Puneet Varma (Editor)

Old Saybrook station

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Tracks
  
3

Opened
  
1873

Rebuilt
  
1 November 2002

Disabled access
  
Yes

Connection
  
Estuary Transit District

Platforms in use
  
1

Old Saybrook station

Location
  
455 Boston Post Road Old Saybrook, Connecticut

Line(s)
  
Northeast Corridor Connecticut Valley Railroad

Connections
  
Estuary Transit District

Parking
  
324 free spaces (Shore Line East) 53 free spaces (Amtrak) Paid private lot

Address
  
Old Saybrook, CT 06475, United States

Similar
  
New London Union Sta, Union Station, Saybrook Point Inn & Spa, The Katharine Hepburn, Harvey's Beach

Amtrak sle train spotting the old saybrook station 11 with acela making a stop


Old Saybrook is a regional rail station located in Old Saybrook, Connecticut. It is served by both Amtrak Northeast Regional intercity trains and Shore Line East commuter service.

Contents

Hd 60 fps amtrak sle train spotting the old saybrook station 14


Service

Located on the Northeast Corridor, the busiest passenger railway in the United States, Old Saybrook station serves some of the rail services that pass through the station. Most trains on Amtrak's Northeast Regional train line stop at Old Saybrook. No high-speed Acela Express trains serve the station but some stop at the following southbound and northbound stations, New Haven and New London, respectively. However, all Shore Line East commuter rail trains stop at Old Saybrook; it serves as the eastern terminus for some trains. (New London is the eastern terminus of the line, with approximately half terminating there.)

Old Saybrook features a common track setup, with one island platform and one side platform. Unlike the two-track commuter-rail-only stations on the 81.6 km (50.7 mile) stretch of the Northeast Corridor between New Haven and New London, there are three tracks at Old Saybrook, in order to handle terminal trains on Shore Line East.

History

The "V" shaped wood frame station at Saybrook Junction, constructed in 1873 by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, originally served that company as well as the Connecticut Valley Railroad. Passengers of both lines used separate platforms but shared the waiting room.

In the mid-1980s, Amtrak leased 5 acres (2.0 ha) of land around the station for the Saybrook Junction Marketplace development. It was one of the first times that Amtrak offered a long-term lease to a private entity to encourage transit-oriented development around a station.

In 2002, a $2.6 million project added high-level platforms and a pedestrian bridge, making the station fully handicapped accessible. The new platforms opened on November 1, 2002.

Parking

By the mid-2000s, ridership increases rendered the station's 137-space free parking lot for Shore Line East riders insufficient, causing commuters to park in the adjacent Saybrook Junction Marketplace parking lot and along roads in town. In November 2011, the Marketplace began charging a fee for commuters to park in their lot.

In March 2013, local officials announced plans for a state-funded 200-space parking lot west of North Main Street between the Upper Cemetery and the tracks. By September 2013, construction was planned to begin on the 3.6 acres (1.5 ha) site in late 2014. The state bought the land for $1.577 million in March 2014. In July 2014, the town received a $999,900 state grant to add sidewalks to North Main Street to improve pedestrian access to the station. The new parking lot was finished in December 2015, but opening was delayed because the handicapped-accessible ramps from the lot to the station were not yet finished. After a deal was brokered for the temporary use of handicapped spaces belonging to the Saybrook Station development, the 199-space lot opened on February 4, 2016. The new lot increased Shore Line East parking to 324 spaces and allowed overnight parking for the first time.

Transit connections

  • Estuary Transit District Shoreline route, Riverside route, Southeast route, Mid-Shore route
  • References

    Old Saybrook station Wikipedia