Joralemon Street Tunnel
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Joralemon Street Tunnel
Summary
Joralemon Street Tunnel is a subway tunnel[1]. It draws 65 Wikipedia views per month (subway_tunnel category, ranking #4 of 8).[2]
Key Facts
- Joralemon Street Tunnel is located in Manhattan[3].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel is located in Brooklyn[4].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel is in the country of United States[5].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's image is recorded as Joralemon Street Tunnel postcard, 1913.jpg[6].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's instance of is recorded as subway tunnel[7].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's architect is recorded as William Barclay Parsons[8].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's operator is recorded as Metropolitan Transportation Authority[9].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's crosses is recorded as East River[10].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's Commons category is recorded as Joralemon Street Tunnel[11].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's Structurae structure ID is recorded as 20032018[12].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 40.69694444, 'lon': -74.00722222}[13].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0b_fld[14].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's NRHP reference number is recorded as 06000015[15].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's heritage designation is recorded as National Register of Historic Places listed place[16].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's carries thoroughfare is recorded as IRT Lexington Avenue Line[17].
- Joralemon Street Tunnel's CRIS Unique Site Number is recorded as 04701.013888[18].
Body
Geography
Joralemon Street Tunnel is in the country of United States[5]. Located in include Manhattan[3], a borough of New York City[19], in United States[20], founded in 1624[21] and Brooklyn[4], a borough of New York City[22], in United States[23], founded in 1634[24].
Designation and Status
Joralemon Street Tunnel's instance of is recorded as subway tunnel[7]. Its heritage designation is recorded as National Register of Historic Places listed place[16].
Why It Matters
Joralemon Street Tunnel draws 65 Wikipedia views per month (subway_tunnel category, ranking #4 of 8).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]