Crugers (Metro-North Station)
History
The station, which still remains in part, was replaced in the last stage of a project to expand the Hudson Line to six-car high-level platforms. While it was possible to add high-level platforms, space constraints from adjacent protected wetlands, a bridge abutment, and track curvature precluded the possibility of lengthened platforms or expanded parking.
On June 30, 1996, Crugers and Montrose stations were closed, and the replacement Cortlandt station was opened. The two former stations provided a combined total of 150 parking spaces, and in 1991 received an average daily ridership of 332 passengers. In contrast, the new Cortlandt station opened with 750 parking spaces, and recorded an average morning peak ridership of 358 passengers in its first month. By Spring 1998, this ridership had grown to 580 passengers.
A bridge over the former station area still stands, but is currently closed to traffic.
References
- ^ Hershenson, Roberta (September 8, 1996). "Cortlandt Welcomes New Train Station". The New York Times. Retrieved April 12, 2011.
- ^ Transportation Research Record. Transportation Research Board, Commission on Sociotechnical Systems, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences. 1999. ISBN 9780309071031.
External links
41°14′07″N 73°55′41″W / 41.2353°N 73.9280°W