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  • Westchester Avenue Station - New Haven Railroad and New York Westchester and Boston Railway

  • Discussion relating to the NH and its subsidiaries (NYW&B, Union Freight Railroad, Connecticut Company, steamship lines, etc.). up until its 1969 inclusion into the Penn Central merger. This forum is also for the discussion of efforts to preserve former New Haven equipment, artifacts and its history. You may also wish to visit www.nhrhta.org for more information.
Discussion relating to the NH and its subsidiaries (NYW&B, Union Freight Railroad, Connecticut Company, steamship lines, etc.). up until its 1969 inclusion into the Penn Central merger. This forum is also for the discussion of efforts to preserve former New Haven equipment, artifacts and its history. You may also wish to visit www.nhrhta.org for more information.
 #1170881  by chnhrr
 
Upon doing some research, I came across this Daily News article from November 20, 2012 on an effort by two architects to restore the Westchester Avenue Station in the Bronx. Has anyone heard any updates concerning their worthy effort? I include a copy of Daniel Beekman’s article from the posting as reference.
 #1171504  by CannaScrews
 
Then you can get off at Westchester Ave, & take the Pelham Bay line (whatever number it is now) & scoot down to Wall St whilst having a seat & you don't have to fight the crowds on the 42nd St platform!


Constructing a station will take maybe $10M or more for what reason? You might get some reverse commuting to Stamford, but the Fordham Rd station 2 miles west would serve the same purpose if MNCR chose to do so.

Nice station though, I used to go by it frequently as a young-un & figured out what the "NYW&B" on the facade meant all my my lonesome.
 #1618866  by Jeff Smith
 
https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/wes ... ue-station
Designed by famed 20th-century architect Cass Gilbert, the future of this abandoned 1908 rail station is currently in limbo.

THE WESTCHESTER AVENUE STATION WAS constructed in 1908 to expand commuter rail service into the Bronx, Westchester County, and Connecticut by the New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad (NY, NH & H). Architect Cass Gilbert, who had recently completed the lauded U.S. Custom House in Lower Manhattan, was tasked with designing 12 stations, though not all of the proposed stations were built.

The Westchester Avenue station consisted of three sections: a tall, central entry hall, a shorter waiting room suspended over the tracks to the east, and a small west porch. The entrance is ornamented with glazed, polychrome terra cotta. In his later 1910 design of the Woolworth Building, Gilbert again utilized terra cotta detailing.

Several factors hampered the success of commuter service on this line: the amount of debt incurred during the expansion, a terminus in the Bronx not Manhattan, and later competition with less expensive subway service. The NY, NH, and H discontinued service to local stations in 1931 although a subsidiary, the New York, Westchester, and Boston rail lines, continued to make scheduled stops. Both railroads eventually declared bankruptcy and on December 31, 1937, the last train stopped at Westchester Avenue.

Amtrak now owns the property, which operates a portion of the Northeast Corridor in the right-of-way. Amtrak lists the asset as a “structure in need of demolition.” The trackside platforms and stairs have been removed. The west porch was demolished, and replaced by an exit from the Sheridan Expressway. Graffiti removal has bleached the colors from the terra cotta on the lower part of the entry hall, which is not to say that the building is free of graffiti. Ivy often covers much of the structure.

The Westchester Avenue station is neither listed on the National Register of Historic Places nor is it a New York City landmark, though local community activists hope to restore and repurpose the building.
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