Capital Area Multimodal Gateway

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Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use American English Template:Infobox station Capital Area Multimodal Gateway, also known as East Lansing station, is an intermodal transit station in East Lansing, Michigan. Operated by the Capital Area Transportation Authority (CATA), it is served by Amtrak's Template:Lnl passenger train, local buses, and intercity buses. It opened in 2015 to replace a nearby Amtrak and bus station operating since 1974.[1]

Description

The Template:Convert station building includes a public waiting area, concessions, Amtrak and intercity bus ticket counters, and public restrooms.[2][3] There are also three internal vestibules which can be accessed by users during the time the station is unstaffed and closed for the day.[4] Outside are separate covered waiting areas for Amtrak and intercity bus riders, a bike storage area, a customer pick-up and drop-off area, and 150 long-term parking spaces.[3]

Services

Amtrak's Blue Water provides a single daily round-trip between Chicago, Illinois and Port Huron, Michigan. Amtrak Thruway provides a connection to long-distance trains in Toledo, Ohio. Indian Trails, in partnership with Greyhound, offers long-distance bus service to various destinations in Michigan. Megabus served the station from 2013 to 2016.[5][6]

Local CATA bus routes 20, 35, 39 stop at the station, and the facility also offers taxicab and bike-sharing. The property also has space on its south end of the site along the CSX Plymouth Subdivision to construct an additional platform for future passenger rail services if needed.

History

File:East Lansing Amtrak station.jpg
The old station, 2007

Historically, the major railroad depots in the Lansing metropolitan area were the Union Station and the Grand Trunk Western Station, both in Lansing. With the establishment of Amtrak in 1971, both stations lost their train service. Amtrak subsequently took over a building in East Lansing to serve as a station for its planned Blue Water train.[1] This building had been built as a storage facility for Michigan State University in 1971.[7] The Blue Water began servicing this facility on September 15, 1974.[8] The service was renamed the Blue Water Limited on October 26, 1975, and became the International Limited on October 31, 1982, when the eastern terminus was extended to Toronto.[8] The International Limited was operated jointly by Via Rail and Amtrak until it was discontinued in 2004 and replaced with the modern Blue Water line.[9]

Script error: No such module "anchor". Plans for the new station complex, the Capital Area Multimodal Gateway, were announced in 2010, and originally included a new parking structure and improved bus facilities as well as bicycle parking.[10] The project was intended to replace the older Amtrak station with updated facilities, and to consolidated rail and bus service into one intermodal transit station.[1] The project was awarded a $6.3 million grant in July 2012 by the U.S. Department of Transportation's Federal Transit Administration, and by then the parking structure had been dropped from the plan. In addition to the construction costs, CATA paid a $3.2 million long-term lease for the site. The station property also included facilities for intercity bus service. Site work began in late July 2014, and included demolition of the old Michigan State University Surplus Store and Printing Services buildings on-site.[11]

File:Last train at old East Lansing station.jpg
The last train to depart from the old East Lansing Amtrak station waits for passengers to board on January 25, 2016. The new station is in the background behind the old station.

The original station closed after the last train departed on January 25, 2016, and operations moved to the newly built station located a few yards to the west.[12]

Passenger statistics

Passenger Statistics for the East Lansing Amtrak Station
(by calendar year)[13]
Year Total Passengers % change
2000 27,661 -12.5%
2001 26,216 -5.2%
2002 23,502 -10.4%
2003 22,495 -4.3%
2004 33,404 +48.5%
2005 40,577 +21.5%
2006 45,212 +11.4%
2007 48,025 +6.2%
2008 51,161 +6.5%
2009 51,280 +0.2%
2010 62,241 +21.4%
2011 66,400 +6.7%
2012 64,975 -2.1%
2013 65,894 +1.4%
2014 64,827 -1.6%
2015 64,357 -0.7%
2016 66,321 +3.1%
2017 68,405 +3.1%

Notable places nearby

See also

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Sister project Template:Amtrak web

Template:Amtrak Michigan stations Template:East Lansing, Michigan

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  7. Michigan Passenger Station's website Template:Webarchive, retrieved February 11, 2009
  8. a b Template:Sanders-Heartland
  9. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  10. Domsic, Melissa. Senate panel OKs $2.5M for East Lansing Amtrak stationTemplate:Dead link, Lansing State Journal, lsj.com, July 29, 2010, retrieved August 10, 2010
  11. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  12. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".">Station closed https://www.freep.com/story/travel/2016/01/22/amtrak-move-terminal-east-lansing/79173586/
  13. Michigan Department of Transportation. Corridor Station Activity , Michigan.gov, retrieved January 22, 2017