New Rochelle station

New Rochelle
Amtrak inter-city rail station
Metro-North New Haven Line commuter rail station
Two Metro-North M8's arrive at New Rochelle station in both directions in September 2015.
Location 1 Railroad Plaza (Amtrak) and
24 Station Plaza North,
(Metro-North)
New Rochelle, NY 10801
Coordinates 40°54′49″N 73°47′11″W / 40.913707°N 73.786433°W / 40.913707; -73.786433 (Amtrak)
40°54′42″N 73°47′02″W / 40.911599°N 73.783815°W / 40.911599; -73.783815 (Metro-North)
Owned by Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Line(s) Northeast Corridor
Platforms 1 side platform
1 island platform
Tracks 4
Connections Bee-Line Bus System: (see New Rochelle Transit Center below)
Construction
Platform levels 2
Parking 1,585 spaces
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code NRO (Amtrak)
Fare zone 12 (Metro-North)
History
Opened 1887
Rebuilt 1991
Electrified 12,500V (AC) overhead catenary
Traffic
Passengers (2006) 1.045 millionSteady 0% (Metro-North)
Passengers (2017) 91,058[1]Increase 4.05% (Amtrak)
Services
Preceding station   Amtrak   Following station
Northeast Regional
Metro-North Railroad
New Haven Line
Former services
Preceding station   New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad   Following station
toward New York
Main Line
toward New Haven
New Rochelle Railroad Station
Location Between North Avenue and Memorial Highway
New Rochelle, New York, USA
Coordinates 40°54′44.34″N 73°47′5.77″W / 40.9123167°N 73.7849361°W / 40.9123167; -73.7849361Coordinates: 40°54′44.34″N 73°47′5.77″W / 40.9123167°N 73.7849361°W / 40.9123167; -73.7849361
Built 1877
Architectural style Late Victorian
NRHP reference # 09000837[2]
Added to NRHP October 14, 2009

New Rochelle is a Metro-North Railroad and Amtrak train station located in New Rochelle, New York. The station serves Metro-North's New Haven Line and Amtrak's Northeast Regional; Bee-Line Bus System buses serve a bus stop just outside the station. It is 16.6 miles (26.7 km) from Grand Central Terminal and the average travel time is 36 minutes with some peak hour runs originating/terminating at New Rochelle being up to 10 minutes shorter in duration. As of August 2006, weekday commuter ridership was 4,020, and there are 1,381 parking spots.[3] It is the busiest New Haven Line station in Westchester County.

On October 14, 2009, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2] The NRHP listing is limited to the historic station building and just the land underneath its roofline, as the pedestrian bridge elevators, track and other associated structure is all much newer and lack historical merit. The building was built in 1887 for the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad. The architect of the building is unknown; it was built by George O. Hawes, a local builder. The building was remodeled in 1931.[4]

History

Early New Rochelle ticket book

On December 25, 1848 the first train steamed through New Rochelle, part of the New York and New Haven Railroad built in the early 1840s. At the time, New Rochelle was the final railroad station before entering New York City. A fatal head-on collision in New Rochelle in 1851 led to the construction of a second track in 1853. By 1869, six trains traveled between the two cities daily. NY&NH was consolidated into the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad a year later. In 1873, the railroad acquired the Harlem River and Port Chester Railroad and linked it to the station. In 1884, the railroad drew up plans for its present brick structure which was constructed in 1887 to replace the original Gothic Revival structure that had stood just northeast of what is now North Avenue.[5]

The 1½ story station is built of brick and has a gabled roof punctuated by a series of hipped dormers. A centered hexagonal dormer projects away from the building to allow views along the tracks. Its eaves overhang beyond the exterior walls of the building, and is supported by unadorned wood brackets. The interior of the 3,670 square feet (341 m2) still retains many original features. By the start of the 20th century, the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad had five tracks through New Rochelle. The population had surged to 15,000 inhabitants. A roundhouse for steam engines, tracks for passenger cars and a large freightyard near Cedar Street was built.[6]

Over the years, New Rochelle became one of the busiest stations on the line. As it developed into a commuter town, local travel increased even more. The city obtained national fame in 1906 when George M. Cohan wrote the song entitled "Forty-five Minutes from Broadway". The average 36-minute train ride and 10-minute walk from Grand Central to Broadway places the station about 45 minutes away.

As with all New Haven Line stations in Westchester County, the station became a Penn Central station upon acquisition by Penn Central in 1969, and eventually became part of the MTA's Metro-North Railroad. On October 25, 1987, New Rochelle became eastern Westchester County's Amtrak station,[7] replacing Rye Station which served as the county's eastern Amtrak station since 1972.[8] The station was fully renovated in 1990, and careful attention was placed on restoring it to its original historic accuracy. The waiting room is reflective of New Haven line stations, with plaster walls, a wood ceiling and wood wainscot sheathing. The original floor was probably wood, but was replaced sometime in the 1930s with Terrazzo. There are wood moldings around the doors, and crown moldings enhance the perimeter at the ceiling line.[9]

Intermodal Transportation Center

An increase in Metro North and Amtrak ridership late in the 20th century caused a demand for additional parking. In 1994, the city launched a plan to create a transportation center, including a parking structure with bus and taxi connections. The parking garage has a capacity in excess of 900 cars, which is two and a half times the on-site parking capacity prior to its construction. On the ground level of the structure is a bus terminal, complete with a waiting area and ticket office. The center was designed to be home to long-distance bus carriers such as the Trailways Transportation System, however they have since moved out of the Center, back to a stop on 2 blocks away on Main Street.[10] Routes on the Westchester Bee-Line are still served here. Several taxi companies operate from the structure, and Connecticut Limousine provides service to regional airports. The center was completed in 2001 and is in active use. The old station and the new transportation center have been blended together to meet the needs of the growing commuter population while at the same time preserving historical and architectural integrity of the 1887 station house.[11]

Station layout

The station has two high-level platforms. The north one is a nine-car-long side platform and the south one is a 10-car long island platform.

G Street level Exit/entrance and parking
P
Platform level
Side platform, doors will open on the right
Track 3 New Haven Line toward New York–Grand Central (Pelham)
Track 1 New Haven Line express trains do not stop here →
Track 2 Acela Express, Vermonter, New Haven Line express trains do not stop here
Acela Express, Vermonter, New Haven Line express trains do not stop here →
Northeast Regional toward Norfolk, Newport News or Lynchburg (New York–Penn Station)
Northeast Regional toward Boston or Springfield (Stamford)
New Haven Line toward Stamford, New Canaan, New Haven or New Haven–State Street (Larchmont)
Island platform, doors will open on the left or right
Track 4 New Haven Line toward Stamford, New Canaan, New Haven or New Haven–State Street (Larchmont)
Northeast Regional toward Boston or Springfield (Stamford)

Bus list

The following bus routes serve the New Rochelle Transit Center area; the 60 local buses stop on Main Street and Church Street eastbound, and Huguenot Street and North Street westbound, south of the station.

Route Stop location Terminal 1 Terminal 2 via notes
Bee-Line Bus
7
Platform C to Yonkers
Getty Square

Riverdale Avenue
Yonkers Avenue, Lincoln Avenue
30
Platform B to Yonkers
Getty Square

Riverdale Avenue
Palmer Road, Pondfield Road, Webster Avenue No Sunday service.
42
Platform B to Wakefield, Bronx
233rd Street and White Plains Road
at 233rd Street ( 2   5  trains)
West First Street, Pelhamdale Avenue
45
Platform D Pelham Bay Park, Bronx
Bruckner Boulevard
at Pelham Bay Park ( 6   <6>  trains)
Eastchester
Mill Road and White Plains Road
Pelham Road, North Avenue
  • Most trips loop through downtown New Rochelle.
  • Open-door in the Bronx.
45Q
Platform D New Rochelle
Main Street and Church Avenue
New Rochelle
Pine Brook Boulevard and Stratton Road
(Top of the Ridge)
North Avenue, Pine Brook Boulevard
61
Platform D Fordham Plaza Bus Terminal
at East 189th Street and Third Avenue (southbound
or Fordham Road and Third Avenue (northbound)
Port Chester Boston Post Road, Fifth Avenue, Halstead Avenue U-Turns at NY-CT line
62
Platform D Fordham, Bronx
(at Tiebout Avenue and Fordham Road
near Fordham Road ( B   D  trains)
White Plains TransCenter Boston Post Road, New England Thruway, Westchester Avenue Express to White Plains
66
Platform C to Dobbs Ferry at
either Dobbs Ferry railroad station
or Mercy College
Ashford Avenue, Ardsley Road, Weaver Street, Palmer Avenue
91
Platform C Yonkers
Yonkers (Metro-North station)
Rye Playland Yonkers Avenue, South Fulton Avenue, Sandford Boulevard, Pelhamdale Avenue, Boston Post Road, New England Thruway
  • Limited-stop service, Nonstop from New Rochelle to Playland.

References

  1. "Amtrak Fact Sheet, FY2017, State of New York" (PDF). Amtrak. November 2017. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
  2. 1 2 "NRHP Announcements". October 23, 2009.
  3. "(untitled; station information)". New York Times. Archived from the original on April 9, 2018.
  4. Friedman, Jean; Krattinger, William & Shaver, Peter D. (August 10, 2009). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: New Rochelle Railroad Station". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved June 17, 2010. and "Accompanying 6 photos, exterior and interior, undated".
  5. Leone, Anne Marie (2004). New Rochelle then and now: a photo history. Fountain Square Books.
  6. New Rochelle: the first three centuries. compiled by New Rochelle Chamber of Commerce. New Rochelle, N.Y.: The Huguenot-Thomas Paine Historical Association. 1988.
  7. "Amtrak October 25, 1987 Schedule". Museum of Railway Timetables.
  8. "Amtrak June 11, 1972 Schedule". Museum of Railway Timetables.
  9. Davis, Barbara (1988). New Rochelle, New York: queen city of the Sound: a tricentennial celebration, 1688–1988. Polomar Press, Inc.
  10. "Bus Station and Terminal Locations". Trailways of New York.
  11. New Rochelle intermodal transportation center: draft environmental impact statement. White Plains, N.Y.: Allee, King, Rosen & Fleming, Inc. 2001.

Sources

  • Beacher, Melvin, Architect (February 2005). Interview regarding 1989 restoration.
  • Hawes, George (January 1884). NY,·NH, & HRR Passenger Station Plans. New Rochelle, New York.
  • Stage JA Archaeological Survey of the Inter-modal Transportation Center. New Rochelle, New York: Historical Perspectives, Inc. 1999.
  • Marchant, Robert (December 11, 1989). "Officials finishing restoration plans for the New Rochelle Train Station". Standard Star.
  • Taylor, David L. (1998). Building-Structure Inventory Form: Metro North Railroad Station. New Rochelle, New York.
  • Wald, Matthew (July 23, 1989). "Resolving the Fate of New Rochelle's Station". New York Times.
  • Wines, Roger (March 1, 1991). "Railroad Station Re-dedication". New Rochelle, New York.
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