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Dedham Corporate Center (MBTA station)

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Line(s)
  
Franklin Line

Fare zone
  
2

Platforms in use
  
2

Disabled access
  
Yes

Opened
  
15 January 1990

Tracks
  
2

Dedham Corporate Center (MBTA station)

Location
  
125 Allied Drive Dedham, Massachusetts

Parking
  
497 spaces ($4.00 fee) 11 accessible spaces

Previous names
  
Dedham Junction (1881-1899) Rust Craft (1955-1977)

Address
  
Dedham, MA 02026, United States

Similar
  
Milton, Endicott, Chestnut Hill, Brandeis/Roberts, Eliot

Dedham Corporate Center (signed as Dedham Corporate Center/128) is a regional rail station on the MBTA Commuter Rail Franklin Line, located just off exit 14 of Interstate 95/Route 128 It serves mostly as a park-and-ride location for inbound riders. The station consists of two platforms (each a long low asphalt platform with a short high-level platform for handicapped accessibility) serving the Franklin Line's two tracks. Previous stations named Dedham Junction (1881-1884 and 1888-1899) and Rust Craft (1955-1977) were located near the modern site.

Contents

Dedham Junction

The Norfolk County Railroad completed their Midland Division from Islington to Boston in January 1855. No station was originally located at the modern location, which was in the middle of a swamp until the middle of the 20th century. The line passed through several operators and finally to the New York and New England Railroad in 1875.

In 1881, the NY&NE built a branch from Dedham Junction (near the modern station site) to Dedham to replace the Norfolk County's original route to Dedham. This allowed the railroad to (unsuccessfully) compete with the Boston and Providence Railroad's Dedham Loop for Boston-Dedham commuter traffic. The branch was closed in 1884, but reopened in 1888 by state commission order. In 1890 a short leg allowing Dedham-Islington travel for the Old Colony Railroad's Wrentham Branch was opened; trains using this route skipped Dedham Junction station. By 1898, the New Haven Railroad had acquired the Old Colony, NY&NE, and the Boston & Providence. With the New Haven having no need for four routes to the small town of Dedham, the southern branch was soon abandoned. Service via Dedham Junction ended in 1899 and via Islington in 1904.

Rust Craft

On May 2, 1955, the New Haven Railroad opened Rust Craft station off Rustcraft Road, just east of the modern station location. The station, which served the Rust Craft greeting card plant, was the first reverse commute-focused station on the MBTA system and was "hailed as the start of a new era". Rust Craft station was closed in 1977 due to low ridership.

Dedham Corporate Center

During the 1980s, the Dedham Corporate Center office park was built nearby due to convenient access to Route 128 and Route 1. On January 15, 1990, Dedham Corporate Center station was opened. As well as providing access to the office park, the station provides nearly 500 parking spaces for commuters riding to Boston, as well as access to the office park for workers coming from both directions on the line.

In late 2014, a kiss and ride dropoff lane was built on the north side of the station off Rustcraft Road.

Dedham Corporate Center is the only stop between Back Bay and Foxboro on special game day service for New England Patriots home games at Gillette Stadium.

Bus connections

No MBTA bus routes directly serve Dedham Corporate Center station. The nearest route is the 34E Walpole - Forest Hills Station via Washington Street, which runs on Route 1A (Washington Street) about half a mile to the northwest.

References

Dedham Corporate Center (MBTA station) Wikipedia