Why did the New York City Transit Authority (NYCTA) buy the Redbirds?
The Redbird story begins in 1958. The subway system was already more than 50 years old, and some subway cars had been in service since the early 1900s. The NYCTA set out to replace its oldest cars in phases, resulting in the largest fleet replacement undertaken to that point. At this time, the NYCTA fleet of passenger cars numbered 4,447, and 1,537 of those were over 35 years old — and some were over 50 — more than 34 percent of the fleet!
In 1958, after a design process intended to standardize car appearance across the former BMT, IND, and IRT services, 110 R26 and 100 R28 cars were ordered to replace the dated rolling stock of the IRT. A year later, in 1959, 230 R27 and 320 R30 cars were ordered for the BMT and IND services.
Some new subway cars had been filtered into service throughout the early 1950s, but platform extensions and expanded capacity of subway lines precluded retiring some of the oldest cars.