Lancaster station (California) explained

Lancaster
Style:Metrolink (California)
Address:44812 Sierra Highway
Borough:Lancaster, California
Owned:City of Lancaster
Line:SCRRA Valley Subdivision
Platform:1 side platform
Tracks:4 (2 bypass tracks, 1 storage track)
Parking:420 spaces, 5 accessible spaces[1]
Bicycle:Lockers
Accessible:Yes
Opened:[2]
Mapframe:yes

Lancaster station is owned by and located in the city of Lancaster, California. It serves as a transfer point for several public transportation bus routes as well as the final Metrolink train station on the Antelope Valley Line that originates away in downtown Los Angeles, at Union Station.

History

Metrolink's Antelope Valley Line originally terminated in Santa Clarita, and was named the Santa Clarita line. Its plans to extend the line were expedited by almost 10 years following the 1994 Northridge earthquake, which collapsed sections of the SR 14 and I-5 freeways. The Navy Seabee construction battalion and crews from the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works built an emergency Lancaster station in three days, and Metrolink service began on January 24, one week after the earthquake.[3]

Connecting services

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lancaster Train Station . June 26, 2024 . . en.
  2. News: Brooks . Carole A. . Local Metrolink Line Sets System Record Monday With 16,000 Riders . January 8, 2021 . The Signal . January 25, 1994 . Santa Clarita, California . 10. Newspapers.com.
  3. Book: Gbenekama. Delana G.. Metrolink 20th Anniversary Report. October 2012. HWDS and Associates, Inc.. 9, 48. May 21, 2018.