Copiague station

Copiague
Copiague Station entrance
Location Marconi Boulevard & Great Neck Road (County Road 47)
Copiague, New York
Coordinates 40°40′52″N 73°23′56″W / 40.681°N 73.399°W / 40.681; -73.399Coordinates: 40°40′52″N 73°23′56″W / 40.681°N 73.399°W / 40.681; -73.399
Owned by Long Island Rail Road
Line(s) Montauk Branch
Platforms 1 island platform
Tracks 2
Connections Suffolk County Transit: S20, S31, S33
Construction
Parking 747 spaces
Bicycle facilities Yes
Other information
Fare zone 9
History
Opened 1902
Rebuilt 19671973
Electrified May 20, 1925
750 V (DC) third rail
Traffic
Passengers (2006) 2,661[1]
Services
Preceding station   LIRR   Following station
Babylon Branch
toward Babylon

Copiague is a station on the Babylon Branch of the Long Island Rail Road, located in Copiague, New York. The station is located on Marconi Boulevard and Great Neck Road (Suffolk County Road 47), one block north of Oak Street (Suffolk County Road 12). Copiague Station was originally built in 1902, and was rebuilt with temporary high-level platforms for the M1s on October 25th, 1968. The original station was replaced with the current elevated station which opened on August 7, 1973. It is one of the few railroad stations along the Babylon Branch west of Patchogue that was not originally built by the South Side Railroad of Long Island.

Station layout

The station has one 10-car-long high-level island platform between the two tracks.

P
Platform level
Track 1 Babylon Branch toward Atlantic Terminal, Hunterspoint Avenue or Penn Station (Amityville)
Montauk Branch does not stop here
Island platform, doors will open on the left
Track 2 Babylon Branch toward Babylon (Lindenhurst)
Montauk Branch does not stop here →
G Ground level Entrance/exit, parking, buses

Belmont Junction

The South Side Railroad of Long Island and Central Railroad of Long Island once had another station in Copiague to the east called Belmont Junction, which was in service between 1873 and 1885.[2] It is not known if the Long Island Rail Road built Copiague Station as a replacement for Belmont Junction, but it had served as one.

References

  1. Average weekday, 2006 LIRR Origin and Destination Study
  2. Babylon/Montauk Branch Stations (Unofficial LIRR History Website)


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