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Louise M. Slaughter Rochester Station

The Louise M. Slaughter Rochester Station is an Amtrak intermodal transit station in Rochester, New York. Local and regional bus transportation is provided by the Rochester-Genesee Regional Transportation Authority (branded RTS). Various taxi firms service the station, as well. The station is located on the north side of Rochester, just east of High Falls on the south side of the tracks.

Rochester, NY
The new Amtrak station in October 2017
General information
Location320 Central Avenue
Rochester, New York
United States
Coordinates43°09′49″N 77°36′30″W / 43.1635°N 77.6082°W / 43.1635; -77.6082
Owned byAmtrak
Line(s)Empire Corridor (Rochester Subdivision)
Platforms1 island platform (formerly 6 island platforms)
Tracks4 (formerly 11)
Connections RTS: 2 North Clinton, 3 Joseph
Megabus
New York Trailways
Construction
ParkingYes
Bicycle facilitiesYes
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeAmtrak: ROC
IATA codeZTE
History
OpenedOriginal depot: 1914; 110 years ago (1914)
Amtrak facility: July 12, 1978
Rebuilt2017
Passengers
FY 2022119,797[1] (Amtrak)
Services
New York State Fair services
Former services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Buffalo
toward Chicago
Lake Shore Syracuse
Buffalo Niagara Rainbow
Preceding station New York Central Railroad Following station
Center Park
toward Chicago
Main Line Brighton
toward New York
Center Park
toward Niagara Falls, New York
Falls Road Terminus
Terminus RochesterOswego Otis
toward Oswego
Auburn Road Brighton
toward Syracuse
Churchville Junction West Shore Railroad
Main Line
Fairport
toward Weehawken

Rochester is served by three Amtrak routes, totalling eight trains each day. The Lake Shore Limited operates one train in each direction daily between Chicago and Boston/New York City (via two sections east of Albany), while the Empire Service operates two trains in each direction between Niagara Falls and New York City, and the Maple Leaf serves the station with one train in each direction between Toronto and New York City. The station, opened in 2017, is the third train station to be built at the site.

History edit

Rochester has a long history of train stations. The first major Rochester station was built in 1845 by the New York Central Railroad on Mill Street by High Falls.

 
The 1882 New York Central Railroad station

In the 1880s, the railroad tracks were elevated (having previously been at grade) and in 1882 the station was relocated to the east side of the Genesee River, close to the modern station site on Central Avenue at St. Paul Street. This station was notable for its large train shed. Not long after the 1882 station was established, the city of Rochester had four major train stations: The New York Central station; the since demolished Erie Railroad Depot; the Lehigh Valley Railroad Station that houses Dinosaur Bar-B-Que; and the Rochester terminal of the Buffalo, Rochester, and Pittsburgh Railway that houses Nick Tahou Hots.[2]

 
The 1914 New York Central Station known as Bragdon Station

The 1882 station would be demolished and replaced in 1914 at the modern site by the more famous New York Central station designed by Claude Fayette Bragdon. The station, often referred to as Bragdon Station, was four stories with three high arching windows reminiscent of train driving wheels and a main room that was reminiscent of New York's Grand Central Terminal complete with arched ceilings and a lunch counter. The station at its height had 6 island platforms connected to the main station building by two tunnels, one for passengers and one for baggage and mail that went all the way to the Cumberland St. Central Post Office. The station was seen as one of Bragdon's greatest architectural accomplishments. As was the case with several large stations of the era, with falling revenues and the high maintenance costs and taxes of such a large facility the station was sold by the New York Central Railroad in 1959 to a private owner.

 
Station in 1978
 
The 1978 "Amshack" style station in 2009. Note the low-level platform

In a move that is largely considered today to have been a mistake, the famed 1914 station was mostly demolished in 1965 after its sale to private owners except for the then run down western-most (one-third) portion which served as the station (with the ticket sales at the entrance to the passenger tunnel). That remaining section was demolished in 1977 to make way for a smaller Amtrak facility in 1978. The passenger, baggage tunnels and one of the platform canopies of the original 1914 building were the last remaining remnants of the previous 1914 station to survive. The tunnels were re-discovered during initial surveying work for the current station.[3] During the construction of the station in 2015, the tunnels were filled in as part of the construction of a new tunnel for the station; the westernmost part of the canopy remains.

The 1978 structure was an Amshack style station similar to other stations Amtrak was building at the time as part of their Standard Stations Program. It opened on July 12, 1978.[4] Its single track platform was shared by eastbound and westbound trains, which caused conflicts between passenger and freight trains and led to delays. In addition, its low-level platforms forced passengers to use steps when boarding and alighting. The 1978 station was intended to be temporary and was long outdated by the time it was demolished in late 2015 to make way for the current station.[5]

Ground was broken for the current station and multimodal transit center on October 28, 2014. It opened on October 6, 2017, in a ceremony attended by Congresswoman Louise Slaughter, Mayor Lovely Warren and Governor Andrew Cuomo.[6] The station's construction cost of $29.5 million (originally $26.5 million) was funded by the City of Rochester, State of New York, and Amtrak.[7][8] Its construction occurred around the same time of two other Empire Corridor stations: Niagara Falls (2016) and Schenectady (2018).

On March 17, 2018, a day after Slaughter's death, Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand along with former Mayor and Lieutenant Governor Bob Duffy requested that Amtrak rename the station for Slaughter, who played a significant part in securing the funding for the rebuilt station.[9] Four days later, Amtrak announced that it would rename the station, and officially unveiled the new name on March 25, 2019.[10][11][12]

Station layout edit

 
Rochester station interior looking west

The two floor station is 9,500 square feet (880 m2). Designed to look like the original 1914 Bragdon station, it includes the 1914 station's original clock and plaques from both the 1914 station and 1882 station.[13][14] Trains call at a single high-level center island platform serving one track in each direction for Amtrak, with two others on either side in each direction for freight traffic to pass by. The platform is connected to the station building via a tunnel underneath the tracks that is accessed by stairs, escalator and elevator.[8] The station also contains two retail stands and many display boards.

To the side of the station is future parking allocation for Greyhound and Trailways buses, which currently stop at a temporary facility across the street as part of a phase 2 plan to directly incorporate buses into the station. It was also built to accommodate proposed high-speed rail service.[7]

 
Rochester station platform

Bus connections edit

The station is across the street from a temporary New York Trailways station. Phase 2 of the train station, which is awaiting funding, is to include a bus station for Trailways, Greyhound, FlixBus and Megabus.[15]

RTS service includes the 2 North Clinton and the 3 Joseph, both of which go to the nearby RTS Transit Center, approximately .4 mile south on Clinton Avenue, where numerous additional bus connections are available.

Immigration checkpoint edit

In 2010 U.S. Border Patrol agents [16] boarded the trains at Rochester station and asked passengers for details of their citizenship. At that time passengers who were not able to suitably prove their right to be in the U.S. could have been removed from the train and taken into custody.

References edit

  1. ^ "Amtrak Fact Sheet, Fiscal Year 2022: State of New York" (PDF). Amtrak. June 2022. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  2. ^ "Monroe County (NY) Library System - Pathfinders - Architecture - Lost Rochester".
  3. ^ https://www.dot.ny.gov/main/business-center/designbuildproject/repository/NY-Rochester-Station_Report-Evaluation_Tunnels_2012_04_19.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ Rochester Gets New Station, Amtrak Week Proclaimed By Mayor Amtrak News August 1, 1978 pages 2/3
  5. ^ "Rochester, NY (ROC". Great American Stations. Amtrak. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  6. ^ Manon, Tianna (October 6, 2017). "Rochester's new train station is open for business". wxxinews.org. Retrieved August 21, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Orr, Steve (October 29, 2014). "Ground broken for Amtrak station". Democrat & Chronicle. Retrieved December 21, 2014.
  8. ^ a b "Officials will break ground on Rochester train station in August". Democrat & Chronicle. April 3, 2013. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  9. ^ WHAM. "New York Senators call on Amtrak to rename Rochester train station after Louise Slaughter". WHAM. Retrieved March 17, 2018.
  10. ^ Abrams, Jason (March 21, 2018). "Amtrak to Name Rochester Station in Honor of Congresswoman Louise M. Slaughter". Amtrak Media.
  11. ^ Thompson, Howard (March 25, 2019). "Rochester train station renamed in honor of late Rep. Louise Slaughter". ROCHESTERFIRST. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
  12. ^ Brown, James (March 25, 2019). "Rochester train station renamed after Louise Slaughter". wxxinews.org. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
  13. ^ "Rochester Central Station clock back in city". Democrat & Chronicle. Associated Press. August 31, 2017. Retrieved August 21, 2019.
  14. ^ "FAQs". New York Department of Transportation. Retrieved August 21, 2019.
  15. ^ WHAM (March 8, 2024). "Push for a new long-distance bus terminal in Rochester gains momentum". WHAM. Retrieved March 11, 2024.
  16. ^ "Border Sweeps in North Reach Miles Into U.S." The New York Times. August 30, 2010.

External links edit

  Media related to Louise M. Slaughter Rochester Station at Wikimedia Commons

  • Rochester, NY – Amtrak
  • Rochester, NY – Station history at Great American Stations (Amtrak)
  • New York Central Railroad Station, Rochester
  • Rochester Amtrak Station (USA Rail Guide – Train Web)
  • Intermodel Transportation Center DOT Project
  • Intermodel Transportation Center DOT preliminary Project
  • Article from The Brickbuilder about 1914 station with floor plans

louise, slaughter, rochester, station, amtrak, intermodal, transit, station, rochester, york, local, regional, transportation, provided, rochester, genesee, regional, transportation, authority, branded, various, taxi, firms, service, station, well, station, lo. The Louise M Slaughter Rochester Station is an Amtrak intermodal transit station in Rochester New York Local and regional bus transportation is provided by the Rochester Genesee Regional Transportation Authority branded RTS Various taxi firms service the station as well The station is located on the north side of Rochester just east of High Falls on the south side of the tracks Rochester NYThe new Amtrak station in October 2017General informationLocation320 Central AvenueRochester New YorkUnited StatesCoordinates43 09 49 N 77 36 30 W 43 1635 N 77 6082 W 43 1635 77 6082Owned byAmtrakLine s Empire Corridor Rochester Subdivision Platforms1 island platform formerly 6 island platforms Tracks4 formerly 11 ConnectionsRTS 2 North Clinton 3 Joseph Megabus New York TrailwaysConstructionParkingYesBicycle facilitiesYesAccessibleYesOther informationStation codeAmtrak ROCIATA codeZTEHistoryOpenedOriginal depot 1914 110 years ago 1914 Amtrak facility July 12 1978Rebuilt2017PassengersFY 2022119 797 1 Amtrak ServicesPreceding station Amtrak Following stationBuffalo Depewtoward Niagara Falls New York Empire Service Syracusetoward New YorkBuffalo Depewtoward Toronto Maple LeafBuffalo Depewtoward Chicago Lake Shore Limited Syracusetoward New York or Boston SouthNew York State Fair servicesPreceding station Amtrak Following stationBuffalo Depewtoward Niagara Falls New York Empire Service New York State Fairtoward New YorkBuffalo Depewtoward Toronto Maple LeafFormer servicesPreceding station Amtrak Following stationBuffalotoward Chicago Lake Shore Syracusetoward New York Grand Central Buffalotoward Detroit Michigan Central Niagara RainbowPreceding station New York Central Railroad Following stationCenter Parktoward Chicago Main Line Brightontoward New YorkCenter Parktoward Niagara Falls New York Falls Road TerminusTerminus Rochester Oswego Otistoward OswegoAuburn Road Brightontoward SyracuseChurchville Junctiontoward Buffalo Exchange Street West Shore RailroadMain Line Fairporttoward WeehawkenRochester is served by three Amtrak routes totalling eight trains each day The Lake Shore Limited operates one train in each direction daily between Chicago and Boston New York City via two sections east of Albany while the Empire Service operates two trains in each direction between Niagara Falls and New York City and the Maple Leaf serves the station with one train in each direction between Toronto and New York City The station opened in 2017 is the third train station to be built at the site Contents 1 History 2 Station layout 3 Bus connections 4 Immigration checkpoint 5 References 6 External linksHistory editRochester has a long history of train stations The first major Rochester station was built in 1845 by the New York Central Railroad on Mill Street by High Falls nbsp The 1882 New York Central Railroad stationIn the 1880s the railroad tracks were elevated having previously been at grade and in 1882 the station was relocated to the east side of the Genesee River close to the modern station site on Central Avenue at St Paul Street This station was notable for its large train shed Not long after the 1882 station was established the city of Rochester had four major train stations The New York Central station the since demolished Erie Railroad Depot the Lehigh Valley Railroad Station that houses Dinosaur Bar B Que and the Rochester terminal of the Buffalo Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway that houses Nick Tahou Hots 2 nbsp The 1914 New York Central Station known as Bragdon StationThe 1882 station would be demolished and replaced in 1914 at the modern site by the more famous New York Central station designed by Claude Fayette Bragdon The station often referred to as Bragdon Station was four stories with three high arching windows reminiscent of train driving wheels and a main room that was reminiscent of New York s Grand Central Terminal complete with arched ceilings and a lunch counter The station at its height had 6 island platforms connected to the main station building by two tunnels one for passengers and one for baggage and mail that went all the way to the Cumberland St Central Post Office The station was seen as one of Bragdon s greatest architectural accomplishments As was the case with several large stations of the era with falling revenues and the high maintenance costs and taxes of such a large facility the station was sold by the New York Central Railroad in 1959 to a private owner nbsp Station in 1978 nbsp The 1978 Amshack style station in 2009 Note the low level platformIn a move that is largely considered today to have been a mistake the famed 1914 station was mostly demolished in 1965 after its sale to private owners except for the then run down western most one third portion which served as the station with the ticket sales at the entrance to the passenger tunnel That remaining section was demolished in 1977 to make way for a smaller Amtrak facility in 1978 The passenger baggage tunnels and one of the platform canopies of the original 1914 building were the last remaining remnants of the previous 1914 station to survive The tunnels were re discovered during initial surveying work for the current station 3 During the construction of the station in 2015 the tunnels were filled in as part of the construction of a new tunnel for the station the westernmost part of the canopy remains The 1978 structure was an Amshack style station similar to other stations Amtrak was building at the time as part of their Standard Stations Program It opened on July 12 1978 4 Its single track platform was shared by eastbound and westbound trains which caused conflicts between passenger and freight trains and led to delays In addition its low level platforms forced passengers to use steps when boarding and alighting The 1978 station was intended to be temporary and was long outdated by the time it was demolished in late 2015 to make way for the current station 5 Ground was broken for the current station and multimodal transit center on October 28 2014 It opened on October 6 2017 in a ceremony attended by Congresswoman Louise Slaughter Mayor Lovely Warren and Governor Andrew Cuomo 6 The station s construction cost of 29 5 million originally 26 5 million was funded by the City of Rochester State of New York and Amtrak 7 8 Its construction occurred around the same time of two other Empire Corridor stations Niagara Falls 2016 and Schenectady 2018 On March 17 2018 a day after Slaughter s death Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand along with former Mayor and Lieutenant Governor Bob Duffy requested that Amtrak rename the station for Slaughter who played a significant part in securing the funding for the rebuilt station 9 Four days later Amtrak announced that it would rename the station and officially unveiled the new name on March 25 2019 10 11 12 Station layout edit nbsp Rochester station interior looking westThe two floor station is 9 500 square feet 880 m2 Designed to look like the original 1914 Bragdon station it includes the 1914 station s original clock and plaques from both the 1914 station and 1882 station 13 14 Trains call at a single high level center island platform serving one track in each direction for Amtrak with two others on either side in each direction for freight traffic to pass by The platform is connected to the station building via a tunnel underneath the tracks that is accessed by stairs escalator and elevator 8 The station also contains two retail stands and many display boards To the side of the station is future parking allocation for Greyhound and Trailways buses which currently stop at a temporary facility across the street as part of a phase 2 plan to directly incorporate buses into the station It was also built to accommodate proposed high speed rail service 7 nbsp Rochester station platformBus connections editThe station is across the street from a temporary New York Trailways station Phase 2 of the train station which is awaiting funding is to include a bus station for Trailways Greyhound FlixBus and Megabus 15 RTS service includes the 2 North Clinton and the 3 Joseph both of which go to the nearby RTS Transit Center approximately 4 mile south on Clinton Avenue where numerous additional bus connections are available Immigration checkpoint editIn 2010 U S Border Patrol agents 16 boarded the trains at Rochester station and asked passengers for details of their citizenship At that time passengers who were not able to suitably prove their right to be in the U S could have been removed from the train and taken into custody References edit Amtrak Fact Sheet Fiscal Year 2022 State of New York PDF Amtrak June 2022 Retrieved August 30 2023 Monroe County NY Library System Pathfinders Architecture Lost Rochester https www dot ny gov main business center designbuildproject repository NY Rochester Station Report Evaluation Tunnels 2012 04 19 pdf bare URL PDF Rochester Gets New Station Amtrak Week Proclaimed By Mayor Amtrak News August 1 1978 pages 2 3 Rochester NY ROC Great American Stations Amtrak Retrieved January 15 2022 Manon Tianna October 6 2017 Rochester s new train station is open for business wxxinews org Retrieved August 21 2019 a b Orr Steve October 29 2014 Ground broken for Amtrak station Democrat amp Chronicle Retrieved December 21 2014 a b Officials will break ground on Rochester train station in August Democrat amp Chronicle April 3 2013 Retrieved April 4 2013 WHAM New York Senators call on Amtrak to rename Rochester train station after Louise Slaughter WHAM Retrieved March 17 2018 Abrams Jason March 21 2018 Amtrak to Name Rochester Station in Honor of Congresswoman Louise M Slaughter Amtrak Media Thompson Howard March 25 2019 Rochester train station renamed in honor of late Rep Louise Slaughter ROCHESTERFIRST Retrieved March 25 2019 Brown James March 25 2019 Rochester train station renamed after Louise Slaughter wxxinews org Retrieved March 25 2019 Rochester Central Station clock back in city Democrat amp Chronicle Associated Press August 31 2017 Retrieved August 21 2019 FAQs New York Department of Transportation Retrieved August 21 2019 WHAM March 8 2024 Push for a new long distance bus terminal in Rochester gains momentum WHAM Retrieved March 11 2024 Border Sweeps in North Reach Miles Into U S The New York Times August 30 2010 External links edit nbsp Media related to Louise M Slaughter Rochester Station at Wikimedia Commons Rochester NY Amtrak Rochester NY Station history at Great American Stations Amtrak New York Central Railroad Station Rochester Rochester Amtrak Station USA Rail Guide Train Web Intermodel Transportation Center DOT Project Intermodel Transportation Center DOT preliminary Project Article from The Brickbuilder about 1914 station with floor plans Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louise M Slaughter Rochester Station amp oldid 1217796177 History, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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