Joliet Union Station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joliet
Amtrak Inter-city rail station
Metra commuter rail station
Station statistics
Address 50 East Jefferson Street
Joliet, Illinois 60432
Connections Pace Buses
Platforms 1 side platform (Rock Island District)
1 side platform, 1 island platform (Amtrak)
Tracks 1 (Rock Island District)
4 (Amtrak)
Parking Yes
Bicycle facilities Yes
Other information
Opened 1912
Rebuilt 1989–1991
Accessible
Station code JOL (Amtrak)
Owned by City of Joliet (⅔)
and Metra (⅓)
Fare zone H (Metra)
Traffic
Passengers (2013)70,142[1] Increase 11%
Services
Preceding station   Amtrak   Following station
toward St. Louis
Lincoln Service
toward Chicago
Texas Eagle
Terminus
Metra
Terminus Heritage Corridor
Rock Island District
    Former services    
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe
toward Los Angeles
Main Line
toward Los Angeles
Main Line
Major stations
Terminus
Rock Island Line
toward Denver or Colorado Springs
Main Line
toward Chicago
Joliet Union Station
Location Joliet, Illinois, USA
Coordinates 41°31′28″N 88°4′46″W / 41.52444°N 88.07944°W / 41.52444; -88.07944Coordinates: 41°31′28″N 88°4′46″W / 41.52444°N 88.07944°W / 41.52444; -88.07944
Architect Cook Engineering & Construction, Jarvis Hunt
Architectural style Beaux Arts/Classical
NRHP Reference # 78001200
Added to NRHP August 1, 1978

Joliet Union Station is a commuter and long-distance railroad station in central Joliet, Illinois serving both Amtrak long-distance and Metra commuter trains. It is at the junction of the former Rock Island Line, Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe, and Alton Railroad main lines. Therefore it has two different milepost numbers depending on how far each route is to Chicago. On The Metra Rock Island District Line, Joliet is 40.2 miles (64.7 km) away from LaSalle Street Station, the northern terminus of the line in Downtown Chicago.[2] On The Metra Heritage Corridor and Amtrak routes, 37.2 miles (59.9 km) away from Chicago Union Station, the northern terminus of the line.[3]

The Rock Island line runs via Blue Island, Illinois to LaSalle Street Station (track owned by Metra), while the Metra Heritage Corridor line runs via Summit, Illinois to Chicago's Union Station (track owned by Canadian National). The Blue Island trains leave from a single track on the south side of the station, while four tracks on the east side serve Amtrak, Metra Heritage, BNSF freight, and Union Pacific freight trains (BNSF owns the western two tracks, while UP owns the eastern two).[4][5] CSX takes over ownership of the Rock Island tracks just west of the station, with trackage rights from the Iowa Interstate Railroad.[5]

Five Amtrak trains on the Chicago – St. Louis corridor stop in Joliet daily each way: the Texas Eagle and the Lincoln Service. This was also a stop for the Ann Rutledge until April 2007.

Train service to Joliet was begun by the Chicago and Rock Island Railroad, a predecessor of the Rock Island Line, in 1852. Joliet Union Station was designed by architect Jarvis Hunt in the Beaux Arts Classical style, and was built in 1912.[6] The City of Joliet owns two thirds of the station and Metra owns the other third.[4] The former waiting room has been converted to a banquet hall that can hold 350 guests.[4]

History

Joliet Union Station

This station used to serve the Southwest Chief until the BNSF merger when Amtrak rerouted the Southwest Chief to the CB&Q to Galesburg. This station is the site of the old Rock Island Line diamond.

When originally built, there were pedestrian tunnels between the terminal and a platform between the first and second track on both the south and east sides of the building. Canopies also covered those platforms. However, the tunnels were later closed and the canopies removed. Finally passenger service on the east side of the building was moved to the third and fourth rails, requiring passengers to cross over the freight tracks to access the trains.[7] Later the number of Rock Island tracks on the south side of the building was reduced from four to one.

Joliet Union Station was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 1, 1978.[8] The station was extensively renovated and made ADA-accessible in 1989–1991. Eastbound U.S. Highway 30, the Lincoln Highway, passes by Joliet Union Station.

Future

The state government of Illinois announced, on October 28, 2010, long-term plans to replace Joliet Union Station and partly rebuild the tracks. Separate tracks, dedicated solely to freight traffic, will be laid for BNSF container stacktrains. Rail passengers will be rerouted into a new multimodal train and bus station. The $42 million project is scheduled to be completed in 2013.[9] $32 million came from “Illinois Jobs Now!”, a six year, $31 billion statewide capital program supported by 20 year state bonds and federal and local matching funds. The BNSF Railway also pledged $2.2 million and the city contributed $7.5 million.[10] As planned, the existing Union Station building will remain, but a new terminal would be built beside it. New underground tunnels would provide Metra access to the Heritage Corridor Line trains, eliminating the need to cross the BNSF freight tracks. The project will also include a new 500-car parking garage. The project is funded by a $32 million grant from the state.[9]

Currently Metra controls the interlocking tower at the junction of the Rock Island and BNSF tracks. As a result, Metra makes freight trains stop in order to give Metra passenger trains priority. Under the grant, control of the interlock would be shifted to the BNSF and Union Pacific and the tower building itself will be demolished. The Metra Rock Island passenger platform would be moved across the diamond to the east side of the BNSF tracks to avoid conflict with the flow of freight trains.[11]

Bus connections

Pace

References

External links

Media related to Joliet Union Station at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.