Granville station (SkyTrain) explained

Granville
Symbol Location:vancouver
Symbol:expo
Type:SkyTrain station
Style:TransLink (BC)
Style2:SkyTrain
Address:655 Seymour Street, Vancouver
Structure:Subway
Platform:Split platforms
Levels:2
Tracks:2
Architect:Architektengruppe U-Bahn
Accessible:yes
Code:GV
Owned:TransLink
Zone:1
Connections: Vancouver City Centre

Granville is an underground station on the Expo Line of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. The station is located in Downtown Vancouver on the portion of Granville Street that is known as the Granville Mall. The station is accessible from the surface via entrances on Granville Street and Seymour Street (both between Georgia and Dunsmuir Streets), and the Dunsmuir entrance between Granville and Seymour.

The station serves the shopping and entertainment districts along Granville and Robson Streets, as well as the office and shopping complexes of Pacific Centre and Vancouver Centre. The station is also within walking distance of such amenities as Robson Square (home of the Vancouver Art Gallery, the Provincial Court of British Columbia, and a satellite campus of the University of British Columbia), the Orpheum Theatre, Vancouver Library Square, TD Tower, Scotia Tower and the HSBC Canada Building.

History

Granville station opened in 1985 and is named for nearby Granville Street, which name is derived from "Granville", the name of the original settlement that preceded Vancouver prior to its incorporation in 1886. The Austrian architecture firm Architektengruppe U-Bahn was responsible for designing the station.[1] [2] Its entrances are integrated with Pacific Centre, a shopping mall: BC Transit (the precursor agency to TransLink) signed an agreement with the Hudson's Bay Company in 1983 to lease a sub-basement corridor under the mall for $1 in order to build an entrance facing Granville Mall.[3]

On September 22, 2006, elevator access was introduced from Dunsmuir Street with the completion of the neighbouring Hudson on Granville development,[4] and large signs were added at the platform level to guide passengers to the newly available elevators. The entrance has separate escalator access to the platform levels independent of the existing station in a similar two up/one down configuration for the longest bank, and a ticket-vending level with a connection to the existing Granville Mall entrance and the Hudson's Bay and Pacific Centre shopping mall. There are retail spaces within the new addition's ticket vending lobby and in the passageway to Hudson's Bay.

The design of the addition, its capacity, and connection to Granville Mall made it possible for the original facility to be closed entirely; however, it remained in full service. The original station area closed only temporarily for lighting upgrades from October 23, 2006, to mid-November.[5]

On May 8, 2018, TransLink announced the Granville Station Escalator Replacement Project as part of the TransLink Maintenance and Repair Program. The replacement of six escalators began on May 26, 2018, resulting in the closure of the Seymour Street entrance and the closure of the Granville/Seymour concourse.[6] On July 17, 2020, the escalators returned to service and the Seymour Street entrance was re-opened.[7]

Structure and design

Like Burrard station, the station was built inside the Dunsmuir Tunnel and has a distinctive platform design. The westbound track (to Waterfront) is stacked above the eastbound track (to King George and Production Way–University stations), with the westbound platform being one level above the eastbound platform. At approximately underground, Granville station is the deepest subway station on the Expo Line.[8]

Services

Granville station is one of four SkyTrain stations on the Expo Line that serve Downtown Vancouver. It connects with many TransLink bus routes, including trolleybus routes on the Granville Mall and suburban bus routes (running on nearby Georgia Street) heading to and from North and West Vancouver. Passengers are able to transfer to the Canada Line (served by Vancouver City Centre station) by walking through Pacific Centre or Vancouver Centre and the Hudson Bay department store, although the only direct transfer point is at Waterfront station.

There is a small retail space standing at the bottom of the long escalator bank in the original station area, where the corridor splits into the westbound and eastbound routes. It is one of the few stores located entirely within a fare paid zone of any SkyTrain station.

Granville station is unique in being one of only a few stations having no surface entrance building of its own, independent of any adjacent buildings (Main Street–Science World station is another for example). The station has three entrances: Granville Mall through the Hudson's Bay Company department store, Seymour Street with direct access to the ticketing platform, and Dunsmuir Street through the Hudson condominium development.

Station information

Entrances

Transit connections

See also: List of bus routes in Metro Vancouver.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pabillano . Jhenifer . 1982 SkyTrain station concept drawings! . The Buzzer Blog . TransLink . February 21, 2011 . February 17, 2019.
  2. Web site: U-Bahn Vancouver. Architektengruppe U-Bahn. February 17, 2019. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160428221856/http://www.agu.at/vancouver.html. April 28, 2016.
  3. News: Lewis . Brian . June 24, 1983 . Granville stop a $1 snap . B1 . . . June 27, 2023.
  4. Web site: Granville Station now fully accessible . The Buzzer . TransLink . September 29, 2006 . February 27, 2020.
  5. Web site: Access to Granville Station temporarily restricted effective Oct. 23 . The Buzzer . TransLink . October 12, 2006 . February 27, 2020.
  6. Web site: Granville Escalator Replacement Project set to begin on May 26 . The Buzzer . TransLink . May 9, 2018 . Allen . Tung. May 8, 2018 .
  7. Web site: Granville SkyTrain Station to reopen Friday after 2-year partial closure . CBC News . July 16, 2020 . July 17, 2020.
  8. Web site: TransLink replacing aging escalators at Granville station . Vancouver Courier . May 8, 2018 . May 18, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190131181436/https://www.vancourier.com/news/translink-replacing-aging-escalators-at-granville-station-1.23295591 . January 31, 2019 . live.