Southborough station (MBTA) explained

Style:MBTA
Southborough
Address:87 Southville Road
Coordinates:42.2669°N -71.525°W
Platform:2 side platforms
Tracks:2
Parking:364 spaces, $6.00 each
Passengers:525 (weekday average boardings)
Pass Year:2018
Opened:June 22, 2002
Accessible:Yes
Zone:6
Former:Cordaville
Other Services Header:Former services
Other Services Collapsible:yes
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail
Zoom:12

Southborough station is a commuter rail station on the MBTA Commuter Rail Framingham/Worcester Line, located near the intersection of Cordaville Street and River Street (MA 85) in the Cordaville section of Southborough, Massachusetts. The parking area is located off River Street adjacent to the inbound platform. Passengers use ramps and stairways to access the sidewalk along River Street to cross under the tracks.

History

A station at Southborough (later called Southville) was in use by 1838.[1] The station was rebuilt in 1852, and a new station at Cordaville was added.[2] Service to both stations lasted until 1960.

In 1994, service to Worcester was restored as mitigation for delays with reopening the Old Colony Lines. Service initially ran nonstop from Framingham to Worcester, but intermediate park and ride stops were added later as mitigation for delays in reopening the Greenbush Line. After the opening of in 2000 caused traffic congestion in the town, officials from Ashland, Southborough, and Westborough asked that their three stations open within a 90-day span to avoid overwhelming any one town with traffic. The three stations, which together cost $14.2 million, were originally scheduled to open on December 31, 2001.[3] However, they were delayed by several factors, including a debate on whether to build full-length high-level platforms. Those were ruled out because they interfere with freight traffic; instead, smaller "mini-high" platforms plus long low platforms were built.[4] Southborough and opened on June 22, 2002, followed by on August 24.[5]

A shuttle service connecting the station with two locations in Marlborough began on September 16, 2019.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book:
  2. Book: Report of the Directors of the Boston and Worcester Railroad. 7 . Boston and Worcester Railroad . 1853 .
  3. News: They'll wait for the stations a little longer . Ted . Flanagan . October 16, 2001 . Boston Globe . 28 . Newspapers.com.
  4. News: Hear that whistle blowin' . Boston Globe . June 16, 2002 . Jonathan . Saltzman . 148, 150 . Newspapers.com. (second page)
  5. News: New stations popular with commuters: Town's rail stop will open Aug. 24 . Jonathan . Saltzman . 111 . Boston Globe . Newspapers.com . August 11, 2002.
  6. Free shuttle service to MBTA to launch next month . Marlborough Economic Development Corporation . August 27, 2019.