New York Daily News

MTA moves a step closer to platform doors

- BY EVAN SIMKO-BEDNARSKI

Companies with ideas for building high-tech barriers designed to keep New Yorkers from ending up on subway tracks have offered proposals for a pilot program to the MTA, agency officials said Thursday.

There’s still no word on when the potentiall­y lifesaving technology can be expected. The MTA has teased a three-station trial of such barriers since early 2022.

The barriers, which consist of railings or walls separating subway platforms from arriving and departing trains, would have automatic doors that open when train doors align with them in stations. They are meant to keep people from jumping, falling or being pushed to train tracks.

Similar barriers are in use in transit systems in Europe and Asia. New Yorkers can see them on the JFK AirTrain.

“We did receive vendor proposals last month for these new platform screen doors,” NYC Transit president Richard Davey told the City Council Thursday after being asked the status of the tryout.

The pilot program — expected at the No. 7 platform at Times Square, the Third Ave. station on the L line in Canarsie, Brooklyn and the Sutphin Blvd.-Archer Ave. platform on the E train in Jamaica, Queens — was first announced by MTA chair Janno Lieber in February 2022 following the death of Michelle Go, who was shoved to her death in front of an R train a month earlier at Times Square.

In the two years since Go’s death, multiple assaults, accidents and suicides have revived interest in the idea.

MTA officials remain reluctant to put a timeline on the project. An MTA spokesman declined to comment Thursday when asked how many vendors had responded to the agency’s request, and would not say when they might award a contract to install build platform barriers and doors.

Transit officials have repeatedly said that platform doors — in use in transit systems in Tokyo and Paris — are not well suited for the city’s subways. Davey expressed the same view Thursday.

“[The doors] are expensive and they won’t fit in every station, for a bunch of reasons,” he said.

“You don’t often see those retrofitte­d [to older systems],” Davey continued.

“They were part and parcel in Japan when they built those lines — or in Singapore, or the one line in London,” he added, a reference to London’s Jubilee Line, a recent extension of which is equipped with platform doors.

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