South Hills Junction (PAT station)

Pittsburgh Light Rail
 South Hills Junction
Pittsburgh Light Rail station

South Hills Junction in 1968
Location Boggston & Warrington Avenue
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 40°25′15″N 80°00′26″W / 40.4209°N 80.0073°W / 40.4209; -80.0073Coordinates: 40°25′15″N 80°00′26″W / 40.4209°N 80.0073°W / 40.4209; -80.0073
Owned by Port Authority
Line(s)
Platforms 4
Connections Port Authority bus routes 41, 41D, 40, 43, Y45, 48, 54C, Y1, Y46 and Y49; Washington City Transit Commuter Route
Construction
Disabled access Yes
History
Opened December 4, 1904
Services
Preceding station   The "T"   Following station
toward Allegheny
Red Line – Overbrook Junction
Red Line – South Hills Village
Blue Line – Library
toward Library
Blue Line – South Hills Village
  Former services  
toward Wood Street
Brown LineTerminus
Location

South Hills Junction is a station on the Port Authority of Allegheny County's light rail network.[1] This station served as the original "merge point" of the inbound Beechview and Overbrook branches of the light rail system, just before the run under Mount Washington through the Mount Washington Transit Tunnel and into downtown Pittsburgh. In 1993 the Overbrook (Blue) Line was shut down for complete reconstruction to serve the modern-day light rail cars. During construction, it was found that a segment of track between the Boggs Ave. stop and South Hills Junction was too narrow for the larger vehicles; this was bypassed with two wide-curved rail ramps built between the Beechview (Red) Line's Palm Garden stop and South Hills Junction where the two branches now merge.

Few local residences are accessible from the station, which functions as a large transit center. In addition to serving as a transfer station for The T, a large number of bus connections are established at the site, including those that travel the South Busway, which travels on the upper level of the station.

History

The station and line were originally established by Pittsburgh Railways in 1904 when the Mount Washington Trolley Tunnel was completed, with the first fare paying passengers on December 4, 1904.[2]

Bus connections

References

  1. Official Port Authority information page
  2. "First passengers carried through Tunnel". Pittsburg Press. April 15, 1958. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
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