Upper level There are two tracks and a very wide
island platform. The northbound track is located under City Hall Park, while the southbound track is under the east side of Broadway. There is an active tower at the north end, with a window that lets any waiting passengers observe
Transit Authority goings-on. The platform tapers off toward the southern end, where the northbound and southbound portions join. The station's configuration, and the wide-open staircases to the sky above, is responsible for another distinguishing feature: the number of birds that fly into and around the station. This station was overhauled in the late 1970s, changing the station's structure and overall appearance. It replaced the original wall tiles, old signs, and incandescent lighting with more modern wall tiles, signs and fluorescent lights, as well as fixing staircases and platform edges. Before the new City Hall master tower was built, there was a provision at the north end of the upper level for a
diamond crossover (which has existed since the construction of this station, when the upper level platform was to be a
terminal) which is now occupied by a relay room. At the south end of the station, the uptown track curves away from the wall; this dates from the original construction when the upper level was converted from a terminal, with presumably a straight line, to a through station with a single two-track tunnel. South of this station, the line utilizes a sharp
reverse curve, first turning west under Vesey Street, then turning south under Church Street toward
Cortlandt Street.
Exits The
fare control area is located in the center of the platform and fenced off from the rest of the platform area, has exits on either end. At the north end, two exits lead to the east side of Broadway at Warren Street, and at the south end, one exit leads to the east side of Broadway at Murray Street. Passengers enter from the sidewalk adjacent to City Hall Park directly onto the wide island platform on the upper level. An exit at the south end of the platform led to the
Woolworth Building, but this was closed in 1982 due to concerns over crime.
Lower level The City Hall station is a bi-level station, with an unused two-island platform, three-track lower level reachable from a single staircase from about the center of the in-use upper platform. The staircase leads to the western platform; the eastern platform was never finished and does not have a usable stairway. The middle track in the lower level station was to be used for
short turns from either direction depending on the service pattern, with a layout much like that at
Whitehall Street–South Ferry station further south. It was initially intended that the local trains were to terminate on the upper level, while the express trains using the lower level would continue on through
lower Manhattan and then through the
Montague Street Tunnel. However, plans were changed before construction ended. As a result, the lower level of the station is unused (except for non-rush hour storage of trains), as are the stub-end center express tracks at
Canal Street on its upper level (the connections to which were instead "temporarily" rerouted to the
Manhattan Bridge for service across that bridge). Another effect of this change is that the southern end of the upper level station slopes downward. This is a result of platform lengthening and rerouting the upper level downward toward the south, rather than letting the lower level stay at the same elevation and continue south through lower Manhattan. The lower level floor continues south of the station until it disappears under the increasingly low ceiling under the ramps carrying the upper level downgrade. The lower level was never used for passenger service or even
finished with tiles and signage. Only the western platform was fully completed; the shorter eastern platform was never finished. == In popular culture ==