Public Transit Info From Queens

If you are coming from Queens, buses and trains are available. Some possible routes are as follows:

  • From Main Street- Flushing (LIRR) the 7 train can be taken to Grand Central Station and 42nd Street, transfer to the 4 train, and take it to 86th Street and Lexington Avenue. From Far Rockaway - Mott Avenue, take the A train. Transfer at Broadway-Nassau to the 5 train, and take this to 86th Street and Lexington Avenue.
  • From Lefferts Boulevard Station, take the A train and transfer at Broadway-Nassau to the 5 train, and take this to 86th Street and Lexington Avenue.
  • From Woodhaven Boulevard and Metropolitan Avenue, take the Q11 bus to Woodhaven Boulevard and Queens Boulevard, where you transfer to the R train. Take this to Lexington Avenue Station and transfer to the 5 train; take this to 86th Street and Lexington Avenue.
  • Express buses from Queens include the X51 from Sanford Avenue and 165th Street to 3rd Avenue and 57th Street.
  • The X63 takes you from 149th Street and 253rd Street to East 57th Street and Park Avenue.
  • The X64 takes you from Linden Place and 234th Street to East 57th Street and Park Avenue.
  • The X68 takes you fro Hillside Avenue and 268th Street to East 57th Street and Third Avenue. For bus info call 718-330-1234

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PHASTI is a registered trademark of Mark E. Pruzansky, MD
These pages and their contents copyright ©2008 Pruzansky Hand Athletic and Sports Trauma Institute.
975 Park Ave., New York, NY, (212) 249-8700

Dr. Pruzansky is an orthopaedic surgeon in New York City, specializing in surgeries of the hand and upper extremities, including sports medicine, with expertise in throwing, serving, and lifting injuries to the upper extremity.  Dr. Pruzansky also performs endoscopic carpal tunnel release, tennis elbow and pitcher’s elbow surgery, and repair of the joints, tendons, ligaments, and nerves of the upper extremity, in addition to gamekeeper’s thumb, skier’s thumb, trigger finger, de Quervain’s tendinitis, wrist disorders, wrist sprains, pediatric orthopaedics, congenital malformations, hand surgery, carpal tunnel release, medial and lateral epicondylitis, arthritis of the hand, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, compression neuropathies, tendon transfers, ganglion cysts, tumors of the hand, wrist, and forearm, and cubital tunnel syndrome. 

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