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A High Capacity Metro Train on an East Pakenham bound service arrives at Platform 6, July 2024. It is serviced by Metro Trains' Alamein, Belgrave, Cranbourne, Frankston, Glen Waverley, Lilydale, Pakenham and Sandringham line services, and V/Line's Gippsland line services. Platform 6 signage for Gippsland and Dandenong group lines. Platform 1:
Jordanville station consists of an island platform which is connected to Winsor Avenue and Huntingdale Road via a pedestrian subway. The length of the platform is approximately 160 metres (520 ft), long enough for a Metro Trains 7-car HCMT. There is a single station building, which primarily functions as a waiting room. [6]
[2] [6] The 1908-built station building, which is now owned and occupied by the Belmont Lions Club, was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 4, 1998. [3] [5] [7] As part of budget cuts, the MBTA was considering an option to shutter the current Belmont station as well as Waverley station and build a new stop in between.
An exit to the West Front of the U.S. Capitol building is pictured on the day it was announced U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration is being moved indoors due to dangerously cold ...
Darling has two side platforms with two faces. The station is currently served by the Glen Waverley line, a service on the metropolitan rail network. [16] The Glen Waverley line runs from Glen Waverley station south east of Melbourne, joining the Belgrave, Lilydale, and Alamein lines at Burnley station, before travelling through the City Loop. [17]
Like the suburb itself, the station was named after Sir Walter Scott's novel Waverley. The suburb was given the name "Mount Waverley" in 1905 to distinguish it from the neighbouring suburb of Glen Waverley. [12] [13] In the late 1950s, a second platform was built at the station as part of the duplication works on the Glen Waverley line. [12]
The cross-platform transfer between both the IND and BMT 63rd Street lines opened on January 1, 2017 with the opening of the Second Avenue Subway. [39] Lexington Avenue-63rd Street was originally a two level station with the BMT tracks hidden behind a now demolished wall with orange tiles. [40] Lexington Avenue–59th Street: BMT Broadway Line N
The Frank B. Hopewell House is a historic house at 301 Waverley Avenue in Newton, Massachusetts. The large 3 + 1 ⁄ 2-story brick building was designed by Boston architect George H Sidebottom and built in 1919. It is the most intact and best preserved of several large early 20th century Colonial Revival estate houses in the city.