Forest Lane station explained

Forest Lane
Style:Dallas Area Rapid Transit
Type:DART light rail station
Address:8210 Forest Lane[1]
Borough:Dallas, Texas
Coordinates:32.9086°N -96.7617°W
Connections: DART:,, and
North Central Dallas GoLink Zone (M-Sun),,
Platform:Island (elevated)
Parking:253 spaces
Bicycle:4 bike lockers,[2] 1 bike rack
Opened:[3]
Accessible:Yes
Owned:Dallas Area Rapid Transit
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail-light
Marker-Color:
  1. 000
Zoom:15

Forest Lane station is a DART Light Rail station in northeastern Dallas, Texas. The elevated station, which serves the and, is located on Forest Lane, NaNmiles east of North Central Expressway (US 75) and 1miles south of Lyndon B. Johnson Freeway (I-635).

The station serves the Medical City Dallas hospital complex, the Cottonwood Trail, and the Hamilton Park neighborhood. In tribute to the largely African-American population of Hamilton Park, the station features a sculpture dedicated to African-Americans who fought against housing segregation.[4]

History

North Central Transit Center

Northeastern Dallas was originally serviced by the North Central Transit Center, a park-and-ride bus station located between North Central Expressway and Coit Road. The transit center was announced by the Texas Department of Transportation in 1983, several months before DART's formation; it was opened in 1985.[5]

The lot consisted of an air-conditioned waiting area and 1,300 parking spaces. In addition to servicing DART, the center was intended to service Surtran, a municipal bus service connecting Dallas to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, but Surtran was discontinued in 1985.[6]

The lot was closed after Forest Lane opened in 2002,[7] with all its bus routes moving to Forest Lane station. The lot was left unused for several years before it was redeveloped; it is currently the location of a Costco store.

Forest Lane

Forest Lane station opened on July 1, 2002, as part of the Red Line's second major expansion. The Saturday before, an opening ceremony, dubbed "Super Saturday", was held at both the Forest Lane and Arapaho Center stations.[8]

In May 2011, the Cottonwood Trail was extended south from North Central Expressway to the White Rock Creek Trail. The extension included a trailhead at Forest Lane, which was the first trailhead to be located at any DART station.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Forest Lane Station . 2024-06-04 . . en.
  2. Web site: Bicycle Parking . . 2024-06-03.
  3. News: Hartzel . Tony . 2002-06-02 . DART light-rail stations reach new level . . . 36A . NewsBank.
  4. Web site: DART Gallery: A Collection of Public Art . . 22.
  5. News: Myerson . Allen R. . 1983-05-10 . State to build N. Dallas bus complex . . . 1A . NewsBank.
  6. DART and the Dallas Transit System, 1971-1987. Dallas Municipal Archives. https://dallascityhall.com/government/citysecretary/archives/Pages/Archives_1991-056.aspx. Scope and Content.
  7. News: 2002-06-23 . DART Changes . . . 32A . NewsBank.
  8. News: Post . Sarah . 2002-06-27 . Events to mark changes rolling into town - Residents to celebrate light rail's arrival, new home for Wildflower! . . . 1R.
  9. News: Simnacher . Joe . 2011-07-05 . Dallas on path to improved trails . . . B1 . NewsBank.