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Ann Arbor station

Ann Arbor station is a train station in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States that is served by Amtrak's Wolverine, which runs three times daily in each direction between Chicago, Illinois and Pontiac, Michigan, via Detroit.

Ann Arbor, MI
Wolverine arrives in Ann Arbor station
General information
Location325 Depot Street[1]
Ann Arbor, Michigan
United States
Coordinates42°17′16″N 83°44′35″W / 42.28778°N 83.74306°W / 42.28778; -83.74306
Owned byAmtrak
Line(s)MDOT Michigan Line
Platforms1 side platform
Tracks1
Connections Amtrak Thruway
Construction
ParkingYes; metered
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeAmtrak: ARB
History
Opened1983
Passengers
FY 2022122,757[2] (Amtrak)
Services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Jackson
toward Chicago
Wolverine Dearborn
toward Pontiac
Former services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Jackson
toward Chicago
Lake Cities
1980–2004
Dearborn
toward Pontiac
Chelsea
toward Jackson
Michigan Executive Ypsilanti
Location

History edit

The present-day station was built in 1983, as a replacement for the original 1877 Michigan Central Railroad-built depot,[3] which the new station directly neighbors. The old depot was sold in 1969 to the C.A. Muer Corporation, by its original owner the Penn Central Transportation Company. It has since been renovated into the "Gandy Dancer" seafood restaurant, which opened in 1970.[3] At the time of the sale the railroad believed it was likely they would soon be ceasing passenger operations outside of the Northeast Corridor, which would have rendered their ownership of the station unnecessary, so, when approached with an offer by the C.A. Muer Corporation to buy it, they accepted.[3] Two years later, however, Amtrak was launched, keeping passenger service in Ann Arbor alive.[3]

For more than a decade after the station former station was sold, passengers in Ann Arbor used the railroad's former express office (located just east of the Broadway Bridge) as a station building. However, this proved to be inadequate in size, especially after daily passenger numbers rose from 15 in 1969 to 250 in 1975.[3] By the mid-1970s, talk arose about constructing a new station to accommodate Ann Arbor's passengers.[3] To expand the small waiting room space of the former express office as a station building, Amtrak began work on enclosing space under the canopy between the express office and the original Michigan Central Railroad station, but stopped after Ann Arbor issued a stop-work order due to Chuck Muer (C.A. Muer Corporation head) objected, arguing there was insufficient parking at the site.[3] As a makeshift measure, a surplus portable classroom building was purchased from the Ann Arbor Public Schools, and placed under the Broadway Bridge for use as an overflow waiting room.[3]

On April 17, 1979, the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) sent a letter to Ann Arbor Mayor Louis Belcher about the need for a new station building, writing, "Ann Arbor is the second heaviest Amtrak station (in passenger numbers) in Michigan and deserves adequate station and parking facilities."[3] In mid-1979, interested parties, including MDOT, Ann Arbor's city government, the University of Michigan, Greyhound Lines, and the Michigan Association of Railroad Passengers, formed a committee to study the construction of a new station building, and where to locate it.[3] Pollack Design Associates, an Ann Arbor-based firm, was contracted to conduct a study, including exploring alternative sites at which a new station building might be located.[3] It released its 98-page report on November 15, 1979. Of the numerous sites looked at, 325 Depot Street came out as the preferred site.[3]

Congressman Carl Pursell secured a federal earmark to fund the construction of a new station building.[3]

The current station building was constructed in 1983. Additionally, a 100-space parking lot was constructed on the opposite side of the railroad tracks (with a stairway being installed to allow people to travel over the tracks).[3] The station building was built in a standard design.


Description edit

 
Sign at the platform

The station is located at 325 Depot Street, just west of the Broadway Street Bridge.[1] The station is one mile (1.6 km) from the Blake Transit Center.

As per 2019 estimates, a population of 1,429,901 people lives within 25 miles (40 km) of the station, and a population of 5,556,996 lives within 50 miles (80 km) of the station.[4]

The station is 3,206 square feet (297.8 m2) in size.[5] The station has a ticket office,[5] is fully wheelchair accessible and has an enclosed waiting area. Other amenities include public restrooms, vending machines, paid parking, and a taxi stand. Baggage cannot be checked at this location; however, carry-ons of up to two suitcases, in addition to any "personal items" such as briefcases, purses, laptop bags, and infant equipment are allowed on board.

 
The waiting room at the station.

The station's waiting room has roughly 60 seats, which is less than its typical boarding loads (which were 80 to 120 passengers circa 2017).[5]

The station has 38 metered short-term parking spaces, and 80 free long-term parking spots.[5]

In regards to passenger numbers, Ann Arbor has been the busiest station along the Wolverine's route, with the exception of Chicago Union Station, and busiest Amtrak station in the state of Michigan, with 122,757 yearly riders as of 2022.[1][6][7]

Notable nearby locations include the University of Michigan and the Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory.

Rail services edit

Currently, the only train route serving the station is the Wolverine.

In the past, the station was served by the Michigan Executive[8] and the Lake Cities.

Ann Arbor is a planned stop on the proposed Ann Arbor–Detroit Regional Rail system.[9][10] Ann Arbor is also included as a stop on one possible alignment considered by MDOT for a potential "Coast-to-Coast" rail service, connecting the state's two largest cities (Detroit and Grand Rapids) with its capital city (Lansing).[11]

Amtrak ridership edit

After only Chicago Union Station, Ann Arbor is the busiest station on the Wolverine,[12] as well as the busiest of the 22 Amtrak stations in Michigan.[13]

In 2019, Amtrak handled 156,674 train arrivals and departures at the station. All of these were coach and business class tickets[4] (the Wolverine does not have a first class or sleeper class). A vast majority of trips were to/from Chicago Union Station.[4] Additionally, there were 2,057 passenger arrivals/departures to the single city which Amtrak Thruway bus service connects the station with.[4]

In 2019, the average trip to/from the station was 216 miles (348 km) in distance,. 9.4% of all trips at the station were to/from stations less than 100 miles (160 km) from the station, 6.9% were to stations between 100 and 200 miles (320 km) away, and 83.7% were to stations more than 200 miles (320 km) away.[4]

In 2019, the average Amtrak fare to/from the station cost $47.00, and the average yield per mile (revenue generated per passenger mile) on trips to/from the station was $0.218.[4]

In 2019, the top city pair on the Wolverine, both by ridership and by revenue, was Ann Arbor–Chicago. Ann Arbor–Kalamazoo ranked tenth among city pairs in terms of Wolverine revenue.[12] The top city pair involving any of Michigan's 22 stations, both in terms of ridership and revenue, is Ann Arbor–Chicago.[13] In 2019, of the 265 city pairs served at Chicago Union Station, Ann Arbor–Chicago ranked sixth-highest in both ridership and revenue.[14]

Annual Amtrak passenger traffic edit

Annual Amtrak passenger traffic (arrivals + departures)[4]
Year Passengers
(in thousands)
Change
2013 155.4 --
2014 141.4   9.0%
2015 141.2   1.4%
2016 127.2   9.9%
2017 144.1   13.3%
2018 155.6   8.0%
2019 156.7   0.7%
2020 77.8   50.4%
2021 46.7   40.0%
2022 122.7   162.7%

Top station pairs by Amtrak ridership edit

The following is the top-ten stations which receive the most ridership to/from ARTIC out of the (as of 2019) fifteen stations that the Wolverine connects the Ann Arbor Station to/from.[4]

Top station pairs by Amtrak ridership (as of 2019)[4]
Rank Station City Distance from Ann Arbor station
1 Chicago Union Station Chicago, Illinois 243 miles (391 km)
2 Kalamazoo Transportation Center Kalamazoo, Michigan 105 miles (169 km)
3 Detroit Detroit, Michigan 38 miles (61 km)
4 Troy Transit Center Troy, Michigan 53 miles (85 km)
5 Dearborn Dearborn, Michigan 30 miles (48 km)
6 Niles Niles, Michigan 154 miles (248 km)
7 Royal Oak Royal Oak, Michigan 49 miles (79 km)
8 Battle Creek Transportation Center Battle Creek, Michigan 83 miles (134 km)
9 Jackson Jackson, Michigan 38 miles (61 km)
6 New Buffalo New Buffalo, Michigan 181 miles (291 km)

Top station pairs by Amtrak revenue edit

The following is the top-ten stations which generate the most revenue from trips to/from the (as of 2019) fifteen stations that the Wolverine connects the Ann Arbor Station to/from.[4]

Top station pairs by Amtrak revenue (as of 2019)[4]
Rank Station City Distance from Ann Arbor station
1 Chicago Union Station Chicago, Illinois 243 miles (391 km)
2 Kalamazoo Transportation Center Kalamazoo, Michigan 105 miles (169 km)
3 Niles Niles, Michigan 154 miles (248 km)
4 Detroit Detroit, Michigan 38 miles (61 km)
5 Troy Transit Center Troy, Michigan 53 miles (85 km)
6 Battle Creek Transportation Center Battle Creek, Michigan 83 miles (134 km)
7 New Buffalo New Buffalo, Michigan 181 miles (291 km)
7 Hammond–Whiting Hammond, Indiana 227 miles (365 km)
9 Royal Oak Royal Oak, Michigan 49 miles (79 km)
10 Dearborn Dearborn, Michigan 30 miles (48 km)

Proposed replacement station edit

Officials in Ann Arbor have expressed a belief that the existing station does not adequately accommodate the ridership in Ann Arbor, which has increased since the station was built.[5] By the 2000s, Ann Arbor's city government was discussing replacing the current station with a larger station.[5]

In addition to concerns about existing inadequacies of the current station, discussion about building a new station also arose in anticipation of increased use due to higher-speed service along the Wolverine route, the possible addition of more Amtrak service, as well as possibility of a commuter rail being established between Detroit and Ann Arbor.[5] As of 2014, projections had been made that, by some point between the years 2035 and 2040, if roundtrips of the Wolverine were increased to ten (from the existing three), annual ridership at the station could reach 969,000. Projections had also been made that a future commuter rail service could have 516,000 boardings and deboardings of its own.[15]

Earlier plans for a Fuller Road station edit

By 2006, the city of Ann Arbor was making plans to construct a new station on Fuller Road by the University of Michigan Hospital, which would also serve planned commuter rail.[16] However, in February 2012, it was determined the Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan would not be partnering to construct a 1,000 car parking structure for such a station,[17] which led to the plan being scrapped.[18] It had been estimated, at the time, that the station would have cost $30 million.[19] Plans were that the city would have paid $3 million of the cost, and most of the cost would be paid for by the federal government.[20]

Restart of planning for a new station edit

October 15, 2012, the Ann Arbor City Council voted to accept a $2.8 federal rail grant, and to spend $500,000 of the city general fund reserves to make preparations for a potential new station.[21] In October 2013, the Ann Arbor City Council approved a resolution which hired the URS Corporation to lead an environmental review study for a new station.[21][15][22]

One of the sites that was under consideration for a new station was the earlier-planned site along Fuller Road. Another site under consideration was the existing site on Depot Street. The remaining six sites under consideration were the south side of Barton Pond (at the north edge of the Barton Nature Area), an area near Argo Pond and Bandemer Park, a site next to the University of Michigan's Mitchell Field, and two locations in and adjacent to Gallup Park.[18] In June 2014, it was announced that three sites had been chosen for further review: the Fuller Road site, the existing Depot Street site, and the site near Argo Pond.[23]

2014 report edit

In 2014, the project team looking into the three remaining site options for a new station released a 22-page report, and furthered narrowed the options down to focus on the existing Depot Street site, and the Fuller Road site.[15]

The team eliminated consideration of a station on a portion of track along North Main Street next to Argo Pond. The reasons for ending consideration of this location were site constraints, such as the requirement for several private properties to be acquire (forcing several businesses to relocate), and concerns about transit connections and roadway access.[15]

The report made proposals for stations at both of the two sites they narrowed down for consideration. Each would see a 12,600 square foot (1,170 m2) station building and adjoining intermodal facility with more than 2,000 parking spaces (the number of initial parking spaces could be lower, with later expansion), four intercity bus berths, five local bus berths, taxi stands, and bicycle parking. Other amenities were also considered for each site.[15] while there was the possibility that the Depot Street site would require the use of land currently owned by DTE Energy. By the time of the report, Amtrak had made it known that the preferred for a new station to be built elevated above the tracks, so that a single waiting room could provide easy access to platforms serving both east and westbound trains.[15]

Environmental assessment report edit

In September 2017, the city of Ann Arbor released a 212-page environmental assessment report looking at options for a new station.[5] The report was released with clearance from the Federal Railroad Administration, who the city had been in private discussions with for months.[24]

The report settled on the Fuller Road site as its preferred location.[5][24] The proposal for a station there has its station building constructed above the tracks, and also features a large parking structure.[5]

The report estimated the cost of its plan for a station on Fuller Road would be $81 million.[5] The report had estimated that costs of alternate plans that would to see a new station built at/near the existing location at Depot Street (costing between $94 million and $98 million) would cost would cost more than a station at Fuller Street, due, in part, to their plan for a new station at this location including the widening of bridges carrying Broadway Street, and the need to acquire 2.5 acres of land from Amtrak and 2.6 acres of land from DTE Energy in order to construct the new station building and a parking structure to serve it.[5]

The report, based on projections of ridership for the year 2035, stated that the station needed to be 8,494 square feet (789.1 m2) in size in order to adhere to Amtrak's station guidelines.[5] The report included a projection that shorter travel times on the Wolverines (as a result of rail improvements), along with increased train frequencies, and improved reliability and connections for the route could lead to the station seeing 969,000 annual passengers by 2035 (if the Wolverine increased frequency to 10 daily roundtrips by then).[5] The report also included a projection that a commuter rail service to Detroit could see between 134,320 and 229,950 annual passengers at the station.[5]

Current plans for station along Fuller Road edit

With a site selected, more formal plans were designed.

Design edit

The project has been designed to be constructed in two phases.[20]

Phase one of construction would see the station, and enough parking to handle the demands of the immediate future, constructed. The gross building area of this phase would be 268,662 square feet (24,959.5 m2). The parking structure would include a bus station, as well as a facility for bicycle maintenance and storage.[20]

Phase two of construction would see a further buildout, if commuter rail were to be constructed. This buildout would see more parking, improvements to the rail system, new platforms, and other improvements. The gross building area of this phase would be 282,459 square feet (26,241.3 m2).[20]

Estimated costs edit

Phase one would cost over $88 million, and phase two would cost $83.1 million, making for a cumulative cost of around $171.1 million.[20]

Of the first phase's $88.4 million of expenses, nearly $55 million would go to the construction of a parking structure $20.3 million would go towards the construction of a train station/bridge/platform; $12.28 million would go towards other site and roadway improvements; $156,000 would go towards fiber-optic cable work and upgrades to tracks and upgrades.[20]

Of the second phase's costs, $66.1 million would go towards parking structure construction (including $26.4 million for commuter rail parking), $4.4 million would go towards construction of a commuter rail station/bridge/platform, $3.8 million would go towards other site and roadway enhancements, and $8.7 million would go towards fiber-optic cable work and upgrades to tracks and upgrades.[20]

The current $121 million price tag is a large increase from earlier estimates.[20] In 2012, cost estimates for a station at Fuller Road were $30 million.[19] In 2014, cost estimates for construction of a new station (without a location decided) were $45 million.[25] The cost estimates for construction rose later to $65 million.[25] In 2014, cost estimates for a station at Fuller Road were $81 million.[5] In January 2019, Ann Arbor Mayor Christoper Taylor's annual report gave a new $87 million cost estimate for the construction of the station, which was higher than all previous cost estimates.[25] By 2021, the estimated cost was $121 million, with phase one of the station costing $88 million, and phase two costing $83 million.[20]

Since at least 2013, the city's plans have remained for 80% of the construction costs to be paid for by the federal government, and the remaining 20% to be paid for by local partners.[21] Local partners could include Washtenaw County's government, Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority, University of Michigan, MDOT, and Greyhound Lines.[25][21][26]

FRA withdrawal of further consideration and subsequent developments edit

In August 2021, the Federal Railroad Administration stopped work on environmental assessment for the station, citing high costs of the designed station, stating that the design, "exceeds intercity passenger rail needs".[27] The FRA also took issue with the "substantial amount of parking" planned, even though the parking had been decided upon due to projected ridership needs and Amtrak guidelines.[28]

In 2022, Ann Arbor officials tried again lobbying for federal support, declaring that it might be possible to reduce the scale of the planned station and accompanying parking and to reconfigure bus accommodations in a manner that would bring down projected costs. This would including decreasing the number of parking spaces, factoring the vehicle use reduction targets in city's new A2Zero carbon-neutrality plan into the number of station parking spaces to be constructed. It has been declared that, if the station were built with an initial parking capacity of only around 250 spaces, this might allow for the existing surface parking lot at the site to be sufficient for the stations' needs, and for no structure to be initially needed.[28] Constructing an outdoor intermodal facility for municipal and intercity buses, instead of an indoor facility, has also received mention as a means to decrease expenses.[28]

The city has also expressed an openness to reexploring the alternative of enhancing the existing station location, despite the city viewing it as a more constrained site and projecting that it would have greater expenses than the Fuller Road location.[28] Advantages given for building at the Fuller Road site include the lack of need for additional right-of-way acquisition, the potential for strong transit connection, the ability for strong bicycle and pedestrian facility connections, superior vehicle access (compared to the Depot Street site), larger site size, and close proximity to significant centers of employment. Advantages given for the existing Depot Street location include superior proximity to Ann Arbor's downtown, slightly stronger public preference (per studies done years prior), and strong connections to bicycle and pedestrian facilities.[28]

There has also been at least some talk about building a bare station, with just a simple platform, at the Fuller Road site in order to provide rail access to the nearby hospital (for commuting hospital workers), and having trains stop at both this new station and the existing Depot Street station.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Ann Arbor, MI (ARB)". Amtrak. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  2. ^ "Amtrak Fact Sheet, Fiscal Year 2022: State of Michigan" (PDF). Amtrak. June 2023. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Stanton, Ryan (February 15, 2015). "Retrospective: How Ann Arbor lost its historic train depot and why some want it back". mlive. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Amtrak service in Ann Arbor, MI ARB" (PDF). railpassengers.org. Rail Passengers Association. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stanton, Ryan (September 21, 2017). "What an $81M train station could look like and why Ann Arbor wants to build it". mlive. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  6. ^ Stanton, Ryan J. (April 24, 2011). "Train ridership on the rise: Ann Arbor remains busiest Amtrak stop between Detroit and Chicago". AnnArbor.com. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  7. ^ Muzumdar, Tanya (October 26, 2011). "Amtrak's Wolverine train line carries record number of passengers". Concentrate. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  8. ^ Pollack Design Associates (November 15, 1979). "The Ann Arbor Depot: A First Phase Investigation of Location Alternatives for Rail Passenger Facilities" (PDF). p. 15.
  9. ^ Fleming, Leonard N. (May 19, 2016). "RTA wants Detroit-Ann Arbor commuter rail service". The Detroit News. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  10. ^ "RTA looks to link Detroit, Ann Arbor". The Times Herald. Associated Press. May 21, 2016. p. A7. Retrieved December 23, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "Coast-To-Coast Passenger Rail Ridership And Cost Estimate Study" (PDF). www.michigan.gov. Transportation Economics & Management Systems, Inc. February 2016. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Amtrak fact sheet: Wolverine service" (PDF). www.railpassengers.org. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  13. ^ a b "Amtrak fact sheet: Amtrak in Michigan" (PDF). www.railpassengers.org. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  14. ^ "Amtrak service in Chicago, IL CHI" (PDF). www.railpassengers.org. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Stanton, Ryan (September 19, 2014). "Maps show conceptual options for new Ann Arbor train station at Fuller and Depot sites". mlive.
  16. ^ McGovern, Judy (January 2010). "A Leap of Faith - Fuller Road Station a bold investment". Ann Arbor Observer. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  17. ^ "The Ann Arbor Chronicle | Ann Arbor Train Station Study Unearthed". Ann Arbor Chronicle. March 6, 2012. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  18. ^ a b Stanton, Ryan (April 4, 2014). "8 sites under review as Ann Arbor officials consider options for new Amtrak station". mlive. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  19. ^ a b Stanton, Ryan J. (August 3, 2012). "Mayor John Hieftje details his vision for funding proposed new train station in Ann Arbor". AnnArbor.com. The Ann Arbor News. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i Stanton, Ryan (September 5, 2021). "How Ann Arbor's train station project cost ballooned to $171M". mlive. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  21. ^ a b c d Stanton, Ryan (October 21, 2013). "Ann Arbor officials to vote on $825K contract for train station study". mlive. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  22. ^ Stanton, Ryan (October 22, 2013). "Ann Arbor hires consultant to study possible locations for new Amtrak station". mlive. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  23. ^ Stanton, Ryan (June 25, 2014). "3 sites under consideration for new Amtrak train station in Ann Arbor". mlive. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  24. ^ a b Stanton, Ryan (September 18, 2017). "Ann Arbor park chosen as preferred site for $81M train station". mlive. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  25. ^ a b c d Stanton, Ryan (January 13, 2018). "New train station for Ann Arbor now estimated to cost $87M". mlive. Retrieved December 19, 2021.
  26. ^ Stanton, Ryan (August 20, 2015). "Final draft of Ann Arbor train station study awaits state, federal review". mlive. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  27. ^ "FRA calls halt to work on new Ann Arbor, Mich., station". Trains. August 26, 2021. Retrieved December 20, 2021.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Stanton, Ryan (March 14, 2022). "Ann Arbor tells feds it's willing to scale back $171M vision for new train station". mlive. Retrieved June 4, 2022.

External links edit

arbor, station, former, michigan, central, railroad, station, arbor, michigan, central, railroad, train, station, arbor, michigan, united, states, that, served, amtrak, wolverine, which, runs, three, times, daily, each, direction, between, chicago, illinois, p. For the former Michigan Central Railroad station in Ann Arbor see Ann Arbor station Michigan Central Railroad Ann Arbor station is a train station in Ann Arbor Michigan United States that is served by Amtrak s Wolverine which runs three times daily in each direction between Chicago Illinois and Pontiac Michigan via Detroit Ann Arbor MIWolverine arrives in Ann Arbor stationGeneral informationLocation325 Depot Street 1 Ann Arbor MichiganUnited StatesCoordinates42 17 16 N 83 44 35 W 42 28778 N 83 74306 W 42 28778 83 74306Owned byAmtrakLine s MDOT Michigan LinePlatforms1 side platformTracks1ConnectionsAmtrak ThruwayConstructionParkingYes meteredAccessibleYesOther informationStation codeAmtrak ARBHistoryOpened1983PassengersFY 2022122 757 2 Amtrak ServicesPreceding station Amtrak Following station Jacksontoward Chicago Wolverine Dearborntoward PontiacFormer servicesPreceding station Amtrak Following station Jacksontoward Chicago Lake Cities1980 2004 Dearborntoward Pontiac Chelseatoward Jackson Michigan Executive Ypsilantitoward Detroit Michigan Central Location Contents 1 History 2 Description 3 Rail services 4 Amtrak ridership 4 1 Annual Amtrak passenger traffic 4 2 Top station pairs by Amtrak ridership 4 3 Top station pairs by Amtrak revenue 5 Proposed replacement station 5 1 Earlier plans for a Fuller Road station 5 2 Restart of planning for a new station 5 3 2014 report 5 4 Environmental assessment report 5 5 Current plans for station along Fuller Road 5 5 1 Design 5 5 2 Estimated costs 5 5 3 FRA withdrawal of further consideration and subsequent developments 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe present day station was built in 1983 as a replacement for the original 1877 Michigan Central Railroad built depot 3 which the new station directly neighbors The old depot was sold in 1969 to the C A Muer Corporation by its original owner the Penn Central Transportation Company It has since been renovated into the Gandy Dancer seafood restaurant which opened in 1970 3 At the time of the sale the railroad believed it was likely they would soon be ceasing passenger operations outside of the Northeast Corridor which would have rendered their ownership of the station unnecessary so when approached with an offer by the C A Muer Corporation to buy it they accepted 3 Two years later however Amtrak was launched keeping passenger service in Ann Arbor alive 3 For more than a decade after the station former station was sold passengers in Ann Arbor used the railroad s former express office located just east of the Broadway Bridge as a station building However this proved to be inadequate in size especially after daily passenger numbers rose from 15 in 1969 to 250 in 1975 3 By the mid 1970s talk arose about constructing a new station to accommodate Ann Arbor s passengers 3 To expand the small waiting room space of the former express office as a station building Amtrak began work on enclosing space under the canopy between the express office and the original Michigan Central Railroad station but stopped after Ann Arbor issued a stop work order due to Chuck Muer C A Muer Corporation head objected arguing there was insufficient parking at the site 3 As a makeshift measure a surplus portable classroom building was purchased from the Ann Arbor Public Schools and placed under the Broadway Bridge for use as an overflow waiting room 3 On April 17 1979 the Michigan Department of Transportation MDOT sent a letter to Ann Arbor Mayor Louis Belcher about the need for a new station building writing Ann Arbor is the second heaviest Amtrak station in passenger numbers in Michigan and deserves adequate station and parking facilities 3 In mid 1979 interested parties including MDOT Ann Arbor s city government the University of Michigan Greyhound Lines and the Michigan Association of Railroad Passengers formed a committee to study the construction of a new station building and where to locate it 3 Pollack Design Associates an Ann Arbor based firm was contracted to conduct a study including exploring alternative sites at which a new station building might be located 3 It released its 98 page report on November 15 1979 Of the numerous sites looked at 325 Depot Street came out as the preferred site 3 Congressman Carl Pursell secured a federal earmark to fund the construction of a new station building 3 The current station building was constructed in 1983 Additionally a 100 space parking lot was constructed on the opposite side of the railroad tracks with a stairway being installed to allow people to travel over the tracks 3 The station building was built in a standard design Description edit nbsp Sign at the platform The station is located at 325 Depot Street just west of the Broadway Street Bridge 1 The station is one mile 1 6 km from the Blake Transit Center As per 2019 estimates a population of 1 429 901 people lives within 25 miles 40 km of the station and a population of 5 556 996 lives within 50 miles 80 km of the station 4 The station is 3 206 square feet 297 8 m2 in size 5 The station has a ticket office 5 is fully wheelchair accessible and has an enclosed waiting area Other amenities include public restrooms vending machines paid parking and a taxi stand Baggage cannot be checked at this location however carry ons of up to two suitcases in addition to any personal items such as briefcases purses laptop bags and infant equipment are allowed on board nbsp The waiting room at the station The station s waiting room has roughly 60 seats which is less than its typical boarding loads which were 80 to 120 passengers circa 2017 5 The station has 38 metered short term parking spaces and 80 free long term parking spots 5 In regards to passenger numbers Ann Arbor has been the busiest station along the Wolverine s route with the exception of Chicago Union Station and busiest Amtrak station in the state of Michigan with 122 757 yearly riders as of 2022 1 6 7 Notable nearby locations include the University of Michigan and the Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory Rail services editCurrently the only train route serving the station is the Wolverine In the past the station was served by the Michigan Executive 8 and the Lake Cities Ann Arbor is a planned stop on the proposed Ann Arbor Detroit Regional Rail system 9 10 Ann Arbor is also included as a stop on one possible alignment considered by MDOT for a potential Coast to Coast rail service connecting the state s two largest cities Detroit and Grand Rapids with its capital city Lansing 11 Amtrak ridership editAfter only Chicago Union Station Ann Arbor is the busiest station on the Wolverine 12 as well as the busiest of the 22 Amtrak stations in Michigan 13 In 2019 Amtrak handled 156 674 train arrivals and departures at the station All of these were coach and business class tickets 4 the Wolverine does not have a first class or sleeper class A vast majority of trips were to from Chicago Union Station 4 Additionally there were 2 057 passenger arrivals departures to the single city which Amtrak Thruway bus service connects the station with 4 In 2019 the average trip to from the station was 216 miles 348 km in distance 9 4 of all trips at the station were to from stations less than 100 miles 160 km from the station 6 9 were to stations between 100 and 200 miles 320 km away and 83 7 were to stations more than 200 miles 320 km away 4 In 2019 the average Amtrak fare to from the station cost 47 00 and the average yield per mile revenue generated per passenger mile on trips to from the station was 0 218 4 In 2019 the top city pair on the Wolverine both by ridership and by revenue was Ann Arbor Chicago Ann Arbor Kalamazoo ranked tenth among city pairs in terms of Wolverine revenue 12 The top city pair involving any of Michigan s 22 stations both in terms of ridership and revenue is Ann Arbor Chicago 13 In 2019 of the 265 city pairs served at Chicago Union Station Ann Arbor Chicago ranked sixth highest in both ridership and revenue 14 Annual Amtrak passenger traffic edit Annual Amtrak passenger traffic arrivals departures 4 Year Passengers in thousands Change 2013 155 4 2014 141 4 nbsp 9 0 2015 141 2 nbsp 1 4 2016 127 2 nbsp 9 9 2017 144 1 nbsp 13 3 2018 155 6 nbsp 8 0 2019 156 7 nbsp 0 7 2020 77 8 nbsp 50 4 2021 46 7 nbsp 40 0 2022 122 7 nbsp 162 7 Top station pairs by Amtrak ridership edit The following is the top ten stations which receive the most ridership to from ARTIC out of the as of 2019 fifteen stations that the Wolverine connects the Ann Arbor Station to from 4 Top station pairs by Amtrak ridership as of 2019 4 Rank Station City Distance from Ann Arbor station 1 Chicago Union Station Chicago Illinois 243 miles 391 km 2 Kalamazoo Transportation Center Kalamazoo Michigan 105 miles 169 km 3 Detroit Detroit Michigan 38 miles 61 km 4 Troy Transit Center Troy Michigan 53 miles 85 km 5 Dearborn Dearborn Michigan 30 miles 48 km 6 Niles Niles Michigan 154 miles 248 km 7 Royal Oak Royal Oak Michigan 49 miles 79 km 8 Battle Creek Transportation Center Battle Creek Michigan 83 miles 134 km 9 Jackson Jackson Michigan 38 miles 61 km 6 New Buffalo New Buffalo Michigan 181 miles 291 km Top station pairs by Amtrak revenue edit The following is the top ten stations which generate the most revenue from trips to from the as of 2019 fifteen stations that the Wolverine connects the Ann Arbor Station to from 4 Top station pairs by Amtrak revenue as of 2019 4 Rank Station City Distance from Ann Arbor station 1 Chicago Union Station Chicago Illinois 243 miles 391 km 2 Kalamazoo Transportation Center Kalamazoo Michigan 105 miles 169 km 3 Niles Niles Michigan 154 miles 248 km 4 Detroit Detroit Michigan 38 miles 61 km 5 Troy Transit Center Troy Michigan 53 miles 85 km 6 Battle Creek Transportation Center Battle Creek Michigan 83 miles 134 km 7 New Buffalo New Buffalo Michigan 181 miles 291 km 7 Hammond Whiting Hammond Indiana 227 miles 365 km 9 Royal Oak Royal Oak Michigan 49 miles 79 km 10 Dearborn Dearborn Michigan 30 miles 48 km Proposed replacement station editOfficials in Ann Arbor have expressed a belief that the existing station does not adequately accommodate the ridership in Ann Arbor which has increased since the station was built 5 By the 2000s Ann Arbor s city government was discussing replacing the current station with a larger station 5 In addition to concerns about existing inadequacies of the current station discussion about building a new station also arose in anticipation of increased use due to higher speed service along the Wolverine route the possible addition of more Amtrak service as well as possibility of a commuter rail being established between Detroit and Ann Arbor 5 As of 2014 projections had been made that by some point between the years 2035 and 2040 if roundtrips of the Wolverine were increased to ten from the existing three annual ridership at the station could reach 969 000 Projections had also been made that a future commuter rail service could have 516 000 boardings and deboardings of its own 15 Earlier plans for a Fuller Road station edit By 2006 the city of Ann Arbor was making plans to construct a new station on Fuller Road by the University of Michigan Hospital which would also serve planned commuter rail 16 However in February 2012 it was determined the Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan would not be partnering to construct a 1 000 car parking structure for such a station 17 which led to the plan being scrapped 18 It had been estimated at the time that the station would have cost 30 million 19 Plans were that the city would have paid 3 million of the cost and most of the cost would be paid for by the federal government 20 Restart of planning for a new station edit October 15 2012 the Ann Arbor City Council voted to accept a 2 8 federal rail grant and to spend 500 000 of the city general fund reserves to make preparations for a potential new station 21 In October 2013 the Ann Arbor City Council approved a resolution which hired the URS Corporation to lead an environmental review study for a new station 21 15 22 One of the sites that was under consideration for a new station was the earlier planned site along Fuller Road Another site under consideration was the existing site on Depot Street The remaining six sites under consideration were the south side of Barton Pond at the north edge of the Barton Nature Area an area near Argo Pond and Bandemer Park a site next to the University of Michigan s Mitchell Field and two locations in and adjacent to Gallup Park 18 In June 2014 it was announced that three sites had been chosen for further review the Fuller Road site the existing Depot Street site and the site near Argo Pond 23 2014 report edit In 2014 the project team looking into the three remaining site options for a new station released a 22 page report and furthered narrowed the options down to focus on the existing Depot Street site and the Fuller Road site 15 The team eliminated consideration of a station on a portion of track along North Main Street next to Argo Pond The reasons for ending consideration of this location were site constraints such as the requirement for several private properties to be acquire forcing several businesses to relocate and concerns about transit connections and roadway access 15 The report made proposals for stations at both of the two sites they narrowed down for consideration Each would see a 12 600 square foot 1 170 m2 station building and adjoining intermodal facility with more than 2 000 parking spaces the number of initial parking spaces could be lower with later expansion four intercity bus berths five local bus berths taxi stands and bicycle parking Other amenities were also considered for each site 15 while there was the possibility that the Depot Street site would require the use of land currently owned by DTE Energy By the time of the report Amtrak had made it known that the preferred for a new station to be built elevated above the tracks so that a single waiting room could provide easy access to platforms serving both east and westbound trains 15 Environmental assessment report edit In September 2017 the city of Ann Arbor released a 212 page environmental assessment report looking at options for a new station 5 The report was released with clearance from the Federal Railroad Administration who the city had been in private discussions with for months 24 The report settled on the Fuller Road site as its preferred location 5 24 The proposal for a station there has its station building constructed above the tracks and also features a large parking structure 5 The report estimated the cost of its plan for a station on Fuller Road would be 81 million 5 The report had estimated that costs of alternate plans that would to see a new station built at near the existing location at Depot Street costing between 94 million and 98 million would cost would cost more than a station at Fuller Street due in part to their plan for a new station at this location including the widening of bridges carrying Broadway Street and the need to acquire 2 5 acres of land from Amtrak and 2 6 acres of land from DTE Energy in order to construct the new station building and a parking structure to serve it 5 The report based on projections of ridership for the year 2035 stated that the station needed to be 8 494 square feet 789 1 m2 in size in order to adhere to Amtrak s station guidelines 5 The report included a projection that shorter travel times on the Wolverines as a result of rail improvements along with increased train frequencies and improved reliability and connections for the route could lead to the station seeing 969 000 annual passengers by 2035 if the Wolverine increased frequency to 10 daily roundtrips by then 5 The report also included a projection that a commuter rail service to Detroit could see between 134 320 and 229 950 annual passengers at the station 5 Current plans for station along Fuller Road edit With a site selected more formal plans were designed Design edit The project has been designed to be constructed in two phases 20 Phase one of construction would see the station and enough parking to handle the demands of the immediate future constructed The gross building area of this phase would be 268 662 square feet 24 959 5 m2 The parking structure would include a bus station as well as a facility for bicycle maintenance and storage 20 Phase two of construction would see a further buildout if commuter rail were to be constructed This buildout would see more parking improvements to the rail system new platforms and other improvements The gross building area of this phase would be 282 459 square feet 26 241 3 m2 20 Estimated costs edit Phase one would cost over 88 million and phase two would cost 83 1 million making for a cumulative cost of around 171 1 million 20 Of the first phase s 88 4 million of expenses nearly 55 million would go to the construction of a parking structure 20 3 million would go towards the construction of a train station bridge platform 12 28 million would go towards other site and roadway improvements 156 000 would go towards fiber optic cable work and upgrades to tracks and upgrades 20 Of the second phase s costs 66 1 million would go towards parking structure construction including 26 4 million for commuter rail parking 4 4 million would go towards construction of a commuter rail station bridge platform 3 8 million would go towards other site and roadway enhancements and 8 7 million would go towards fiber optic cable work and upgrades to tracks and upgrades 20 The current 121 million price tag is a large increase from earlier estimates 20 In 2012 cost estimates for a station at Fuller Road were 30 million 19 In 2014 cost estimates for construction of a new station without a location decided were 45 million 25 The cost estimates for construction rose later to 65 million 25 In 2014 cost estimates for a station at Fuller Road were 81 million 5 In January 2019 Ann Arbor Mayor Christoper Taylor s annual report gave a new 87 million cost estimate for the construction of the station which was higher than all previous cost estimates 25 By 2021 the estimated cost was 121 million with phase one of the station costing 88 million and phase two costing 83 million 20 Since at least 2013 the city s plans have remained for 80 of the construction costs to be paid for by the federal government and the remaining 20 to be paid for by local partners 21 Local partners could include Washtenaw County s government Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority University of Michigan MDOT and Greyhound Lines 25 21 26 FRA withdrawal of further consideration and subsequent developments edit In August 2021 the Federal Railroad Administration stopped work on environmental assessment for the station citing high costs of the designed station stating that the design exceeds intercity passenger rail needs 27 The FRA also took issue with the substantial amount of parking planned even though the parking had been decided upon due to projected ridership needs and Amtrak guidelines 28 In 2022 Ann Arbor officials tried again lobbying for federal support declaring that it might be possible to reduce the scale of the planned station and accompanying parking and to reconfigure bus accommodations in a manner that would bring down projected costs This would including decreasing the number of parking spaces factoring the vehicle use reduction targets in city s new A2Zero carbon neutrality plan into the number of station parking spaces to be constructed It has been declared that if the station were built with an initial parking capacity of only around 250 spaces this might allow for the existing surface parking lot at the site to be sufficient for the stations needs and for no structure to be initially needed 28 Constructing an outdoor intermodal facility for municipal and intercity buses instead of an indoor facility has also received mention as a means to decrease expenses 28 The city has also expressed an openness to reexploring the alternative of enhancing the existing station location despite the city viewing it as a more constrained site and projecting that it would have greater expenses than the Fuller Road location 28 Advantages given for building at the Fuller Road site include the lack of need for additional right of way acquisition the potential for strong transit connection the ability for strong bicycle and pedestrian facility connections superior vehicle access compared to the Depot Street site larger site size and close proximity to significant centers of employment Advantages given for the existing Depot Street location include superior proximity to Ann Arbor s downtown slightly stronger public preference per studies done years prior and strong connections to bicycle and pedestrian facilities 28 There has also been at least some talk about building a bare station with just a simple platform at the Fuller Road site in order to provide rail access to the nearby hospital for commuting hospital workers and having trains stop at both this new station and the existing Depot Street station 28 References edit a b c Ann Arbor MI ARB Amtrak Retrieved October 28 2013 Amtrak Fact Sheet Fiscal Year 2022 State of Michigan PDF Amtrak June 2023 Retrieved August 30 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Stanton Ryan February 15 2015 Retrospective How Ann Arbor lost its historic train depot and why some want it back mlive Retrieved December 19 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k Amtrak service in Ann Arbor MI ARB PDF railpassengers org Rail Passengers Association Retrieved June 4 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stanton Ryan September 21 2017 What an 81M train station could look like and why Ann Arbor wants to build it mlive Retrieved December 19 2021 Stanton Ryan J April 24 2011 Train ridership on the rise Ann Arbor remains busiest Amtrak stop between Detroit and Chicago AnnArbor com Retrieved December 19 2021 Muzumdar Tanya October 26 2011 Amtrak s Wolverine train line carries record number of passengers Concentrate Retrieved December 19 2021 Pollack Design Associates November 15 1979 The Ann Arbor Depot A First Phase Investigation of Location Alternatives for Rail Passenger Facilities PDF p 15 Fleming Leonard N May 19 2016 RTA wants Detroit Ann Arbor commuter rail service The Detroit News Retrieved December 19 2021 RTA looks to link Detroit Ann Arbor The Times Herald Associated Press May 21 2016 p A7 Retrieved December 23 2021 via Newspapers com Coast To Coast Passenger Rail Ridership And Cost Estimate Study PDF www michigan gov Transportation Economics amp Management Systems Inc February 2016 Retrieved December 19 2021 a b Amtrak fact sheet Wolverine service PDF www railpassengers org Retrieved June 4 2022 a b Amtrak fact sheet Amtrak in Michigan PDF www railpassengers org Retrieved June 4 2022 Amtrak service in Chicago IL CHI PDF www railpassengers org Retrieved June 4 2022 a b c d e f Stanton Ryan September 19 2014 Maps show conceptual options for new Ann Arbor train station at Fuller and Depot sites mlive McGovern Judy January 2010 A Leap of Faith Fuller Road Station a bold investment Ann Arbor Observer Retrieved December 20 2021 The Ann Arbor Chronicle Ann Arbor Train Station Study Unearthed Ann Arbor Chronicle March 6 2012 Retrieved December 20 2021 a b Stanton Ryan April 4 2014 8 sites under review as Ann Arbor officials consider options for new Amtrak station mlive Retrieved December 20 2021 a b Stanton Ryan J August 3 2012 Mayor John Hieftje details his vision for funding proposed new train station in Ann Arbor AnnArbor com The Ann Arbor News Retrieved December 20 2021 a b c d e f g h i Stanton Ryan September 5 2021 How Ann Arbor s train station project cost ballooned to 171M mlive Retrieved December 20 2021 a b c d Stanton Ryan October 21 2013 Ann Arbor officials to vote on 825K contract for train station study mlive Retrieved December 20 2021 Stanton Ryan October 22 2013 Ann Arbor hires consultant to study possible locations for new Amtrak station mlive Retrieved December 20 2021 Stanton Ryan June 25 2014 3 sites under consideration for new Amtrak train station in Ann Arbor mlive Retrieved December 20 2021 a b Stanton Ryan September 18 2017 Ann Arbor park chosen as preferred site for 81M train station mlive Retrieved December 19 2021 a b c d Stanton Ryan January 13 2018 New train station for Ann Arbor now estimated to cost 87M mlive Retrieved December 19 2021 Stanton Ryan August 20 2015 Final draft of Ann Arbor train station study awaits state federal review mlive Retrieved December 20 2021 FRA calls halt to work on new Ann Arbor Mich station Trains August 26 2021 Retrieved December 20 2021 a b c d e f Stanton Ryan March 14 2022 Ann Arbor tells feds it s willing to scale back 171M vision for new train station mlive Retrieved June 4 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ann Arbor station Ann Arbor MI Amtrak Ann Arbor MI Station history at Great American Stations Amtrak Amtrak Stations Database Ann Arbor station on LocalWiki Gandy Dancer on LocalWiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ann Arbor station amp oldid 1218450392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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