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It is the current western terminus of the TRE commuter line, and is located near the Fort Worth Convention Center, the Fort Worth Water Gardens, Sundance Square and Tarrant County government facilities. T&P Station features free parking (unlike the nearby Fort Worth Central Station) which can be accessed from West Vickery Boulevard.
It also serves as the main transfer center for Trinity Metro, Fort Worth's public bus system. It is located at the corner of 9th Street and Jones Street on the east side of Downtown Fort Worth. It is the busiest Amtrak station in Texas by ridership, with 107,566 passengers in FY 2023. [2]
Station Transfer Municipality Parking spaces T&P Station: Trinity Railway Express: Fort Worth: 350 Fort Worth Central Station – North Side: 164 Mercantile Center: 318 North Richland Hills/Iron Horse: North Richland Hills: 376 North Richland Hills/Smithfield: 559 Grapevine–Main Street: Grapevine Vintage Railroad: Grapevine: 137 DFW Airport ...
4201 North Beach Street Fort Worth, TX 76137 ... Parking: 318 [1] Accessible: Yes: ... Mercantile Center station is a TEXRail commuter rail station in Fort Worth, ...
The station was designed and constructed by the airport at an estimated $28.4 million cost. Construction required the demolition of a guideway used by the airport's now-defunct Airtrans system. [5] Both TEXRail and the Terminal B station entered revenue service on January 10, 2019. [1]
The Tandy Center Subway was a small rapid transit system that operated in Fort Worth, Texas, from February 15, 1963 [1] to August 30, 2002. [2] It ran a distance of 0.7 miles (1.1 km) and was, during the period of its operation, the only privately owned subway in the United States.
In this May 2003 photo, Bob Simpson, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of XTO Energy in Fort Worth, stands in front of the Baker Building after the company purchased the property.
Trinity Lakes station is a Trinity Railway Express commuter rail station. The station is located in eastern Fort Worth, Texas, on the border with Hurst, Texas, just to the east of Interstate 820 and north of Trinity Boulevard. The station is a part of Trinity Lakes, a 1,600-acre master planned mixed-use transit-oriented development. [2]