South Station

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Boston South Station
SouthStation.agr.JPG
Station statistics
Address 700 Atlantic Avenue
Boston, MA 02110
Coordinates 42°21′07″N 71°03′19″W / 42.352035°N 71.055182°W / 42.352035; -71.055182Coordinates: 42°21′07″N 71°03′19″W / 42.352035°N 71.055182°W / 42.352035; -71.055182
Lines MBTA Subway:     Red Line      Silver Line MBTA Commuter Rail:     Framingham/Worcester Line      Needham Line      Franklin Line      Providence/Stoughton Line      Fairmount Line      Greenbush Line      Middleborough/Lakeville Line      Plymouth/Kingston Line Amtrak:     Acela Express      Lake Shore Limited      Northeast Regional
Connections Bus Terminal
Tracks 13 since 1989 renovation
Parking privately owned garage
Bicycle facilities bike lockers
Baggage check Available for Lake Shore Limited and Northeast Regionals 66 and 67
Other information
Opened 1899 (Depot)
December 3, 1916 (Red Line)
December 17, 2004 (Silver Line)
Accessible Handicapped/disabled access
Code BOS (Amtrak)
Owned by Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
Fare zone 1A (MBTA Commuter Rail only)
Traffic
Passengers (2005) 11.345 million 0% (MBTA)
Passengers (2008) 1,393,691 17.2% (Amtrak)
Services
Preceding station   Amtrak   Following station
Acela Express Terminus
toward Chicago
Lake Shore Limited
Northeast Regional
Preceding station   MBTA.svg MBTA   Following station
toward Alewife
Red Line
toward Ashmont or Braintree
Terminus Silver Line
Silver Line
One-way operation
Silver Line
toward Dudley
toward Worcester
Framingham/Worcester Line Terminus
Needham Line
Franklin Line
(Special events)
Terminus
Providence/Stoughton Line
toward Readville
Fairmount Line
Terminus Greenbush Line
toward Greenbush
Middleborough/Lakeville Line
Plymouth/Kingston Line
toward Kingston or Plymouth

South Station, New England's second-largest transportation center[1] (after Logan International Airport), located at the intersection of Atlantic Avenue and Summer Street in Dewey Square, Boston, Massachusetts, is the largest train station and intercity bus terminal in Greater Boston, a prominent train station in the northeastern United States and serves as a major intermodal domestic transportation hub, with service to the Greater Boston region and the Midwestern and Northeastern United States.

Contents

[edit] Facilities

South Station's facilities and offerings include:

The station is accessible by the general public 24 hours a day, every day of the year.

[edit] North Station connections

Several MBTA commuter rail lines, plus Amtrak's Downeaster service to Maine, originate from North Station, about 1¼ miles (2 km) around the Boston peninsula from South Station. Transfers from North Station to all other Amtrak trains and the MBTA Commuter Rail's Providence/Stoughton, Needham, Franklin and Framingham/Worcester lines may be made at Back Bay (a one seat ride on the Orange Line); all other passengers have to change subway trains at either Park Street or Downtown Crossing stations. A North-South Rail Link is proposed to unify the two halves of the rail system, but as of May 2006 the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has withdrawn its sponsorship of the proposal due to its high cost[citation needed]. The North-South Rail Link is not mentioned in the MBTA's 2010-2014 Capital Investment Program. [1] Currently passenger equipment is transferred between the two halves of the system via the Grand Junction Railroad, which is not used for passenger service.

[edit] Bus terminal

The South Station bus terminal is housed in a separate building along Atlantic Avenue, built over the train platforms, and serves several bus companies and destinations:

[edit] Nearby attractions

[edit] Accessibility

  • South Station is wheelchair accessible, but finding the elevator to the subway can be a bit tricky (it's in the corridor behind the information booth). There is another elevator directly outside the Dewey Square exit, but that elevator is often locked.
  • Other Amtrak stations on the Northeast Corridor are generally accessible.
  • Some MBTA commuter rail stations have no wheelchair access and many of those that do have short elevated platforms that only serve one or two cars, on the outbound end of the train. See MBTA accessibility.
Red Line T inbound to Alewife at South Station in Boston, Mass.


[edit] Ridership

Amtrak Acela and Commuter Rail trains at South Station; the two share platforms. Behind is the long-distance bus terminal.

In the early 1900s, after the station first opened, heavy commuter ridership made it the busiest station in the world. However, massive cutbacks made by the bankrupt New Haven Railroad, and an increase in the popularity of automobile travel later left the station with far fewer riders than at that time.

More recently, ridership has grown considerably, in part due to the reopening of Old Colony commuter rail service and the electrification of the Amtrak Northeast Corridor from New Haven to Boston, which allowed high speed Acela service.[2]

South Station Ridership (passengers/year)

Service 1975 1990 2001
Intercity rail 537,000 839,000 1,060,000
Commuter rail 2,774,000 12,000,000 18,000,000
Intercity Bus n/a n/a 3,000,000


[edit] History

[edit] Need for a combined station

Map showing Boston railroad terminals in 1880, before the construction of South Station.

When the railroads serving Boston were first laid out and built, each one stopped at its own terminal. The four terminals serving the south-side railroads were as follows:

South Station combined the four terminals in one spot (a union station).

[edit] Opening

A view of the Atlantic Avenue Elevated in front of South Station; the elevated station was at far right

South Station opened as South Central Station on January 1, 1899 at a cost of $3.6 million (1899 dollars). The architects were Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge of Boston. It became the busiest station in the country by 1910. A station on the Atlantic Avenue Elevated served the station from 1901 to 1938; what is now the Red Line subway was extended from Park Street to South Station in 1913. The train shed, one of the largest in the world, was eliminated in a 1930 renovation due to corrosion from the nearby ocean's salt air. While the station handled 125,000 passengers each day during World War II, after the war passenger rail declined in the U.S. In 1959, the Old Colony Railroad, which served the South Shore and Cape Cod, stopped passenger service. The New Haven Railroad went bankrupt in 1961. South Station was sold to the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) in 1965. Portions of the station were demolished and the land was used to build the Boston South Postal Annex and the Stone and Webster building.

Looking north at the merge of the two approaches, with the two pairs of tracks approaching the lower-level loop at right; the terminal is in the background
The never-used lower-level loop platforms

In the original configuration, two tracks came off each approach to join into a four-track line and then run under the main platforms in a two-track loop. These tracks were never put into service, and later became a parking lot and bowling alley for employees.[2]

[edit] Renovation

In 1978, the BRA sold what was left of the station, now on the National Register of Historic Places,[3] to the MBTA, though the BRA retained air rights over the station. Funding was obtained for a major renovation of the station that was completed in 1989. A total of 13 tracks became available, all with high level platforms and some capable of handling 12 car trains. Piers were installed for the eventual construction of an office building and bus station above the tracks. After some delays, an inter-city bus terminal opened in October 1995, replacing one on top of the I-93 Dewey Square Tunnel diagonally across from the station between Summer Street and Congress Street. The new bus terminal has been called “the best bus facility in the country”[citation needed] and has direct ramp connections to I-93 and the Massachusetts Turnpike (though there are two traffic lights in the outbound direction). The renovations, including the bus terminal, cost $195 million (2001 dollars).

The Red Line subway platforms were extended in 1985 to allow six-car trains, and renovated again in 2005 as part of the Silver Line Phase II project, which serves the waterfront and Logan Airport. The Phase II tunnel was constructed in conjunction with Boston's "Big Dig" and was originally referred to as the South Boston Piers Transitway. Phase II opened on Friday, December 17, 2004, with the first route running only to Silver Line Way. An new Phase I Silver Line route, the SL4 was added on October 13, 2009, with a stop across the street from South Station.[4]

[edit] Future

Planned system improvements should result in additional passenger traffic. Silver Line Phase III would build a tunnel connecting South Station with the Silver Line Phase I BRT service to Dudley Square, Roxbury. T. F. Green Airport Station in Rhode Island is currently under construction. An extension to Fall River and New Bedford, Massachusetts is being planned.[3]

The South Station Tower is a high-rise building approved for construction above the track platforms. Groundbreaking was anticipated to take place sometime in 2008,[4] but has not begun as of October 2009. The tower will include a privately-funded improvement to the terminal that would increase the number of bus berths and provide a direct interior connection between the subway entrance area and the bus terminal. A proposed relocation of the Boston South Postal Annex would allow additional expansion.

[edit] Notes

Inside the station
  1. ^ http://www.pps.org/great_public_spaces/one?public_place_id=116
  2. ^ French & Fowler, The Renovation of Boston’s South Station, 2003
  3. ^ "National Register Information System". pp. Ref# 75000299. http://www.nr.nps.gov/. Retrieved 2007-10-30. 
  4. ^ New Silver line service, MBTA press release, October 13, 2009

[edit] Sources

[edit] See also


[edit] External links

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