Cary station (North Carolina) explained

Style:Amtrak
Cary, NC
Address:211 North Academy Street
Borough:Cary, North Carolina
Country:United States
Coordinates:35.7886°N -78.7813°W
Line:NCRR Corridor
Aberdeen Subdivision
Connections:
Platform:2 side platforms
Tracks:2
Structure:At-grade
Parking:123 spaces
Accessible:Yes
Opened:1996
Rebuilt:2005, 2011
Owned:Town of Cary
Mapframe:yes

Cary station is an active train station located in Cary, North Carolina. It is served by three Amtrak trains: the,, and services.[1] Service from the Cary station is to Charlotte, Miami, New York, and points in between.[2]

History

The railroad came to Cary in 1854 with the arrival of the North Carolina Railroad.[3] This is the northernmost track in Cary today, and it was originally built mostly by enslaved people. A second line for the Chatham Railroad was completed in 1868, creating a railroad crossing in Cary. Regular passenger service to Cary started in 1867. The Chatham Railroad constructed a passenger waiting room and warehouse in Cary by 1871. By the early 20th century, Cary residents used both railroads for daily trips to Raleigh for shopping. However, during the Great Depression, rail service was discontinued.

Cary's historic station was demolished in about 1976.[4] It had served the Southern Railway and the Seaboard Air Line. When Amtrak passenger service to Cary resumed in 1995, there was no longer a depot. This initial Amtrak service was an infill station on the Piedmont, a state-owned regional railroad operated by Amtrak and mostly financed by the North Carolina Department of Transportation.

Current station

In 1996, the North Carolina Department of Transportation Rail Division erected a platform and shelter for the H Line, north of the station, at the cost of $100,000.[5] This was just prior to the opening of the new Cary Station which cost $737,000—$637,000 from the town and $100,000 from the Triangle Transit Authority. The state-subsidized Carolinian, began serving the station in 1997, in addition to the Piedmont.

In 2006, the North Carolina Department of Transportation constructed a platform on the S Line, south of the station, which allowed the Silver Star (New York-Tampa-Miami) to begin service to Cary. The town contributed $30,000 or 10% of the project's cost.

The station was expanded at the cost of $2 million in NCDOT and Federal Railroad Administration funds in 2010 and 2011. The station reopened on September 1, 2011, and featured a larger waiting room, restrooms, and a staffed ticket sales window with checked baggage service.

In June 2024, the station was a stop along the U.S. Open Express, which operated during the U.S. Open at course number 2 of Pinehurst Resort.[6]

The Cary station has about 130 free parking spaces. It also serves as the hub for GoCary, the bus system for the town. All numbered routes use the station as a terminus.[7] The station also connects to downtown Raleigh and other points in the Triangle via the GoTriangle bus network.[8] [9] The station is designated as a park & ride location for the GoTriangle network.[10]

Awards

In Amtrak's 2017 customer satisfaction survey, the Cary Station ranked #1 in "overall experience," beating more than 450 stations for the honor. Amtrak customers reviewed stations based on cleanliness, ease of boarding, safety, signage, and staff friendliness.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Stradling, Richard (November 9, 2017). "Top-Rated Amtrak Station in Downtown Cary". The Herald-Sun (Durham, NC). pp. A4. Retrieved March 2, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. Web site: Cary Train Schedule North Carolina Amtrak Service . 2022-03-03 . NC By Train . North Carolina Department of Transportation . en-US.
  3. Web site: 150 Years: Tales of Cary's Railroad Stop – CaryCitizen . 2022-03-02 . carycitizen.news.
  4. Web site: Kairis. . Ashley . April 8, 2021 . Cary, NC (CYN) – Great American Stations . 2022-03-02 . en-US.
  5. http://www.bytrain.org/istation/icary.html Cary Station (NCDOT Rail)
  6. News: ‘Just much easier.’ Hundreds ride special trains to the US Open in Pinehurst . News & Observer . Raleigh, NC . Stradling . Richard . June 13, 2024 . June 13, 2024.
  7. Web site: Maps & Schedules - GoCary . gocary.org . 31 July 2024.
  8. Web site: 300 RTC-Cary-Raleigh - GoTriangle . gotriangle.org . 31 July 2024.
  9. Web site: 310 RTC-Wake Tech RTP - GoTriangle . gotriangle.org . 31 July 2024.
  10. Web site: Park-and-Ride - GoTriangle . gotriangle.org . 31 July 2024.