Infill station

Train stop built on an existing line From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Infill station

An infill station (sometimes in-fill station) is a train station built on an existing passenger rail, rapid transit, or light rail line to address demand in a location between existing stations. Such stations take advantage of existing train service and encourage new riders by providing a more convenient location. Many older transit systems have widely spaced stations and can benefit from infill stations.[1] In some cases, new infill stations are built at sites where a station had once existed many years ago, for example the Cermak–McCormick Place station on the Chicago 'L''s Green Line.

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Reston railway station is an example of an infill station.

Examples

Summarize
Perspective

The Americas

Canada

Chile

  • Santiago
    • San José de la Estrella station, 2009

United States

Asia

China

Hong Kong

Israel

Japan

Malaysia

KTM Komuter
Planned infill stations:

Opened infill stations:

Rapid Rail
Planned infill stations:

Opened infill stations:

Philippines

Singapore

South Korea

Taiwan

Thailand

Europe

Finland

France

Germany

Ireland

The Netherlands

Poland

Russia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Ukraine

United Kingdom

References

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