Bayside station (LIRR) explained

Bayside
Style:Long Island Rail Road
Style2:left aligned version
Address:213th Street and 41st Avenue
Bayside, Queens, New York
Coordinates:40.7631°N -73.7718°W
Line:Port Washington Branch
Distance:10.8miles from [1]
Other: NYCT Bus:
MTA Bus:
Nassau Inter-County Express:
Platform:2 side platforms
Tracks:2
Parking:Yes (metered, NYC permit, & private)
Bicycle:Yes
Passengers:7,905[2]
Pass Year:2012 - 2014
Pass Rank:10 of 125
Opened:October 27, 1866 (NY&F)[3]
Rebuilt:1923 (station house)
1928 - 1930 (grade elimination)
Electrified:October 21, 1913
750 V (DC) third rail
Accessible:Yes
Code:BSD
Owned:Long Island Rail Road
Former:Bay Side (1866 - 1872)
Zone:3
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail
Zoom:14

Bayside (formerly Bay Side)[4] is a station on the Long Island Rail Road's Port Washington Branch in the Bayside neighborhood of Queens, New York City. The station is located at 213th Street and 41st Avenue, off Bell Boulevard and just north of Northern Boulevard, and is 12.6 miles (20.3 km) from Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan. The station is part of CityTicket.

History

Bayside station was originally built on October 27, 1866, by the North Shore Railroad of Long Island, a subsidiary of the New York and Flushing Railroad. The station, along with the rest of the line was acquired by the Flushing and North Side Rail Road in 1869. The F&NS was consolidated into the Flushing, North Shore and Central Railroad in 1874 through a merger with the Central Railroad of Long Island, only to be leased in 1876 by the LIRR. The current station building dates to October 11, 1923. The tracks were depressed beneath Bell Boulevard from 1928 through 1930. A railway express elevator building was then opened on the eastbound side until the Port Washington Branch stopped carrying freight. The 1928 express/baggage station remains today, being converted into a local community center. The wooden pedestrian bridge that carried commuters across the tracks to both platforms was replaced in 1998 by a decorative steel bridge.

The station, along with the Port Washington Branch in general, is heavily used. During the 2005 New York City transit strike, Bayside was one of the few stations that Port Washington trains stopped at, and lesser-used stations such as Auburndale and Murray Hill were bypassed.[5] [6]

Station layout

The station has two slightly offset side platforms, each 10 cars long.

GGround levelExit/entrance, crossover, buses
P
Platform level
Platform A, side platform
Track 1← toward or
Track 2 toward or
Platform B, side platform

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: TIMETABLE No. 4 . Long Island Rail Road . May 14, 2012 . August 6, 2022 . VI.
  2. Web site: 2012-2014 LIRR Origin and Destination Report : Volume I: Travel Behavior Among All LIRR Passengers. 23 August 2016. Metropolitan Transportation Authority. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20190717085537/http://web.mta.info/mta/planning/data/2012_LIRR_OD_Report_Volume_I_FINAL%2008232016.pdf. 17 July 2019. 29 March 2020. PDF pp. 15, 197. Data collection took place after the pretest determinations, starting in September 2012 and concluding in May 2014. .... 2012-2014 LIRR O[rigin and ]D[estination] COUNTS: WEEKDAY East/West Total By Station in Numerical Order ... Bayside.
  3. [Vincent F. Seyfried]
  4. http://digitalarchives.queenslibrary.org/vital/access/services/Download/aql:336/SOURCE1?view=true The Long Island Rail Road A Comprehensive History by Vincent F. Seyfried Part Two The Flushing, North Shore & Central Railroad
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20051228133245/http://www.mta.info/strike/lirr.htm MTA Strike Contingency Plan: Long Island Rail Road Information
  6. Web site: NYC Transit Strike Day 2 in Queens - Tips and News . John . Roleke . About.com: Queens, NY . December 20, 2005 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100329192917/http://queens.about.com/b/2005/12/20/nyc-transit-strike-day-1-queens-news-and-tips.htm . March 29, 2010.