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Pickering GO Station

Coordinates:43°49′50″N79°05′06″W / 43.83056°N 79.08500°W /43.83056; -79.08500
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Railway station in Ontario, Canada
For the heritage train station in England, seePickering railway station.
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(July 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Pickering
Pickering GO Station in 2023
General information
Location1322 Bayly Street
Pickering,Ontario
Coordinates43°49′50″N79°05′06″W / 43.83056°N 79.08500°W /43.83056; -79.08500
Owned byMetrolinx
Platforms3side platforms (train)
loop with bays (bus)
Tracks3
Connections
Construction
Structure typeStation building and tunnels and elevators to platforms
Parking2,508 spaces
Bicycle facilitiesYes
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeGO Transit: PIN
Fare zone91
History
OpenedMay 23, 1967; 57 years ago (1967-05-23)
Passengers
2018907,000[1]
Services
Preceding stationGO TransitFollowing station
Rouge HillLakeshore EastAjax
towardsOshawa
Union Station
Terminus
Lakeshore East
(express)
Former services
Preceding stationCanadian National RailwayFollowing station
Port Union
towardSarnia
Grand Trunk Railway
Main Line
Whitby
towardMontreal

Pickering GO Station is a train and bus station in theGO Transit network[2] located inPickering,Ontario,Canada. It is a stop on theLakeshore East line and was the eastern terminus from 1967 until 1990, when service was extended to Whitby and subsequently to Oshawa.

History

[edit]
GTR station Pickering

The previous Pickering station, which had been constructed byGrand Trunk Railway in the early 1900s, had been about 2 kilometres east of the current location at Liverpool Road. Plans for the original GO Transit Lakeshore line called for commuter train service not to go beyond Liverpool Road where theCN York Subdivision tracks joined theCN Kingston Subdivision, because this would interfere with freight trains. No practical site could be found, but there was a large field south of the tracks on the east side of Liverpool Road with more than enough space to accommodate a station building, bus terminal and car parking, with convenient access from Bayly Street. Installation of a new crossover before the overpass at Liverpool Road was required to get to an existing industrial track, so that GO Trains standing at the station platform would be off the main line.[3]

When the station opened in 1967 it was a key transfer point between train and bus services.

In 1990 the single platform was supplemented by two more platforms and tracks when GO Transit built a dedicatedright-of-way on the north side of the Canadian National tracks. This was part of the project to expand Lakeshore East train service to Ajax and Whitby, and finally to a new terminus at the Oshawa Via Rail station in 1995.

Station layout

[edit]

Platforms

[edit]
Pickering Pedestrian Bridge spanning railway tracks,Highway 401, and Pickering Parkway at Pickering GO Station
Pedestrian Bridge

Pickering has three platforms for trains, 1 and 2 which serve trains to Union and trains to Oshawa. Track 3, separated from the other tracks, is closest to the bus bays and station. Track 3 is the original track before the extension to Oshawa, and is no longer being used.

Pedestrian bridge

[edit]

The Pickering Pedestrian Bridge was opened in 2012 between the GO station on its south side of the tracks and Pickering Town Centre, a shopping centre with access to regional bus service on the bridge's north side. The 250-metre (820 ft) enclosed bridge spans 6 railway tracks, the 14 lanes ofHighway 401 and the two-lane Pickering Parkway, a municipal road. At night, the bridge is illuminated by 300 LED lights in rotating shades of lilac, purple, blue and teal making the bridge visible from overflying airplanes. The bridge has received the City of Pickering’s 2019 Urban Design Award and the 2019 Engineering News Record Global Best Projects Award. In 2021, the bridge became aGuinness World Record holder for the longest enclosed pedestrian bridge in the world.[4][5] Exterior cladding of the bridge in a metallic mesh proved to be problematic during construction and, along with severe weather, delayed its completion.[6]

Parking

[edit]

As of 2021[update], the station has three parking lots with respectively 585, 780 and 500 spaces plus a multi-level parking garage finished in 2013 or 2014 with 1673 spaces.[7][8]

Connecting bus routes

[edit]
A passenger waiting to board a GO Transit bus at the Pickering GO Station

The station is the Pickering hub forDurham Region Transit local bus services, which evolved from theBay Ridges Dial-a-Bus in 1970.

Durham Region Transit[9]
  • 112C to Burkholder Drive (Seaton)
  • 121 to Pickering Parkway Terminal
  • 121A to Pickering Parkway Terminal via Sunbird Trail
  • PULSE 900B To Oshawa (Pickering Parkway Terminal)
  • PULSE 916 to Harmony Terminal (Pickering Parkway Terminal)
  • 917 to Oshawa Centre Terminal (Pickering Parkway Terminal)
GO Transit
  • 41 - Hamilton/Pickering
  • 90 - Lakeshore East Bus (early morning/late nights)
  • 94 - Pickering/Square One via Pearson Airport

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Drivers of Ridership and Revenue"(PDF).Metrolinx. 2019-02-07. p. 4. Retrieved2019-01-31.
  2. ^"Pickering GO Station Information". GO Transit. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2019.
  3. ^Wilfred Sergeant."Building GO Transit".8: Locating the stations. HTA Press. Archived fromthe original on March 26, 2014.
  4. ^"Pickering Pedestrian Bridge declared longest enclosed people crossing in world by Guinness".Metrolinx. September 14, 2021.Archived from the original on September 14, 2021. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2021.
  5. ^""Gateway to Durham Region" officially lights up the night sky".Metrolinx. September 25, 2018.Archived from the original on December 2, 2020. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2021.
  6. ^Carola Vyhnak (7 February 2014)."Pickering's GO pedestrian bridge inching along". Torstar News Services. RetrievedFebruary 8, 2014.
  7. ^"Pickering GO".Metrolinx. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2021.
  8. ^"Sections of Pickering GO station closed for construction - 680News". Archived fromthe original on 15 July 2012.
  9. ^"System Map"(PDF).www.durhamregiontransit.com. 2022-03-30. Retrieved2022-04-02.

External links

[edit]
Lakeshore West line
Milton line
Kitchener line
Barrie line
Richmond Hill line
Stouffville line
Lakeshore East line
Union Pearson Express
Former or proposed
station sites
Bus terminals
Miscellaneous
See also
† anditalics denotes a future station
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