There's an abandoned subway station at the southern tip of Manhattan, and you have to pass a background check to visit

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Patrick Cashin NYCT_9060

Patrick Cashin / MTA New York City Transit

A 6 train passing through the old City Hall station.

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Even if you use New York's subway system every day, you've probably never walked through the City Hall station.

Though it's been closed since 1945, the subway station was never demolished. To this day, after the 6 train makes its final downtown stop at the Brooklyn Bridge station, it travels through the old City Hall station in its route to turn back uptown.

For the regular New Yorker, it's not so easy to get inside.

The New York Transit Museum hosts tours of the abandoned station at various times throughout the year. The tour is only available to museum members, and it's sold out until 2016, with a long waiting list.

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You even have to pass a background check before you'll be allowed in.

City Hall Statio

Marc A. Hermann, MTA New York City Transit

When the City Hall station first opened in 1904, the fare to ride the subway was a mere five cents.

Elevated subway transportation had been implemented in the city decades earlier, but City Hall station, the southernmost stop in Manhattan, would be one of the first stations built on a new underground line. It became the poster child for the entire New York subway station.

The subway would go from there, to Grand Central, Times Square, and then all the way north to 145th street in the Bronx.

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George B. McClellan, Jr., who was the mayor of New York at the time, believed that this, along with the other new underground stations that formed the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (or the IRT), would cement New York as a truly great city.

City Hall

Patrick Cashin, MTA New York City Transit

The station's curved entryways and ceilings - there are no straight lines anywhere - are some of its most notable design features. There are also no columns on the platform to block your view.

Other unique elements include electric chandeliers, oak furnishings, white terra cotta, and decorative plaques.

Despite City Hall's beauty, the larger, and more convenient Brooklyn Bridge station nearby grew more popular over time. Traffic at the City Hall station declined, and even though it had weathered the Great Depression and World War II, the station closed on the last day of the year in 1945.

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In 1979, it was granted interior landmark status by New York City.

City Hall

Marc A. Hermann, MTA New York City Transit Museum

Safety and security concerns are the main reasons why the MTA does not regularly open the space to the public.

If you want to experience the City Hall station for yourself, your best bet is to get a Transit Museum membership, which costs between $35 and $50 a year.

City Hall Station

Marc A. Hermann, MTA New York City Transit Museum

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