A 50-year-old man was found dead on a 6 train Wednesday morning — and his body was stored in an out-of-commission platform bathroom at a steamy 33rd Street station for about two hours until the medical examiner removed it, The Post has learned.

Straphangers said they’re disgusted they have to share space with rotting corpses.

“Oh my God, in this heat?” exclaimed Jennifer Agiular, 25, a nursing student from the Bronx.

“That’s just unsanitary. A body can’t just sit in a subway station bathroom for two hours, even if the death is from natural causes. It starts decomposing right away if it’s not refrigerated, and even faster in the summer.”

The incident comes two days after The Post exposed how “leaking” corpses of people found dead or killed in the subway are often temporarily stored in break areas or employee lunch rooms, much to the chagrin of spooked employees.

Riders on the 6 train alerted authorities shortly before at 8 a.m. Wednesday that a man in one of the cars was unresponsive, authorities said.

Responding paramedics removed the body from the train. Police say the deceased was Jorge Portareal, who died from natural causes.

While waiting for the medical examiner to arrive, MTA workers told The Post paramedics brought the body to the north end of the southbound platform on a stretcher and slid it into an old, single-stall bathroom that’s now used as a janitor’s closet.

The ME finally removed it at 10:21.

A spokesperson for Mayor De Blasio said that, all things considered, the body wasn’t there very long.

“It’s not like television, these things take time,” said Olivia Lapeyrolerie.

She said the medical examiner arrived within 30 minutes of being called and conducted it’s investigation of the death, including speaking to witnesses, within an hour of getting there.

“The medical examiner and NYPD are committed to reducing our response times even further to ensure both the humane treatment of the deceased and the health of subway workers and straphanger,” she said, adding that wait time has actually decreased to 1.9 hours this year from 2.14 hours the year before.

MTA workers who have to clean up the mess say any time at all with a dead body is too long.

“They can’t just lay the bodies on the platforms, because people across the tracks would see them,” reasoned a maintenance man who came by wearing gloves and lugging a gallon jug of Clorox and a trash bag to clean up after the body was removed.

“This is my first time doing this,” he said, gesturing to the disgusting bathroom, where the sink and chunks of concrete lay on the floor along with some paramedic paraphernalia that had just been used.

“I hope it’s my last time. I don’t like cleaning up after bodies.”

— with Shawn Cohen and Danielle Furfaro