Puneet Varma (Editor)

Wollaston (MBTA station)

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Platforms
  
1 island platform

Opened
  
1 September 1971

Line(s)
  
Red Line

Tracks
  
2

Parking
  
550 spaces ($5.00 fee)

Passengers (2013 daily)
  
4,624

Wollaston (MBTA station)

Location
  
Newport Avenue and Beale Street Wollaston

Owned by
  
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority

Address
  
Quincy, MA 02171, United States

Bicycle facilities
  
88 spaces in "Pedal and Park" bicycle cage; ~20 outside spaces

Owner
  
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority

Similar
  
North Quincy, Quincy Adams, Quincy Center, Braintree, Ashmont

Wollaston is a rapid transit station on the MBTA Red Line, located in the Wollaston neighborhood of Quincy, Massachusetts. It serves Quincy's Wollaston neighborhood. It was opened in September 1971 as the second of three stations in the original South Shore Extension, replacing a mainline rail station which had been located there from 1845 to 1959. As of 2015, Wollaston is the only Red Line heavy rail station that is not wheelchair accessible, but planning is underway for a major renovation.

Contents

Wollaston station serves Eastern Nazarene College, which is 0.5 miles (0.80 km) away.

History

The Old Colony Railroad opened through Quincy in November 1845. Several local stations were located in Quincy, including Wollaston station (also known as Wollaston Heights) at Beale Street. In 1877, a large station with a clock tower was built on the west (inbound) side of the tracks. The Old Colony switched from English-style left-hand running to American-style right-hand running in 1893 when it was acquired by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad; the depot was moved to the east side of the tracks in 1895.

Passenger service on the Old Colony system declined after World War II, and the New Haven decided to abandon the line in the late 1950's. Emergency subsidies kept the lines open during construction of the Southeast Expressway, but all passenger service to Wollaston and the rest of the former Old Colony system was ended on June 30, 1959.

Even before 1959, discussion was underway to bring rapid transit to the Old Colony mainline. The 1926 Report on Improved Transportation Facilities and 1945–47 Coolidge Commission Report recommended a branch of the Cambridge-Dorchester Line (later renamed as the Red Line) to parallel the Old Colony mainline to Braintree, taking over service on local stops. The newly formed MBTA bought the Old Colony right-of-way from South Boston to South Braintree in 1965. In 1966, the Program for Mass Transportation recommended the extension, and construction of the station began that year. Wollaston opened along with North Quincy and Quincy Center on September 1, 1971.

Station layout

The main entrance to the station is via the large parking lot off Beale Avenue. An additional entrance is located on Newport Avenue. The station, located on a high grade, is one of a small number of elevated rapid transit stations remaining in the MBTA system. (The only others are Science Park, Malden Center, Charles/MGH, Beachmont and Fields Corner.) Boston once had several elevated lines, but the Atlantic Avenue Elevated, Charlestown Elevated, Washington Street Elevated and Causeway Street Elevated were all closed and torn down in sequence from 1938 to 2004 in favor of subway and surface-level lines.

Although the platform is elevated, the station lobby and turnstiles are actually situated several feet below street level, making the lobby prone to flooding during heavy rainstorms. On July 25, 1988, the lobby was flooded by an afternoon deluge, stranding around 100 riders at the station.

When the station was built, return of commuter service to the right-of-way was considered unlikely and few provisions were made. Only a single non-rapid-transit track for freight service was left on the narrow grade. Commuter service, however, returned on the Old Colony Lines beginning in 1997 and on the Greenbush Line beginning in 2007. Because of the limited width of the elevated grade and right-of-way through densely populated Quincy, adding a second commuter rail track would be extremely difficult. The single-tracked section of the line around Wollaston represents a major bottleneck on the commuter rail system serving the South Shore.

Planned renovations

The Red Line's Braintree Extension was built several decades before the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act and not all of the stations were originally handicapped-accessible. All other stations on the Red Line proper - and all except Valley Road on the Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line - have been rebuilt or retrofitted for handicapped accessibility. The MBTA is planning renovations to Wollaston that will make it handicapped-accessible and solve the flooding problems. Design reached 15% in July 2014, 30% in mid-2015, and 60% in early 2016.

The 30% design planned for accessible headhouses at each end of the station, with pedestrian bridges crossing over the inbound track to connect the headhouses to the platform, but the 60% design revised this to a single larger headhouse. The current lobby area will be converted to an accessible passageway between the parking lots and Newport Avenue, with a separate fare payment area and elevator to the platform. Funding has been identified and is pending approval; 100% design was reached in July 2016. The project will be bid in Spring 2017. The $38 million construction work will last from July 2017 to June 2020; it will require the station to be closed for 20 months of that time.

Bus connections

Two bus routes stop directly at Wollaston station on Newport Avenue:

  • 211 Quincy Center Station - Squantum via Montclair & North Quincy Station
  • 217 Quincy Center Station - Ashmont Station via Beale Street, Wollaston, & East Milton Square
  • Two additional bus routes stop on Hancock Street several blocks to the east:

  • 210 Quincy Center Station - North Quincy Station or Fields Corner Station via Hancock Street & Neponset Avenue
  • 212 Quincy Center Station - North Quincy Station via Billings Road
  • References

    Wollaston (MBTA station) Wikipedia