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New London Union Station

New London Union Station is a railroad station on the Northeast Corridor located in downtown New London, Connecticut, United States. Union Station is a station stop for most Amtrak Northeast Regional trains and all CTrail Shore Line East commuter rail trains, making it the primary railroad station in southeastern Connecticut. It serves as the centerpiece of the Regional Intermodal Transit Center, with connections to local and intercity buses as well as ferries to Long Island and Fishers Island, New York, and Block Island, Rhode Island. The station has one side platform and one island platform serving the two-track Northeast Corridor; the latter platform also serves a siding track that connects to the New England Central Railroad mainline.

New London, CT
Front view of New London Union Station in July 2012
General information
Location35 Water Street
New London, Connecticut
United States
Owned byNew London RR Company (station)[1]
Amtrak (track and platforms)[2]
Line(s)Amtrak Northeast Corridor[2]
New England Central Railroad
Platforms1 side platform
1 island platform
Tracks3
Connections
Construction
ParkingYes
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeAmtrak: NLC
History
Opened1848 (NLW&P)
1852 (NH&NL)
Rebuilt1861(NLW&P)
1864 (NLN)
1886–1887 (Union Station)
Renovations: 1976–77, 2002–03
Passengers
FY 2022138,728[3] (Amtrak)
201966 daily boardings[4] (Shore Line East)
Services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Old Saybrook Northeast Regional Mystic
     Acela does not stop here
Preceding station CT Rail Following station
Old Saybrook
toward Stamford
Shore Line East Terminus
Former services
Preceding station New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Following station
Waterford
toward New Haven
Shore Line Groton
toward Boston
Terminus Norwich Branch Groton
toward Worcester
Preceding station Central Vermont Railway Following station
Terminus Main Line East New London
toward St. Johns
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
New Haven Acela Providence
Montrealer Willimantic
toward Montreal
Union Station
Coordinates41°21′15″N 72°05′35″W / 41.35417°N 72.09306°W / 41.35417; -72.09306
ArchitectHenry Hobson Richardson[5]
NRHP reference No.71000913[5]
Added to NRHPJune 1971[5][6]
Location

Rail service to New London began with the New London, Willimantic, and Palmer Railroad in 1848 and the New Haven and New London Railroad in 1852. The original stations were each replaced in the 1860s; after several consolidations, they were served by the Central Vermont Railway (CV) and New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad (New Haven) by the 1870s. After one of the stations burned in 1885, a new three-story brick union station was erected in 1887. It was the last and largest railroad station designed by famed architect H. H. Richardson, and his best according to biographer Henry-Russell Hitchcock.[7][8]

Passenger service declined in the 20th century; all CV passenger service to New London ended in 1949. The New London Redevelopment Agency began planning in 1961 to demolish the station as part of urban renewal. Amtrak took over passenger service in May 1971; Union Station was added to the National Register of Historic Places the next month following a local effort. After several years of controversy over whether to demolish or preserve the structure, it was purchased by architect George M. Notter in 1975. Notter's firm renovated the station for combined use by Amtrak and commercial tenants; it was the first station to be restored for Amtrak's use, and one of the earliest cases of adaptive reuse of an industrial-age building in New England.

Shore Line East commuter service joined Amtrak intercity service at the station in 1996. High-level platforms were added in 2001 to serve the new Acela Express service. A second renovation in 2002–03 restored the exterior and returned the waiting room to its original configuration. The planned National Coast Guard Museum, which will be located across the tracks from the station, will include a long-planned footbridge over the tracks.

History and design edit

 
1852-built station on an 1854 landscape
 
The ex-NYP&B station (at right) in 1883

Early stations edit

Union Station is the sixth railroad station to serve New London. When the New London, Willimantic, and Palmer Railroad opened in 1848, an existing building on Water Street a block east of Federal Street was converted into a station.[9][10] A two-story Greek Revival depot was built near the modern location in 1852 with the arrival of the New Haven and New London Railroad (NH&NL). The New London, Willimantic, and Palmer continued to use its older station for some time, although a track was built to join the two railroads.[10]

In 1854, a connecting track was opened through downtown Norwich, allowing trains from the Norwich and Worcester Railroad to connect with steamships at New London rather than Allyn's Point. Use of the connection stopped in November 1855, but was continuous after April 1859.[11] After the completion of the New London and Stonington Railroad to Groton Wharf in 1858, ferry service ran from New London to Groton to allow through railroad service.[11] The NH&NL station was soon too small to handle large passenger loads, and the Bureau of Railroad Commissioners was petitioned for a new station as early as 1859.[10]

The New Haven and New London Railroad merged with the New London and Stonington in 1857 to form the New Haven, New London and Stonington Railroad. The line was leased by the New York, Providence and Boston Railroad (NYP&B) in 1859. The NYP&B bought the section east of Groton outright in 1864; the section from New London westward was spun off as the Shore Line Railway. In 1870, the Shore Line was leased by the New York and New Haven Railroad, which itself became part of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad in 1872.[11] At some point during this series of events, the 1852-built station was replaced by a larger, two-story structure, which was also used by some through trains from the north.[10]

In 1861, the New London Northern Railroad succeeded the New London, Willimantic, and Palmer.[11] That year, the railroad constructed a freight depot and steamboat wharf (likely also used for passenger trains) along Water Street. The depot burned on May 8, 1864, but was rebuilt on the same site.[10]

The NYP&B-era station was highly unpopular; the Bureau was petitioned for a replacement not long after it was built, and local newspapers took up the issue in 1874 and 1875. In 1877, the commissioners referred to the "wholly insufficient and inconvenient accommodations" at the station. When the building burned on February 5, 1885, one newspaper remarked "few New London people are sorry, as the ancient structure had long since outlived its usefulness." It was torn down in April 1886.[10]

H.H. Richardson station edit

 
Union Station shortly after its completion
 
Sever Hall, which Richardson designed in 1878, was his inspiration for much of Union Station's design
 
Union Station on an early postcard, showing the distinctive "eyebrow" canopy

After the previous depot was destroyed, the Central Vermont Railroad (which then leased the New London Northern) began making plans for a larger replacement station. The Central Vermont and the New Haven Railroad (which had bought the Shore Line in 1870) bought the east end of the Parade from New London for the unusually low price of $15,000, with the understanding that the railroads would build a structure more suitable for the bustling city.[12]

Noted American architect Henry Hobson Richardson, known for his public buildings including several Boston and Albany Railroad depots, was hired by the Central Vermont in September 1885 to design the new station. Richardson likely obtained the commission through his friend and former classmate James A. Rumrill, who was a director of the railroad.[13] New London was the last of many railroad stations worked on by Richardson before his death in 1886, though numerous others were designed by his students (including the nearby New London Public Library designed by Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge). Many of Richardson's later attributed works were designed primarily by his office staff, but the quality of the design indicates that it was closely supervised by Richardson.[8] Richardson's biographer, Henry-Russell Hitchcock, considered New London to be his best station design.[8]

Union Station is particularly large for a Richardson train station, and stands out as the only of his stations not built in the Richardsonian Romanesque style of Trinity Church in Boston. Instead, it is a "severe, compact brick box", with significant Colonial influence taken from other buildings in New London.[9][14] Its design is heavily based on Sever Hall at Harvard University, which Richardson designed in 1878. The station has a similar profile, brick color and patterns, and arched entryway, but lacks the ornamentation of Sever.[8][13] Richardson originally designed Union Station with rough stone walls and Longmeadow trim like his other stations, but the material was changed to less expensive brick shortly before construction; the ornamentation was also likely eliminated at this time.[7] The strict symmetry is atypical of Richardson's designs and may have been a later change by Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge after Richardson's death.[7]

Although different from his other stations, the 2+12-story structure features many of Richardson's characteristic motifs, including its multi-faceted roof, prominent arched entrance, and elegant brickwork.[15] Like many of his stations, the roofline is dominant and contrasts the monochrome walls. The bricks are arranged in a mixture of Flemish bond and two different herringbone styles, broken by details around windows and doors, to create visual interest.[2] A projecting central section tempers the roofline on the east and west facades, while the dormers shown a slight Asian influence common in his designs. The rear bay window – the lone circular element save for the matching arched front doorway – served as the ticket booth.[2] The ceiling and third floor are suspended from the roof trusses using an array of 2-inch (51 mm)-diameter iron rods, which allowed for a large two-story waiting room without interior columns.[14] The platform canopy was notable for matching the broad curve of the tracks; it originally extended further south, with a raised "eyebrow" section over State Street.[9]

The new station began construction in September 1886 and opened in 1887, with a total cost of $76,300.[13] It was designated a union station as it connected two railroads – the Central Vermont Railroad which succeeded the New London, Willimantic, and Palmer, and the Shore Line which would merge into the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad in 1897. The Thames River Bridge was opened in October 1889, connecting the station to the New York, Providence and Boston Railroad and completing the Shore Line rail link from New York to Boston. The southern end of the Norwich and Worcester Railroad was completed through Gales Ferry in June 1899, allowing traffic from Worcester to reach New London via the bridge rather than through Norwich.[11]

Around 1912, New London citizens successfully petitioned the Public Utilities Commission for the installation of a footbridge connecting the station to the ferry docks in order to improve pedestrian safety. At the time, with no bridge crossing the river below Norwich, the ferries were heavily used. The footbridge, constructed of steel with a canopy to keep out rain, was constructed soon after.[16]

Decline and revival edit

 
The 1912-built pedestrian bridge shortly before its 1961 demolition

Central Vermont passenger service running north ended in 1949, but service running east and west along the Shore Line has remained continuous since the station was built.[11] In the latter days of the New Haven Railroad, infrastructure was not maintained in order to cut costs, and stations like New London suffered for it. In 1953, the railroad asked the Public Utilities Commission for permission to remove the footbridge, but the request was denied. The railroad petitioned again in 1961, seeking to spend $1,250 to remove the bridge rather than $15,000 repairing it. Of the average 132 people using the bridge daily (versus 612 crossing the tracks on the street), most were reportedly using it as an "observation post" to view the harbor.[16][17]

 
The waiting room before the 1976–77 renovation
 
Interior of the station after the 1976–77 renovation

In 1961, the New London Redevelopment Agency called for the station to be demolished to make room for a shopping mall or department store as an "urban renewal" project. This began a fifteen-year fight over the station building, pitting the Redevelopment Agency against a small group of private citizens who wished to have the building restored for further use.[18] The city paid $120,000 to buy the station; demolition costs were estimated at $55,000.[19] The New Haven Railroad folded into Penn Central in 1969; continually beset with financial problems, Penn Central had no interest in investing in the station.[19] The station by this time was "a dust-covered derelict with urine-soaked floors and peeling ceilings."[18] Amtrak took over intercity passenger service on May 1, 1971; Penn Central continued to operate a limited amount of local service that was discontinued over the rest of the decade.[20] After a local effort, Union Station was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in June 1971 over the lobbying efforts of former mayor Richard Martin. Martin claimed that ninety percent of the city agreed with the redevelopment plans. Under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the addition to the NRHP prevented local authorities from using federal funds for demolition, although the law did not provide for enforcement or punishment.[6][19]

The conflict was generally seen locally as outside "meddlers" – state officials, rich "out-of-state bleeding hearts", and historians – interfering with local plans that would improve the city. Robert P. Turk, director of the Redevelopment Agency, wrote a letter accusing preservationists of dealing in "pure academic nonsense".[21] Frank Scheetz, a Groton local and former submariner, attempted to buy the station for use as a submarine museum, with plans to berth a decommissioned submarine nearby.[6] The Redevelopment Agency rejected Scheetz's offer, claiming he was a speculator; Scheetz alleged that the city duplicitously changed prices in order to refuse the legitimate offer.[19] (Scheetz later funded the display of the USS Croaker in Groton from 1977 to 1987, and was "instrumental" in bringing the USS Nautilus to permanent display at Submarine Force Library and Museum at the Naval Submarine Base New London in the 1980s.)[22] In September 1973, the City Council voted to allow demolition. Amtrak responded with a letter stating that the company wanted to discuss the possibility of preservation and would be willing to contribute financially.[6] That year, a number of the same local activists formed the Union Railroad Station Trust, intending to restore the station.[2]

On February 20, 1975, the Redevelopment Agency voted to demolish the building.[23] Union Railroad Station Trust asked the Boston architectural firm Anderson Notter Associates to prepare a study of adding office and restaurant space.[24] George M. Notter, one of the firm's principals (and later president of the American Institute of Architects), was an early advocate of adaptive reuse.[2][25] Surprised that no developers were pursuing what he saw as a sure profit, Notter formed Union Station Associates as a subsidiary of Anderson Notter and invested a substantial sum of his own money into the station. Notter convinced Amtrak to agree to a 20-year lease for part of the station at $45,000 annually, thus giving the group a stronger negotiating point.[18][26] After eighteen months of negotiations, Union Station Associates purchased the building on July 24, 1975, effectively saving the station.[24][27] The group paid only the cost of the underlying land, $11,400 – the same figure Scheetz initially offered two years before.[18][19]

 
An Amtrak train passes the renovated station and 1976-built platforms in 1983

Union Station Associates spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on a full renovation of the building for combined use by Amtrak and commercial tenants.[18] The exterior was restored to the original 1885 specifications.[15] However, some of the interior work modified the station far from its original configuration. A mezzanine was built over half the waiting area to provide restaurant seating, and the floor of the rest was cut out to create an atrium. The basement became the passenger waiting area, with a newsstand and a plant shop occupying additional space.[26][28] New, wider platforms were built to improve the boarding experience.[9] The renovated station was celebrated and rededicated in July 1976.[18] The New London Day, which five years before called the station an "eyesore", ran their coverage under the headline "We were wrong!"[24] New London Union Station was the first station in the country to be restored for Amtrak use.[15] It represented a "watershed" in historic preservation as one of the first industrial age structures in New England to be reused – a shift away from the previous attitude that valued only Colonial buildings – as well as the recognition of the historic value of the old downtowns of New England's port cities.[24]

Turn of the century edit

 
An Acela train at the southbound high-level platform, constructed in 2001 to allow the then-new high-speed service to stop at New London

As Notter predicted, the renovated station initially proved attractive to commercial tenants. When an engineering firm moved into the "Crow's Nest" of the attic space in the late 1980s, the building was fully occupied for the first time since the heyday of the New Haven railroad.[14] However, Notter and others involved in the 1975 purchase were approaching retirement age. In the late 1990s, the city offered to buy the station for use as a maritime museum detailing the history of the adjacent Thames River. No longer worried about the safety of the building, the developers sold, and the tenants moved elsewhere.[14]

In 1996, the well-connected owners of Cross Sound Ferry proposed a footbridge from the Water Street parking garage to the ferry slips so that ferry passengers would not have to cross Water Street and the tracks at grade. Amtrak saw the project as an opportunity to build a new elevated station nearby and contributed $1 million to the design of the bridge. However, Amtrak reversed course in 1999 and decided to keep using Union Station; in 2001, the railroad declined to fund the footbridge.[29] Also in 2001, Amtrak built a pair of high-level platforms to serve the new Acela high-speed service, thus adapting the 19th-century station for 21st-century usage. Catenary wires were installed over the tracks as part of the introduction of the Acela.[30][31] Late that year or early in 2002, the 1899-built freight house on the east side of the tracks was torn down as part of redevelopment sponsored by the New London Development Corporation. The freight house had previously been used by Amtrak maintenance-of-way crews, and before that by the Fishers Island Ferry District.[9]

 
Waiting room restored to its original specifications after the 2002–03 renovation

By this time, many of the 1970s repairs were beginning to wear down, and the city put aside its plans for the maritime museum.[14] The New London Railroad Company, fronted by historian Barbara Timken and local businessman Todd O'Donnell, bought the station from the city as the New London Railroad Company in 2002. The pair organized a second full restoration of the station, including a new slate roof, restored brickwork, and restoration of the waiting room to its original configuration.[2] The mezzanine level and basement atrium created in the 1976 renovation were removed.[14] Additionally, mechanical systems were upgraded and various accessibility concerns addressed. The baggage room was restored for Greyhound use.[28] Amtrak and Greyhound rent space from the company for offices and passenger waiting areas.[32]

Despite Amtrak's disinterest in the project, Cross Sound continued to pursue construction of the footbridge. Standing as high as 73 feet (22 m) (higher than the station itself), the bridge was to cost $10 million, paid by public funds.[29] In 2003, the city used eminent domain to take portions of the station property in order to build a footbridge from the Water Street parking garage to the ferry slips on the east side of the tracks. The city only wished to pay for the small area taken up by the footprints, but O'Donnell wanted more compensation because the large footbridge would detract from the aesthetics of the historic station. With no agreement reached, the issue went to court.[14] Meanwhile, O'Donnell was in a financial conundrum: the taxi and auto traffic generated by the bus, rail, and ferry traffic was limiting his ability to lease space in the station. He abandoned renovations to the upper floors, and was forced to consider ending the leases with Amtrak and Greyhound and seek alternate tenants.[14][33] In 2007, the city abandoned the eminent domain case and scrapped the footbridge plans, although O'Donnell was still considering selling the building.[14]

Shore Line East edit

 
A weekend Shore Line East train arrives at New London in June 2013

In February 1996, a single Shore Line East weekday round trip was extended from Old Saybrook to New London. An additional round trip was extended in February 2010, and 3 more in May 2010 for a total of 5 daily round trips between New London and New Haven.[34] Weekend Shore Line East service between Old Saybrook and New Haven Union Station began in 2008, but no regular weekend trains ran to New London.[35]

In July 2012, Governor Dannel Malloy announced that 5 weekend round trips would be extended to New London beginning in April 2013. However, the extension was dependent on ongoing negotiations with the marine industry over mandated closings of the Old Saybrook – Old Lyme bridge.[36] Two weekday midday trips were added in May 2013, while weekend service began on June 1, 2013, after the application for additional bridge closings was approved by the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.[37][38] Because Shore Line East service to New London is limited, Amtrak honors monthly Shore Line East passes on select intercity trains between New London and New Haven.[39] By 2019, weekend Shore Line East ridership at New London was nearly twice weekday ridership.[4]

Upgrades and Coast Guard Museum edit

 
Union Station is the centerpiece of the Regional Intermodal Transportation Center, which also includes bus, taxi, and ferry services.
 
Sign indicating "Future Home of National Coast Guard Museum" on an unused plot behind New London Union Station

In 2006, the Southeastern Connecticut Council of Governments (SCCOG) began a study of how to improve the Regional Intermodal Transportation Center (RITC), including Union Station.[14] The study analyzed problems with the RITC – including poor pedestrian connections, minimal bus facilities, and a lack of food vendors – and considered but rejected a move to a Fort Trumbull site. The proposed alternative released in 2010, which would cost around $20 million, would relocate Water Street slightly to the west. The bus terminal would be expanded, with a new building adding onto the existing former baggage office. A pedestrian bridge was to be constructed connecting the Water Street Garage, the main station area, the northbound Amtrak platform, and the ferry terminal – a design that served station passengers as well as the ferries. Other pedestrian improvements were to include wayfinding signs, pedestrian-scale lighting, and expanded sidewalks.[32]

Beginning in 2010, Union Station was considered a possible site for the National Coast Guard Museum, which would have added a glass atrium north of the main station building as well as a pedestrian bridge over the tracks to a second waterfront building. The Coast Guard removed the site from consideration in May 2012 due to opposition from Cross Sound Ferry over use of its property. The station's private owners stated that they would consider other uses for the space.[40]

However, after further consideration, the Coast Guard announced in April 2013 that the museum was to be located at Union Station.[41] The main portion of the museum is to be located east of the tracks, with a new 500-passenger ferry terminal likely integrated into the four-story, 54,300-square-foot glass-faced building.[42] A pedestrian bridge will connect the museum to the station and the northbound platform, as well as to the Water Street garage.[43]

In July 2013, the station owners sent a letter of concern to the state, seeking that the Environmental Impact Report for the museum and footbridge consider a breadth of possible impacts, particularly from the footbridge.[44] The museum itself received a Finding Of No Significant Impact in March 2014. The Environmental Impact Evaluation for the footbridge, released in July 2014, analyzed seven alternatives for the footbridge location. Alternative 5a, located east of the baggage building and including a section to the garage, was the preferred alternative.[43] The state committed $20 million towards the cost of the potential footbridge.[45]

In 2014, O'Donnell and Timken began talks with the Coast Guard Museum Association about selling the station to a third-party investor associated with the Association.[45] The sale was originally to be effective at the end of 2014, but was delayed because the Redevelopment Agency never issued a formal certificate of completion for the 1975 sale and renovations. Since the Agency was dissolved in 2008, the City Council issued the certificate in early January 2015, allowing the sale the proceed.[46] On January 12, the Council released the station from the 1960s urban renewal plan as part of an agreement with O'Donnell and Timken to ease the sale process. The new agreement also included stipulations for historic preservation of the building, and allowed – but did not require – its continued use as a train station.[47] On January 29, 2015, Union Station Development sold the station to the New London RR Company – a holding company owned by James Coleman Jr., chairman of the Association – for $3 million.[1][48] Coleman brought in a restaurant serving locally sourced food for the first floor, and intended to renovate the second floor for use by museum-related tenants.[49]

Electrification and track work on Track 6, necessary to allow use of M8 electric railcars on Shore Line East, took place from November 2021 to April 2022.[50] The cars entered service for Shore Line East that May.[51][52] In June 2023, the US Department of Transportation awarded $17 million for transportation improvements in downtown New London, including the footbridge and station renovations.[53]

Layout edit

New London Union Station
1
 
2
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Express office
 
 
 
 
 
abandoned NB platform
Station building
 
 
 
 
 
NB high-level platform
 
 
 
 
 
Track 6 stub platform
SB low-level platform
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
State Street
SB high-level platform
 
 
 
 
 
 
NB low-level platform
1
 
 
2
 
6
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Northbound high-level platform (right), southbound low-level platform, and station building

New London has an unconventional platform layout due to the State Street grade crossing and its location on a sharp curve. The two Northeast Corridor tracks (Tracks 1 and 2) are next to the station, while the New England Central Railroad (formerly Central Vermont) freight track (Track 6) is further away.[30][54]

Both NEC tracks have high-level platforms, which were added in 2001 for use by Acela trains, which cannot use low platforms.[30] The southbound NEC track is served by a low platform behind the station, which leads to a short high-level platform south of State Street. The northbound NEC track is served by a high-level platform behind the station building; the low platform south of State Street is generally only used for deboarding passengers from busy trains.[30] Because of the sharp curve, the high-level platforms are set slightly back from the tracks to avoid scraping the ends of train cars, and thus bridge plates are needed to span the gap between platform and car.[55]

The northbound platform, currently a side platform, can serve as an island platform should passenger service return to the NECR track. The 2010 SCCOG report indicated that Amtrak wished Shore Line East to move its operations to Track 6, freeing the mainline tracks for through trains.[32] In 2013, most Shore Line East trains began using Track 6. Most passengers use the low-level section of the platform south of State Street, but a short metal spur on the high-level platform provides handicapped accessible boarding for trains using the track.[30] A low-level section of the northbound platform also remains north of the high-level section; it has not been used since the high-level section was constructed.

The southbound platform is adjacent to the station building, and its high-level section requires crossing only a lightly used spur of State Street. However, access to the northbound platform requires crossing both Northeast Corridor tracks. The footbridge to the planned Coast Guard Museum will allow access to the northbound platform without crossing tracks, which will improve safety and prevent passengers from being trapped on the platform by stopped trains.[32]

Service edit

 
A southbound Acela train at New London

All Amtrak Northeast Regional trains that run on the Northeast Corridor east of New Haven (about 9 trains each direction daily) stop at New London.

The station was previously also served by a small number of Acela trains: one southbound train in the morning, and northbound trains in the morning and evening. When Acela trains served the station, most ran nonstop between Providence and New Haven.[56] Acela service was discontinued by 2022.[57]

Shore Line East service to New London is limited by slots available over the Connecticut River bridge between Old Saybrook and Old Lyme; service is operated at uneven headways on weekdays and weekends. Multi-ride and monthly Shore Line East tickets are accepted on several Northeast Regional trains as well.[58]

The Central Corridor Rail Line is a proposed regional service which would run from New London north through Norwich, Willimantic, and Amherst to Brattleboro, Vermont over the New England Central Railroad. While locally supported by some towns along the route, the service is not currently funded.[59]

Intermodal connections edit

 
Greyhound station at the former baggage and express office in 2012. Greyhound no longer uses the building.
 
Cross Sound ferries and a Block Island Express ferry

Several ferry services run from docks on Ferry Street just north of the station. The Cross Sound Ferry runs to Orient Point on Long Island with approximately hourly service year-round. The Block Island Fast Ferry, a high-speed catamaran to Block Island, runs several daily round trips during the summer months. The Fishers Island Ferry offers year-round local service to Fisher's Island, about 5 miles offshore, with multiple daily trips.[2]

Greyhound Bus Lines offers limited intercity service from a stop on Water Street. Current service consists of two daily buses in each direction operating along the I-95 corridor, with transfers available to other routes in Boston, New Haven, and New York City. Greyhound and Peter Pan Bus (which no longer serves New London) previously used the former baggage and express office.[9][32]

Union Station is one of four major transfer points for Southeast Area Transit (SEAT) local bus service, with timed connections on a clock-face schedule between several routes running from New London to nearby areas including Norwich, Groton, Niantic, Waterford, and Foxwoods Casino. SEAT buses serving the station stop at a shelter north of the station building on Water Street.[32] The following SEAT routes run from Union Station:

  • 1 Norwich / Mohegan Sun / New London – Route 32
  • 2 Norwich / Groton/ New London – Route 12
  • 3 Groton / New London / Niantic
  • 12 Jefferson Avenue / Crystal Mall / New London Shopping Center / Senior Center
  • 13 Shaws Cove / L & M Hospital / Ocean Beach
  • 14 New London Mall / Waterford Commons / Crystal Mall / New London Shopping Center
  • 15 New London / Waterford – Evening Service
  • 101 Norwich / Mohegan Sun / New London – Route 32
  • 108 New London / Groton / Mistick Village / Foxwoods

Union Station is also served by 9 Town Transit route 643. The drop-off lane in front of the station also serves as a taxi stand for several local companies. Special buses to Foxwoods Casino, which connect primarily to Cross Sound Ferry services, also stop nearby.[32]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Warranty Deed" (PDF). New London RR CO. January 28, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "NEW LONDON, CT (NLC)". Great American Stations. Amtrak. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  3. ^ "Amtrak Fact Sheet, Fiscal Year 2022: State of Connecticut" (PDF). Amtrak. June 2023. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  4. ^ a b "Attachment 8: Shore Line East station ridership" (PDF). Facility Management Services for Various Railroad Station Facilities for Region C. Connecticut Department of Transportation. 2021.
  5. ^ a b c "Connecticut – New London County". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  6. ^ a b c d "Amtrak Urges the Preservation Of Periled New London Station". The New York Times. September 23, 1973. p. 29 – via Proquest Historical Newspapers.
  7. ^ a b c Floyd, Margaret Henderson (1997). Henry Hobson Richardson: A Genius for Architecture. Monacelli Press. pp. 200, 218. ISBN 1885254709.
  8. ^ a b c d Hitchcock, Henry-Russell (1961). The Architecture of H. H. Richardson and His Times (revised ed.). Archon Books. pp. 273, 278. ISBN 9780262580052.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Roy, John H. Jr. (2007). A Field Guide to Southern New England Railroad Depots and Freight Houses. Branch Line Press. pp. 72–74. ISBN 9780942147087.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Belletzkie, Bob. "CT Passenger Stations, N-NE". TylerCityStation. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Karr, Ronald Dale (1995). The Rail Lines of Southern New England. Branch Line Press. p. 107. ISBN 0942147022.
  12. ^ . The New London Day. July 2, 1931. Archived from the original on November 17, 2010 – via New London Landmarks.
  13. ^ a b c Ochsner, Jeffery Karl (1982). H.H. Richardson: Complete Architectural Works. MIT Press. pp. 403–406. ISBN 0262150239.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Dilts, James D. (Fall–Winter 2010). "Three Amtrak Stations Take Different Roads to Rehabilitation". Railroad History (203): 46–50. JSTOR 43525153.
  15. ^ a b c McDonald, Melissa (June 7, 1983). "Photographs: Written Historical and Descriptive Data" (PDF). Historic American Buildings Survey. United States National Park Service.
  16. ^ a b "State Gives Its Permission To Raze Railroad Footbridge". The New London Day. September 9, 1961 – via Google Newspapers.
  17. ^ . Leroy Roberts Railroad Collection. September 14, 1958. Archived from the original on June 23, 2010.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Knight, Michael (July 23, 1976). "New London Station Restored by Amtrak". New York Times. p. 19. ProQuest 122879078.
  19. ^ a b c d e Knight, Michael (September 28, 1973). "Station (Landmark or Eyesore) Nears End". The New York Times. p. 35. ProQuest 119793625.
  20. ^ Baer, Christopher T. (April 2015). "A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE SUCCESSORS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY AND THEIR HISTORICAL CONTEXT: 1971" (PDF). Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society.
  21. ^ Huxtable, Ada Louise (May 9, 1971). "A Lot Happens In Ten Years". The New York Times. ProQuest 119093677.
  22. ^ "Frank Scheetz dies; contractor, veteran led fight to return Nautilus to Groton". The New London Day. June 4, 1998. p. B1 – via Google Newspapers.
  23. ^ Baer, Christopher T. (April 2015). "PRR CHRONOLOGY: 1975" (PDF). Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  24. ^ a b c d Campbell, Robert (November 21, 1976). "Union Station: It's more than just a renovation". Boston Globe. p. E3. ProQuest 747838300.
  25. ^ Sullivan, Patricia (December 28, 2007). "George Notter, 74; Architect Remade Old Buildings (obituary)". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
  26. ^ a b "New life for old station". Boston Globe. September 5, 1976. p. E3. ProQuest 747472297.
  27. ^ "Special City Council Meeting Agenda" (PDF). City of New London. January 9, 2015.
  28. ^ a b "Union Railroad Station: New London's Gem". Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
  29. ^ a b Condon, Tom (January 16, 2005). "Skywalk Is Not The Ticket For New London". Hartford Courant. Retrieved September 2, 2016.
  30. ^ a b c d e Cox, Jeremiah (December 24, 2014). "New London, CT". Subway Nut. Retrieved August 30, 2016.
  31. ^ "Acela Express Startup Scheduled—Again" (PDF). TrainRider. Vol. 10, no. 3. Train Riders/Northeast. Fall 2000. p. 1.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g TranSystems (March 2010). "Regional Intermodal Transportation Center Master Plan and Efficiency Study: Executive Summary" (PDF). Southeastern Connecticut Council of Governments. Retrieved May 15, 2013.
  33. ^ Holtz, Jeff (August 27, 2006). "A Station Unsure Where It's Headed". New York Times. p. P2. ProQuest 93090047.
  34. ^ "All aboard the Shore Line East!". The New London Day. May 9, 2010. Retrieved July 12, 2012.
  35. ^ "Governor Rell Announces Weekend Shore Line East Rail Service Starting on 4th of July" (Press release). Connecticut Department of Transportation. June 27, 2008.
  36. ^ "Shore Line East Steaming Into New London". Hartford Courant. July 6, 2012. Retrieved July 12, 2012.
  37. ^ Smith, Greg (May 17, 2013). "Shore Line East expands train service". The New London Day. Retrieved May 20, 2013.
  38. ^ Altimari, Daniela (May 30, 2013). "Shore Line East Adding Weekend Service". Hartford Courant. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  39. ^ Drelich, Kimberly (July 10, 2015). "Commuters, officials cheer Amtrak honoring Shore Line East tickets". The New London Day. Retrieved September 28, 2016.
  40. ^ Langevald, Dirk (May 3, 2012). "Coast Guard Passes On Union Station As Museum Site". New London Patch. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  41. ^ Kathleen Edgecomb and Jennifer McDermott (April 5, 2013). "Great expectations for New London come with national museum". The New London Day. Retrieved May 15, 2013.
  42. ^ Petrone, Paul (April 5, 2013). "A National Coast Guard Museum For Downtown New London". Waterford Patch. Retrieved May 6, 2016.
  43. ^ a b Milone & MacBroom, INC (July 2014). "ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT EVALUATION: NATIONAL COAST GUARD MUSEUM PEDESTRIAN OVERPASS, NEW LONDON, CONNECTICUT" (PDF). State of Connecticut Department of Economic & Community Development.
  44. ^ Timken, Barbara; O'Donnell, Todd; Quinn, Daniel (July 17, 2003). "Re: Request for Scoping Determination, CEPA Scoping Notice, June 4, 2013, U.S. National Coast Guard Museum" (PDF). GreenbergTraurig.
  45. ^ a b Bergman, Julia (December 14, 2014). "Sale of Union Station is near on behalf of Coast Guard Museum group". The New London Day. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  46. ^ Bergman, Julia (January 6, 2015). "Sale of Union Station delayed by lack of document". The New London Day. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  47. ^ Young, Colin A.; Bergman, Julia (January 13, 2015). "New London's Union Station sale takes step forward". The New London Day. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  48. ^ Bergman, Julia (January 30, 2015). "Coast Guard museum project may be picking up steam". The New London Day. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  49. ^ Bergman, Julia (July 10, 2016). "Union Station owner in town to check on progress". The New London Day. Retrieved September 28, 2016.
  50. ^ "Project Information Appendix". Northeast Corridor Capital Investment Plan: Fiscal Years 2022-2026 (PDF). Northeast Corridor Commission. October 2021. p. A3-46.
  51. ^ "Governor Lamont Announces That M8 Electric Trains Have Arrived on Shore Line East". Office of the Governor of Connecticut (Press release). May 24, 2022.
  52. ^ Hartley, Scott A. (May 24, 2022). "Connecticut replaces diesel Shore Line East trains with electric multiple-unit equipment". Trains Magazine. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
  53. ^ "RAISE 2023 Fact Sheets" (PDF). United States Department of Transportation. June 2023. p. 29.
  54. ^ TranSystems (November 2010). "Analysis of Costs for the Operation and Maintenance of the Transportation Related Areas of New London Union Station, the Adjacent Greyhound Facility and the Water Street Parking Garage" (PDF). Regional Intermodal Transportation Center Master Plan and Efficiency Study. Southeastern Connecticut Council of Governments. pp. 9–10.
  55. ^ (PDF). Amtrak. October 6, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 3, 2016 – via National Transportation Safety Board.
  56. ^ "Northeast Corridor Timetable" (PDF). Amtrak. March 10, 2018. Retrieved June 3, 2018.
  57. ^ "Acela Train". Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  58. ^ "Expanding Rail Service" (PDF). Connecticut Department of Transportation. January 1, 2007.
  59. ^ Benson, Adam (February 21, 2014). "Rail line plan to seek federal funding". Norwich Bulletin. Retrieved August 30, 2016.

External links edit

  • New London, CT – Amtrak
  • New London, CT – Station history at Great American Stations (Amtrak)
  • Shore Line East – New London, CT
  • Greyhound – New London, Connecticut
  • New London, CT (USA Rail Guide – Train Web)
  • Station Building on Google Maps Street View
  • Historic American Engineering Record entry and images for New London Union Station

london, union, station, railroad, station, northeast, corridor, located, downtown, london, connecticut, united, states, union, station, station, stop, most, amtrak, northeast, regional, trains, ctrail, shore, line, east, commuter, rail, trains, making, primary. New London Union Station is a railroad station on the Northeast Corridor located in downtown New London Connecticut United States Union Station is a station stop for most Amtrak Northeast Regional trains and all CTrail Shore Line East commuter rail trains making it the primary railroad station in southeastern Connecticut It serves as the centerpiece of the Regional Intermodal Transit Center with connections to local and intercity buses as well as ferries to Long Island and Fishers Island New York and Block Island Rhode Island The station has one side platform and one island platform serving the two track Northeast Corridor the latter platform also serves a siding track that connects to the New England Central Railroad mainline New London CTFront view of New London Union Station in July 2012General informationLocation35 Water StreetNew London ConnecticutUnited StatesOwned byNew London RR Company station 1 Amtrak track and platforms 2 Line s Amtrak Northeast Corridor 2 New England Central RailroadPlatforms1 side platform1 island platformTracks3ConnectionsSEAT 1 2 3 12 13 14 15 1089 Town Transit 643Greyhound LinesCross Sound FerryBlock Island Express FerryFishers Island FerryConstructionParkingYesAccessibleYesOther informationStation codeAmtrak NLCHistoryOpened1848 NLW amp P 1852 NH amp NL Rebuilt1861 NLW amp P 1864 NLN 1886 1887 Union Station Renovations 1976 77 2002 03PassengersFY 2022138 728 3 Amtrak 201966 daily boardings 4 Shore Line East ServicesPreceding station Amtrak Following stationOld Saybrooktoward Norfolk Newport News or Roanoke Northeast Regional Mystictoward Boston South Acela does not stop herePreceding station CT Rail Following stationOld Saybrooktoward Stamford Shore Line East TerminusFormer servicesPreceding station New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad Following stationWaterfordtoward New Haven Shore Line Grotontoward BostonTerminus Norwich Branch Grotontoward WorcesterPreceding station Central Vermont Railway Following stationTerminus Main Line East New Londontoward St JohnsPreceding station Amtrak Following stationNew Haventoward Washington D C Acela Providencetoward Boston SouthMontrealer Willimantictoward MontrealUnion StationU S National Register of Historic PlacesCoordinates41 21 15 N 72 05 35 W 41 35417 N 72 09306 W 41 35417 72 09306ArchitectHenry Hobson Richardson 5 NRHP reference No 71000913 5 Added to NRHPJune 1971 5 6 LocationRail service to New London began with the New London Willimantic and Palmer Railroad in 1848 and the New Haven and New London Railroad in 1852 The original stations were each replaced in the 1860s after several consolidations they were served by the Central Vermont Railway CV and New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad New Haven by the 1870s After one of the stations burned in 1885 a new three story brick union station was erected in 1887 It was the last and largest railroad station designed by famed architect H H Richardson and his best according to biographer Henry Russell Hitchcock 7 8 Passenger service declined in the 20th century all CV passenger service to New London ended in 1949 The New London Redevelopment Agency began planning in 1961 to demolish the station as part of urban renewal Amtrak took over passenger service in May 1971 Union Station was added to the National Register of Historic Places the next month following a local effort After several years of controversy over whether to demolish or preserve the structure it was purchased by architect George M Notter in 1975 Notter s firm renovated the station for combined use by Amtrak and commercial tenants it was the first station to be restored for Amtrak s use and one of the earliest cases of adaptive reuse of an industrial age building in New England Shore Line East commuter service joined Amtrak intercity service at the station in 1996 High level platforms were added in 2001 to serve the new Acela Express service A second renovation in 2002 03 restored the exterior and returned the waiting room to its original configuration The planned National Coast Guard Museum which will be located across the tracks from the station will include a long planned footbridge over the tracks Contents 1 History and design 1 1 Early stations 1 2 H H Richardson station 1 3 Decline and revival 1 4 Turn of the century 1 5 Shore Line East 1 6 Upgrades and Coast Guard Museum 2 Layout 3 Service 3 1 Intermodal connections 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory and design edit nbsp 1852 built station on an 1854 landscape nbsp The ex NYP amp B station at right in 1883Early stations edit Union Station is the sixth railroad station to serve New London When the New London Willimantic and Palmer Railroad opened in 1848 an existing building on Water Street a block east of Federal Street was converted into a station 9 10 A two story Greek Revival depot was built near the modern location in 1852 with the arrival of the New Haven and New London Railroad NH amp NL The New London Willimantic and Palmer continued to use its older station for some time although a track was built to join the two railroads 10 In 1854 a connecting track was opened through downtown Norwich allowing trains from the Norwich and Worcester Railroad to connect with steamships at New London rather than Allyn s Point Use of the connection stopped in November 1855 but was continuous after April 1859 11 After the completion of the New London and Stonington Railroad to Groton Wharf in 1858 ferry service ran from New London to Groton to allow through railroad service 11 The NH amp NL station was soon too small to handle large passenger loads and the Bureau of Railroad Commissioners was petitioned for a new station as early as 1859 10 The New Haven and New London Railroad merged with the New London and Stonington in 1857 to form the New Haven New London and Stonington Railroad The line was leased by the New York Providence and Boston Railroad NYP amp B in 1859 The NYP amp B bought the section east of Groton outright in 1864 the section from New London westward was spun off as the Shore Line Railway In 1870 the Shore Line was leased by the New York and New Haven Railroad which itself became part of the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad in 1872 11 At some point during this series of events the 1852 built station was replaced by a larger two story structure which was also used by some through trains from the north 10 In 1861 the New London Northern Railroad succeeded the New London Willimantic and Palmer 11 That year the railroad constructed a freight depot and steamboat wharf likely also used for passenger trains along Water Street The depot burned on May 8 1864 but was rebuilt on the same site 10 The NYP amp B era station was highly unpopular the Bureau was petitioned for a replacement not long after it was built and local newspapers took up the issue in 1874 and 1875 In 1877 the commissioners referred to the wholly insufficient and inconvenient accommodations at the station When the building burned on February 5 1885 one newspaper remarked few New London people are sorry as the ancient structure had long since outlived its usefulness It was torn down in April 1886 10 H H Richardson station edit nbsp Union Station shortly after its completion nbsp Sever Hall which Richardson designed in 1878 was his inspiration for much of Union Station s design nbsp Union Station on an early postcard showing the distinctive eyebrow canopyAfter the previous depot was destroyed the Central Vermont Railroad which then leased the New London Northern began making plans for a larger replacement station The Central Vermont and the New Haven Railroad which had bought the Shore Line in 1870 bought the east end of the Parade from New London for the unusually low price of 15 000 with the understanding that the railroads would build a structure more suitable for the bustling city 12 Noted American architect Henry Hobson Richardson known for his public buildings including several Boston and Albany Railroad depots was hired by the Central Vermont in September 1885 to design the new station Richardson likely obtained the commission through his friend and former classmate James A Rumrill who was a director of the railroad 13 New London was the last of many railroad stations worked on by Richardson before his death in 1886 though numerous others were designed by his students including the nearby New London Public Library designed by Shepley Rutan and Coolidge Many of Richardson s later attributed works were designed primarily by his office staff but the quality of the design indicates that it was closely supervised by Richardson 8 Richardson s biographer Henry Russell Hitchcock considered New London to be his best station design 8 Union Station is particularly large for a Richardson train station and stands out as the only of his stations not built in the Richardsonian Romanesque style of Trinity Church in Boston Instead it is a severe compact brick box with significant Colonial influence taken from other buildings in New London 9 14 Its design is heavily based on Sever Hall at Harvard University which Richardson designed in 1878 The station has a similar profile brick color and patterns and arched entryway but lacks the ornamentation of Sever 8 13 Richardson originally designed Union Station with rough stone walls and Longmeadow trim like his other stations but the material was changed to less expensive brick shortly before construction the ornamentation was also likely eliminated at this time 7 The strict symmetry is atypical of Richardson s designs and may have been a later change by Shepley Rutan and Coolidge after Richardson s death 7 Although different from his other stations the 2 1 2 story structure features many of Richardson s characteristic motifs including its multi faceted roof prominent arched entrance and elegant brickwork 15 Like many of his stations the roofline is dominant and contrasts the monochrome walls The bricks are arranged in a mixture of Flemish bond and two different herringbone styles broken by details around windows and doors to create visual interest 2 A projecting central section tempers the roofline on the east and west facades while the dormers shown a slight Asian influence common in his designs The rear bay window the lone circular element save for the matching arched front doorway served as the ticket booth 2 The ceiling and third floor are suspended from the roof trusses using an array of 2 inch 51 mm diameter iron rods which allowed for a large two story waiting room without interior columns 14 The platform canopy was notable for matching the broad curve of the tracks it originally extended further south with a raised eyebrow section over State Street 9 The new station began construction in September 1886 and opened in 1887 with a total cost of 76 300 13 It was designated a union station as it connected two railroads the Central Vermont Railroad which succeeded the New London Willimantic and Palmer and the Shore Line which would merge into the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad in 1897 The Thames River Bridge was opened in October 1889 connecting the station to the New York Providence and Boston Railroad and completing the Shore Line rail link from New York to Boston The southern end of the Norwich and Worcester Railroad was completed through Gales Ferry in June 1899 allowing traffic from Worcester to reach New London via the bridge rather than through Norwich 11 Around 1912 New London citizens successfully petitioned the Public Utilities Commission for the installation of a footbridge connecting the station to the ferry docks in order to improve pedestrian safety At the time with no bridge crossing the river below Norwich the ferries were heavily used The footbridge constructed of steel with a canopy to keep out rain was constructed soon after 16 Decline and revival edit nbsp The 1912 built pedestrian bridge shortly before its 1961 demolitionCentral Vermont passenger service running north ended in 1949 but service running east and west along the Shore Line has remained continuous since the station was built 11 In the latter days of the New Haven Railroad infrastructure was not maintained in order to cut costs and stations like New London suffered for it In 1953 the railroad asked the Public Utilities Commission for permission to remove the footbridge but the request was denied The railroad petitioned again in 1961 seeking to spend 1 250 to remove the bridge rather than 15 000 repairing it Of the average 132 people using the bridge daily versus 612 crossing the tracks on the street most were reportedly using it as an observation post to view the harbor 16 17 nbsp The waiting room before the 1976 77 renovation nbsp Interior of the station after the 1976 77 renovationIn 1961 the New London Redevelopment Agency called for the station to be demolished to make room for a shopping mall or department store as an urban renewal project This began a fifteen year fight over the station building pitting the Redevelopment Agency against a small group of private citizens who wished to have the building restored for further use 18 The city paid 120 000 to buy the station demolition costs were estimated at 55 000 19 The New Haven Railroad folded into Penn Central in 1969 continually beset with financial problems Penn Central had no interest in investing in the station 19 The station by this time was a dust covered derelict with urine soaked floors and peeling ceilings 18 Amtrak took over intercity passenger service on May 1 1971 Penn Central continued to operate a limited amount of local service that was discontinued over the rest of the decade 20 After a local effort Union Station was added to the National Register of Historic Places NRHP in June 1971 over the lobbying efforts of former mayor Richard Martin Martin claimed that ninety percent of the city agreed with the redevelopment plans Under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 the addition to the NRHP prevented local authorities from using federal funds for demolition although the law did not provide for enforcement or punishment 6 19 The conflict was generally seen locally as outside meddlers state officials rich out of state bleeding hearts and historians interfering with local plans that would improve the city Robert P Turk director of the Redevelopment Agency wrote a letter accusing preservationists of dealing in pure academic nonsense 21 Frank Scheetz a Groton local and former submariner attempted to buy the station for use as a submarine museum with plans to berth a decommissioned submarine nearby 6 The Redevelopment Agency rejected Scheetz s offer claiming he was a speculator Scheetz alleged that the city duplicitously changed prices in order to refuse the legitimate offer 19 Scheetz later funded the display of the USS Croaker in Groton from 1977 to 1987 and was instrumental in bringing the USS Nautilus to permanent display at Submarine Force Library and Museum at the Naval Submarine Base New London in the 1980s 22 In September 1973 the City Council voted to allow demolition Amtrak responded with a letter stating that the company wanted to discuss the possibility of preservation and would be willing to contribute financially 6 That year a number of the same local activists formed the Union Railroad Station Trust intending to restore the station 2 On February 20 1975 the Redevelopment Agency voted to demolish the building 23 Union Railroad Station Trust asked the Boston architectural firm Anderson Notter Associates to prepare a study of adding office and restaurant space 24 George M Notter one of the firm s principals and later president of the American Institute of Architects was an early advocate of adaptive reuse 2 25 Surprised that no developers were pursuing what he saw as a sure profit Notter formed Union Station Associates as a subsidiary of Anderson Notter and invested a substantial sum of his own money into the station Notter convinced Amtrak to agree to a 20 year lease for part of the station at 45 000 annually thus giving the group a stronger negotiating point 18 26 After eighteen months of negotiations Union Station Associates purchased the building on July 24 1975 effectively saving the station 24 27 The group paid only the cost of the underlying land 11 400 the same figure Scheetz initially offered two years before 18 19 nbsp An Amtrak train passes the renovated station and 1976 built platforms in 1983Union Station Associates spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on a full renovation of the building for combined use by Amtrak and commercial tenants 18 The exterior was restored to the original 1885 specifications 15 However some of the interior work modified the station far from its original configuration A mezzanine was built over half the waiting area to provide restaurant seating and the floor of the rest was cut out to create an atrium The basement became the passenger waiting area with a newsstand and a plant shop occupying additional space 26 28 New wider platforms were built to improve the boarding experience 9 The renovated station was celebrated and rededicated in July 1976 18 The New London Day which five years before called the station an eyesore ran their coverage under the headline We were wrong 24 New London Union Station was the first station in the country to be restored for Amtrak use 15 It represented a watershed in historic preservation as one of the first industrial age structures in New England to be reused a shift away from the previous attitude that valued only Colonial buildings as well as the recognition of the historic value of the old downtowns of New England s port cities 24 Turn of the century edit nbsp An Acela train at the southbound high level platform constructed in 2001 to allow the then new high speed service to stop at New LondonAs Notter predicted the renovated station initially proved attractive to commercial tenants When an engineering firm moved into the Crow s Nest of the attic space in the late 1980s the building was fully occupied for the first time since the heyday of the New Haven railroad 14 However Notter and others involved in the 1975 purchase were approaching retirement age In the late 1990s the city offered to buy the station for use as a maritime museum detailing the history of the adjacent Thames River No longer worried about the safety of the building the developers sold and the tenants moved elsewhere 14 In 1996 the well connected owners of Cross Sound Ferry proposed a footbridge from the Water Street parking garage to the ferry slips so that ferry passengers would not have to cross Water Street and the tracks at grade Amtrak saw the project as an opportunity to build a new elevated station nearby and contributed 1 million to the design of the bridge However Amtrak reversed course in 1999 and decided to keep using Union Station in 2001 the railroad declined to fund the footbridge 29 Also in 2001 Amtrak built a pair of high level platforms to serve the new Acela high speed service thus adapting the 19th century station for 21st century usage Catenary wires were installed over the tracks as part of the introduction of the Acela 30 31 Late that year or early in 2002 the 1899 built freight house on the east side of the tracks was torn down as part of redevelopment sponsored by the New London Development Corporation The freight house had previously been used by Amtrak maintenance of way crews and before that by the Fishers Island Ferry District 9 nbsp Waiting room restored to its original specifications after the 2002 03 renovationBy this time many of the 1970s repairs were beginning to wear down and the city put aside its plans for the maritime museum 14 The New London Railroad Company fronted by historian Barbara Timken and local businessman Todd O Donnell bought the station from the city as the New London Railroad Company in 2002 The pair organized a second full restoration of the station including a new slate roof restored brickwork and restoration of the waiting room to its original configuration 2 The mezzanine level and basement atrium created in the 1976 renovation were removed 14 Additionally mechanical systems were upgraded and various accessibility concerns addressed The baggage room was restored for Greyhound use 28 Amtrak and Greyhound rent space from the company for offices and passenger waiting areas 32 Despite Amtrak s disinterest in the project Cross Sound continued to pursue construction of the footbridge Standing as high as 73 feet 22 m higher than the station itself the bridge was to cost 10 million paid by public funds 29 In 2003 the city used eminent domain to take portions of the station property in order to build a footbridge from the Water Street parking garage to the ferry slips on the east side of the tracks The city only wished to pay for the small area taken up by the footprints but O Donnell wanted more compensation because the large footbridge would detract from the aesthetics of the historic station With no agreement reached the issue went to court 14 Meanwhile O Donnell was in a financial conundrum the taxi and auto traffic generated by the bus rail and ferry traffic was limiting his ability to lease space in the station He abandoned renovations to the upper floors and was forced to consider ending the leases with Amtrak and Greyhound and seek alternate tenants 14 33 In 2007 the city abandoned the eminent domain case and scrapped the footbridge plans although O Donnell was still considering selling the building 14 Shore Line East edit nbsp A weekend Shore Line East train arrives at New London in June 2013In February 1996 a single Shore Line East weekday round trip was extended from Old Saybrook to New London An additional round trip was extended in February 2010 and 3 more in May 2010 for a total of 5 daily round trips between New London and New Haven 34 Weekend Shore Line East service between Old Saybrook and New Haven Union Station began in 2008 but no regular weekend trains ran to New London 35 In July 2012 Governor Dannel Malloy announced that 5 weekend round trips would be extended to New London beginning in April 2013 However the extension was dependent on ongoing negotiations with the marine industry over mandated closings of the Old Saybrook Old Lyme bridge 36 Two weekday midday trips were added in May 2013 while weekend service began on June 1 2013 after the application for additional bridge closings was approved by the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection 37 38 Because Shore Line East service to New London is limited Amtrak honors monthly Shore Line East passes on select intercity trains between New London and New Haven 39 By 2019 weekend Shore Line East ridership at New London was nearly twice weekday ridership 4 Upgrades and Coast Guard Museum edit nbsp Union Station is the centerpiece of the Regional Intermodal Transportation Center which also includes bus taxi and ferry services nbsp Sign indicating Future Home of National Coast Guard Museum on an unused plot behind New London Union StationIn 2006 the Southeastern Connecticut Council of Governments SCCOG began a study of how to improve the Regional Intermodal Transportation Center RITC including Union Station 14 The study analyzed problems with the RITC including poor pedestrian connections minimal bus facilities and a lack of food vendors and considered but rejected a move to a Fort Trumbull site The proposed alternative released in 2010 which would cost around 20 million would relocate Water Street slightly to the west The bus terminal would be expanded with a new building adding onto the existing former baggage office A pedestrian bridge was to be constructed connecting the Water Street Garage the main station area the northbound Amtrak platform and the ferry terminal a design that served station passengers as well as the ferries Other pedestrian improvements were to include wayfinding signs pedestrian scale lighting and expanded sidewalks 32 Beginning in 2010 Union Station was considered a possible site for the National Coast Guard Museum which would have added a glass atrium north of the main station building as well as a pedestrian bridge over the tracks to a second waterfront building The Coast Guard removed the site from consideration in May 2012 due to opposition from Cross Sound Ferry over use of its property The station s private owners stated that they would consider other uses for the space 40 However after further consideration the Coast Guard announced in April 2013 that the museum was to be located at Union Station 41 The main portion of the museum is to be located east of the tracks with a new 500 passenger ferry terminal likely integrated into the four story 54 300 square foot glass faced building 42 A pedestrian bridge will connect the museum to the station and the northbound platform as well as to the Water Street garage 43 In July 2013 the station owners sent a letter of concern to the state seeking that the Environmental Impact Report for the museum and footbridge consider a breadth of possible impacts particularly from the footbridge 44 The museum itself received a Finding Of No Significant Impact in March 2014 The Environmental Impact Evaluation for the footbridge released in July 2014 analyzed seven alternatives for the footbridge location Alternative 5a located east of the baggage building and including a section to the garage was the preferred alternative 43 The state committed 20 million towards the cost of the potential footbridge 45 In 2014 O Donnell and Timken began talks with the Coast Guard Museum Association about selling the station to a third party investor associated with the Association 45 The sale was originally to be effective at the end of 2014 but was delayed because the Redevelopment Agency never issued a formal certificate of completion for the 1975 sale and renovations Since the Agency was dissolved in 2008 the City Council issued the certificate in early January 2015 allowing the sale the proceed 46 On January 12 the Council released the station from the 1960s urban renewal plan as part of an agreement with O Donnell and Timken to ease the sale process The new agreement also included stipulations for historic preservation of the building and allowed but did not require its continued use as a train station 47 On January 29 2015 Union Station Development sold the station to the New London RR Company a holding company owned by James Coleman Jr chairman of the Association for 3 million 1 48 Coleman brought in a restaurant serving locally sourced food for the first floor and intended to renovate the second floor for use by museum related tenants 49 Electrification and track work on Track 6 necessary to allow use of M8 electric railcars on Shore Line East took place from November 2021 to April 2022 50 The cars entered service for Shore Line East that May 51 52 In June 2023 the US Department of Transportation awarded 17 million for transportation improvements in downtown New London including the footbridge and station renovations 53 Layout editvteNew London Union StationLegend1 nbsp 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp New England Central nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Express office nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp abandoned NB platformStation building nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NB high level platform nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Track 6 stub platformSB low level platform nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp State StreetSB high level platform nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NB low level platform1 nbsp nbsp 2 nbsp 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Northbound high level platform right southbound low level platform and station buildingNew London has an unconventional platform layout due to the State Street grade crossing and its location on a sharp curve The two Northeast Corridor tracks Tracks 1 and 2 are next to the station while the New England Central Railroad formerly Central Vermont freight track Track 6 is further away 30 54 Both NEC tracks have high level platforms which were added in 2001 for use by Acela trains which cannot use low platforms 30 The southbound NEC track is served by a low platform behind the station which leads to a short high level platform south of State Street The northbound NEC track is served by a high level platform behind the station building the low platform south of State Street is generally only used for deboarding passengers from busy trains 30 Because of the sharp curve the high level platforms are set slightly back from the tracks to avoid scraping the ends of train cars and thus bridge plates are needed to span the gap between platform and car 55 The northbound platform currently a side platform can serve as an island platform should passenger service return to the NECR track The 2010 SCCOG report indicated that Amtrak wished Shore Line East to move its operations to Track 6 freeing the mainline tracks for through trains 32 In 2013 most Shore Line East trains began using Track 6 Most passengers use the low level section of the platform south of State Street but a short metal spur on the high level platform provides handicapped accessible boarding for trains using the track 30 A low level section of the northbound platform also remains north of the high level section it has not been used since the high level section was constructed The southbound platform is adjacent to the station building and its high level section requires crossing only a lightly used spur of State Street However access to the northbound platform requires crossing both Northeast Corridor tracks The footbridge to the planned Coast Guard Museum will allow access to the northbound platform without crossing tracks which will improve safety and prevent passengers from being trapped on the platform by stopped trains 32 Service edit nbsp A southbound Acela train at New LondonAll Amtrak Northeast Regional trains that run on the Northeast Corridor east of New Haven about 9 trains each direction daily stop at New London The station was previously also served by a small number of Acela trains one southbound train in the morning and northbound trains in the morning and evening When Acela trains served the station most ran nonstop between Providence and New Haven 56 Acela service was discontinued by 2022 57 Shore Line East service to New London is limited by slots available over the Connecticut River bridge between Old Saybrook and Old Lyme service is operated at uneven headways on weekdays and weekends Multi ride and monthly Shore Line East tickets are accepted on several Northeast Regional trains as well 58 The Central Corridor Rail Line is a proposed regional service which would run from New London north through Norwich Willimantic and Amherst to Brattleboro Vermont over the New England Central Railroad While locally supported by some towns along the route the service is not currently funded 59 Intermodal connections edit nbsp Greyhound station at the former baggage and express office in 2012 Greyhound no longer uses the building nbsp Cross Sound ferries and a Block Island Express ferrySeveral ferry services run from docks on Ferry Street just north of the station The Cross Sound Ferry runs to Orient Point on Long Island with approximately hourly service year round The Block Island Fast Ferry a high speed catamaran to Block Island runs several daily round trips during the summer months The Fishers Island Ferry offers year round local service to Fisher s Island about 5 miles offshore with multiple daily trips 2 Greyhound Bus Lines offers limited intercity service from a stop on Water Street Current service consists of two daily buses in each direction operating along the I 95 corridor with transfers available to other routes in Boston New Haven and New York City Greyhound and Peter Pan Bus which no longer serves New London previously used the former baggage and express office 9 32 Union Station is one of four major transfer points for Southeast Area Transit SEAT local bus service with timed connections on a clock face schedule between several routes running from New London to nearby areas including Norwich Groton Niantic Waterford and Foxwoods Casino SEAT buses serving the station stop at a shelter north of the station building on Water Street 32 The following SEAT routes run from Union Station 1 Norwich Mohegan Sun New London Route 32 2 Norwich Groton New London Route 12 3 Groton New London Niantic 12 Jefferson Avenue Crystal Mall New London Shopping Center Senior Center 13 Shaws Cove L amp M Hospital Ocean Beach 14 New London Mall Waterford Commons Crystal Mall New London Shopping Center 15 New London Waterford Evening Service 101 Norwich Mohegan Sun New London Route 32 108 New London Groton Mistick Village FoxwoodsUnion Station is also served by 9 Town Transit route 643 The drop off lane in front of the station also serves as a taxi stand for several local companies Special buses to Foxwoods Casino which connect primarily to Cross Sound Ferry services also stop nearby 32 See also editNational Register of Historic Places listings in New London County ConnecticutReferences edit a b Warranty Deed PDF New London RR CO January 28 2015 a b c d e f g h NEW LONDON CT NLC Great American Stations Amtrak Retrieved May 6 2016 Amtrak Fact Sheet Fiscal Year 2022 State of Connecticut PDF Amtrak June 2023 Retrieved August 30 2023 a b Attachment 8 Shore Line East station ridership PDF Facility Management Services for Various Railroad Station Facilities for Region C Connecticut Department of Transportation 2021 a b c Connecticut New London County National Register of Historic Places National Park Service a b c d Amtrak Urges the Preservation Of Periled New London Station The New York Times September 23 1973 p 29 via Proquest Historical Newspapers a b c Floyd Margaret Henderson 1997 Henry Hobson Richardson A Genius for Architecture Monacelli Press pp 200 218 ISBN 1885254709 a b c d Hitchcock Henry Russell 1961 The Architecture of H H Richardson and His Times revised ed Archon Books pp 273 278 ISBN 9780262580052 a b c d e f Roy John H Jr 2007 A Field Guide to Southern New England Railroad Depots and Freight Houses Branch Line Press pp 72 74 ISBN 9780942147087 a b c d e f Belletzkie Bob CT Passenger Stations N NE TylerCityStation Retrieved May 16 2013 a b c d e f Karr Ronald Dale 1995 The Rail Lines of Southern New England Branch Line Press p 107 ISBN 0942147022 The Parade a Conspicuous Feature The New London Day July 2 1931 Archived from the original on November 17 2010 via New London Landmarks a b c Ochsner Jeffery Karl 1982 H H Richardson Complete Architectural Works MIT Press pp 403 406 ISBN 0262150239 a b c d e f g h i j Dilts James D Fall Winter 2010 Three Amtrak Stations Take Different Roads to Rehabilitation Railroad History 203 46 50 JSTOR 43525153 a b c McDonald Melissa June 7 1983 Photographs Written Historical and Descriptive Data PDF Historic American Buildings Survey United States National Park Service a b State Gives Its Permission To Raze Railroad Footbridge The New London Day September 9 1961 via Google Newspapers New London Conn railroad station Leroy Roberts Railroad Collection September 14 1958 Archived from the original on June 23 2010 a b c d e f Knight Michael July 23 1976 New London Station Restored by Amtrak New York Times p 19 ProQuest 122879078 a b c d e Knight Michael September 28 1973 Station Landmark or Eyesore Nears End The New York Times p 35 ProQuest 119793625 Baer Christopher T April 2015 A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE SUCCESSORS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY AND THEIR HISTORICAL CONTEXT 1971 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society Huxtable Ada Louise May 9 1971 A Lot Happens In Ten Years The New York Times ProQuest 119093677 Frank Scheetz dies contractor veteran led fight to return Nautilus to Groton The New London Day June 4 1998 p B1 via Google Newspapers Baer Christopher T April 2015 PRR CHRONOLOGY 1975 PDF Pennsylvania Technical and Historical Society Retrieved October 11 2012 a b c d Campbell Robert November 21 1976 Union Station It s more than just a renovation Boston Globe p E3 ProQuest 747838300 Sullivan Patricia December 28 2007 George Notter 74 Architect Remade Old Buildings obituary The Washington Post Retrieved May 16 2013 a b New life for old station Boston Globe September 5 1976 p E3 ProQuest 747472297 Special City Council Meeting Agenda PDF City of New London January 9 2015 a b Union Railroad Station New London s Gem Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation Retrieved May 16 2013 a b Condon Tom January 16 2005 Skywalk Is Not The Ticket For New London Hartford Courant Retrieved September 2 2016 a b c d e Cox Jeremiah December 24 2014 New London CT Subway Nut Retrieved August 30 2016 Acela Express Startup Scheduled Again PDF TrainRider Vol 10 no 3 Train Riders Northeast Fall 2000 p 1 a b c d e f g TranSystems March 2010 Regional Intermodal Transportation Center Master Plan and Efficiency Study Executive Summary PDF Southeastern Connecticut Council of Governments Retrieved May 15 2013 Holtz Jeff August 27 2006 A Station Unsure Where It s Headed New York Times p P2 ProQuest 93090047 All aboard the Shore Line East The New London Day May 9 2010 Retrieved July 12 2012 Governor Rell Announces Weekend Shore Line East Rail Service Starting on 4th of July Press release Connecticut Department of Transportation June 27 2008 Shore Line East Steaming Into New London Hartford Courant July 6 2012 Retrieved July 12 2012 Smith Greg May 17 2013 Shore Line East expands train service The New London Day Retrieved May 20 2013 Altimari Daniela May 30 2013 Shore Line East Adding Weekend Service Hartford Courant Retrieved May 6 2016 Drelich Kimberly July 10 2015 Commuters officials cheer Amtrak honoring Shore Line East tickets The New London Day Retrieved September 28 2016 Langevald Dirk May 3 2012 Coast Guard Passes On Union Station As Museum Site New London Patch Retrieved May 6 2016 Kathleen Edgecomb and Jennifer McDermott April 5 2013 Great expectations for New London come with national museum The New London Day Retrieved May 15 2013 Petrone Paul April 5 2013 A National Coast Guard Museum For Downtown New London Waterford Patch Retrieved May 6 2016 a b Milone amp MacBroom INC July 2014 ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT EVALUATION NATIONAL COAST GUARD MUSEUM PEDESTRIAN OVERPASS NEW LONDON CONNECTICUT PDF State of Connecticut Department of Economic amp Community Development Timken Barbara O Donnell Todd Quinn Daniel July 17 2003 Re Request for Scoping Determination CEPA Scoping Notice June 4 2013 U S National Coast Guard Museum PDF GreenbergTraurig a b Bergman Julia December 14 2014 Sale of Union Station is near on behalf of Coast Guard Museum group The New London Day Retrieved September 5 2016 Bergman Julia January 6 2015 Sale of Union Station delayed by lack of document The New London Day Retrieved September 5 2016 Young Colin A Bergman Julia January 13 2015 New London s Union Station sale takes step forward The New London Day Retrieved September 5 2016 Bergman Julia January 30 2015 Coast Guard museum project may be picking up steam The New London Day Retrieved September 5 2016 Bergman Julia July 10 2016 Union Station owner in town to check on progress The New London Day Retrieved September 28 2016 Project Information Appendix Northeast Corridor Capital Investment Plan Fiscal Years 2022 2026 PDF Northeast Corridor Commission October 2021 p A3 46 Governor Lamont Announces That M8 Electric Trains Have Arrived on Shore Line East Office of the Governor of Connecticut Press release May 24 2022 Hartley Scott A May 24 2022 Connecticut replaces diesel Shore Line East trains with electric multiple unit equipment Trains Magazine Retrieved May 31 2022 RAISE 2023 Fact Sheets PDF United States Department of Transportation June 2023 p 29 TranSystems November 2010 Analysis of Costs for the Operation and Maintenance of the Transportation Related Areas of New London Union Station the Adjacent Greyhound Facility and the Water Street Parking Garage PDF Regional Intermodal Transportation Center Master Plan and Efficiency Study Southeastern Connecticut Council of Governments pp 9 10 Northeast Corridor Employee Timetable 5 PDF Amtrak October 6 2014 Archived from the original PDF on February 3 2016 via National Transportation Safety Board Northeast Corridor Timetable PDF Amtrak March 10 2018 Retrieved June 3 2018 Acela Train Retrieved April 10 2022 Expanding Rail Service PDF Connecticut Department of Transportation January 1 2007 Benson Adam February 21 2014 Rail line plan to seek federal funding Norwich Bulletin Retrieved August 30 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to New London Union Station New London CT Amtrak New London CT Station history at Great American Stations Amtrak Shore Line East New London CT Greyhound New London Connecticut New London CT USA Rail Guide Train Web Station Building on Google Maps Street View Historic American Engineering Record entry and images for New London Union Station Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New London Union Station amp oldid 1187730931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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