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The Newark Light Rail (NLR) is a light rail system serving Newark, New Jersey, and surrounding areas, owned by New Jersey Transit and operated by its bus operations division. The service consists of two segments, the original Newark City Subway (NCS), and the extension to Broad Street station.
1980 (purchase of Transport of New Jersey) Headquarters: Newark, New Jersey: Service area: New Jersey (statewide) Service type: Local and commuter bus transit, Newark Light Rail: Routes: 267 (See list below) Stations: 26 bus terminals, 19,500 bus stops, 17 light rail stations [1] Fleet: 3,052 buses, 696 leased to private operators 21 light rail ...
The Newark Light Rail (NLR) is a light rail system composed of two sections, the Newark City Subway, originally opened in the 1930s by PSCT as the No. 7 line, and the sole surviving line of several that ran into this tunnel, and the Broad Street Line which operates from Newark Penn to Newark Broad Street via Washington Park and Riverfront Stadium, which opened in 2006.
A Pennsylvania Railroad class GG1 train, built for the Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1930s–1940s, hauls a commuter train into South Amboy station in 1981. NJT was founded on July 17, 1979, an offspring of the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), mandated by the state government to address many then-pressing transportation problems. [5]
Formerly route 9 Newark Avenue. 80S began under Montgomery and West Side IBOA. Numbered #30 in 2016. 80S service under New Jersey Transit began October 28, 2023; Greenville; 81: Bayonne 1 Street and Avenue C or Jersey City-Greenville: Exchange Place: Avenue C, New Jersey Turnpike (X trips only), Ocean Avenue (full-time), Montgomery Street
Newark Broad Street station is a New Jersey Transit commuter rail and light rail station at 25 University Avenue in Newark, New Jersey.Built in 1903, the station's historic architecture includes an elegant clock tower and a brick and stone façade on the station's main building.
The parallel NJ Transit local bus on U.S. Route 130 was heavily patronized, and the corridor was ripe for economic development. In November 1996, NJ Transit's board of directors approved a light rail transit alignment from Glassboro to Trenton with diesel-powered cars based on the findings of the special study.
Branch Brook Park station is a light rail station in the Forest Hill neighborhood of Newark, New Jersey. The station services trains of the Newark Light Rail, operated by NJ Transit and is the last in the city of Newark heading westbound. The next station to the west is Silver Lake in Belleville.