Addison | |
Style: | Dallas Area Rapid Transit |
Address: | 4925 Arapaho Rd. Addison, Texas 75001 |
Coordinates: | 32.9586°N -96.8281°W |
Line: | Silver Line (future) |
Other: | DART:,,,,,,,,,,, (M-F) |
Parking: | 300 spaces[1] |
Opened: | June 7, 1999[2] |
Rebuilt: | 2025-2026 (planned) |
Accessible: | Yes |
Owned: | Dallas Area Rapid Transit |
Other Services Header: | Future services |
Addison Transit Center is a bus-only mass transit station located along Arapaho Road in Addison, Texas. It is part of the Dallas Area Rapid Transit system.
The station services downtown Addison, including Addison Circle Park and Addison Airport. Bus routes at the station connect to the Galleria Dallas mall, Downtown Dallas, and other northern Dallas suburbs.[3]
This transit center will be an inaugural station on the Silver Line commuter rail service when that line is completed.[4]
The station was opened on June 7, 1999 as a replacement for park-and-ride lots at Prestonwood Mall and Loos Field House. The facility was built at a $7.8 million cost, $5 million of which was for the land.
Four photographic collages of Addison were installed on the ceiling of the facility. The collages, which included images submitted by local residents, were created by local artist Philip Lamb. Lamb had previously worked with DART to create terrazzo panels at Dallas Union Station.[5] [6]
Addison Transit Center is adjacent to a rail corridor built by the St. Louis Southwestern Railway (also known as the Cotton Belt Route) which DART purchased in 1990 for a proposed commuter rail line between DFW Airport and Plano.[7] Addison would be included as a station on this route. In fact, following opposition to the line from parts of North Dallas, one proposal suggested making Addison the eastern terminus of the line.[8]
The line was approved in August 2016[9] and was later renamed the Silver Line. Construction of the rail platforms of Addison Transit Center began February 1, 2021.[10] Service is set to begin when the Silver Line opens in 2025 or 2026.[11]
In anticipation of the line, the Addison town government announced a $500 million development project on an 18-acre site near the station.