Gates Avenue is the oldest station in the subway system to have been built as a rapid transit station; it has been serving
BMT trains since 1885. While
Far Rockaway–Mott Avenue is the oldest station currently in operation in the
New York City Subway system, having originally opened in 1869 as a
Long Island Rail Road station, that station had an 8-year disruption in service while being converted to subway
loading gauge, meaning that Gates Avenue is the system's oldest station in continuous operation. Gates Avenue was originally opened by the Union Elevated Railroad on May 13, 1885 for the
BMT Lexington Avenue Line, and has been in continuous operation since then. The BMT Jamaica Line connected to the station on June 25, 1888. Prior to the
Dual Contracts, trains either operated down Broadway to
Broadway Ferry (which closed upon the opening of the
Williamsburg Bridge tracks to
Essex Street) or Lexington Avenue, eventually merging onto the Myrtle Avenue El. The Dual Contracts expanded the BMT Jamaica Line, including Gates Avenue, to three tracks, allowing for express service, as well as expanding service in Manhattan down
Nassau Street. In 1950, the Lexington Avenue El closed, resulting in the redirection of all trains to the Williamsburg Bridge. In 2024, the MTA announced that the Gates Avenue station would become fully compliant with the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 as part of the agency's 2020–2024 Capital Program. The renovation of the station was to be funded by
congestion pricing in New York City. The project, which was to begin in late 2026, is to include two elevators and four rebuilt staircases. == Station layout==