Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Fairmount (MBTA station)

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Owned by
  
MBTA

Connections
  
MBTA Bus: 24

Disabled access
  
Yes

Rebuilt
  
2003

Tracks
  
2

Line(s)
  
Fairmount Line

Parking
  
51 spaces

Connection
  
MBTA Bus

Platforms in use
  
2

Fairmount (MBTA station)

Location
  
Fairmount Avenue at Truman Highway Hyde Park, Massachusetts

Address
  
Boston, MA 02136, United States

Similar
  
Milton, Chestnut Hill, Hyde Park, Eliot, Melrose/Cedar Park

Fairmount (sometimes written as Fairmount Avenue) is a regional rail station on the MBTA Commuter Rail Fairmount Line, located in the Hyde Park section of Boston, Massachusetts, under the Fairmount Avenue overpass. It is the last stop outbound on the Fairmount Line before it joins the Franklin Line at Readville. Fairmount station opened in 1979 during Southwest Corridor reconstruction; intended to be temporary, it eventually became a permanent stop.

Contents

Previous service

Service on the Fairmount Line (as the Dorchester Branch of the Norfolk County Railroad and later the New York and New England Railroad and New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad) began in 1855 and lasted until 1944. The service included a stop named Hyde Park at Fairmount Avenue, and a stop named Fairmount near Glenwood Avenue. The station at Glenwood Avenue was also known as Glenwood. Another station, currently known as Hyde Park, is located in Hyde Park six blocks to the west. During their histories, both stations were referred to both as "Hyde Park" and as "Fairmount".

Fairmount Line

The Dorchester Branch (also known as the Midland Route) was reopened as a bypass in November 1979 during Southwest Corridor construction, including stops at Uphams Corner, Morton Street, and Fairmount. This station was originally built at minimal cost, with small low-level platforms and no direct access to Morton Street. The station was not handicapped accessible, as service over the route was intended to be temporary. However, it was popular with residents of the communities the line passed through: by 1983, over 600 riders per day boarded at Fairmount, enough to justify service to both Fairmount and nearby Hyde Park after the end of construction.

When the Southwest Corridor reopened in October 1987, the Fairmount shuttle service was retained as the Fairmount Line. Fairmount was the terminus of the line until it was extended to Readville on November 30, 1987.

Renovation

A major renovation of Fairmount station began in early 2003. The $7 million project, which was completed in 2004-05, added 1-car-length high platforms and ramps to the Fairmount Avenue overpass to make the station handicapped accessible. During the construction, new temporary platforms were built slightly northeast of the station.

Uphams Corner and Morton Street stations received full-length high level platforms in renovations that finished in 2007. When Blue Hill Avenue, the last of four new stations, is completed in 2017, Fairmount and Readville will be the only stations on the line without full-length high-level platforms. The MBTA wishes to eventually add high-level platforms at Fairmount to speed boarding, but there are no current plans to do so.

As part of a long-term shift of the Fairmount Line from commuter rail to a rapid transit-like service, Fairmount was shifted from Zone 1 to Zone 1A on July 1, 2013, making a trip to South Station equal to a rapid transit fare. This equalized all fares on the line except trips to/from Readville.

Bus connections

Fairmount station's sole direct bus connection is the 24 Wakefield Avenue & Truman Highway - Mattapan or Ashmont Station via River Street route, which runs on Fairmount Avenue.

The 32, 33, and 50 routes serve Hyde Park station at Cleary Square, a short walk to the west.

References

Fairmount (MBTA station) Wikipedia