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West Haven station

West Haven station is a commuter rail station on the Metro-North Railroad's New Haven Line, located in West Haven, Connecticut. The station was built on Sawmill Road between Hood Terrace and Railroad Avenue, in the Elm Street-Wagner Place neighborhood. West Haven has 660 parking spaces in on-site lots (with the possibility of 300–400 more in a parking garage in a refurbished industrial building north of the station if warranted by future demand) as well as bicycle facilities. The station is accessible. West Haven has full service on the New Haven Line, as well as from the handful of Shore Line East trains which run past New Haven to Stamford.[2]

West Haven
A New Haven Line train passes West Haven
General information
Location20 Railroad Avenue
West Haven, Connecticut
Coordinates41°16′16″N 72°57′48″W / 41.271142°N 72.963199°W / 41.271142; -72.963199
Line(s)ConnDOT New Haven Line (Northeast Corridor)
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks4
Construction
Parking660 spaces
AccessibleYes
Other information
Fare zone21
History
OpenedAugust 18, 2013 (2013-08-18)
Passengers
20181,117 daily boardings[1] (Metro-North)
Services
Preceding station Metro-North Railroad Following station
Milford New Haven Line New Haven
Preceding station CT Rail Following station
Milford
toward Stamford
Shore Line East
peak service
New Haven Union Station
toward New London

After a decade of studies, planning, and controversy over the station site, ground was broken for the station on November 10, 2010.[3] The $80 million project included the station, with two 12-car platforms, a glass station building, and an overhead pedestrian bridge, as well as the restoration of the formerly abandoned fourth mainline track through the station. It is only the second new station on the line in a century, after Fairfield Metro in 2011. The station opened to passengers on August 18, 2013.[4][5]

Shore Line East service at the station was suspended indefinitely on March 16, 2020, due to the coronavirus pandemic.[6][7]

History edit

Original stations edit

 
1916 valuation photo of the 1915 eastbound station building at West Haven, with the canopy of the 1895 westbound building behind

During the 19th and early 20th centuries, a station stop was located in West Haven between Washington and Campbell Avenues, about 0.7 miles (1.1 km) east of the modern station. The first West Haven station, at Washington Avenue, opened along with the rest of the New York and New Haven Railroad on December 25, 1848. The wood-framed building, located on the south (eastbound) side of the tracks, was moved west halfway to Campbell Avenue in 1895 when the line was quadruple-tracked.[8] At that time, a second station was built on the westbound side across from the older station. The first station burned down on February 26, 1914, and was replaced by a new building by the middle of 1915.[8] As trains grew longer and heavier, closely spaced village stops were retired in favor of more widely spaced downtown stations. West Haven closed in the mid-1920s, though the eastbound station building was not demolished until the 1940s.[8] The station was briefly proposed to reopen in the 1950s following the construction of a Veterans Affairs hospital nearby; however, this did not come to fruition, and the idea was largely abandoned for several decades.[8]

A short-lived station was also located at Front Avenue in West Haven on the New Haven and Derby Railroad. The station was at street level, with stairs to the platform on the elevated tracks. The station opened in 1871 and was closed by 1914.[8]

Planning for a new station edit

In the late 1990s, Metro-North began considering adding a station in either West Haven or neighboring Orange to fill the ten-mile (16 km) gap between the Milford and New Haven stations—the longest such gap on the New Haven mainline. Both town governments were supportive of a station, which was then to cost $25–30 million. Support in West Haven was largely rallied by the West Haven Train Station Committee Inc., which circulated a petition eventually signed by 7600 residents. Support in Orange was both local by the Orange Railroad Committee and also aided by several employers, including Bayer Pharmaceuticals, whose employees were likely to use the station.[9] In fall 2001, a site study and a regional transportation committee recommended the Orange site (at Marsh Hill Road) based on cost, time considerations, and highway access. However, in December 2001, the South Central Council of Governments voted instead to support the West Haven site, citing the economic needs of West Haven versus comparatively wealthy Orange.[9]

Orange's first selectman originally planned to appeal the decision, and controversy continued.[9] The sustained bitter animosity between the two towns was cited in a study of bargaining between municipalities.[10] The Final Environmental Impact Statement, issued in June 2007, considered both station sites, noting that "The recommendation of the West Haven site does not preclude the construction of a commuter railroad station at the Orange site in the future, as the demand for additional parking and service warrants, and as additional funding becomes available."[11] In 2011 - even after ground was broken at West Haven - state lawmakers considered a funding deal to build an Orange station.[12]

Design and funding edit

 
West Haven station under construction in May 2012

In February 2005, the City of West Haven released a proposal for the West Haven station that modified the state's current plan, with less land taking adjacent to the station and a pedestrian bridge across Saw Mill Road to a 629-space garage in the Armonstrong North building. The city's proposal also included transit-oriented development, with a 325-unit residential development on the Armstrong South property and mixed-use buildings along Hood Terrace and Railroad Avenue.[13] On June 19, 2006, West Haven Mayor John M. Picard and U.S. Representative Rosa L. DeLauro announced that DeLauro had secured $1.2 million in federal funding for the project, which brought the federal funding commitment as of that date to $3.2 million.[14][15] The Final Environmental Impact Statement, released in June 2007, estimated the capital cost for the station at $66.56 million including land acquisitions, with a total of 1,074 parking spaces split between lots and a garage. Ridership was estimated at 1,620 daily riders at opening and 1,955 by 2025, with about 20% new transit users rather than diverted from New Haven or Milford stations.[11]

Design was one-third complete and construction planned for fall 2009 when initial renderings were released in June 2008, with costs estimated at $100 million.[16] The State Bond Commission authorized a $103 million bond for station construction in 2009.[17]

Construction edit

 
The nearly complete station in May 2013
 
Signage at the station three weeks before opening

About 12 miles (19 km) of Track 4 - the southbound outside track - was taken out of service for passenger trains in the mid-1980s to reduce maintenance costs. The track was removed entirely between Devon and Woodmont, and reduced to freight use only between Woodmont and New Haven. The West Haven station project involved restoration of the New Haven Line's original configuration of 4 electrified main tracks in the five-mile (8.0 km) stretch from New Haven to Woodmont, leaving Woodmont to Devon as the only remaining triple-track section of the New Haven Line. The fourth track allows Metro-North local trains to stay exclusively on the outer tracks, leaving the inner tracks for passing Amtrak service and Metro-North expresses. The track restoration and re-electrification represented $33.68 million of the project cost.[17] The restoration used new material, while the old rails and ties were reconditioned for use elsewhere in the state on freight-only and museum trackage.[18]

Groundbreaking was held on November 10, 2010, with the presence of outgoing Governor Jodi Rell. At the time, the station was expected to cost $118 million and open by the end of 2012.[3] After a year of site preparation and foundation work, construction began in earnest in early 2012. In April 2012, the state announced that the station was coming in under budget, with a cost of $80 million plus $25 million in previous property acquisition and design work.[17] The majority of station and building construction was completed by the end of 2012, with primarily electrical, interior finishing, and paving work remaining.[19] In March 2013, as the station neared completion, some of the original station advocates began pushing to use money left over from construction to build a parking garage at the site.[20]

In February 2013, Metro-North proposed to include West Haven in the same fare zone as New Haven Union Station and State Street station. The station was originally to open on June 1, 2013, but these plans were derailed by construction delays and the death of a track worker who was struck by a train in late May.[4][21] The station ultimately opened on August 18, 2013, with a formal ribbon-cutting the next day.[4][22]

Platforms and tracks edit

The station has two high-level side platforms, which can accommodate 12-car trains, serving the outer tracks of the four-track Northeast Corridor.[23]: 23 

References edit

  1. ^ Metro-North 2018 Weekday Station Boardings. Metro-North Railroad Market Analysis/Fare Policy Group. April 2019. p. 6.
  2. ^ "Metro-North's New West Haven Station Opens On New Haven Line Sunday". Port Chester Daily Voice. August 13, 2013. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  3. ^ a b Pinto, Amanda (November 10, 2010). "All Aboard: Ground broken on much anticipated West Haven rail station". New Haven Register. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c Bowen, Douglas John (July 15, 2013). "Metro-North West Haven Station to open Aug. 18". Railway Age. Retrieved July 16, 2013.
  5. ^ Walmsley, Ebony (August 19, 2013). "New West Haven train station open for business". New Haven Register on-line. Retrieved August 19, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ @SLEalerts (March 13, 2020). "Effective 3/16/20, ALL weekday (Monday - Friday) CTrail Shore Line East trains will operate on an enhanced weekend schedule until further notice" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  7. ^ (PDF). April 20, 2020. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 20, 2020. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e Belletzkie, Bob. "CT Passenger Stations, W-WE". TylerCityStation. Retrieved May 23, 2013.
  9. ^ a b c Weizel, Richard (January 6, 2002). "And the Winner Is: West Haven, for Now". New York Times. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  10. ^ Myers, Minor III (Fall 2005). "Obstacles to Bargaining Between Local Governments: The Case of West Haven and Orange, Connecticut". The Urban Lawyer. 37 (4): 853–892. JSTOR 27895593.
  11. ^ a b "Final State Environmental Impact Evaluation for the New Railroad Station at City of West Haven or Town of Orange" (PDF). Connecticut Department of Transportation. June 2007. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  12. ^ Hladky, Gregory B. (August 9, 2011). "Do We Really Need That Orange Train Station?". CT.com. Retrieved May 21, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ (PDF). City of West Haven. February 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 28, 2007. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  14. ^ . City of West Haven. Archived from the original on October 8, 2007. Retrieved May 20, 2013.
  15. ^ (Press release). Congresswoman Rosa L. DeLauro. June 19, 2006. Archived from the original on November 11, 2008. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  16. ^ Smith, Abbe (June 9, 2008). "W. Haven station design shows grand transit hub". New Haven Register. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  17. ^ a b c Misur, Susan (April 16, 2012). "West Haven train station work on track; may come in under budget". New Haven Register. Retrieved May 23, 2012.
  18. ^ Misur, Susan (April 19, 2012). "West Haven train station project recycles track". New Haven Reguster. Retrieved May 23, 2012.
  19. ^ Misur, Susan (December 9, 2012). "$80 million West Haven train station takes shape". New Haven Register. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  20. ^ Misur, Susan (March 26, 2013). "Support builds for garage at West Haven train station". New Haven Register. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  21. ^ Dempsey, Christine (May 28, 2013). "Veteran Track Worker Dies In Train Accident". Hartford Courant. Retrieved July 16, 2013.
  22. ^ McNamara, Neal (August 19, 2013). "Officials cut ribbon at new West Haven train station". New Haven Register. Retrieved August 21, 2013.
  23. ^ "Metro-North Railroad Track & Structures Department Track Charts Maintenance Program Interlocking Diagrams & Yard Diagrams 2015" (PDF). Metro-North Railroad. 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2019.

External links edit

  •   Media related to West Haven station at Wikimedia Commons
  • Metro-North station page for West Haven
  • List of upcoming Metro-North train departure times and track assignments from MTA
  • Station from Google Maps Street View

west, haven, station, commuter, rail, station, metro, north, railroad, haven, line, located, west, haven, connecticut, station, built, sawmill, road, between, hood, terrace, railroad, avenue, street, wagner, place, neighborhood, west, haven, parking, spaces, s. West Haven station is a commuter rail station on the Metro North Railroad s New Haven Line located in West Haven Connecticut The station was built on Sawmill Road between Hood Terrace and Railroad Avenue in the Elm Street Wagner Place neighborhood West Haven has 660 parking spaces in on site lots with the possibility of 300 400 more in a parking garage in a refurbished industrial building north of the station if warranted by future demand as well as bicycle facilities The station is accessible West Haven has full service on the New Haven Line as well as from the handful of Shore Line East trains which run past New Haven to Stamford 2 West HavenA New Haven Line train passes West HavenGeneral informationLocation20 Railroad AvenueWest Haven ConnecticutCoordinates41 16 16 N 72 57 48 W 41 271142 N 72 963199 W 41 271142 72 963199Line s ConnDOT New Haven Line Northeast Corridor Platforms2 side platformsTracks4ConstructionParking660 spacesAccessibleYesOther informationFare zone21HistoryOpenedAugust 18 2013 2013 08 18 Passengers20181 117 daily boardings 1 Metro North ServicesPreceding station Metro North Railroad Following station Milfordtoward Grand Central New Haven Line New Haventoward New Haven or New Haven State Street Preceding station CT Rail Following station Milfordtoward Stamford Shore Line Eastpeak service New Haven Union Stationtoward New London After a decade of studies planning and controversy over the station site ground was broken for the station on November 10 2010 3 The 80 million project included the station with two 12 car platforms a glass station building and an overhead pedestrian bridge as well as the restoration of the formerly abandoned fourth mainline track through the station It is only the second new station on the line in a century after Fairfield Metro in 2011 The station opened to passengers on August 18 2013 4 5 Shore Line East service at the station was suspended indefinitely on March 16 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic 6 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Original stations 1 2 Planning for a new station 1 3 Design and funding 1 4 Construction 2 Platforms and tracks 3 References 4 External linksHistory editOriginal stations edit nbsp 1916 valuation photo of the 1915 eastbound station building at West Haven with the canopy of the 1895 westbound building behind During the 19th and early 20th centuries a station stop was located in West Haven between Washington and Campbell Avenues about 0 7 miles 1 1 km east of the modern station The first West Haven station at Washington Avenue opened along with the rest of the New York and New Haven Railroad on December 25 1848 The wood framed building located on the south eastbound side of the tracks was moved west halfway to Campbell Avenue in 1895 when the line was quadruple tracked 8 At that time a second station was built on the westbound side across from the older station The first station burned down on February 26 1914 and was replaced by a new building by the middle of 1915 8 As trains grew longer and heavier closely spaced village stops were retired in favor of more widely spaced downtown stations West Haven closed in the mid 1920s though the eastbound station building was not demolished until the 1940s 8 The station was briefly proposed to reopen in the 1950s following the construction of a Veterans Affairs hospital nearby however this did not come to fruition and the idea was largely abandoned for several decades 8 A short lived station was also located at Front Avenue in West Haven on the New Haven and Derby Railroad The station was at street level with stairs to the platform on the elevated tracks The station opened in 1871 and was closed by 1914 8 Planning for a new station edit In the late 1990s Metro North began considering adding a station in either West Haven or neighboring Orange to fill the ten mile 16 km gap between the Milford and New Haven stations the longest such gap on the New Haven mainline Both town governments were supportive of a station which was then to cost 25 30 million Support in West Haven was largely rallied by the West Haven Train Station Committee Inc which circulated a petition eventually signed by 7600 residents Support in Orange was both local by the Orange Railroad Committee and also aided by several employers including Bayer Pharmaceuticals whose employees were likely to use the station 9 In fall 2001 a site study and a regional transportation committee recommended the Orange site at Marsh Hill Road based on cost time considerations and highway access However in December 2001 the South Central Council of Governments voted instead to support the West Haven site citing the economic needs of West Haven versus comparatively wealthy Orange 9 Orange s first selectman originally planned to appeal the decision and controversy continued 9 The sustained bitter animosity between the two towns was cited in a study of bargaining between municipalities 10 The Final Environmental Impact Statement issued in June 2007 considered both station sites noting that The recommendation of the West Haven site does not preclude the construction of a commuter railroad station at the Orange site in the future as the demand for additional parking and service warrants and as additional funding becomes available 11 In 2011 even after ground was broken at West Haven state lawmakers considered a funding deal to build an Orange station 12 Design and funding edit nbsp West Haven station under construction in May 2012 In February 2005 the City of West Haven released a proposal for the West Haven station that modified the state s current plan with less land taking adjacent to the station and a pedestrian bridge across Saw Mill Road to a 629 space garage in the Armonstrong North building The city s proposal also included transit oriented development with a 325 unit residential development on the Armstrong South property and mixed use buildings along Hood Terrace and Railroad Avenue 13 On June 19 2006 West Haven Mayor John M Picard and U S Representative Rosa L DeLauro announced that DeLauro had secured 1 2 million in federal funding for the project which brought the federal funding commitment as of that date to 3 2 million 14 15 The Final Environmental Impact Statement released in June 2007 estimated the capital cost for the station at 66 56 million including land acquisitions with a total of 1 074 parking spaces split between lots and a garage Ridership was estimated at 1 620 daily riders at opening and 1 955 by 2025 with about 20 new transit users rather than diverted from New Haven or Milford stations 11 Design was one third complete and construction planned for fall 2009 when initial renderings were released in June 2008 with costs estimated at 100 million 16 The State Bond Commission authorized a 103 million bond for station construction in 2009 17 Construction edit nbsp The nearly complete station in May 2013 nbsp Signage at the station three weeks before opening About 12 miles 19 km of Track 4 the southbound outside track was taken out of service for passenger trains in the mid 1980s to reduce maintenance costs The track was removed entirely between Devon and Woodmont and reduced to freight use only between Woodmont and New Haven The West Haven station project involved restoration of the New Haven Line s original configuration of 4 electrified main tracks in the five mile 8 0 km stretch from New Haven to Woodmont leaving Woodmont to Devon as the only remaining triple track section of the New Haven Line The fourth track allows Metro North local trains to stay exclusively on the outer tracks leaving the inner tracks for passing Amtrak service and Metro North expresses The track restoration and re electrification represented 33 68 million of the project cost 17 The restoration used new material while the old rails and ties were reconditioned for use elsewhere in the state on freight only and museum trackage 18 Groundbreaking was held on November 10 2010 with the presence of outgoing Governor Jodi Rell At the time the station was expected to cost 118 million and open by the end of 2012 3 After a year of site preparation and foundation work construction began in earnest in early 2012 In April 2012 the state announced that the station was coming in under budget with a cost of 80 million plus 25 million in previous property acquisition and design work 17 The majority of station and building construction was completed by the end of 2012 with primarily electrical interior finishing and paving work remaining 19 In March 2013 as the station neared completion some of the original station advocates began pushing to use money left over from construction to build a parking garage at the site 20 In February 2013 Metro North proposed to include West Haven in the same fare zone as New Haven Union Station and State Street station The station was originally to open on June 1 2013 but these plans were derailed by construction delays and the death of a track worker who was struck by a train in late May 4 21 The station ultimately opened on August 18 2013 with a formal ribbon cutting the next day 4 22 Platforms and tracks editThe station has two high level side platforms which can accommodate 12 car trains serving the outer tracks of the four track Northeast Corridor 23 23 References edit Metro North 2018 Weekday Station Boardings Metro North Railroad Market Analysis Fare Policy Group April 2019 p 6 Metro North s New West Haven Station Opens On New Haven Line Sunday Port Chester Daily Voice August 13 2013 Retrieved August 19 2013 a b Pinto Amanda November 10 2010 All Aboard Ground broken on much anticipated West Haven rail station New Haven Register Retrieved May 21 2013 a b c Bowen Douglas John July 15 2013 Metro North West Haven Station to open Aug 18 Railway Age Retrieved July 16 2013 Walmsley Ebony August 19 2013 New West Haven train station open for business New Haven Register on line Retrieved August 19 2013 permanent dead link SLEalerts March 13 2020 Effective 3 16 20 ALL weekday Monday Friday CTrail Shore Line East trains will operate on an enhanced weekend schedule until further notice Tweet via Twitter Shore Line East Service Information PDF April 20 2020 Archived from the original PDF on September 20 2020 Retrieved April 29 2020 a b c d e Belletzkie Bob CT Passenger Stations W WE TylerCityStation Retrieved May 23 2013 a b c Weizel Richard January 6 2002 And the Winner Is West Haven for Now New York Times Retrieved May 21 2013 Myers Minor III Fall 2005 Obstacles to Bargaining Between Local Governments The Case of West Haven and Orange Connecticut The Urban Lawyer 37 4 853 892 JSTOR 27895593 a b Final State Environmental Impact Evaluation for the New Railroad Station at City of West Haven or Town of Orange PDF Connecticut Department of Transportation June 2007 Retrieved May 21 2013 Hladky Gregory B August 9 2011 Do We Really Need That Orange Train Station CT com Retrieved May 21 2013 permanent dead link A Proposal for Action West Haven Train Station and Transit Oriented Development PDF City of West Haven February 2005 Archived from the original PDF on September 28 2007 Retrieved May 21 2013 Train station funding announced City of West Haven Archived from the original on October 8 2007 Retrieved May 20 2013 DeLauro West Haven Officials Announce 1 2 Million For Construction of the West Haven Train Station Press release Congresswoman Rosa L DeLauro June 19 2006 Archived from the original on November 11 2008 Retrieved May 21 2013 Smith Abbe June 9 2008 W Haven station design shows grand transit hub New Haven Register Retrieved May 21 2013 a b c Misur Susan April 16 2012 West Haven train station work on track may come in under budget New Haven Register Retrieved May 23 2012 Misur Susan April 19 2012 West Haven train station project recycles track New Haven Reguster Retrieved May 23 2012 Misur Susan December 9 2012 80 million West Haven train station takes shape New Haven Register Retrieved May 21 2013 Misur Susan March 26 2013 Support builds for garage at West Haven train station New Haven Register Retrieved May 21 2013 Dempsey Christine May 28 2013 Veteran Track Worker Dies In Train Accident Hartford Courant Retrieved July 16 2013 McNamara Neal August 19 2013 Officials cut ribbon at new West Haven train station New Haven Register Retrieved August 21 2013 Metro North Railroad Track amp Structures Department Track Charts Maintenance Program Interlocking Diagrams amp Yard Diagrams 2015 PDF Metro North Railroad 2015 Retrieved January 28 2019 External links edit nbsp Media related to West Haven station at Wikimedia Commons Metro North station page for West Haven List of upcoming Metro North train departure times and track assignments from MTA Station from Google Maps Street View Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title West Haven station amp oldid 1219808135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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