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SEPTA Regional Rail: Airport Line Train #3433 at 30th Street ...
src: i.ytimg.com

The Airport Line (formerly the R1 Airport) is a route of the SEPTA Regional Rail commuter rail system, which officially runs between Philadelphia International Airport and Center City, Philadelphia. In practice however, only a few trains originate or terminate in Center City while most are through routed with lines to the north, primarily the Warminster Line. In a planned reversal of this practice, sometime in late November 2015, SEPTA posted on its website that, beginning December 14, more trains would originate/ terminate at Jenkintown station during the weekdays. The line between Center City and the Airport Terminals runs seven days a week from 5:00 AM to midnight with trains every 30 minutes. The trip length from Suburban Station to the airport is 19 to 24 minutes.


Video Airport Line (SEPTA)



Route

While geographically on the former Pennsylvania Railroad side of the Regional Rail System, the route consists of new construction, a reconstructed industrial branch of the former Pennsylvania Railroad, and a shared Conrail (formerly Reading Company) freight branch. The Airport Line opened on April 28, 1985, as SEPTA R1, providing service from Center City to the Philadelphia International Airport. By its twentieth anniversary in 2005, the line had carried over 20 million passengers to and from the airport. The line splits from Amtrak's Northeast Corridor north of Darby and passes over it via a flying junction. West of the airport, the line breaks from the old right-of-way and a new bridge carries it over I-95 and into the airport terminals between the baggage claim (arrivals) and the check-in counters (departures). The line ends between terminals E and F at their combined station.

Each airport station is directly connected to each airport terminal by escalators and elevators which rise one level to the walkways between the arrival and departure areas. All airport stations feature high-level platforms to make it easier to board and alight from the train with luggage, and some stations can be accessed directly from the baggage claim side across the road with the taxi stands.


Maps Airport Line (SEPTA)



Stations

The Airport Line makes the following station stops, after leaving the Center City Commuter Connection: All stations are in the City and County of Philadelphia.


SEPTA Regional Rail: PHL Airport bound Silverliner IV Train ...
src: i.ytimg.com


History

The line south of the Northeast Corridor was originally part of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad main line, opened on January 17, 1838. The connection between the NEC and the original PW&B is made however by the later 60th Street Branch. A new alignment of the PW&B (now the NEC) opened November 18, 1872, and on July 1, 1873, the Philadelphia and Reading Railway, later the Reading Company, leased the old line for 999 years. Connection was made over the PRR's Junction Railroad and later the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's Baltimore and Philadelphia Railroad. However, as a condition of the sale, no passenger service was provided. The line passed into Conrail in 1976 and SEPTA in 1983, with passenger service to the Airport beginning on April 28, 1985.

Infill stations were planned from the beginning of service, two of which were on the Airport Line proper: one at 70th Street, the other one at 84th Street. The latter station was opened in 1997 as Eastwick, while 70th Street was never built, and has since disappeared from maps. Additionally, University City station (proposed as "Civic Center") opened in April 1995 to serve all R1, R2 and R3 trains passing it. All these stations appeared on 1984 SEPTA informational maps, the first ones to show the Center City Commuter Connection and the Airport Line.

SEPTA activated positive train control on the Airport Line on October 10, 2016.


PHOTOS: SEPTA MID-WINTER TRIP XII
src: acm.jhu.edu


Ridership

Ridership by fiscal year:


File:SEPTA GE Silverliner IV 308.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
src: upload.wikimedia.org


References

  • Railroad History Database
  • PRR Chronology (Christopher T. Baer)

SEPTA: Airport line will operate every 30 minutes during papal visit
src: media.philly.com


External links

  • "SEPTA - Airport Line schedule" (PDF). 

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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