Misplaced Pages

Waterfront Connection

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Rail junction in USA
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (July 2018)
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Waterfront Connection" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)

40°44′37″N 74°07′36″W / 40.7435°N 74.1267°W / 40.7435; -74.1267 (Waterfront Connection (NJT))

Newark/Hoboken Division approaches
Legend
Northeast Corridor
to Boston
&
LIRR Main Line
to Greenport
Sunnyside Yard
East River Tunnels under East River
New York Penn Station Amtrak
North River Tunnels under Hudson River
NY
NJ
Hoboken Terminal Port Authority Trans-Hudson Hudson–Bergen Light Rail
Hoboken Yard
Bergen Tunnels under Bergen Hill
Secaucus JunctionMAIN BCL PVL
Boonton Line to Hackettstown
Portal BridgeLower Hack Lift
over Hackensack River
Kearny
Connection
 
Sawtooth
Kearny
Connection
Bridges
Sawtooth
Waterfront
Connection
Newark DrawbridgeDock Bridge
over Passaic River
Newark Broad Street Newark Light Rail
Newark Penn Port Authority Trans-Hudson Newark Light Rail Amtrak
GLAD MOBO M&E
Hunter Connection
CNJ to Communipaw Terminal
Elizabeth (NJT)
Elizabeth (CNJ)
RVL to High BridgeAldene Connection
Elizabeth River
Rahway River Bridge
UNION interlockingNJCL to Bay Head
Northeast Corridor & NEC
to Trenton

Newark Division Hoboken Division
(12 kV 25 Hz AC) (25 kV 60 Hz AC)

The Waterfront Connection allows NJ Transit trains to switch from the former Pennsylvania Railroad main line (now the Newark Division) to the former Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad main line, now NJ Transit Rail Operations. The connection opened on September 9, 1991, at a cost of $16 million.

The connection consists of a single track that splits from the Northeast Corridor main line to New York Penn Station as it rises to go over the main line of NJ Transit Rail Operations to Hoboken. The connection rises to the east with a bridge over PATH's westbound track and a Conrail freight line, merging into the Hoboken line from the south. The red through-girder bridge here was built for it; for its first 10+ years it was not electrified. The Waterfront Connection lies immediately south of the Kearny Connection, and serves the complementary purpose. The two connections allow any trains originating from the west of Kearny, regardless of line, to terminate at either Hoboken or New York Penn Station.

Currently the only train that uses the waterfront connection is a single inbound morning Raritan Valley Line train to Hoboken, North Jersey Coast Line trains previously used the connection to reach Hoboken with five rush hour trains in each direction originating/terminating at Hoboken. However since 2020 all trains to and from Hoboken on the North Jersey Coast Line have been cancelled and now originate and terminate exclusively at New York Penn Station. The Waterfront Connection allows diesel trains to operate direct from Hoboken to Bay Head, the last stop on the North Jersey Coast Line. Since the North Jersey Coast Line's electrification ends at Long Branch, rush hour passengers south of Long Branch can take diesel trains all the way to Hoboken or change at Newark Penn Station for service to New York City. As of 2015, the ALP-45DP has allowed the introduction of one-seat rides from New York Penn Station all the way to Bay Head.

With the advent of the Waterfront Connection, NJ Transit no longer needed a separate fueling facility on the diesel portion of the North Jersey Coast Line since diesel engines can make the trip directly to Hoboken. Faced with pressure from Bay Head residents in 2002, the Bay Head fueling facility was shut down and trains now refuel exclusively at Hoboken or at Raritan Yard.

Predecessor

As part of NJ Transit's "Bergen Shore Express" summer promotion 1986–1988, NJ Transit Rail Operations trains from the Bergen County Line turned southwest at West End Junction onto the Morris & Essex line, switched onto the Center Street Branch, PATH tracks, and then the Northeast Corridor to head for the North Jersey Coast Line. The switches that allowed this have since all been removed.

References

  1. Hanley, Robert (September 10, 1991). "Hoboken-Newark Rail Link Opens as Part of Multimillion-Dollar Expansion". New York Times. Retrieved February 20, 2011.
  2. New Jersey Chapter - Sierra Club
  3. Bergen Shore Express article
NJ Transit Rail Operations
Hoboken Division
Newark Division
Connections
Current rolling stock
Bridges and tunnels
Stations and yards
Proposed lines
Other topics
Categories: