Bingham Junction station explained

Bingham Junction
Symbol:red
Symbol Location:uta
Address:7387 South Bingham Junction Boulevard
Borough:Midvale, Utah
Country:United States
Connections: UTA: F570[1]
Platform:1 island platform
Tracks:2
Structure:At-grade
Parking:200 spaces
Accessible:Yes
Owned:Utah Transit Authority (UTA)
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail-light
Zoom:15

Bingham Junction station is a light rail station in Midvale, Utah, United States, served by the Red Line of the Utah Transit Authority's (UTA) TRAX light rail system. The Red Line provides service from the University of Utah to the Daybreak community of South Jordan.

Description

The station is located at 7387 South Bingham Junction Boulevard (approximately 930 West), about midway between the Jordan River and Interstate 15.[2] Bingham Junction Boulevard is easily accessed from Jordan River Boulevard (7000 South/7200 South [SR-48]) on the north and 7720 South (West Center Street) on the south. The station situated in the middle of a large, former superfund site (approaching a square mile in size) associated with Midvale's industrial past (especially smelting), but recent redevelopment of the area includes transit-oriented residential areas to the south, commercial developments to the west, and a retail area far to the north (visible across brownfield). The station is also UTA's closest to Midvale's historic downtown, but any direct route to it for pedestrians remains blocked by a fenced right-of-way for a railroad spur.

The station's name refers to the connection between the Union Pacific Railroad's Provo Subdivision (previously the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad's Utah Division), which still exists (for the use of the Savage Bingham and Garfield Railroad freight service) a few blocks east of the station. Bingham Junction has a Park and Ride lot with 200 free parking spaces available.[3] The station opened August 7, 2011, as part of the Red Line (Mid-Jordan) and is operated by the Utah Transit Authority.[4]

Notes and References

  1. April 14, 2022 . Salt Lake County System Map . Utah Transit Authority.
  2. News: UTA's board OKs station names. Hancock. Laura. Deseret News. Deseret Digital Media. Salt Lake City. February 25, 2010. August 8, 2013.
  3. Web site: TRAX Parking and Stops. rideuta.com. Utah Transit Authority. March 1, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20121223120602/http://www.rideuta.com/mc/?page=TRAX-TRAXParkingandStops. December 23, 2012. dead.
  4. News: 2011 completion date for two TRAX lines announced. Fidel. Steve. Deseret News. Salt Lake City. October 1, 2010. March 7, 2013.