University station (Buffalo Metro Rail)

University (formerly South Campus until September 1, 2003) is a Buffalo Metro Rail station located near the intersection of Main Street and Niagara Falls Boulevard on the University at Buffalo South Campus. It is a major transfer point between Metro Rail and many city and suburban bus routes and offers a unique "Kiss and Ride" facility on the top level, above the mezzanine. This allows drivers of automobiles a separate area to drop off passengers, so they do not add to the traffic congestion from buses at the station during rush-hour periods and a large park-and-ride facility directly to the east of the station. Since University station serves as a terminal, immediately south is a double crossover. From May 20, 1985 to November 10, 1986, due to construction issues at LaSalle station, Amherst Street station served as the northern terminus. Since November 10, 1986, University station serves as the northern terminus.

University
Buffalo Metro Rail station
Train laying over at University
Location3383 Main Street
Buffalo, New York 14214
Coordinates42°57′17″N 78°49′14″W
Owned byNiagara Frontier Transportation Authority
Platforms2 inter-connected side platforms
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
Depth55 feet (17 m)
Parking600 park and ride spaces
Other information
Fare zonePaid fare
History
OpenedNovember 10, 1986
Previous namesSouth Campus (November 10, 1986–September 1, 2003)
Traffic
Passengers (2017)790,307[1]
Services
Preceding station NFTA Following station
LaSalle Metro Rail Terminus

Bus routes serving University station

University station serves UB South and is a transfer point for buses to the north and northeast suburbs of the city and is also one of four stations that offers an off-road bus loop, requiring passengers to board/debark using curbside stops (the other three being LaSalle, Delavan/Canisius College and Utica) and is served by 11 bus routes:

  • NFTA
    • 5 Niagara-Kenmore (inbound)
    • 8 Main (inbound)
    • 12 Utica
    • 13 Kensington (inbound)
    • 19 Bailey (inbound)
    • 34 Niagara Falls Boulevard (outbound)
    • 44 Lockport (outbound)
    • 47 Youngs Road (outbound)
    • 48 Williamsville (outbound)
    • 49 Millard Fillmore Suburban (formerly Hopkins) (outbound)
    • 81 Eastside (inbound)
  • University at Buffalo shuttles
    • Blue Line - serves as a shuttle van to University at Buffalo-affiliated locations of the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus from the University at Buffalo-South Campus.
    • UB Stampede - connects the two campuses of the University at Buffalo (North and South). This service is open to members of the University community, but closed to the general public.[2]

Artwork

In 1979, an art selection committee was created, composed of NFTA commissioners and Buffalo area art experts, that would judge the artwork that would be displayed in and on the properties of eight stations on the Metro Rail line. Out of the 70 proposals submitted, 22 were chosen and are currently positioned inside and outside of the eight underground stations.[3] University station is home of three pieces of work, from Stephen Antonakos (New York City), Harvey Breverman (Buffalo), and Beverly Pepper (Todi, Italy and New York City). The work from Stephen Antonakos is called "Neon for South Campus Station" and is an "abstract form of neon tubing, creating large, incomplete circles and incomplete squares, mounted on the interior ceiling of the mezzanine level of the station." The 550 feet of tubing is red, orange and blue.[4] Harvey Breverman's work is "a large triptych on a semi-circular wall at the foot of the escalators at the trainroom level." The work is entitled Synoptic Triptych. It focuses on the composite nature of a diverse, evolving University (at Buffalo) community and it's attending resources.[4] Beverly Pepper's work is a sculpture of steel and grass located in the bus loop entitled Vertical Presence-Grass Dunes. The work changes in appearance as the passengers ride around the loop. An illusion of movement is created through the passing sun patterns.[4]

Notable places nearby

University station is near:

gollark: They like backward compatibility so obviously there'll just be some sort of extreme WINE thing.
gollark: See, MS likely doesn't want to maintain their own kernel and stuff. The implications are obviously obvious: MS is looking to port Windows to run on the Linux kernel, and thingying Edge is a test.
gollark: Or a test for the confusing future of Windows for Linux™.
gollark: EEE™.
gollark: osmarks wikipedia mirror™ contains arbitrary quantities of nanoapioforms.

References

  1. "Metro Rail Expansion Project Final Scoping Document" (PDF). May 2019. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  2. "Campus Transportation Services Page for Parking and Transportation Services - University at Buffalo". buffalo.edu. University at Buffalo Campus Transportation Services. 12 April 2016. Retrieved 18 July 2016. The University requires passengers to swipe their UB Card in to a card reader as they enter UB Stampede buses
  3. "Buffalo Art In Transit," Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority, c. 1986
  4. "South Campus Station," Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority, c. 1986
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.