Roxbury Crossing (MBTA station)
ROXBURY CROSSING | |||||||||||
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Roxbury Crossing main entrance | |||||||||||
Location | 1400 Tremont Street west of 1200 Columbus Avenue, Roxbury | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 42°19′53″N 71°05′44″W / 42.3313°N 71.0956°WCoordinates: 42°19′53″N 71°05′44″W / 42.3313°N 71.0956°W | ||||||||||
Owned by | Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority | ||||||||||
Line(s) | |||||||||||
Platforms | 1 island platform | ||||||||||
Tracks | 2 | ||||||||||
Construction | |||||||||||
Bicycle facilities | 16 spaces | ||||||||||
Disabled access | Yes | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened |
1834 (B&P)[1] 4 May 1987 (Orange Line)[2] | ||||||||||
Closed | 29 September 1940 (NYNH&H) | ||||||||||
Rebuilt | 1 June 1897 | ||||||||||
Traffic | |||||||||||
Passengers (2009) | 3,693 (weekday average boardings)[3] | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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Location | |||||||||||
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Roxbury Crossing is an MBTA subway station on the Orange Line, located at 1400 Tremont Street in the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, on the location of a former commuter rail station of the same name. The current station opened in 1987 as part of the renovation and relocation of the southern Orange Line.
History
On 21 June 1831, the Boston and Providence Railroad was incorporated, and was chartered the next day to build a rail line between its two namesake cities; construction began in late 1832, and the B&P opened from Park Square to Canton in 1834, with intermediate stations at Readville and Roxbury Crossing (the remaining section of the B&P main line, from Canton to Providence, opened the following year with the completion of the Canton Viaduct).[1][4] Originally, the station (along with the entire B&P main line north of Readville) was at ground level, but, starting in 1891, the Old Colony Railroad (which had acquired the B&P in 1888, and was itself acquired in 1893 by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad) raised the section of its main line through Roxbury and Jamaica Plain (extending from Massachusetts Avenue to the current location of Forest Hills station) onto a 4-track stone embankment to eliminate dangerous grade crossings. The project involved the building of five new stations in Roxbury and Jamaica Plain; the existing stations at Roxbury Crossing, Jamaica Plain, and Forest Hills were replaced with new elevated stations, while two additional commuter stations were built at Heath Street and Boylston Street. The new Roxbury Crossing station opened on 1 June 1897, along with the other four new stations.[4][5]
On 22 November 1909, the Washington Street Elevated was extended south along Washington Street from its original southern terminus at Dudley, with new stations at Egleston and Forest Hills; an infill station at Green Street opened on 22 September 1912.[2] Although the five NYNH&H stations in Roxbury and Jamaica Plain continued to operate for over three decades following the southward extension of the Washington Street Elevated, they were ultimately unable to compete with the Elevated, and Roxbury Crossing, along with the other four stations, was closed on 29 September 1940 due to a lack of passengers.[4][5]
In the 1960s, plans took hold to extend I-95 into downtown Boston along the NYNH&H's right-of-way and to replace the Washington Street Elevated (from 1967 known as the Orange Line) with a rapid transit line running in the new highway's median; these plans led to the demolition of hundreds of homes (including the virtual obliteration of the Roxbury Crossing neighbourhood) and the clearing of a long strip of land (the Southwest Corridor) extending through Roxbury and Jamaica Plain all the way up to Green Street, before the project was halted by highway revolts in 1969 and the 11 February 1970 announcement by Governor Francis W. Sargent of a moratorium on new highway construction within the Route 128 corridor, and eventually cancelled by Governor Sargent in 1972. The cleared strip of land was eventually developed into the Southwest Corridor Park, and the Orange Line was moved to a new alignment along the Corridor in 1987 despite the cancellation of the project originally calling for its relocation. This included a new rapid transit station at Roxbury Crossing, on the site of the former NYNH&H station; the Washington Street Elevated was permanently closed on 30 April 1987, and Roxbury Crossing station, along with the eight other new stations on the southern Orange Line, opened four days later.[4][2]
Accessibility
Like all stations on the Orange Line, this station is wheelchair accessible.
Attractions
- Boston Building Resources
- Roxbury Community College
Bus connections
- 22 Ashmont Station - Ruggles Station via Jackson Square
- 29 Mattapan Station - Ruggles Station via Jackson Square
- 66 Harvard Station - Dudley Station via Allston & Brookline Village
Station layout
G | Street Level | Exit/Entrance |
M | Mezzanine | To entrances/exits |
L2 Platforms |
Southbound | ← Orange Line toward Forest Hills (Jackson Square) |
Island platform, doors will open on the left | ||
Northbound | → Orange Line toward Oak Grove (Ruggles) → |
References
- 1 2 Local Attachments : The Making of an American Urban Neighborhood, 1850 to 1920 (Creating the North American Landscape), by Alexander von Hoffman, The Johns Hopkins University Press (1996), ISBN 0-8018-5393-1
- 1 2 3 Belcher, Jonathan (26 December 2015). "Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district" (PDF). NETransit. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
- ↑ "Ridership and Service Statistics" (PDF). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. 2010. Retrieved 28 October 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 Heath, Richard (25 January 2013). "A HISTORY OF FOREST HILLS" (PDF). Jamaica Plain Historical Society. Retrieved 13 February 2016.
- 1 2 Rocheleau, Matt (26 November 2012). "Raising the railroad in Forest Hills". Boston Globe. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roxbury Crossing (MBTA station). |
- The MBTA's official page for this station
- Photos of this station at world.nycsubway.org
- Tremont Street entrance from Google Maps Street View
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