2009-06-25 19:04:42
names names and more names...
"Opened in 1904, the subway was originally intended as an ad-free public space...." -
so was radio -
the battle, as per the book, "Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929" by Maury Klein, was won by the advertisers in the 20's...
the bright side? as these companies go bankrupt, the stations'll get new names and the city'll get re-newed revenues ;-)
so was radio -
the battle, as per the book, "Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929" by Maury Klein, was won by the advertisers in the 20's...
the bright side? as these companies go bankrupt, the stations'll get new names and the city'll get re-newed revenues ;-)
2009-06-28 16:21:25
names names and more names...
Now taking up a collection to buy a stop named Chock Full'O Nuts.
Or how about one for the Japanese soft drink Calupis? (the U is silent and they can't pronounce L). Even better is a candy named Cream Colon.... maybe they got the words reversed? Their Madison Street types also came up with a cigarette named godenbatt... here they just left the L out.
If it avoids raising taxes there, NYC would probably approve anything.
Or how about one for the Japanese soft drink Calupis? (the U is silent and they can't pronounce L). Even better is a candy named Cream Colon.... maybe they got the words reversed? Their Madison Street types also came up with a cigarette named godenbatt... here they just left the L out.
If it avoids raising taxes there, NYC would probably approve anything.
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