Terminal 1–Lindbergh station explained

Terminal 1–Lindbergh
Style:Metro (Minnesota)
Address:6450 Glumack Drive
Borough:Fort Snelling, Minnesota
Coordinates:44.8811°N -93.2057°W
Owned:Metropolitan Airports Commission
Platform:1 island platform
Tracks:2
Structure:Underground
Parking:Paid parking nearby
Accessible:Yes
Zone:Airport: Free service to Terminal 2–Humphrey station, standard fare to all other stations
Passengers:1,908 daily[1]
Pass Year:2023
Pass Percent:-16.4
Pass Rank:6 out of 37
Other Services Header:Future services
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Marker:rail-light
Marker-Color:
  1. 0053a0
Zoom:15

Terminal 1–Lindbergh station is a light rail station on the Metro Blue Line. It is the only underground station on the Blue Line and is located 69feet below ground level at Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport. It is a center-platform station that is accessed by escalator or elevator. Service began at the site when the second phase of the Blue Line opened on December 4, 2004.

Design

The location of this station directly below a major airport caused challenges for its designers. The tunnel and the station both had to be carefully designed to meet Federal Aviation Administration safety requirements.[2] Passengers can access this station from the transit center in the "Hub Building", which is reached by taking the Minneapolis–St. Paul Airport Trams, a people mover from the main terminal.[3]

Due to concerns about terrorism, the tunnels were designed to be highly blast-resistant. The underground portion was the costliest section of the entire rail project.[4]

This station was excavated after the two main tunnel tubes were constructed with a tunnel boring machine (though cut and cover was used near the ends of the tunnels). The station box is 40feet high, 63feet wide, and approximately 300feet long. The station is the largest subterranean public space in Minnesota.[5] During the excavation of the tunnels, a buried river valley was encountered a few hundred feet south of the station.

Lindbergh Station is unheated, but maintains a temperature of roughly 50–60 °F (10–15 °C) year-round because of its underground location.

Service

Airport shuttle operation

Service between this station and Terminal 2–Humphrey station is free to passengers and operates 24-hours a day. The Blue Line is the main way for travelers to transfer between terminals. Along with Terminal 2-Humphrey station, the station is owned and maintained by the Metropolitan Airports Commission rather than Metro Transit.

Connections

From the station, there is a direct bus connection to Route 54 to Downtown Saint Paul and the Mall of America.

Public art

The station contains the artwork Dragonfly by Andrea Myklebust and Stanton Sears. The artwork consists of a by terrazzo floor pattern of a dragonfly wing on platform complemented by an airfoil wing suspended from the ceiling. The artwork is owned and maintained by the Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport. Myklebust and Sears have several other terrazzo floor artworks at the airport.[6] The walls of the station are fabricated to look like an outcrop of Saint Peter Sandstone through which the tunnels have been bored.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Transit Stops Boardings and Alightings - Minnesota Geospatial Commons . 2024-06-17 . gisdata.mn.gov . en-US.
  2. Book: North American Tunneling 2004 . April 2004 . CRC Press . 978-9058096692 . Ozdemir . Levent . Atlanta.
  3. Web site: 2018 . Terminal-1-Lindbergh-Station . December 13, 2018 . Metro Transit.
  4. Web site: August 2010 . Hiawatha Line Before and After Study . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20130319051613/http://www.metrotransit.org/Data/Sites/1/media/lightrail/Hiawatha_Before_After_study.pdf . March 19, 2013 . May 22, 2013 . Metro Transit . 23.
  5. News: Stratton . Jeremy . September 4, 2007 . Twin tunnels carrying trains to and from Minneapolis-St. Paul airport were major undertaking . aviationpros.com . Endeavor Business Media . August 6, 2021.
  6. Web site: Terminal 1-Lindbergh Station Public Art – Metro Transit . August 6, 2021 . www.metrotransit.org . Metro Transit.