Providence (Amtrak station)
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Providence | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Address | 100 Gaspee Street Providence, RI |
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Lines | Amtrak:
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Connections | Bus routes | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Opened | 1988 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Accessible | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Code | PVD | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Owned by | Amtrak | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traffic | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Passengers (2007) | 565,701[1][2] ▲ 10% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Providence Station is a railroad station in Providence, Rhode Island and is served by Amtrak and the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). The station has four tracks for passenger service, with a fifth track passing through for Providence and Worcester Railroad freight trains. It is the 17th busiest Amtrak station in the country, after BWI.[3]
Providence Station has full length high-level platforms and is wheelchair accessible. A new layover facility for MBTA commuter trains, located north of the station in Pawtucket, opened in 2006, allowing the MBTA to increase service to the city. Service is planned to T. F. Green Airport once a new station under construction in Warwick is completed around 2009.
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[edit] History
Providence's first railroad station was Union Station, a brick edifice built in 1847 by the Providence and Worcester, Providence and Stonington, and Boston and Providence Railroads. This building was lost to fire in 1896, and replaced by a newer Union Station, completed 1898, which consisted of five large brick structures, built by New Haven Railroad. In 1988, the current Providence Station (shown here) was built to replace the 1892 station. Designed by Marilyn Taylor of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, local architectural historian Wm McKenzie Woodward considers its saucer dome "an obvious yet very gracious gesture toward the (Rhode Island) State House".[4]
The now-renovated buildings of the 1892 station still form the northern side of Kennedy Plaza in the center of Downtown Providence.
[edit] Amtrak
Two of Amtrak's passenger rail routes serve the station: the Acela Express and the Northeast Regional. The Acela Express is the United States' only high-speed rail service. It connects Boston's South Station with New York Penn Station and Washington, DC. The Regional rail service is a more local train that stretches between Newport News, Virginia and Boston. Not all Regional trains go to Newport News; the vast majority end at Washington, DC. 512,974 Amtrak passengers patronise the station annually.[2]
[edit] MBTA
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0:00 | South Station Amtrak connection | ||||
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Old Colony Lines | |||||
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0:05 | Back Bay Amtrak connection | ||||
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Framingham/Worcester Line | |||||
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0:08 | Ruggles | ||||
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Needham Line | |||||
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0:16 | Hyde Park | ||||
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Franklin Line | |||||
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0:21 | Route 128 Amtrak connection | ||||
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0:26 | Canton Junction | ||||
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0:29 | Canton Center | ||||
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0:38 | Stoughton | ||||
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0:32 | Sharon | ||||
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Franklin Line | |||||
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Foxboro | |||||
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0:40 | Mansfield | ||||
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0:48 | Attleboro | ||||
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0:55 | South Attleboro | ||||
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Blackstone River | |||||
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1:04 | Providence Amtrak connection | ||||
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T.F. Green Airport | |||||
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Wickford Junction |
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA), also has service at Providence station. The Providence/Stoughton commuter rail line's southern terminus is located at Providence. The Providence/Stoughton Line provides commuter service to towns between Providence and Boston, sharing track with Amtrak trains. A new station is under construction that will allow service to T.F. Green Airport in 2009 or 2010. Service might be extended farther south to Wickford Junction.
Unlike what the name implies, there is no direct service from Providence to Stoughton, Massachusetts. Stoughton station lies on a branch of the Providence/Stoughton line that is only accessible from stations between South Station and Canton Junction.
[edit] Ground transportation
A taxi stand faces the city side of the station. Though the Kennedy Plaza hub for bus-based local and regional transportation is approximately 1/4 mile away, the route is not marked. The 50, 55, 56, and 57 RIPTA buses connect the state side of the station with Kennedy Plaza. Until the extension to the MBTA commuter rail is completed, those wishing to transfer to T.G Green Airport via public transportation must take a bus to Kennedy Plaza and transfer there.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Amtrak only.
- ^ a b Amtrak National Fact Sheet. Amtrak Media Relations (February 2007). Retrieved on 2007-03-12.
- ^ http://www.amtrak.com/pdf/AmtrakBackgroundInformationFacts-022007.pdf
- ^ Woodward, Wm McKenzie. Guide to Providence Architecture. 1st ed. 2003: United States. ISBN 0-9742847-0-x. p303-304.
[edit] References
- Woodward, Wm McKenzie. Guide to Providence Architecture. 1st ed. 2003: United States. ISBN 0-9742847-0-x. p303-304.
- One Union Station on The Rhode Island Foundation
- Three and One-Half Centuries at a Glance (May 2002). ProvidenceRI.com - History and Fact.
[edit] External links
- Providence (Amtrak station) is at coordinates Coordinates: