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The William F. Walsh Regional Transportation Center (RTC) is an Amtrak intermodal transit station serving the Syracuse area. It is owned and operated by Intermodal Transportation Center, Inc, a subsidiary of Centro, [2] and is also served by Greyhound Lines, Megabus, and Trailways. Local and regional bus transportation is provided by Centro.
Colmar station (French: Gare de Colmar) is a railway station located in Colmar, in the Haut-Rhin département of Alsace, France. The same design was used in the construction of Gdansk's principal railway station in Poland. Thus the buildings are 'twins' of one another.
Rockland, NY: Erie ‡ NJT station leased to Metro-North Naugatuck Waterbury Branch: Naugatuck: New Haven, CT: New Haven: New Canaan New Canaan Branch: New Canaan: Fairfield, CT: New Haven ‡ 1868 New Hamburg Hudson Line: New Hamburg: Dutchess, NY: New York Central: October 17, 1981 Rebuilt by the MTA; station was closed by Penn Central on ...
Civic Center: 5,881,022 36 Chambers Street: BMT Nassau Street Line: August 4, 1913 Chambers Street–World Trade Center/Park Place/Cortlandt Street: Chambers Street: IND Eighth Avenue Line: September 10, 1932 Manhattan: Financial District: 12,298,422 11 Cortlandt Street: BMT Broadway Line: January 5, 1918 Park Place: IRT Broadway–Seventh ...
University Place was formerly part of Wooster Street, but received a new name in 1838, a year after New York University's first building opened on Washington Square. [5] The street was the original location of the Union Theological Seminary in 1838, and the New York Society Library moved there in 1856. [6]
Former RW&O trackage is operated by CSX (CSXT), Ontario Midland Railroad (OMID) and the Mohawk, Adirondack and Northern Railroad.Several disconnected sections of the former line have also been converted to trails, including the Webster Hojack Trail, Cayuga Hojack Trail, Maple City Trail in Ogdensburg, Harbor Rail Trail in Oswego and additional sections in Hamlin, Hilton and Rochester, New York.
In 1962, the Port Authority bought the H&M and reorganized it as PATH. Reconstruction of the station began in 1968. [11] [3] Though the cornerstone was installed on September 20, 1972, the transportation center itself was opened in stages in 1973, 1974, and 1975 [12] during the late phases of the Brutalist architecture movement.
The Port Authority Bus Terminal (colloquially known as the Port Authority and by its acronym PABT) is a bus terminal located in Manhattan in New York City. It is the busiest bus terminal in the world by volume of traffic, [ 2 ] serving about 8,000 buses and 225,000 people on an average weekday and more than 65 million people a year.