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@anthony32467 күн бұрын
The miles and Jeremy dynamic is unmatched
@iamzuckerburger6 күн бұрын
Srsly I would literally go see them do a show at UCB
@jchamp_76 күн бұрын
i concur
@gene78875 күн бұрын
One of the underrated aspects of this channel is how Miles's different travel companions bring different energies to their adventures so it never gets stale
@KC3YCU4 күн бұрын
@@gene7887He's like The Doctor of transit content
@AverytheCubanAmerican6 күн бұрын
The Lincoln Tunnel Helix is honestly an incredible engineering feat! The Helix was originally built in 1937 and it is an oval-shaped 270-degree loop to get vehicles from the top of the Palisades down to the toll plaza! The Palisades are about 180 feet (or around 55 m) high at Weehawken where the tunnel is! They originally thought about building a tunnel that would cut through the Palisades, but they realized it wasn't feasible and would disrupt the urban landscape above. To make enough room for the toll plaza area and merging lanes into the center or southern tube, the highway had to go about 2,000 feet (around 610 m) south of the tunnel portal and then make a quick U-turn back to the north to the toll plaza. So to be able to make room to do all that, it's quite the feat! The Lincoln Tunnel was first called the Midtown Hudson Tunnel, but to avoid confusion with the Queens-Midtown Tunnel, they renamed it to the Lincoln Tunnel because the Port Authority believed that the tunnel was "parallel to the importance of the George Washington Bridge". The Lincoln Tunnel was designed by Ole Singstad, who also designed the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel and Queens-Midtown Tunnel. He advanced the use of the immersed tube method of underwater vehicular tunnel building, a system of constructing the tunnels with prefabricated sections. As mentioned, the Lincoln Tunnel has an inbound rush hour bus lane, and averages over 1,850 daily buses, which translates to over 463,000 buses and over 18.5 million passengers a year! The tunnel along with the rest of NJ Route 495 was once part of the Interstate Highway System, and was envisioned to connect to the LIE (which was also designated I-495 and remains part of the Interstate system), but a highway between the tunnel and the Queens-Midtown Tunnel was cancelled (thankfully), leaving them unconnected, thus the NJ side became NJ Route 495 in the 1980s. The George Washington Bridge carried a traffic volume of over 104 million vehicles in 2019 and is the world's only suspension bridge with 14 vehicular lanes! It was named such because it sits near the sites of Fort Washington (in NY) and Fort Lee, which were fortified positions used by George Washington and his forces as they attempted to deter the occupation of NYC in 1776 during the American Revolution. Unsuccessful, Washington evacuated Manhattan by ferrying his army between the two forts. It was the longest main bridge span in the world from its 1931 opening until the Golden Gate Bridge opened in 1937. The GWB's GWB Bus Station was designed by Pier Luigi Nervi from the Italian province of Sondrio. He also designed the Norfolk Scope arena in Norfolk, VA, the PalaLottomatica and Palazzetto dello Sport arenas in Rome (which hosted the 1960 Summer Olympics basketball tournament), UNESCO Headquarters in Paris (as part of a collab with Bernard Zehrfuss from France and Marcel Breuer from Hungary), Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Assumption in San Francisco (collab with Pietro Belluschi), and the Paul VI Audience Hall which is part of the Vatican complex. Also, when you passed by Port Imperial in Weehawken, at one point in time, a Formula 1 street circuit was actually considered there! It was announced in 2011, in 2012 Sebastian Vettel did a test run and described it as an American Monaco, but it was dropped in 2013 by F1 because they claimed the promoters were apparently in breach of contract
@mrlegend4456railfanning6 күн бұрын
Damn that's really long 😮
@Ok-lu8gx6 күн бұрын
ok
@counterfit56 күн бұрын
That grand prix would have been amazing
@Reticulating-Splines6 күн бұрын
Neat! I didnt know the Lincoln Tunnel Toilet Bowl had an official name. The football field on the top of the tunnel has to be another engineering marvel cause who else would think to put one there
@swingline-tb9xv6 күн бұрын
Ok here’s a weird GWB thing. At the Bridge Plaza in Fort Lee, single drivers will sometimes pull up and people will hop into an absolute strangers car. The drivers are looking for 2 passengers so they qualify for the heavily-discounted car pool lane and the passengers get a free ride. It’s all understood and no words are exchanged. The cars drop off at the street-level entrance to the GWBBS. Transit symbiosis!
@mrcarlosguy2476 күн бұрын
I used to do this with many many others, but it stopped when cashless tolling went into effect and the carpool discount was discontinued. The carpool discount was given when there were 3 or more people in the car, which the toll attendant had to verify when you went to the toll booth.
@swingline-tb9xv6 күн бұрын
Damn, I didn’t know it was gone, left the area a while ago.
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
It's called "slugging" in DC! Didn't realize something similar used to happen in NYC!
@iamzuckerburger6 күн бұрын
@@swingline-tb9xv Fort Lee is soooooo adurreable
@CRnoskillКүн бұрын
@MilesinTransit I know this is off topic. Just needed to tag you.. I have a greyhound hack NO1 uses.. when you are in app you can buy your ticket and when you chose your seats it takes you to a screen where you have a time limit. Those seats are UNAVAILABLE for purchase until you buy them, time little reached or you FULLY exit purchase. A bus driver yelled at me about.my bag in the seat next to me. We were boarded 30 moms early (belive it or not) so during this time I think I reserved the remaining of the seats making them not available for purchase and also when I checked on my tablet it said only 3 seats remaining and that was because I could only reserve so many seats that way. It also adjusted the price in greyhounds fave, thinking the tickets we going to be bought. Newdless to say I sat next to no1.
@avibarr27516 күн бұрын
That section on New Jersey along the Hudson is so utterly fascinating. Beyond the unusual urban fabric and building stock, the fact that almost every neighborhood is it’s own city. It’s only 10 miles between the GW Bridge and Jersey City, but its divided between 13+ municipalities. Guttenberg for example is only 4 blocks wide.
@AverytheCubanAmerican7 күн бұрын
"We're not gonna be needing these because it's free" the guy at the machine: 👁👄👁. It was a missed opportunity to say *"Woke up this mornin', got yourself a bus".* 😂. Sorry, had to, but Jeremy gets me! Before the domination of the PABT, Manhattan used to have different bus terminals scattered, like a Greyhound terminal right by Penn Station! Greyhound wouldn't move to the PABT until 1963! The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad had coach service aboard a ferry to Communipaw Terminal in Jersey City that ran from an elegant bus terminal with a revolving bus platform in the Chanin Building at 42nd and Lexington. Some of which were part of hotels like the Hotel Astor Bus Terminal on West 45th and the Dixie Bus Center on 42nd Street, located on the ground floor of the Dixie Hotel (later Hotel Carter), opened in 1930 and operated until 1959. Like the one in the Chanin Building, the one in the Hotel Carter also had a bus turntable! Buses would come down an entrance ramp onto the turntable, which was 35 feet in diameter and constructed out of 12 triangular steel wedges like a big pizza pie. An operator in a control booth would rotate the turntable until the bus could be driven into one of the 12 parking spaces. Departing buses would be backed out on to the turntable, which would revolve until the bus could be driven up the exit ramp. The 1940s-vintage buses were short allowing them to go up and over the sidewalk and then down the ramp. Ah yes, Soviet architecture...long live the People's Republic of New Jersey! That public staircase you saw at 3:29 leads up to Hamilton Park, the site of the Weehawken Dueling Grounds! At the dueling grounds site, you can see the boulder that Hamilton rested upon after the duel. And yup, that's the Lincoln Tunnel ventilation shaft at 3:18! The ventilation shaft on the NY side on the other hand is NY Waterway's West 39th Street terminal! Besides Guttenberg, Union City, West New York, and Hoboken are among the top four most densely populated municipalities in the US! To put things into perspective for Guttenberg, over 12K people (in 2020 census) live in a land area that's just .19 square miles (total area of .24 square miles)! And I call it the Whittier, Alaska of New Jersey because of those Galaxy Towers! A trio of 44-story octagonal towers (with two 16-story connecting structures) with over a thousand residential units (began as rentals but was converted to condos in 1980), retail, and office space! It takes its name from Johannes Gutenberg as it used to be populated by many Germans but now it's very Cuban. And that's not even the weirdest municipality in NJ! The weirdest one in NJ is South Hackensack....a township split into THREE SECTIONS! Basically after the boroughitis craze, several boroughs were formed within the limits of Lodi Township, and what became South Hackensack were the bits the boroughs didn't want. So it's divided into three noncontiguous sections. The northeastern, primary residential section is adjacent to Hackensack, Little Ferry and Teterboro. A small western portion, known as Garfield Park, lies in between Garfield, Lodi, Wallington and Wood-Ridge, while a southern sliver containing only industrial properties lies in the Meadowlands between Carlstadt, Moonachie, and Ridgefield. Teterboro is also weird, in that it's mostly an airport, industrial land, a Costco, a Texas Roadhouse, a Walmart....and that's it.
@YoungThos7 күн бұрын
4:09 Miles - "Is that corn?!" Jeremy - "It's the Upper West Side" Classic 😹
@honajtransit7 күн бұрын
good job jeremy, you have converted miles into a palisades foamer miles, for more cool palisades foamering, the haverstraw-ossining ferry is really amazing (and scenic!)
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Noted!
@gene78875 күн бұрын
Also if you take Metro North to Ossining, south of the station the rail ROW passes through Sing Sing State Correctional Facility, the origin of the saying "send them up the river" as a euphemism for going to prison.
@chicagolandrailfan1437 күн бұрын
Babe, wake up a new miles in transit video just dropped
@edwmac54347 күн бұрын
I am a Foamer who recently became a locomotive engineer. Miles I hope you end up on my train one day in your videos.
@Leonard_Wilson6 күн бұрын
If your supervisor gives you permission then that would be awesome.
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
That's fantastic! Am I allowed to ask which service you operate?
@justinbak127 күн бұрын
158 is my route, and I watch your videos on my commute (currently sitting on the 158). This is exciting stuff
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
That's wild!!
@Peace2Mateo6 күн бұрын
You were right that ride thru that part of NJ is interesting ! I am now on a binge of what Gutenberg has to offer
@w-m-d8 сағат бұрын
so glad you guys recognize the greatness of NJT and hudson county’s beautiful views and voluminous buildings
@97nelsn6 күн бұрын
8:42 hi vlog! What an unexpected cameo
@bensezer79667 күн бұрын
When someone in a wheelchair takes a bus at Port Authority they pull the bus up to the weird Coach USA part which has an elevator. Also, it’s even crazier taking the routes that use coach busses on those little roads in Hudson/Bergen counties.
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un6 күн бұрын
As someone else mentioned, at 4:15, that's Ailanthus altissima aka the tree of heaven. It is native to northeast and central China, and Taiwan. Unlike other members of the genus Ailanthus, it is found in temperate climates rather than the tropics. Because of that, it has a vigorous invasive species in Europe and North America. The first Western descriptions were made shortly after it was introduced to Europe by French Jesuit Pierre Nicholas d'Incarville, who had sent seeds from Beijing via Siberia to his botanist friend Bernard de Jussieu in the 1740s.In 1784, not long after Jussieu had sent seeds to England, some were forwarded to the US by Philly gardener William Hamilton. In both Europe and America, it quickly became a favored ornamental, especially as a street tree, and by 1840, it was available in most nurseries. The Tree of Heaven was brought to California by Chinese immigrants who came during the California Gold Rush of the 1850s. So yeah, it quickly escaped cultivation and invaded native ecosystems, and its invasiveness has been compounded by its role in the life cycle of the spotted lanternfly. Similarly, another Asian invasive plant species in the Americas is kudzu, which you saw in your MARTA video! Kudzu kills plants by smothering them under a blanket of leaves and by breaking branches or uprooting entire trees. It's known as the "Vine that ate the South", but it has made its way to the northern states like New York! Kudzu was introduced from Japan into the United States at the Japanese pavilion in the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. It remained a garden plant until the Dust Bowl era, when the vine was marketed as a way for farmers to stop soil erosion. The new Soil Conservation Service grew seventy million kudzu seedlings and paid $8 an acre to anyone who would sow the vine. Road and rail builders planted kudzu to stabilize steep slopes. Farmer and journalist Channing Cope, dubbed the "kudzu kid", popularized it in the South as a fix for eroded soils. He started the Kudzu Club of America, which, by 1943, had 20,000 members. The club aimed to plant 8 million acres across the South. Cultivation peaked at over one million acres by 1945. An invasive plant as fast-growing as kudzu outcompetes everything from native grasses to fully mature trees by shading them from the sunlight they need to photosynthesize. And climate change makes it worse when invasive species like kudzu are often more flexible and adaptable to change than many native plants and can outcompete them early in the growing season. Kudzu thrives in areas with mild winters and hot summers. Climate change makes it easier for creeping vine to spread, as winters in many areas of the US become milder. Climate change also leads to more regional drought, an opportunity for kudzu as kudzu is able to weather dry periods with its deep root systems and then take over where native plants could not survive.
@jonat_gabl7 күн бұрын
0:03 _Governor Phil Murphy_ Talks about Gov. Murphy. Shows photo of NED. Favorite running joke. Pioneer of fare holidays.
@foxandcity6 күн бұрын
An OurBus travelling through New Jersey? A fitting tribute to Marc and me! -Blair
@JeffTaylor-tr7my6 күн бұрын
When oh when will we get to see the stylish antics of Blair and Marc again here on the channel?
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Oh man, if only your OurBus had diverted to the GWB!
@foxandcity6 күн бұрын
@@MilesinTransit That would've just been perfect! Icing on the cake. Hopefully we would've gotten to Union Square by the time the next race started...
@97nelsn6 күн бұрын
Should’ve made a stop at Mitsuwa Marketplace. The Japanese food court is worth the trip alone.
@Flushing2Fishtown7 күн бұрын
There are also NJT buses that run nonstop between the Port Authority and the GWB bus terminals on their way to places north of the bridge! They used to run up Amsterdam Avenue but these days they generally run through NJ on the highways because it’s usually faster
@trainluvr6 күн бұрын
So that explains why its official name is station and not terminal. Never thought about that until now, despite taking frequent umbrage when hearing GCT called Grand Central Station, which it is not (and despite a GCS actually existing-serving subway trains).
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Which routes are those??
@Flushing2Fishtown6 күн бұрын
@@MilesinTransit I was mistaken its actually Rockland Coaches (Coach USA not NJT) routes that do this: Route 9AT and 11AT
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Hmm, do they still run those? It looks like they're only running the vanilla 9 and 11 these days!
@b_d154 күн бұрын
Across the street at 4:31 is Mitsuwa Marketplace, it’s an awesome Japanese supermarket!
@jayo_z7 күн бұрын
Woke up this mornin' and got some gabagool...
@kolkoreh6 күн бұрын
Mama always said I’d eat some… gabagool
@daviiiid.r7 күн бұрын
i’m so happy you get to see GWB bus stop in fort lee, it’s a beautiful example of american transit architecture
@keithcaito36396 күн бұрын
I always love these silly trips that you deem “unnecessary” or weird but I love each and every one of them. Bucket list goals includes being one one of these weird trips.
@AbuNewYorkCity6 күн бұрын
I'm not even mad about this one. Someone going between Washington Heights and Midtown could have saved money, lol
@u.s.69094 күн бұрын
Riding transit is so much fun for me even when it sucks. First class flights to Greyhound....love it all.
@troybellamy46156 күн бұрын
In the PABT mobility impaired passengers must contact a NJT dispatcher ahead of time and the bus will load at gate 304 which is the designated wheelchair pickup gate for the "chute" bues
@chrisgeorge746 күн бұрын
They also can do it at gate 421, which is where they unload ada passengers
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Gosh, what a pain!
@dhruvg5507 күн бұрын
A journey you can consider taking - Take the MNR to Tarrytown Take the HudsonLink across the bridge to Nyack Take the TOR Haverstraw Ferry Bus/97 to Haverstraw Take the Haverstraw-Ossining ferry to Ossining Take MNR/Bee-line back to Tarrytown and you would've completed the Rockland-Westchester loop! I've done it once. Think you'd enjoy it!
@honajtransit7 күн бұрын
consider: doing this by bike (it is very fun)
@AverytheCubanAmerican6 күн бұрын
So basically "Circumnavigating the Tappan Zee"
@dhruvg5506 күн бұрын
@@AverytheCubanAmerican yep! i wonder how many variations of this exist (circumnavigating different parts of the Hudson via public transit)
@gene78875 күн бұрын
I'm very proud of everyone in this thread not calling the Tappan Zee Bridge by its illegitimate name
@honajtransit5 күн бұрын
@@dhruvg550 you could probably circumnavigate the hudson highlands (start in pawling, DCPT E to MNR hudson line to newburgh beacon shuttle to shortline to port jervis line to hudson link to harlem line) but that may be hard schedule wise (esp west of the river)
@SupremeLeaderKimJong-un6 күн бұрын
"Is that corn?!" you just summoned the Midwest....and Nikita Khrushchev. That empty lot you mentioned that you thought was for floodplain reasons, basically that land is wrapped up in scandals connected to Bob Menendez. Basically the 615 River Road was once owned by Hess, Hess sold to the site to a private equity firm and a land reuse/development company, the two companies filed an application for development in 2015, but a guy named Fred Daibes who is responsible for Edgewater's development boom got Edgewater officials to block it. This ended Menendez's friendship with US attorney for NJ Philip Sellinger because Sellinger was a shareholder in a firm representing 615 River Road, Greenberg Traurig LLP, and Menendez pressed Sellinger to intervene on behalf of Daibes's other federal banking indictment. While testifying in the senator's corruption trial, Sellinger said that when Menendez was vetting him to be New Jersey's new US attorney in 2020, he told him the prosecution of Daibes was unfair. The case over the property was settled in 2019, and in 2021, the project for the site involves three 25-story towers. One of my favorite NJT routes out of the PABT is the 320 to Harmon Meadow Mill Creek, it exists for two reasons. Because it stops at the North Bergen Park & Ride (right next to NJT's Meadowlands bus garage) for a quick ride for commuters heading to NYC since it's right next to NJ Route 495, and for New Yorkers heading to Walmart in Harmon Meadow since Manhattan doesn't have one! The 85 also serves Harmon Meadow, going from Hoboken Terminal to there via 9th/Congress HBLR and Bergenline Ave, with it being extended to American Dream when the mall opened, making it even more of a shopper service! During rush hour, the 78 from Newark Penn serves Harmon Meadow too! Palisade is derived from pale, ultimately from the Latin word palus, meaning stake. The Lenape called the cliffs "rocks that look like rows of trees", a phrase that became "Weehawken"! They're basalt cliffs, the margin of a diabase sill, formed about 200 million years ago at the close of the Triassic period by the intrusion of molten magma upward into sandstone. When the trapped magma first intruded into the Triassic layers of sedimentary rock, it was so hot that contact metamorphism occurred, altering the rock around it. In the case of the Palisades, the magma cooled under the sedimentary layers, forming a sill made of igneous diabase about 40 miles long and 1,000 feet thick. During this time, crustal movements along the Ramapo fault tilted the entire region downward about 17 degrees to the west. Water erosion of the softer sandstone left behind the columnar structure of harder rock that exists today! The Palisades were the site of 18 documented duels and probably many unrecorded ones in the years 1798-1845. The most famous duel was of course the Burr-Hamilton duel which took place in Weehawken in July 1804! It also played a role during the American Revolution, as in the wake of the rebel's defeat in the Battle of Brooklyn and the Battle of Fort Washington, British commander Lord Cornwallis marched his men up the Palisades to try to ambush George Washington. Washington, stationed near Fort Lee, was alerted to the ambush by an unknown horseback patriot, and successfully fled west through Englewood and over the Hackensack River, avoiding capture in what is remembered as Washington's Retreat
@JeffTaylor-tr7my6 күн бұрын
Bob Menendez is really a politician/criminal that doesn't stop giving, isn't he?
@lpamnz3 күн бұрын
I watched for the part at the end where you reveal how ridiculous this option is, but never knew that side of the river was like that, so cool!
@TheMayorOfPrimeCity3 күн бұрын
Excellent video Miles. I’m hoping Gov. Murphy will grace us with another fare free week
@mattreynolds56716 күн бұрын
Another excellent trip gentleman, thanks for taking me with ya. Keep up the good work. 🎥
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@thenatedog14616 күн бұрын
You went through my hometown of Edgewater where you saw the big voluminous buildings! To answer your question on the big patch of land that hasn't been built on yet.... it used to be the site of Hess Oil Tankers (Edgewater was a big industrial town prior to the 1990s), a company bought up the land to use for highrises but its been in litigation with the town, who wants to build a school and other town utility buildings, on the site. The 158 is a lifeline for me whenever I go back!
@gchsbus6 күн бұрын
I REMEMBER WHEN THIS HAPPENED A FEW WEEKS AGO and the first person I thought of was Miles. I was thinking "Well this would make a good video". Well... he was already on top of it, as usual. Love this channel.
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
@alk616955 күн бұрын
I took advantage of the free NJT fare. I mainly road the railroads, the Hudson Bergan Light Rail, and a commuter bus. It was fun. I wish I was able to do more. Just didn't have the time.
@mariowartortle26287 күн бұрын
Love this haircut arch we are stuck in right now
@subparnaturedocumentary6 күн бұрын
for real he should keep it
@bmolitor6156 күн бұрын
Jeremy! he is so unendingly pleased by everything he encounters!
@roaddogg8004 күн бұрын
I think you'd really enjoy a long transit trip on the west coast. It's possible to ride transit all the way up California from the Mexican border to the Oregon border, and beyond.
@Queso24694 күн бұрын
If you ever want a really amazing view of Manhattan, you can bike almost the same route along the water. It's like 90% mixed use path except part of that final hill which is terrifying riding with traffic.
@camisierra175 күн бұрын
9:09 this is quite literally how my NJT bus to school looks like every day 😭
@easyasme6 күн бұрын
I was waiting to see what yall did for the free nj transit week!! Hype
@barbeerian6 күн бұрын
I did that loop on inline skates back in the 90s. Through the Lincoln Tunnel and then up and over the GWB.
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
WOW!
@ryanstevens27226 күн бұрын
I live in South Jersey and the buses here are largely empty any time of the day so I wondered where are the NJT buses crowded and you have answered that. Thanks!
@davidsp59367 күн бұрын
Bridge foaming through the foamer window!
@AnonyDave6 күн бұрын
Fry: I don't get it, this bus is perfect. I can't find anything wrong with it Driver: We are technically in new jersey sir
@Sammie10536 күн бұрын
Glad you had a better experience than me during the fare holiday! On that Sunday (looks like the same morning this was filmed, based on the rain) I hopped a train on the NEC line from Princeton Junction to NYC Penn Station... Unbeknownst to me, the 9:00 train had been canceled. I can't post photos in a KZbin comment but the Princeton Junction platform was PACKED. We all got onto the train, but it was standing room only - by the third stop. I went and stood in the vestibule (it was so busy the conductors didn't care) and by Metuchen even the vestibule was so full I couldn't really move. By Edison I literally couldn't move my arms. It was rough. Nice to see people taking advantage of the free transit though
@Reticulating-Splines6 күн бұрын
NEC got absolutely FUCKED by the fare holiday, it seemed like every day something else was breaking down. Its really only gotten worse as evidenced by just this past week with the whole tunnel-train fiasco
@jerseypup6 сағат бұрын
I avoid going to NYC like the plague for that week (US Open) but I did several short hops on the NEC and every one of them was terrible. Trains that should have been nearly empty were more packed than rush hour. It got to the point that I just stuck with local buses, less crowded and more reliable.
@Jonathannovak16 күн бұрын
Man I rode NJ Transit every single day during free week and was wondering if you were doing a video about it! I used it to cross the entire state multiple times, to Philadelphia, Atlantic City, Wildwood, Cape May, Asbury Park and Port Jervis! I kept thinking “man this is some Miles shit” as I spent 6 hours getting to Philadelphia purely on NJT free rides lol
@AbuNewYorkCity6 күн бұрын
Me too. Figured NJ is a big state and it can get expensive normally to go some places.
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
That's awesome!!
@subwayfanminecrafttrainmta2737 күн бұрын
I saw you guys at the bus festival in Brooklyn
@ShantyIrishman6 күн бұрын
Aww, I missed them, I run in Brooklyn Bridge Park every weekend.
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
I wasn't there, but you probably did see Jeremy and co!
@this_jedi_crafts66266 күн бұрын
Oh my GOSH - you and your pals crack me up! LOVED seeing you guys on the 158. I live just north of the Galaxy Towers (on JFK Blvd East - which also has amazing views). River Road is definitely scenic and quite diverse. The "foliage" you inquired about - there are stretches of River Road that were allegedly so contaminated from creosote (that area used to be a railway and shipyard,) that the government said that you couldn't develop on the land (even doing like a story of concrete to attempt to shield the contaminates). HOWEVER (as it always happens - OTHER areas along that gorgeous stretch (on River Road) "somehow" got developed despite having the same health and safety issues. Some weekends (since I gave up my car) I walk down the steep Hill under the Galaxy Towers and take the 158 to and from the Target in Edgewater Commons. If you guys want another, equally cool view, next time take the 165, 166, 168 or 128 from PABT (Gate 212) along Blvd East - it's SUPER local (and takes a while) and then get off on Blvd East & Palisade Avenue (right at the edge of Braddock Park) and then you can take the 159 north (to the same Bridge Plaza destination. Thanks for another super entertaining vlog!
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Great stuff, thanks a lot!
@chrispontani60596 күн бұрын
This is exactly the kind of transit content I come here to enjoy.
@Dan_Gyros5 күн бұрын
Honestly riding a public transit vehicles in the rain is just peak vibes
@IVR026 күн бұрын
I like that this video ended up kinda being an ode to the Palisades and their funky architecture and infrastructure. Especially love the shoutout to the Galaxy Towers - genuinely one of my favorite apartment buildings. They just look so fascinating. Same goes for thr Stonehenge tower up the road in North Bergen.
@az51816 күн бұрын
that's the OurBus to Canada and thus the Niagara Falls and Toronto wrap
@johnhoward-fusco83667 күн бұрын
Miles in Transit - enjoy your vids! Were you at the Crowded House show on Saturday at Ovation Hall in AC? I saw someone who looked a whole lot like you wearing a green 'T' hoodie. If so, did you like the concert?
@chrisgeorge746 күн бұрын
That was him. He posted about his bus route there on twitter. Also, what kind of person other than miles would wear a T hoodie lol
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
That was me, yeah! Of all places to get spotted, wow! I did like it a lot, although I must confess that I'm a much bigger fan of Split Enz than of Crowded House, so my ulterior motive of getting some Enz covers was dashed for the most part!
@harrisonhschan6 күн бұрын
The red shelters at the Bridge station remind me of the Ottawa Transitway - which also has red shelters with a very similar design aesthetic with mostly glass panes and lots of curved roofs with a similar radius (but those are enclosed).
@williamcato36976 күн бұрын
Shoutout "Hi Vlog" girl --
@tristaterailroading6 күн бұрын
To answer your question if that is a floodplain, yes it is! It is the meadowlands region of NJ and it is INCREDIBLY hard to build on.
@Spanderson996 күн бұрын
Keep the wacky transit adventures coming! This is absolutely the sort of stunt I’d try if I lived in New York. Currently on a month-long trip in which I’m working towards visiting every terminal on the BC ferries network. Problem is, we have no transit to speak of so I need to bike for weeks on end to get to some of these spots. 4 days left until I reach Bella Coola, one of the more remote spots on the network. Come out west and ride some ferries sometime. Washington and BC both have pretty good networks.
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Oh wow, that sounds like an amazing challenge! I definitely need to come out there for the ferries sometime.
@tonkabear23696 күн бұрын
I like how much you and your friends have doing this.
@bernardschmitt63897 күн бұрын
I should be studying right now... but there is a new Miles in Transit video so studying will have to be put on hold.
@United1748-6 күн бұрын
same
@Wholehogentertainment6 күн бұрын
Same
@JonathanCabot6 күн бұрын
education is short lived but transit is forever
@HSullivan6 күн бұрын
I believe the empty lot you mentioned and wondered why it hasn't been developed is the superfund site in edgewater. Coal tar was manufactured there for years, and waste oil was also recycled there. Cleanup cost almost $100 Million. I remember walking there years ago and some guy on a bike passing a friend and I asked us to look it up in the paper, since we also were wondering what that spot's deal is.
@K2YU6 күн бұрын
The building at 4:29 reminds me of a smaller version of the Romanian Palace of the Parliament for some reason.
@daveporter02176 күн бұрын
Hard to say if Ceaucescu was a foamer
@timothyschollux6 күн бұрын
Shoutout to the tribal king. May he always be mentioned!
@CodeDeb6 күн бұрын
That little town in NJ reminds me of that town in Alaska where everyone lives in the same apartment building
@joermnyc6 күн бұрын
4:45 This empty lot is wrapped up in some scandals because people up the hill are suing over "lost views" and the owners may have done some questionable things with certain politicians. This lot used to have two huge oil or gas tanks (my wife lived on the Manhattan side when we first met (she went to Teachers College), and I was wondering what this odd lot was from Riverside Park one day.)
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Gosh, sounds like a handful...
@LucaPasini27 күн бұрын
Those are some large blocks of flats indeed. I'm writing this comment from a large block of flat myself, but not that large.
@phwayne6 күн бұрын
Back in the early 1970s, many platforms did not have the inside partitions. We had to wait outside among all the diesel bus fumes.
@DoubleHCreations6 күн бұрын
Idea: make a parody of the Fairly OddParents theme but Miles In Transit
@HackleFlyer6 күн бұрын
Hearing the 319 mentioned gave me war flashbacks during that free week…wasn’t prepared for a 6-hour long bus ride.
@happyplayer25316 күн бұрын
Was it the wait that was the problem?
@HackleFlyer6 күн бұрын
@@happyplayer2531 no, it was the SHEER LENGTH of the line
@happyplayer25316 күн бұрын
@@HackleFlyer oh i see, you went all the way to Cape May. I took the 551 on the way back, which was much faster than the timetabled 3 hours
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
I need to do this at some point! Gotta be the full summer route to Cape May though.
@Hale4446 күн бұрын
More NJTransit!
@Hale4446 күн бұрын
Also "Zoomer's world ends because they have to wait 10 minutes for a bus!!"
@maxsilverstone86006 күн бұрын
10:11 Very disappointed that you didn't say "poor bid"
@PurelyAJD4 күн бұрын
We love Jeremy
@KC3YCU4 күн бұрын
A few years ago, I had several hours in Manhattan before my Megabus left from rando spot down by the river, so I went to PABT looking for a place to sit (spoiler: there isn't one). I thought there might be seats up by the bus gates, so I completely missed the "Ticketed Passengers Only" sign and went up the escalator. Finding no seats and no other way back down, I ran down the up escalator, like little kids do at the mall
@MilesinTransit4 күн бұрын
That's hilarious!
@jonathanstensberg5 күн бұрын
Illustrating the desperate need for literally any way to cross the Hudson between 40th and 178th.
@psychorabbitt7 күн бұрын
So now that Miles is back to living in Boston again, I had a thought yesterday when I was out and about. How about traveling all the way across Massachusetts using only transit! It might be possible since you can take the Green line to Riverside, then get a MWRTA bus to MassBay CC in Wellesly, then take ANOTHER MWRTA bus from there to Framingham State. THEN take the MWRTA's microtransit system (Catch Connect) to get to the Framingham commuter rail station. Ride the commuter rail to the Westboro station, then get the WRTA's microtransit (Via) to somewhere in Shrewsbury that's along where the 15 bus serves. Take THAT to the WRTA hub in Worcester. Then from there you get the B79 which is a special connector bus run by PVTA that goes between Worcester and Amherst. THEN it would be a bus from Amherst to Northampton to connect into FRTA territory. And from there... I honestly don't know how you'd get further west. But, if Miles does this insane trip, I would be willing to join him as a guy with his face blurred (because I am ugly and camera shy).
@MilesinTransit6 күн бұрын
Right now it's impossible to get further west than Charlemont, but I've heard that the PVTA and FRTA got a grant to run connecting routes to the western end of the state! I'll do that trip then.
@psychorabbitt6 күн бұрын
@@MilesinTransit That's what I thought. I was looking at the maps yesterday and was thinking, "I don't think you can get all the way to Pittsfield..."
@davidsp59367 күн бұрын
Fun Fact: There were plans for a Formula 1 race along parts of your route.
@subparnaturedocumentary6 күн бұрын
now thats a fun fact!
@joermnyc6 күн бұрын
Sadly they were never able to get things up to the required standards, and then Formula E ran races in Brooklyn (around the docks near the cruise terminal, it's too small for the F1 cars, and there was really no paddock to speak of) for a few years. Now that Vegas has the 3rd American race, it's going to take something really big to lure F1 here (rumors are Miami might not last as long as they thought.)
@gene78875 күн бұрын
@@joermnycthe current rumor is the next city in the US that F1 will try to have a street race is downtown Chicago. NASCAR has done it so it's feasible
@JamesTerrebonne01947 күн бұрын
The first trip reminds me of Alexandria, Virginia along King Street/Rte 7 just off I-395. Almost identical with the tower apartments on the hilltops and small strip malls below.
@phronsiekeys6 күн бұрын
I'm getting flashbacks...after college I lived in Weehawken and had to take a freaking Port Authority NJT to and from work in the city every day. And they weren't running every 2 minutes at rush hour. My bus went up on the cliff though.
@mikeythesoulace6 күн бұрын
The M98 limited route used to actually go up to the GWB bus terminal a while ago!
@BDavinci066 күн бұрын
You guys are doing trips I have done many times but I paid!🙁 There are plenty options for the River Road route. You can take the #158 or you can take the #159R That goes via river road and then turns towards Anderson Avenue. That will probably get you nearby Bridge Plaza in Fort Lee. The #156 and the#158 get you off of Lemoine Avenue closest to Bridge Plaza Otherwise, the best trip you want to go outside the city for even for a little bit. A huge contrast from the city to the suburbs back to the city
@parac0sm0naut265 күн бұрын
Hey Miles I got an idea for a trip. What if we did a trip, and hosted an in trip, or at station Bingo game, or other game with actual travel related prizes. Including "door prizes"? I'd cover my travel, and half of yours plus prizes, and equipment, while being behind the scene coordinator. You'd formulate which route would be ideal. One with a Folk like late night transfer maybe. Maybe even a Gambling Junkett. Amtrack or Bus
@asianpower-yw3bn6 күн бұрын
hey miles, at 4:15 (if the foilage is before mitsua marketplace) there used to be a very large golf course/driving range where the foilage is, but i think it was demolished a few years ago!
@GojiMet867 күн бұрын
Wow, I took the 156R at gate 201 on Friday (the river variant running alongside the 158), but to Port Imperial. A nice walk along the waterfront to Palisades medical center is (first time in that area). After, I took the 158 back down, but they had a mix of the shorter 40-foot NABIs, so those were crowded. Had to wait for a long boi to show up. Very nice area, and I do want to do the whole trip up to GW Bridge some other day. Also got to see the Hamilton/Burr statues on Harbor Boulevard in Lincoln Harbor.
@DoubleHCreations6 күн бұрын
5:14 oh my gosh, you sound like Timmy Turner and 7:09 sounds like Wanda
@officialmcdeath6 күн бұрын
On the subject of futile bus journeys, some of the weekend London Overground rail replacement buses, particularly South of the River, will have you reconsidering your entire life's course - they are super circuitous and go half the speed of regular buses but they're as good as free, you just make sure to show your Oyster on the way in, no tap required \m/
@peterwatters7 күн бұрын
i love watching you guys at 2x speed
@kns77176 күн бұрын
Surprisingly the crowds weren't too bad on Free Fare Friday - was impressed!
@AbuNewYorkCity6 күн бұрын
It was free for the whole week, plus Labor Day
@kns77176 күн бұрын
@@AbuNewYorkCity indeed but I was out on it during the friday
@dreselus6 күн бұрын
7:35 that guy at the bus stop reminds me so much of Hiroshi Uchiyamada from GTO, red tie and all.
@uniontpke7726 күн бұрын
Lol about the haircut referring to the livestream.
@AbuNewYorkCity6 күн бұрын
I made it to New Jersey all eight days, mostly took the trains but did some busses also
@mtasubwaymartasubway6 күн бұрын
I took the nj train to Trenton and then transferred to,I think,409, from Trenton to Philadelphia. Then towards back home to NYC, I took the Atlantic City NJ train to Atlantic City from Philadelphia, then took the 319 bus back to NYC, NYC subway A train to Utica, then the NYC bus B46 bus going home. Next time when I go to Philadelphia, I want to ride one of the septa buses
@LukeSesay6 күн бұрын
Great video 👍👍👍
@maxarnold70586 күн бұрын
This is exactly what I needed to come home to
@Blank007 күн бұрын
And I thought the dumbest way to take advantage is to try to get on one of the diminishing Arrow III trains
@Danno3856 күн бұрын
Everything Jeremy says is so interesting, I wish he had his own mic 😂
@davidsp59367 күн бұрын
I know PABT and Bridge Plaza, all too well.
@TheSuperSnake7 күн бұрын
fare free is crazy
@youtubesewersocialist6 күн бұрын
Quite, especially when an agency like NJ Transit is having a huge funding crisis....
@kendall2166 күн бұрын
And yes we have a bus lane on the outbound also , starts at 2pm to 7:15pm
@hbowman1087 күн бұрын
4:15- in the foliage, you can see Ailanthus altissima, "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn". It is an invasive toxic weed from China that can grow to be over fifty feet tall. It is the only tree that can bust through concrete.
@yungrichnbroke51996 күн бұрын
Port authority is the most absurd transit experience I’ve ever had anywhere.
@njbusnut6 күн бұрын
You should ride the 319 to Atlantic City
@davidwpoon6 күн бұрын
4:45 Lawsuits and corruption. And an empty lot further south a bit earlier was the Quanta Superfund Site.