Kitchener Station
The station is served by GO Transit regional trains operating between Kitchener and Toronto, Via Rail intercity trains operating between Sarnia and Toronto via London, and GO Transit regional buses operating between Kitchener and Bramalea.
History
In 1856, the Grand Trunk Railway was in the process of a westward push, extending its Toronto–Brampton line. The first Grand Trunk train arrived in Guelph on January 30. On Wednesday, June 18, the first train arrived in Kitchener (then known as Berlin) with 150 passengers. The first Berlin railway station opened shortly after, on the 1st of July. The railway was extended beyond Berlin to St. Marys Junction in 1858, and to Sarnia in 1859.
In 1857, shortly after the arrival of the Grand Trunk, the Great Western Railway also arrived in Berlin via its subsidiary, the Preston and Berlin Railway. This branch line, the northern section of which still exists in the form of the CN Huron Park Spur, connected the northern Grand Trunk and southern Great Western mainlines to each other at a junction west of the newly-built Kitchener Grand Trunk station, near King Street. The Great Western began to construct its own wooden station close to the junction, and had purchased land near the Grand Trunk station which would allow for either adjacent stations or a future union station. However, service on the Preston and Berlin line ended only a few months after it began due to the catastrophic collapse of its bridge over the Grand River, and the plans for a union station never bore fruit.
The Grand Trunk Railway built the current station building in 1897 to replace the original, smaller building built in 1856. The station building originally included a prominent Gothic clock tower. A second tower was added to the station after a 1908 fire. In 1916, the town of Berlin was renamed to Kitchener, and the station was renamed accordingly.
After the Great War, the Grand Trunk and several other financially distressed railways were nationalised and merged into the Canadian National Railway. The Guelph Subdivision was a secondary mainline for trains from Chicago, Michigan, and Western Ontario bound for Toronto and points East. Kitchener station served international GTR / CNR trains such as the Maple Leaf (Chicago - Port Huron - Toronto), as well as numerous regional trains.
In 1966, Canadian National Railway (CN), by this point the owner of the station, removed the clock tower and the other roof features. In 1983, CN threatened to demolish the station, but Via Rail, which had assumed responsibility for CN's passenger services in 1978, opted to retain it. Under the provisions of Canada's Heritage Railway Stations Protection Act, it was designated a railway heritage structure on February 15, 1994.
Between 1982 and 2004, Kitchener was served by the joint Via Rail-Amtrak International service between Chicago and Toronto.
In November 2010, a partial rollout of GO train service was announced to be in place by late 2011. Two Kitchener line trains daily served Acton, Guelph and Kitchener with layover for those trains at a small facility in Kitchener. $18 million was spent to get this first stage operational, with further upgrades to come. Service began on December 19, serving only Kitchener and Guelph to begin with.
Services
Service directly to the station is operated by GO Transit and Via Rail. In addition, GO Transit and Grand River Transit operate other bus services which stop near the station on either Weber Street or Victoria Street but do not enter the station's bus terminal.
Via Rail
Kitchener station is an intermediate stop on the Via Rail Toronto–London–Sarnia intercity train service, which forms a component of Via Rail's Corridor network. As of 2021, service consists of a single round trip per day.
GO Transit
The station is nominally the western terminus of GO Transit's Kitchener line regional/commuter rail service connecting Kitchener to Toronto via Guelph, Georgetown, and Brampton. As of 2021, the station is served by 10 eastbound and 9 westbound trains per weekday, one of which extends beyond Kitchener to London. That train to London ended service in October 2023. There is no GO train service on weekends.
GO Transit bus route 30 also provides hourly bus service from Kitchener station to Bramalea GO Station where passengers can connect to hourly off-peak trains.
Future
The Region of Waterloo plans to replace the existing Kitchener station with a new Kitchener Central Station or "Transit Hub" located at King Street where the railway crosses the Ion light rail line. The station would accommodate regional GO and intercity Via Rail trains, as well as intercity coach buses. In 2016, it was estimated that the new station could only open in 2022 at the earliest. The Central Station light rail stop opened in 2019 along with the light rail line itself.
A larger GO train layover facility is planned west of Kitchener near Baden, in order to allow increased train service to Kitchener. In the meantime, trains are stored in an interim yard in Kitchener off Shirley Avenue east of the station.
In addition, an infill station known as Breslau GO is planned in the residential community of Breslau, across the Grand River to the east. The new station would be oriented around park and ride service, in order to address parking capacity without large-scale station parking downtown.
See also
- List of historic places in Regional Municipality of Waterloo
- List of oldest buildings and structures in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo
- List of designated heritage railway stations of Canada
- Rail transport in Ontario
References
Citations
- ^ "Canadian former National Railways Station at Kitchener". Canada's Historic Places. Retrieved May 7, 2012.
- ^ "William Armstrong, the Grand Trunk Railway and the Breslau Bridge". Historically Speaking - Kitchener Public Library. 2 April 2018. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ Brown, Ron (2002). The Last Stop: Ontario's heritage railway stations. Toronto: Polar Bear Press. ISBN 978-1-896757-19-3. OCLC 49047616.
- ^ "Kitchner Line Schedule" (PDF). GO Transit. 16 October 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 October 2021. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
- ^ Clowes 1996, p. 10.
- ^ Scrimgeour 1990, p. 8.
- ^ Savage 1994.
- ^ Melzer, Matt (23 April 2004). "Final Run of the Amtrak / VIA International". TrainWeb.org. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
From 1982, Amtrak and VIA Rail Canada had jointly operated the International train between Chicago and Toronto
- ^ Outhit, Jeff (14 November 2010). "GO trains to run from Kitchener to Toronto in 2011". Waterloo Region Record. Retrieved 14 November 2010.
- ^ Outhit, Jeff (25 November 2011). "GO Train coming Dec. 19". Waterloo Region Record. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2011.
- ^ "Grand River Transit Route Map" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-03. Retrieved 2016-03-11.
- ^ "Toronto-London-Sarnia" (PDF). Via Rail. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
- ^ "Central Station Open House Panels" (PDF). Region of Waterloo. May 19, 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 23, 2018. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
- ^ R. J. Burnside and Associates, Ltd. (2009-07-13). "Georgetown to Kitchener Environmental Study Report". Archived from the original on 2010-05-28. Retrieved 2010-11-21.
- ^ "New Train Layover & Bus Facility, Shirley Avenue, Kitchener". Merx. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
- ^ Coxson, Doug (September 9, 2014). "Baden site still in GO Transit's plans for train layover facility". New Hamburg Independent. Archived from the original on 11 September 2014. Retrieved 11 September 2014.
- ^ Outhit, Jeff (17 November 2019). "New plan pitches faster, two-way GO trains in Kitchener by 2025". Waterloo Region Record. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
Bibliography
- Clowes, Art (March 1996). "Just A. Ferronut's Railway Archeology" (PDF). Rail & Transit. Upper Canada Railway Society. pp. 9–12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 March 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
- Metrolinx (March 2021). Kitchener GO Rail Service Expansion: Preliminary Design Business Case (PDF) (Report).
- Savage, Dave (1994). Directory of Railway Stations of Ontario. Cobourg, Ontario: Canadian Station News. ISBN 978-0-9699091-0-1. OCLC 32549067.
- Scrimgeour, Pat (July 1990). Westman, Stuart I. (ed.). "Historical Outlines of Railways in Southern Ontario" (PDF). UCRS Newsletter. No. 489. Upper Canada Railway Society. pp. 8–13.
External links