Downtown New Britain station explained

Downtown New Britain
Style:CT Transit
Address:East Main Street and Harvard Street
New Britain, Connecticut
Owned:ConnDOT
Operator:Connecticut Transit
Bus Stands:19 bays
Bus Routes:101, 102, 128, 505, 506, 507, 509, 511, 513, 923, 928
Connections:41, 501, 502, 503, 510, 512, HNB (on Columbus Boulevard)
Bicycle:Yes
Accessible:Yes
Opened:[1]
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:bus
Zoom:14

Downtown New Britain is a bus rapid transit station and the terminus of the CTfastrak line, located just south of Route 72 off Columbus Boulevard and Main Street in New Britain, Connecticut. It opened with the line on March 28, 2015. The station consists of one side platform and one island platform, comprising a collective total of 19 bus bays for CTfastrak local and express services, plus local CT Transit buses which do not use the busway.[2] The station is located at the site of New Britain's former railroad station, which saw service from 1850 to 1960.

Railroad history

The Hartford and New Haven Railroad (H&NH) opened through the far east part of New Britain in 1839.[3] The railroad quickly established a New Britain station on what is now New Britain Avenue (CT-174) just over the Wethersfield border, possibly in a privately owned building or house.[4] It was replaced with a dedicated station at the same location in 1848.The Hartford, Providence and Fishkill Railroad (HP&F) opened in 1850; it shared the H&NH right of way north of Newington Junction, but diverged to the south and ran to downtown New Britain and beyond. The HP&F established their own station just east of Main Street; the H&NH then moved their New Britain station north to Newington and finally Newington Junction. The H&NH established their own branch from Middletown to New Britain via Berlin in 1865, sharing the HP&F station.

The station may have been expanded in 1876, but by the 1880s it was in poor condition and publicly maligned. The state legislature ordered a new union station in 1884, which was completed in 1887. A retail arcade stretching west from the station, unique on the New Haven Railroad, was completed within the next three years. It proved profitable but the railroad declined to pursue similar dedicated retail spaces at other stations, stating they were "not in that kind of business".

Passenger service declined in the 20th century; service on the branch to Middletown ended in 1932. Waterbury–Boston intercity service via New Britain, including the Nutmeg, operated until 1955. The city purchased the station in November 1956; it was demolished at the end of the month and replaced with a parking lot weeks after. Tickets were thereafter sold from an office in the arcade. Waterbury-Hartford local service ended on January 22, 1960, replaced with buses to Newington Junction. The ticket office closed on September 16, 1960, leaving only local buses serving New Britain.

Future

The 2013 Central Connecticut Rail Study, which analyzed the possibility for commuter rail from Waterbury to Hartford via New Britain and Berlin, recommended placing a rail platform on the straight section of track just south of the bus platforms. This would allow a cross-platform transfer between trains and buses.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Despite Snow, Thousands of Riders, Many First-Timers, Experience CTfastrak on First Day of Service . https://web.archive.org/web/20150911222239/http://ctfastrak.com/about/news/news-releases/13-media-releases/279-03-28-15-despite-snow-thousands-of-riders-many-first-timers-experience-ctfastrak-on-first-day-of-service . 11 September 2015 . Connecticut Department of Transportation . 28 March 2015.
  2. Web site: Station Site Plans . Connecticut Department of Transportation . 17 January 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150118094512/http://www.ctfastrak.com/station-siteplans . 18 January 2015 . dead .
  3. Book: Karr, Ronald Dale . The Rail Lines of Southern New England . 2 . Branch Line Press . 2017 . 9780942147124 . 74–78, 83–89.
  4. Web site: Track 12: CT Passenger Stations, N-NE . Tyler City Station . 1 November 2015.
  5. Web site: Central Connecticut Rail Study: Public Meetings . June 2013 . Connecticut Department of Transportation . 1 November 2015.