Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
Campbell Hall station is a commuter rail stop owned by Metro-North Railroad serving trains on the Port Jervis Line, located just south of the hamlet of Campbell Hall, New York in the town of Hamptonburgh. The station is located at the end of Watkins Road, off Egbertson Road (County Route 77).
Media related to Southport station (Metro-North) at Wikimedia Commons Metro-North station page for Southport; List of upcoming Metro-North train departure times and track assignments from MTA; Bureau of Public Transportation of the Connecticut Department of Transportation, "Condition Inspection for the Southport Station" report dated September 2002
Mount Vernon East station is a commuter rail station on the Metro-North Railroad New Haven Line, located in Mount Vernon, New York.The station is the first station north of the junction where the New Haven Line splits from the Harlem Line and is the northernmost station on the line before it changes from third rail power to overhead catenary power, which takes place between the Mount Vernon ...
The new overpass was designed in a less modern style and now has glass-sided elevators. During the construction, Metro-North built a temporary wooden station to the station's south. [19] In 2010, Metro-North began a program called Arts for Transit. As part of the program, an art installation was created for the station.
A separate westbound shelter was built some time around 1950, and both structures would serve until the current building was constructed by Metro-North in the 1980s. [ 3 ] [ 8 ] The station was temporarily closed from August 17 to September 6, 2024, due to work on the Walk Bridge replacement project.
Metro North customers using the Harlem line are experiencing up to 45-minute delays Tuesday morning due to repairs, MTA officials said. The delays are attributed to a rail necessitating repairs ...
The success of the pilot program has led the MTA to extend the program up to the summer of 2020 and renewed calls for the program to be implemented within New York City, where the fare for the Freedom Ticket—if approved—would cost US$2.75 and include free transfers between the LIRR & Metro-North, bus, and subway. [82]
The old NYC station house as seen from the GCT-bound platform, now a frozen yogurt shop.. The Hudson River Railroad reached the settlement by 1849; the first passengers on a regularly scheduled run through the village paid fifty cents to travel from Peekskill to Chambers Street in Manhattan on September 29, 1849. [5]