Stony Brook station (MBTA) explained

Stony Brook
Style:MBTA
Style2:Orange
Address:100 Boylston Street
Coordinates:42.3172°N -71.1043°W
Tracks:2
Bicycle:12 spaces
Passengers:3,501[1]
Pass Year:FY2019
Opened:May 4, 1987
Structure:Below grade
Accessible:Yes
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Marker:rail-underground
Mapframe-Zoom:13

Stony Brook station is a rapid transit station in Boston, Massachusetts. It serves the MBTA Orange Line and is located below grade at Boylston Street in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood. The station opened on May 4, 1987, as part of the Southwest Corridor project, replacing an earlier station that was open from 1897 to 1940.

History

Railroad station

The Boston and Providence Railroad opened through Roxbury in June 1834. Local stations were gradually added; Boylston Street station was open by around 1849.[2] [3] A new station building was constructed in 1872.[4] [5] It was a one-story wood building located on the west side of the tracks north of Boylston Street.[6] [7] The final wooden bridges on the railroad's mainline were eliminated in the early 1880s when Stony Brook was rerouted to the east side of the tracks.[8] A new station at Boylston was constructed around 1891.[9]

Starting in 1891, the Old Colony Railroad (acquired in 1893 by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad) raised the section of its main line through Jamaica Plain (extending from Massachusetts Avenue to) onto a 4-track stone embankment to eliminate dangerous grade crossings. The project involved the replacement of the five NYNH&H stations in Roxbury and Jamaica Plain; the new elevated stations opened on June 1, 1897.[10] [11]

On November 22, 1909, the Washington Street Elevated was extended south from (now Nubian Square) to Forest Hills. Although the five NYNH&H stations in Roxbury and Jamaica Plain continued to operate for over three decades following the southward extension of the Washington Street Elevated, they were ultimately unable to compete with the Elevated, and all, including Boylston Street, were closed on September 29, 1940 due to a lack of passengers.

Orange Line station

In the 1960s, plans took hold to extend I-95 into downtown Boston along the NYNH&H's right-of-way and to replace the Washington Street Elevated (after 1967 known as the Orange Line) with a rapid transit line running in the new highway's median. Although the project was halted by highway revolts in 1969 and the February 11, 1970 announcement by Governor Francis W. Sargent of a moratorium on new highway construction within the Route 128 corridor, and eventually cancelled by Governor Sargent in 1972, the right-of-way had already been cleared. This empty strip of land (known as the Southwest Corridor) was eventually developed into the Southwest Corridor Park, and the Orange Line was moved to a new alignment along the Corridor in 1987 despite the cancellation of the project originally calling for its relocation. This included a new rapid transit station at Boylston Street, on the site of the former NYNH&H station, named Stony Brook after the former watercourse of the same name. (The name was determined in 1985 as part of a series of station name changes.[12]) The Washington Street Elevated was permanently closed on April 30, 1987, and the new southern half of the Orange Line, including Stony Brook, opened on May 4.

Stony Brook has not been served by MBTA bus service since route 48 was discontinued on July 1, 2012. The entire Orange Line, including Stony Brook station, was closed from August 19 to September 18, 2022, during maintenance work.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A Guide to Ridership Data . MassDOT/MBTA Office of Performance Management and Innovation . June 22, 2020 . 8.
  2. 10.2307/3111453 . Commuter Services in the Boston Area, 1835-1860 . The Business History Review . 36 . 2 . Summer 1962 . 153–170 . Charles J. . Kennedy. 3111453 . 154294514 .
  3. News: House To Let In Roxbury [Advertisement] ]. Boston Evening Transcript . January 4, 1854 . 3 . Newspapers.com.
  4. News: Annual Meeting of the Boston & Providence Railroad Company . The Boston Globe . November 21, 1872 . 1 . Newspapers.com.
  5. Book: Report of the Board of Directors of the Boston and Providence Railroad Corporation for the Year Ending September 30, 1872 . 6 . November 20, 1872 . Boston and Providence Railroad Corporation.
  6. Atlas of the county of Suffolk, Massachusetts : vol. 5th, West Roxbury, now ward 17, Boston . 1874 . G.M. Hopkins & Co. . 10–11 . Plate A . 1:1,800.
  7. https://www.loc.gov/resource/g3764bm.g03693188803/?sp=68 . Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts . Plate 94 . 3 . 1888 . Sanborn Map Company . 1:6,00.
  8. Book: Report of the Board of Directors of the Boston and Providence Railroad Corporation for the Year Ending September 30, 1881 . 9 . Boston and Providence Railroad . 1881.
  9. Book: Twenty-Eighth Annual Report of the Old Colony Railroad Co. to the Stockholders . 7 . September 1891 . Old Colony Railroad Company.
  10. Web site: A HISTORY OF FOREST HILLS. Jamaica Plain Historical Society. Heath, Richard. January 25, 2013 . February 13, 2016.
  11. News: Raising the railroad in Forest Hills . Boston Globe . Rocheleau, Matt . November 26, 2012 . February 12, 2016.
  12. News: T board votes to change the names of some stations . Boston Globe . July 27, 1985 . Douglas S. . Crocket . 26 . Newspapers.com.
  13. Web site: A Rider's Guide to Planning Ahead: Upcoming Orange & Green Line Service Suspensions . August 2022 . Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority.