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Scarsdale station is a commuter rail stop on the Metro-North Railroad's Harlem Line, located in Scarsdale, New York. Scarsdale is the southernmost station on the two-track section of the Harlem Line; a third track begins to the south. Scarsdale is the second busiest Metro-North station in Westchester County, after White Plains. It is the ...
As with many commuter railroad systems of the late-20th Century in the United States, the stations exist along lines that were inherited from other railroads of the 19th and early 20th Centuries. Stations on the east side of the Hudson River were originally part of either New York Central Railroad or New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad ...
The station at Mott Haven on the Bronx side of the Harlem River had to be elevated. The entire cost was $2 million. [26] [34] On October 15, 1897, a spacious new station in Harlem was opened at 125th Street, replacing a small, dingy station in the old Park Avenue open cut. The new station was built atop the old open cut and directly under the ...
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In 2014, Metro-North officials announced that they would be installing security cameras at all stations on the Harlem and New Haven Lines in order to address public safety concerns. These concerns arose from an incident on September 29, 2013, where the body of 17-year-old Mount Saint Michael Academy student Matthew Wallace was found on the ...
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Hartsdale station in 1988. The station building was originally built in 1915 (or 1914 according to the MTA [9]) by the Warren and Wetmore architectural firm for the New York Central Railroad, as a replacement for a smaller wooden depot built by the New York and Harlem Railroad originally known as "Hart's Corner Station."
The former Heathcote station, located at a major intersection of three roads at the New Rochelle-Scarsdale border locally called "Five Corners," now houses Real Living Five Corners Real Estate. [13] On May 28, 2012, the Village of Scarsdale issued an official proclamation to recognize the 100th anniversary of the building.