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Gateway Station (Charlotte)

Charlotte Gateway Station is a future intermodal transit station in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States. Currently operating as a streetcar stop for the CityLynx Gold Line, with an adjoining bus station for Greyhound Lines intercity buses,[1] it is the centerpiece of the overall 19-acre (7.7 ha) Station District, and it will serve Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) bus lines, the Lynx Silver Line light rail, Amtrak intercity trains. The district will also include parking facilities, mixed-use development and an elevated greenway. Estimated at a cost of $800.1 million (2017 US dollars) for full implementation of all public and private components, the project will be built in three phases, with Amtrak service tentatively scheduled to start in 2026–2027.[3]

Charlotte Gateway Station
CityLynx streetcar station
General information
Location690 West Trade Street
Charlotte, North Carolina
United States
Coordinates35°13′53″N 80°50′53″W / 35.23136°N 80.84807°W / 35.23136; -80.84807
Owned byCharlotte Area Transit System
Platforms1 low-level island platform
Tracks2
Bus operators Greyhound Lines[1]
History
OpenedAugust 30, 2021 (2021-08-30) (streetcar)[2]
Opening2026–2027 (intermodal station)[3]
Services
Preceding station CATS Following station
Johnson & Wales CityLynx Gold Line Mint Street
Future services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Gastonia Crescent Salisbury
toward New York
Terminus Carolinian Kannapolis
toward New York
Piedmont Kannapolis
toward Raleigh
Location

History edit

In 1991, the City of Charlotte and the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) completed a preliminary feasibility study for a new Uptown rail station to replace the existing Amtrak station, built in 1962 by the Southern Railway and located on North Tryon Street near the rail yard for SOU's successor, Norfolk Southern. The site chosen along West Trade Street, currently a Greyhound station since 1973, was once the location of three previous stations: the Atlanta & Charlotte Depot (prior to 1886), the Richmond and Danville Depot (1886-1905) and the Southern Depot (1905-1962).[4][5]

In 1998, NCDOT began the acquisition of property for the station and supportive land uses (i.e. retail and offices). In 2002, NCDOT completed its feasibility study for the Charlotte Multi-Modal Station and Area Track Improvements. The study identified two possible options: The Preferred Alternative, which included the station, various track work and a greenway at $206.8 million (2002 dollars), and the Station Build Only Alternative at $109.6 million (2002 dollars). By 2004, NCDOT had completed property acquisition of 27-acre (110,000 m2).[6][7]

Announced publicly in August 2005, the proposed Gateway Station is envisioned to serve as both a multimodal transit center in addition to both office and retail space. As originally presented, the station would feature an underground station for CATS buses, a 100,000-square-foot (9,300 m2) office building, and soaring lobby for other rail and bus services in the building's atrium.[8][9]

In 2009, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 awarded $520 million grant for the Piedmont Improvement Project in North Carolina; which was used to make rail improvements identified in the 2002 feasibility study. In that same year, an Environmental impact assessment was completed that resulted in a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) and the City of Charlotte and NCDOT signed a municipal agreement.[4]

In 2012, NCDOT completed property acquisition again of approximately 18-acre (73,000 m2) for the Charlotte Gateway Station project. On November 1, 2012, NCDOT selected Houston-based developer, the Hines Group, for the project.[10] In 2015, NCDOT won a $25 Million TIGER Grant, to help start construction of Gateway Station.[11]

On August 30, 2021, the streetcar station was opened as part of the second phase of the CityLynx Gold Line.[2][12]

The station's inter-city tracks and platform were completed in November 2022.[13][14] The first test run of a Piedmont train using the station occurred on November 29, 2022.[14]

Station plans edit

The station was built with a streetcar platform, which provides connection to the CityLynx Gold Line, and a 1,100 ft (340 m) long, fully ADA compliant high-level platform, the second in the state behind Raleigh Union Station, for Amtrak service.[15] It will be the southern terminus of Amtrak's Carolinian and Piedmont lines, as well as a service stop on Amtrak's Crescent and a major stop on the planned Southeast High Speed Rail Corridor. It will significantly improve connections between Amtrak and local transit. CATS plans for the station to be a stop on the Lynx Silver Line. An adjacent, interim bus station was built for Greyhound, which provides connections to routes running to Atlanta, Detroit, Jacksonville, New York City and Philadelphia.[1]

Construction edit

Both the Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) and NCDOT have started/completed various projects that impact the future station, including the CityLynx Gold Line and a new Locomotive and Railcar Maintenance Facility located on West Summit Avenue. However, groundbreaking for the Charlotte Gateway Station did not begin until July 2018.[16] The project is using a phased implementation approach to facilitate the near-term development of the rail station while also setting the stage for private development to occur. There are three general phases with additional sub-phases.[4]

Phase 1 edit

 
The temporary Charlotte Greyhound Station in May 2021

At an estimate cost of $91.3 million (2017 dollars), the first phase has two parts:

  • 1A) Construct 2,000 feet of track, structures, and signals to support two new station tracks; construct retaining wall/earthwork; construct temporary intercity bus facility (completed August, 2019).[17]
  • 1B) Construct rail platform and canopy for passenger loading/unloading.

Construction of Phase 1 was completed in November 2022.[13][14]

Phase 2 edit

At an estimate cost of $49.9 million (2017 dollars), the second phase has two parts:

  • 2A) Construct platform canopy; construct station building (interim condition) with full construction of concourse level and core and shell only for plaza and mezzanine levels; construct temporary surface parking and passenger drop-off area.
  • 2B) Decommission existing Amtrak station on North Tryon Street.

This phase is partially funded with capital carryover from phase 1.[4][18][19]

Phase 3 edit

At an estimate cost of $658.9 million (2017 dollars), the third phase has three parts:

  • 3A) Construct greenway connection with bridge over Fourth Street, vertical circulation and retaining walls; construct bus facility, which includes structured parking and residential over retail wrapping garage (facility will serve as temporary parking for rail passengers till phase 3B is completed).
  • 3B) Complete upper section of station building; extend greenway with bridge over Trade Street, vertical circulation and retaining walls; extend greenway to Bank of America Stadium; construct private development around station.
  • 3C) Construct remote properties between Fifth and Seventh Streets; extend greenway to Ninth Street.

This phase is currently not funded, but is expected to be developed mostly by private developers.[4]

Station layout edit

As of December 2, 2022, the station consists of one island platform in the center of Trade Street, for Gold Line service, and it is located on what will become the front entrance of the intermodal station. A second, high-level island platform is located alongside Norfolk Southern's tracks for Amtrak service, which is not publicly accessible.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Charlotte Bus Station". Greyhound Lines. Retrieved August 12, 2023. 518 West 4th Street. Charlotte, NC 28202
  2. ^ a b "CityLYNX Gold Line". Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS). Retrieved August 30, 2021.
  3. ^ a b Passenger Rail Developments in North Carolina. High Speed Rail Alliance. July 28, 2023. Retrieved August 8, 2023 – via YouTube.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Charlotte Gateway Station - Multimodal Station Area Plan - Final Report" (PDF). Charlotte Area Transit System. July 2017. Retrieved May 8, 2018.
  5. ^ "Charlotte Multi Modal Station Project Timeline". NCDOT Rail Division. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
  6. ^ . Charlotte Area Transit System (Press release). Archived from the original on August 30, 2008. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
  7. ^ (PDF). Charlotte Area Transit System. July 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 15, 2008. Retrieved May 8, 2018.
  8. ^ Whitacre, Dianne (August 24, 2005). "CATS plans $100 million transit hub". The Charlotte Observer. p. 1A.
  9. ^ Rainey, Amy (January 16, 2008). "The Ever-Changing Face of the Queen City - Here's the Scoop on Some Projects Going Up, in and Around Your Neighborhood". The Charlotte Observer. p. 10Z.
  10. ^ "Plan for new Greyhound bus station moving along". Charlotte, NC: WCNC-TV. Archived from the original on 2013-02-09.
  11. ^ "Charlotte to move Amtrak station uptown with federal grant". The Charlotte Observer. October 29, 2015. Retrieved October 30, 2015.
  12. ^ WBTV Web Staff (August 30, 2021). "CityLYNX Gold Line streetcar officially up and running". WBTV. Retrieved August 30, 2021.
  13. ^ a b "Charlotte Gateway Station: Phase 1". Raleigh, NC: NCDOT. November 2, 2022. from the original on December 2, 2022. Retrieved December 2, 2022.
  14. ^ a b c Brierton, James (December 1, 2022). "First test train arrives at Charlotte's Gateway Station". Charlotte, NC: WCNC. from the original on December 2, 2022. Retrieved December 2, 2022.
  15. ^ "Gateway Station Phase 1". Retrieved November 23, 2019.
  16. ^ Portillo, Ely (17 July 2018). "Charlotte's breaking ground on a new uptown train station this week". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  17. ^ Fahey, Ashley (19 February 2017). "Infrastructure phase of Gateway Station is 60% complete; master design plan to be presented this summer". Charlotte Business Journal. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  18. ^ Harrison, Steve (January 9, 2018). "After two decades, an uptown transit hub is moving forward. Here's the vision". The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  19. ^ "Work continues on Charlotte's new Gateway Station". Spectrum News 1 North Carolina. 2021-04-30. Retrieved 2021-06-29.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Gateway Station (Charlotte) at Wikimedia Commons
  • Gateway Station Home

gateway, station, charlotte, this, article, about, under, construction, station, charlotte, current, amtrak, station, charlotte, station, amtrak, charlotte, gateway, station, future, intermodal, transit, station, charlotte, north, carolina, united, states, cur. This article is about the under construction station in Charlotte For the current Amtrak station see Charlotte station Amtrak Charlotte Gateway Station is a future intermodal transit station in Charlotte North Carolina United States Currently operating as a streetcar stop for the CityLynx Gold Line with an adjoining bus station for Greyhound Lines intercity buses 1 it is the centerpiece of the overall 19 acre 7 7 ha Station District and it will serve Charlotte Area Transit System CATS bus lines the Lynx Silver Line light rail Amtrak intercity trains The district will also include parking facilities mixed use development and an elevated greenway Estimated at a cost of 800 1 million 2017 US dollars for full implementation of all public and private components the project will be built in three phases with Amtrak service tentatively scheduled to start in 2026 2027 3 Charlotte Gateway StationCityLynx streetcar stationGeneral informationLocation690 West Trade StreetCharlotte North CarolinaUnited StatesCoordinates35 13 53 N 80 50 53 W 35 23136 N 80 84807 W 35 23136 80 84807Owned byCharlotte Area Transit SystemPlatforms1 low level island platformTracks2Bus operatorsGreyhound Lines 1 HistoryOpenedAugust 30 2021 2021 08 30 streetcar 2 Opening2026 2027 intermodal station 3 ServicesPreceding station CATS Following station Johnson amp Walestowards French Street CityLynx Gold Line Mint Streettowards Sunnyside AvenueFuture servicesPreceding station Amtrak Following station Gastoniatoward New Orleans Crescent Salisburytoward New York Terminus Carolinian Kannapolistoward New York Piedmont Kannapolistoward RaleighLocation Contents 1 History 2 Station plans 3 Construction 3 1 Phase 1 3 2 Phase 2 3 3 Phase 3 4 Station layout 5 References 6 External linksHistory editIn 1991 the City of Charlotte and the North Carolina Department of Transportation NCDOT completed a preliminary feasibility study for a new Uptown rail station to replace the existing Amtrak station built in 1962 by the Southern Railway and located on North Tryon Street near the rail yard for SOU s successor Norfolk Southern The site chosen along West Trade Street currently a Greyhound station since 1973 was once the location of three previous stations the Atlanta amp Charlotte Depot prior to 1886 the Richmond and Danville Depot 1886 1905 and the Southern Depot 1905 1962 4 5 In 1998 NCDOT began the acquisition of property for the station and supportive land uses i e retail and offices In 2002 NCDOT completed its feasibility study for the Charlotte Multi Modal Station and Area Track Improvements The study identified two possible options The Preferred Alternative which included the station various track work and a greenway at 206 8 million 2002 dollars and the Station Build Only Alternative at 109 6 million 2002 dollars By 2004 NCDOT had completed property acquisition of 27 acre 110 000 m2 6 7 Announced publicly in August 2005 the proposed Gateway Station is envisioned to serve as both a multimodal transit center in addition to both office and retail space As originally presented the station would feature an underground station for CATS buses a 100 000 square foot 9 300 m2 office building and soaring lobby for other rail and bus services in the building s atrium 8 9 In 2009 the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 awarded 520 million grant for the Piedmont Improvement Project in North Carolina which was used to make rail improvements identified in the 2002 feasibility study In that same year an Environmental impact assessment was completed that resulted in a Finding of No Significant Impact FONSI and the City of Charlotte and NCDOT signed a municipal agreement 4 In 2012 NCDOT completed property acquisition again of approximately 18 acre 73 000 m2 for the Charlotte Gateway Station project On November 1 2012 NCDOT selected Houston based developer the Hines Group for the project 10 In 2015 NCDOT won a 25 Million TIGER Grant to help start construction of Gateway Station 11 On August 30 2021 the streetcar station was opened as part of the second phase of the CityLynx Gold Line 2 12 The station s inter city tracks and platform were completed in November 2022 13 14 The first test run of a Piedmont train using the station occurred on November 29 2022 14 Station plans editThe station was built with a streetcar platform which provides connection to the CityLynx Gold Line and a 1 100 ft 340 m long fully ADA compliant high level platform the second in the state behind Raleigh Union Station for Amtrak service 15 It will be the southern terminus of Amtrak s Carolinian and Piedmont lines as well as a service stop on Amtrak s Crescent and a major stop on the planned Southeast High Speed Rail Corridor It will significantly improve connections between Amtrak and local transit CATS plans for the station to be a stop on the Lynx Silver Line An adjacent interim bus station was built for Greyhound which provides connections to routes running to Atlanta Detroit Jacksonville New York City and Philadelphia 1 Construction editBoth the Charlotte Area Transit System CATS and NCDOT have started completed various projects that impact the future station including the CityLynx Gold Line and a new Locomotive and Railcar Maintenance Facility located on West Summit Avenue However groundbreaking for the Charlotte Gateway Station did not begin until July 2018 16 The project is using a phased implementation approach to facilitate the near term development of the rail station while also setting the stage for private development to occur There are three general phases with additional sub phases 4 Phase 1 edit nbsp The temporary Charlotte Greyhound Station in May 2021 At an estimate cost of 91 3 million 2017 dollars the first phase has two parts 1A Construct 2 000 feet of track structures and signals to support two new station tracks construct retaining wall earthwork construct temporary intercity bus facility completed August 2019 17 1B Construct rail platform and canopy for passenger loading unloading Construction of Phase 1 was completed in November 2022 13 14 Phase 2 edit At an estimate cost of 49 9 million 2017 dollars the second phase has two parts 2A Construct platform canopy construct station building interim condition with full construction of concourse level and core and shell only for plaza and mezzanine levels construct temporary surface parking and passenger drop off area 2B Decommission existing Amtrak station on North Tryon Street This phase is partially funded with capital carryover from phase 1 4 18 19 Phase 3 edit At an estimate cost of 658 9 million 2017 dollars the third phase has three parts 3A Construct greenway connection with bridge over Fourth Street vertical circulation and retaining walls construct bus facility which includes structured parking and residential over retail wrapping garage facility will serve as temporary parking for rail passengers till phase 3B is completed 3B Complete upper section of station building extend greenway with bridge over Trade Street vertical circulation and retaining walls extend greenway to Bank of America Stadium construct private development around station 3C Construct remote properties between Fifth and Seventh Streets extend greenway to Ninth Street This phase is currently not funded but is expected to be developed mostly by private developers 4 Station layout editAs of December 2 2022 the station consists of one island platform in the center of Trade Street for Gold Line service and it is located on what will become the front entrance of the intermodal station A second high level island platform is located alongside Norfolk Southern s tracks for Amtrak service which is not publicly accessible References edit a b c Charlotte Bus Station Greyhound Lines Retrieved August 12 2023 518 West 4th Street Charlotte NC 28202 a b CityLYNX Gold Line Charlotte Area Transit System CATS Retrieved August 30 2021 a b Passenger Rail Developments in North Carolina High Speed Rail Alliance July 28 2023 Retrieved August 8 2023 via YouTube a b c d e Charlotte Gateway Station Multimodal Station Area Plan Final Report PDF Charlotte Area Transit System July 2017 Retrieved May 8 2018 Charlotte Multi Modal Station Project Timeline NCDOT Rail Division Retrieved June 17 2008 Gateway Station CGS Project Background Charlotte Area Transit System Press release Archived from the original on August 30 2008 Retrieved June 17 2008 Feasibility Study for the Charlotte Multi Modal Station and Area Track Improvements PDF Charlotte Area Transit System July 2002 Archived from the original PDF on August 15 2008 Retrieved May 8 2018 Whitacre Dianne August 24 2005 CATS plans 100 million transit hub The Charlotte Observer p 1A Rainey Amy January 16 2008 The Ever Changing Face of the Queen City Here s the Scoop on Some Projects Going Up in and Around Your Neighborhood The Charlotte Observer p 10Z Plan for new Greyhound bus station moving along Charlotte NC WCNC TV Archived from the original on 2013 02 09 Charlotte to move Amtrak station uptown with federal grant The Charlotte Observer October 29 2015 Retrieved October 30 2015 WBTV Web Staff August 30 2021 CityLYNX Gold Line streetcar officially up and running WBTV Retrieved August 30 2021 a b Charlotte Gateway Station Phase 1 Raleigh NC NCDOT November 2 2022 Archived from the original on December 2 2022 Retrieved December 2 2022 a b c Brierton James December 1 2022 First test train arrives at Charlotte s Gateway Station Charlotte NC WCNC Archived from the original on December 2 2022 Retrieved December 2 2022 Gateway Station Phase 1 Retrieved November 23 2019 Portillo Ely 17 July 2018 Charlotte s breaking ground on a new uptown train station this week The Charlotte Observer Retrieved 17 July 2018 Fahey Ashley 19 February 2017 Infrastructure phase of Gateway Station is 60 complete master design plan to be presented this summer Charlotte Business Journal Retrieved 25 May 2021 Harrison Steve January 9 2018 After two decades an uptown transit hub is moving forward Here s the vision The Charlotte Observer Retrieved May 9 2018 Work continues on Charlotte s new Gateway Station Spectrum News 1 North Carolina 2021 04 30 Retrieved 2021 06 29 External links edit nbsp Media related to Gateway Station Charlotte at Wikimedia Commons Gateway Station Home Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gateway Station Charlotte amp oldid 1219893890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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