Riverside–Downtown station

Joseph Tavaglione Riverside Downtown Station
Amtrak and Metrolink (Southern California) train station
Metrolink #887 waits at the station's south platform.
Location 4066 Vine Street
Riverside, CA 92507
United States
Coordinates 33°58′33″N 117°22′12″W / 33.9757°N 117.3699°W / 33.9757; -117.3699Coordinates: 33°58′33″N 117°22′12″W / 33.9757°N 117.3699°W / 33.9757; -117.3699
Owned by Riverside County Transportation Commission
Line(s) BNSF Railway
Platforms 1 side platform, 2 island platforms
Tracks 6
Connections Riverside Transit Agency
Construction
Parking 710 free spaces
Bicycle facilities Yes
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code RIV
History
Opened 1993
Traffic
Passengers (2017) 12,029[1] (Amtrak)
Services
Preceding station   Amtrak   Following station
toward Los Angeles
Southwest Chief
toward Chicago
Metrolink
91/Perris Valley Line
Riverside LineTerminus
Inland Empire–Orange County Line
toward Oceanside
Location
Joseph Tavaglione Riverside Downtown Station
Location within southern California
Joseph Tavaglione Riverside Downtown Station
Joseph Tavaglione Riverside Downtown Station (California)

The Joseph Tavaglione Riverside Downtown Station is a train station in Riverside, California, United States that opened in 1993. It is served by one Amtrak intercity rail line and three Metrolink commuter rail lines, as well as Riverside Transit Agency buses and Amtrak Thruway and Megabus coach service. The station is owned by the Riverside County Transportation Commission, and is referred to as Riverside by Amtrak and as Riverside–Downtown by Metrolink.

History

The current station opened on June 14, 1993, returning rail service to Riverside following the closure of the Santa Fe depot in 1984. The original depot, built in 1927, still stands a few blocks north of the current station.[2] The original depot was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.[3] The Southwest Chief added a stop in Riverside in April 2002, after 18 years of not stopping at Riverside.[4]

In December 2012, the station was renamed after Joseph Tavaglione, a local businessman and chair of the California Transportation Commission.[5][6][7][8]

Current services

The Southwest Chief provides one train per day in each direction through the station, one to Los Angeles and one to Chicago, which boards from the station's South platform. In conjunction with the California Department of Transportation, Amtrak California also provides two Thruway Motorcoach routes: to Bakersfield, with connections to the San Joaquins for the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento; and to Fullerton, with connections to the Pacific Surfliner for San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego.

Megabus began providing service from the station to the South Strip Transfer Center in Las Vegas on December 12, 2012.[9]

The station is a hub for Metrolink commuter rail, with three lines serving the station on weekdays, and two on weekends. Trains traveling to and from Orange County board from the South platform, which is accessible via a bridge over the tracks. All weekend trains board on the South platform, across the bridge.

No ticketing agents are on site. Tickets for Metrolink may be purchased from the ticket vending machines located on all platforms. All Amtrak services require advanced reservations, but tickets can be picked up from Metrolink's ticket machines once reservations have been made either online or via telephone. Megabus reservations can only be made on their website.

The Riverside Transit Agency provides free connecting transit service to Metrolink (but not Amtrak) passengers at the station including the agency's CommuterLink express bus system, providing connections to Temecula, Banning and Hemet. The SunLine transit 220 bus provides service to UCR, Moreno valley, Beaumont, Cabazon and Palm Desert.

Platforms and tracks

North platforms  Riverside Line toward L.A. Union Station (Pedley)
Center tracks  Bypass/Freight lines No passenger service
South platforms  Southwest Chief toward Los Angeles (Fullerton)
 Southwest Chief toward Chicago (San Bernardino)
 91 Line toward L.A. Union Station (Riverside–La Sierra)
 91 Line toward Perris–South (Riverside–Hunter Park/UCR)
 Inland Empire–Orange County Line toward Oceanside

(Riverside–La Sierra)

 Inland Empire–Orange County Line toward San Bernardino-Downtown (San Bernardino)

References

  1. "2017 California Report" (PDF). Amtrak. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  2. http://www.insidetheie.com/Historical-Buildings-Riverside
  3. National Park Service (2013-11-02). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  4. http://www.greatamericanstations.com/Stations/RIV/Station_view
  5. http://issuu.com/rivchamber/docs/grb_2013_01/4
  6. http://www.metrolinktrains.com/pdfs/MetrolinkMatters/MetrolinkMattersFebruary2013.pdf
  7. http://rctc.org/onthemove/201212_onthemove.html
  8. http://mobility21.com/forward-motion-dec-2012/
  9. http://us.megabus.com/.aspx
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