Brushville station With the opening of the
Long Island Rail Road Main Line from Jamaica to
Hicksville on March 1, 1837, De Lancey Avenue station was opened, located in the vicinity of where
Queens Village station is today at Springfield Boulevard. The station was constructed east of Jamaica. On November 27, 1837, this station was replaced by Brushville station, located between Hempstead Turnpike, and what later became known as First Avenue and 212th Street. This station was renamed Queens from 1852 to 1856. The station was discontinued on October 19, 1871 as it was replaced by a permanent station known as
Inglewood station. That station was built at Springfield Road (later Boulevard) by Colonel A. M. Wood on land across from his estate that he sold to the LIRR. The Main Line was double-tracked to Hicksville in 1890, passing through the area. An 1895 map showed a proposed new station at First Avenue. Brushville station reopened as Brushville Road at First Avenue in June 1897. Interstate Park was sold for residential development in 1906. The station was renamed "Bellaire" in 1907, following a request by developer Parvin Harbaugh. On May 22, 1923, New York City and the LIRR agreed on a plan to extend Cross Island Boulevard and Bellaire Boulevard under the rail line, which would be elevated. Work on the Queens Elimination Project, which extended from a point west of Bellerose station to Hollis station, was completed in 1924. As part of the project, five grade crossings, at Hempstead Turnpike, Springfield Boulevard, Bennet Avenue, Wertland Avenue, and Madison Avenue, were eliminated by placing the line on an embankment and constructing bridges, and two new streets were extended underneath the line, at Bellaire Boulevard and Cross Island Boulevard. In addition, the line was four-tracked and electrification was extended to Floral Park. Bellaire and Queens stations were rebuilt with concrete high-level platforms that could accommodate eleven-car trains. Pedestrian subways were constructed between platforms at Floral Park and Bellerose, station platforms at Hillside and Hollis were extended new interlockings were installed at Floral Park and Queens, and an automatic block signaling system was installed between Floral Park and Hillside. Telephone and telegraph lines were constructed as part of the project, as was a freight yard at Queens, and a storage yard east of Floral Park for electric local trains. On December 17, 1923, the first track on the embankment opened for service in the westbound direction. On January 7, 1924, a second track, an eastbound one, opened for service, increasing the completion of the project to 60 percent. With the opening of this track, service in both directions was relocated from the previous level, below the embankment level, to the embankment, allowing the old tracks to be discontinued, and for five grade crossings to be closed. In February 1924, work on the project was expected to be completed in May, though it was substantially completed in December. The new station at Bellaire opened on September 20, 1924 with high-level platforms. The project to eliminate the five grade crossings cost $2,500,000, while the project to extend Cross Island Boulevard under the line cost $75,000, and the project to do the same for Bellaire Boulevard (211th Street) cost $60,000. The entire cost of the project ended up being $2,760,000. A quarter of the $2,500,000 cost of the elimination of the five crossings was paid for by the State, while the cost of the new streets carried across the rail line was paid for by the City and the LIRR. The cost of four-tracking the line, and the construction of stations and other facilities was paid for by the LIRR. The line was elevated by carrying the line on a high fill embankment with steel and concrete bridges at street crossings. The State made three payments of $248,000, and the City made its first payment of $70,000, but objected to the second and third payments, totaling $178,000, as it questioned the legality of the LIRR's addition of tracks as part of the project. The mapped out route for Cross Island Boulevard and Bellaire Boulevard extended across the tracks, but the section crossing the tracks had not been opened. The -wide streets would be carried under the new elevated line. The clearance between the streets and the railroad line would be . As part of the project, Bellaire station was moved from being just west of Bennett Avenue, to extending from Bennett Avenue to Bellaire Boulevard. The original plan from 1923 called for a station long enough to accommodate eight-car trains. Eight additional westbound trains would be added daily and on Sundays in June. At a joint hearing of the PSC and the New York State Transit Commission on February 17, 1930, the Bellaire Community Association filed a petition requesting 16 additional rush hour trains stopping at the station, and 18 additional trains on Sunday. A counsel for the PSC found there was an 80 minute gap in service at the station, and that 76 people from the station boarded the train arriving at the station following the gap. He urged that the PSC to order the LIRR to improve service to the station. A Trainmaster for the LIRR denied that the quality of service at Bellaire was poor, but noted that some additional service could be provided to the station without inflicting hardship on service. The station, at the time, was served by 49 westbound and 56 eastbound trains on weekdays. On May 9, 1936, a fire started at the station, causing $500's worth of damage. Multiple fires took place across Queens and Nassau County early on December 2, 1940 in ten degree weather, including a fire that damaged Bellaire station. The fire required the station to be temporarily closed for repairs and the relocation of its ticket office to a nearby store.
Closing The station's agency was discontinued in 1968—1969. On June 18, 1972, the Long Island Rail Road announced a major change in train schedules to take place on all ten branches of the LIRR. As part of the changes, three stations with low ridership, Bellaire,
South Farmingdale, and
Landia, would be closed on June 26. The station was used by over 100 daily riders, and a railroad spokesperson said the cost of maintaining the station exceeded fare revenue from the station. The potential closure of Bellaire was first reported eighteen months prior. On June 23, 1972, the Bellaire Commuters' Association won a court order from Queens Supreme Court Justice William G. Giaccio to enjoin the LIRR from closing the station on June 26 until a hearing took place that morning in which the Association could make its case to keep the station open. The order kept the station for an additional half day, with three trains leaving for Penn Station at 6:55 a.m., 7:22 a.m., and 7:40 a.m., and three trains leaving for
Flatbush Avenue Terminal at 7:58 a.m., 8:23 a.m., and 8:56 a.m. The Association submitted a petition to the railroad with 1,000 signatures opposing the closing. Queens Borough President
Donald Manes also sent a letter to
William Ronan, chairman of the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), saying that the MTA should reconsider its decision to close the station, considering the need to reduce car use due to pollution. The president of the Bellaire Commuters' Association, Mary Lennon, said that it made more sense to have area residents walk to the Bellaire station than having them drive to the nearby Hollis or Queens Village stations, both about away, causing more congestion. == Station layout ==