Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Long Beach (LIRR station)

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Owned by
  
MTA

Tracks
  
10

Opened
  
June 1909

Platforms in use
  
2

Line(s)
  
Long Beach Branch

Parking
  
Yes

Rebuilt
  
1988

Long Beach (LIRR station)

Location
  
Park Avenue & Park Place Long Beach, New York

Connections
  
Long Beach Bus: N69, East Loop, West Loop, Shopper's Special Nassau Inter-County Express: n15, n33

Address
  
Long Beach, NY 11561, United States

Owner
  
Metropolitan Transportation Authority

Similar
  
Island Park, Centre Avenue, Lido Beach, Oceanside, Nostrand Avenue

Long Beach is the terminus of the Long Beach Branch of the Long Island Rail Road. It is located at Park Place and Park Avenue in the City of Long Beach, New York.

Contents

The MTA offers a package which includes train fare and admission to the beach.

History

Long Beach Station was originally built in 1880 by the New York and Long Beach Railroad, however it was much closer to the Atlantic Ocean than the present station. The site was surrounded by Broadway, Penn Street, Edwards Boulevard and Riverside Boulevard, and served the grand Long Beach Hotel, which Austin Corbin claimed was the world's largest hotel. It also included a clock tower on the station house, a water tower, and a gazebo. Additionally, it had a connection to the Long Beach Marine Railway, which served Lido Beach and Point Lookout. The hotel burned down on July 27, 1907 in what was officially ruled as an electrical fire.

Due to repeated storm damage to rails and other equipment, the LIRR petitioned the New York State Public Service Commission to move the station 1000 feet north in January 1909, which was fully endorsed by the Estates of Long Beach who even offered to exchange land with the railroad. That permission was granted in February of the same year. The present depot at Park Avenue was built in June 1909, and is larger than the previous station off the Atlantic Coast. It was designed by Kenneth M. Murchison, who also designed the 1913-built Jamaica station and Hoboken Terminal. Over a year later, the station and the line were electrified. The station was renovated in 1988. Another renovation in the early 2000s added a parking garage, bus depot, and platform bridge. The bus depot is on Centre Street adjacent to the station building, and the parking garage contains a section for bicycles.

Long Beach Club House Station

Prior to the relocation, another station named Club House Station (not to be confused with the Club House station on the Montauk Branch in Great River, New York) existed nearby at what is today Market Street and National Boulevard. Originally a signal stop built in April 1898, it contained a path leading to a club house on the coast of Reynolds Channel The station was closed in 1909 when Long Beach Station was moved to the channel.

Platforms and tracks

This station has two high-level island platforms. The east platform between Tracks 3 and 4 is 10 cars long. The west platform between Tracks 5 and 6 is eight cars long. There are 10 tracks total. The six tracks not next to the platforms (two to the east of the station and four to the west) are used for train storage.

References

Long Beach (LIRR station) Wikipedia