Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
Burlington South is a station on NJ Transit's River Line light rail system, located on West Broad Street in Burlington, Burlington County, New Jersey, United States, near the New Jersey side of the Burlington–Bristol Bridge. The station opened on March 15, 2004. [1] Southbound service from the station is available to Camden, New Jersey.
NJ Transit, which manages the rail service, will add supplemental buses to several stops during peak hours, starting Monday. The River Line, which travels from Trenton to Camden, will continue its ...
2nd Street station is a station on the Hudson–Bergen Light Rail (HBLR) located west of Marshall Street near the foot of Paterson Plank Road in Hoboken, New Jersey. There are two tracks and two side platforms.
New Jersey Transit's Board of Directors have hired an engineering firm to study the environmental impact of a proposed Hudson-Bergen Light Rail line extension with three stops in Englewood.
Washington Street station is an underground station on the Newark City Subway Line of the Newark Light Rail. The station is owned and service is operated by New Jersey Transit. The station is located at the intersection of Raymond Boulevard and Washington Street with a second entrance at University Avenue, both in Downtown Newark.
45th Street station is a station on the Hudson–Bergen Light Rail (HBLR) in Bayonne, New Jersey.Located next to Avenue E and East 45th Street (along with Route 440), it is the northernmost station of four in Bayonne. 45th Street station contains a single island platform, with two tracks (one on each side).
In conjunction with the station, New Jersey Transit operates a 730-space park-and-ride lot on Tonnelle Avenue (U.S. Route 1 & 9), between 49th and 51st Streets. Currently, the station is the northern terminus for the light rail system, with two tracks and an island platform .
Light rail (or light rail transit, abbreviated to LRT) is a form of passenger urban rail transit using rolling stock derived from tram technology [1] while also having some features from heavy rapid transit. The term was coined in 1972 in the United States, to create an English equivalent for the German word Stadtbahn meaning City railway.