North Carrollton/Frankford station explained

North Carrollton/Frankford
Style:Dallas Area Rapid Transit
Address:1717 West Frankford Road
Carrollton, Texas 75007
Coordinates:32.9927°N -96.938°W
Platform:1 island platform
Tracks:2
Structure:At grade
Parking:1,677 spaces[1]
Opened:December 6, 2010[2]
Accessible:Yes
Owned:Dallas Area Rapid Transit
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail-light
Zoom:15

North Carrollton/Frankford station (sometimes shortened to North Carrollton station) is a DART Light Rail station in Carrollton, Texas that serves as the northern terminus of the . The station is the only DART facility to be located in Denton County and primarily serves as a park-and-ride.

The station is adjacent to the right-of-way for the A-train commuter rail line, but the A-train does not stop at North Carrollton/Frankford. Instead, it meets with the Green Line at Trinity Mills, one station to the south.[3]

History

The station was first proposed in 2000 in a study of the "Northwest Corridor", which included the modern-day Green Line and . In these proposals, the station was simply named "Frankford" after Frankford Road.[4]

In 2002, the city of Carrollton passed a resolution proposing names for the three stations in the city. This proposal renamed the Frankford Road station to "North Carrollton" with the specific aim of ensuring that the name "Carrollton" would appear on the line's destination signs.[5]

In 2004, following the proposal of the A-train, the city of Carrollton debated removing North Carrollton/Frankford from the line. The station was primarily intended as a park-and-ride lot for Denton County residents commuting to Downtown Dallas, but the A-train (which did not stop at the station) would serve the same purpose.[6]

The station was opened on December 6, 2010 with the rest of the northern Green Line.

On April 2, 2012, DART began a pilot program known as "Fair Share Parking", which required commuters from non-DART member cities to pay a $2 fee for parking. North Carrollton/Frankford was one of two stations to be included in the program at launch, the other being Parker Road.[7] The proposal was intended to improve parking availability and to make up for the lack of sales tax revenue from non-residents.[8] However, most commuters simply switched to parking at other stations; in North Carrollton/Frankford's case, most commuters moved to Trinity Mills.[9] After the pilot program failed to make a profit, DART opted to end it. North Carrollton/Frankford reverted to free parking on April 2, 2014.[10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: North Carrollton/Frankford Station . 2024-01-18 . . en.
  2. News: Floyd . Jacquielynn . 2010-12-07 . On DART's Green Line, the advantage is clear . . . B1 . NewsBank.
  3. Web site: System Map . . 2023-01-23.
  4. Final Report Major Investment Study for the DART Northwest Corridor . https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1148413/ . report . 2000 . . 2024-02-05 . DART Historical Archive . The Portal to Texas History . University of North Texas.
  5. News: Stafford . Scott . 2002-03-29 . 'We should have Carrollton on the front of that train' City is first to tell agency what it wants light-rail stops called . . . 35A . NewsBank.
  6. News: 2004-10-16 . Regional Roundup . . . 2B . NewsBank.
  7. News: Lindenberger . Michael A. . 2012-04-03 . Parking charges debut . . . B7 . NewsBank.
  8. News: Lindenberger . Michael A. . 2011-09-28 . Paid parking could start at two DART lots by December . . . B3 . NewsBank.
  9. News: Wilonsky . Robert . 2013-03-25 . One year in DART’s paid-parking experiment in Plano, Carrollton is not faring nearly as well as expected . . . NewsBank.
  10. News: Formby . Brandon . 2014-03-31 . DART ends paid parking, creates reserved lot in Plano . . . NewsBank.