The George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal is a commuter bus terminal located at the east end of the George Washington Bridge in Washington Heights, Manhattan. The station is built over the Trans-Manhattan Expressway (Interstate 95) between 178th and 179th Streets and Fort Washington and Wadsworth Avenues and features direct bus ramps on and off the upper level of the bridge. The complex includes the 175th Street station of the IND Eighth Avenue Line of the New York City Subway, located at Fort Washington Avenue and 175th Street.
The first floor of the bus terminal has shops and a waiting area. There is also an New York City Off-Track Betting Parlor also located on the first floor.
The bus station is owned and operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. On a typical weekday, about 15,000 passengers on some 730 buses use the bus station. The building was the first work built in the United States by the Italian engineer-architect Pier Luigi Nervi and opened on January 17, 1963. The subway station, operated by the New York City Transit Authority, was part of the original A line which opened in 1932.
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