Sunday, January 18, 2026

Passengers now have leaning rails at these East Village bus stops

This past week, the MTA installed leaning bars (aka, butt rails or butt shelves) at the M8 stop on St. Mark's Place at Second Avenue (above) and the M9 stop on Ninth Street at First Avenue (photo below by Steven) ...
As noted before, depending on your height, the lean machines aren't super comfy. In addition, advocates have criticized the bars for making MTA bus and subway stops less accessible to segments of the population, including people with disabilities. 

However, the MTA says these booty bars cost about $450, compared to over $4,000 for a traditional wooden bench.

This past November, City Hall committed $40 million to putting seating or rear rails at every eligible bus stop in NYC — some 8,750 without a place to sit or lean. The rollout will reportedly take up to 10 years, with 875 stops updated annually.

Let us know if you have seen more of the new "I'm not sitting" bars around... some stops have had them for years.

8 comments:

  1. Complete waste of money. Just put a bench.

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  2. As a septuagenarian well on my way to octogenarian with some mobility issues, I've been asking for more benches along the M8 bus route (both east and west) for ages. I guess this is my answer.
    Why the $4500 quote for a "wooden" bench. The current benches are that metal 3-seater model like the one near Whiskers on 9th St.
    And while were talking about bus routes, I noticed the tree near the bus bench @ 3rd Ave. @ 10th St. (near Korean grocery) suddenly disappeared and the the tree near the bus shelter on 2nd Ave.@ St Marks (by Library) also disappeared. How do you find out why?

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  3. Abslutely ridiculous, it's right in the middle of the sidewalk on a main strip of St Marks. I HATE this DOT. Gone crazy since the pandemic.

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    Replies
    1. It's not in the middle. The sidewalk there is that tight right now as two hats/scarves/sun glasses stalls on the sidewalk were removed and the sidewalk around the corner building is being replaced. They've been at it since last year. When the plywood barrier comes down it will be better.

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  4. Anything to deter homeless from sleeping there, while vastly inconveniencing everyone else!

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    Replies
    1. Instead of detering the homeless. Address the homeless problem. So much money is wasted on avoiding issues when it can be spent address the issues.

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  5. this is such a waste of our money. they should have at least made them easily removable so someone can sell them for scrap metal. these will be just another thing to write graffiti on. no one is going to use them

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  6. I first saw these butt rails installed in subway stations, and my first thought was, "What kind of joke is this?" I get that it prevents anyone from stretching out and taking a snooze, but it's truly mean-spirited to those of us who might actually need something to lean on while waiting for the bus.

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