Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Cedar Avenue (Staten Island Railway station)

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Line
  
South Beach Branch

Platforms
  
2 side platforms

Borough
  
Staten Island

Services
  
none

Opened
  
1934

Tracks
  
2

Cedar Avenue (Staten Island Railway station)

Closed
  
March 31, 1953; 63 years ago (1953-03-31)

Similar
  
West New Brighton, Tower Hill, Sailors' Snug Harbor, Elm Park, Port Richmond

Cedar Avenue was a station on the demolished South Beach Branch of the Staten Island Railway. It had two tracks and two side platforms and was located at Cedar Avenue and Railroad Avenue.

History

The station opened as part of a grade crossing elimination project on the South Beach Branch. This station was abandoned when the SIRT discontinued passenger service on the South Beach Branch to South Beach at midnight on March 31, 1953 because of city-operated bus competition. The platforms continued to remain on this location into the 1960s.

South of this station is the Robin Road Trestle, which is the only remaining intact trestle along the South Beach Line. In the early 2000s developers purchased the property on either side of the trestle's abutments, but the developers, the New York City Department of Transportation, and the New York City Transit Authority all claimed ownership of it. Consequently, townhouses have built up against both sides of it.

References

Cedar Avenue (Staten Island Railway station) Wikipedia