2nd Street station (Hudson–Bergen Light Rail)

2nd Street station is a station on the Hudson–Bergen Light Rail (HBLR) located west of Marshall Street near the foot of Paterson Plank Road in Hoboken, New Jersey. There are two tracks and two side platforms.

Second Street
2nd Street station platforms in August 2009
General information
Location204 Marshall Street
Hoboken, New Jersey
Coordinates40°44′30″N 74°02′34″W / 40.7416°N 74.0428°W / 40.7416; -74.0428
Owned byNew Jersey Transit
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks2
ConnectionsBus transport NJ Transit Bus: 85, 87, 89
Construction
Bicycle facilitiesYes[1]
AccessibleYes
Other information
Fare zone1
History
OpenedSeptember 7, 2004 (September 7, 2004)[2]
Services
Preceding station NJ TransitFollowing station
NewportWest Side–Tonnelle9th Street–Congress Street
Hoboken
Terminus
Hoboken–Tonnelle
Location
Map

Station layout

Side platform, doors will open on the right
Southbound     Hoboken–Tonnelle toward Hoboken (Terminus)
     West Side–Tonnelle toward West Side Avenue (Newport)
Northbound      Hoboken–Tonnelle toward Tonnelle Avenue (9th Street–Congress Street)
     West Side–Tonnelle toward Tonnelle Avenue (9th Street–Congress Street)
Side platform, doors will open on the right

History

The right of way originally part of New Jersey Junction Railroad

The station opened on September 7, 2004. The right of way on which it is situated was originally part of the New York Central New Jersey Junction Railroad, which maintained a station there. It was later used by the Penn Central River Division and[3] the Conrail River Line before being abandoned to make way for the current system.[4] The station is located at the foot of the Hudson Palisades. In 2003, Jersey City agreed with a developer of a nearby factory-to-housing conversion to cover the cost of an outdoor public stairway from Jersey City Heights to the station. The stairway was never built and in June 2011 the city took responsibility for the project.[5] The steel steps were opened in November 2013.[6]

Station art

Station art was installed at the same time that the station opened. A Planetary Park features nine planets depicted in their relative scale and position to the sun. Artist John van Alstine constructed the Sun and a functioning sundial. Grace Graupe-Pillard fabricated the nine fiberglass planets with painted steel figurative attachments, as a metaphor for the celebration of the individual and his/her connection to the world.

References