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Greenvale station

Coordinates: 40°48′56″N 73°37′37″W / 40.815547°N 73.626916°W / 40.815547; -73.626916
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Greenvale
The Greenvale station in 2016
General information
LocationBetween Glen Cove Avenue & Plaza Road north of Helen Street
Roslyn Harbor, NY
Coordinates40°48′56″N 73°37′37″W / 40.815547°N 73.626916°W / 40.815547; -73.626916
Owned byLong Island Rail Road
Line(s)Oyster Bay Branch
Distance24.2 mi (38.9 km) from Long Island City[1]
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks2
ConnectionsLocal Transit Nassau Inter-County Express: n27
Construction
ParkingYes; Village of Roslyn Harbor Permits and Metered Parking
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeGVL
Fare zone7
History
Opened1866 (freight only)
1875, 1880s (passenger service)
Rebuilt1890s, 1997
Previous namesWeek's
Passengers
2006262[2]
Services
Preceding station Long Island Rail Road Following station
Roslyn Oyster Bay Branch Glen Head
toward Oyster Bay
Former services
Preceding station Long Island
Rail Road
Following station
North Roslyn
toward Mineola
Oyster Bay Branch Glen Head
toward Oyster Bay
Location
Map

Greenvale (formerly known as Week's) is a station on the Long Island Rail Road's Oyster Bay Branch. The station is located off Helen Street, between Glen Cove Avenue and Glen Cove Road in the Incorporated Village of Roslyn Harbor, in Nassau County, New York, United States.

History

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Greenvale station was originally established by the Glen Cove Branch Rail Road – a subsidiary of the Long Island Rail Road which opened the year prior between Mineola and Glen Head – on July 21, 1866, as "Week's station," a freight-only station primarily used for delivering milk.[3][4][5] Passengers were briefly allowed at the station in 1875, and then again sometime during the 1880s.[5][6][7] At some point, the station was renamed "Greenvale."[5]

The passenger station has never existed as anything else other than a sheltered platform.[5] On May 17, 1891, it was demolished by a locomotive that collided with a horse whose hoof was stuck in the switching apparatus; the collision resulted in the deaths of the horse and the two crew members.[8] The station was subsequently rebuilt.[5][9]

Modern history

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New shelters were built on both sides of the tracks in 2000 on high-level platforms that were installed in 1997 to make the station compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and compatible with the Long Island Rail Road's then-new C3 bilevel railcars, which could not serve low-level platforms.[5]

Station layout

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The Greenvale station is located partially at ground level and partially built on an embankment. It has two high-level side platforms, each four cars long.

P

Platform

level

Platform A, side platform Disabled access
Track 1      Oyster Bay Branch toward Long Island City or Penn Station (Roslyn)
Track 2      Oyster Bay Branch toward Oyster Bay (Glen Head)
Platform B, side platform Disabled access
G Ground level Exit/entrance, parking lots, and buses
M Mezzanine Underpass between platforms

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Long Island Rail Road (May 14, 2012). "TIMETABLE No. 4" (PDF). p. VI. Retrieved August 7, 2022.
  2. ^ Average weekday, 2006 LIRR Origin and Destination Study[full citation needed]
  3. ^ Morrison, David D.; Pakaluk, Valerie (2003). Long Island Rail Road Stations. Chicago: Arcadia. p. 57. ISBN 0-7385-1180-3. Retrieved November 20, 2011.
  4. ^ Seyfried, Vincent. "The Long Island Rail Road: The Age of Expansion, 1863-1880". digitalarchives.queenslibrary.org. p. 203. Retrieved May 1, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Morrison, David D. (March 5, 2018). Long Island Rail Road: Oyster Bay Branch. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467128544.
  6. ^ "LIRR station history" (PDF). TrainsAreFun.com.
  7. ^ Seyfried, Vincent. "The Long Island Rail Road: The age of expansion, 1863-1880". p. 203. Archived from the original on December 20, 2014.
  8. ^ "A LOCOMOTIVE BLOWN UP; FATAL EXPLOSION AT THE OYSTER BAY STATION. THE ENGINEER, FIREMAN, AND REAR BRAKEMAN KILLED AND TWO OTHERS INJURED -- THE ENGINE DESTROYED - - THE STATION DAMAGED". The New York Times. September 10, 1891. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
  9. ^ "Long Island Rail Road Wrecks". TrainsAreFun.com.
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