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JFK/UMass station is a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) intermodal transfer station, located adjacent to the Columbia Point area of Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts. It is served by the rapid transit Red Line; the Greenbush Line, Kingston/Plymouth Line, and Middleborough/Lakeville Line of the MBTA Commuter Rail system, and three MBTA bus routes. The station is named for the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum and the University of Massachusetts Boston, both located nearby on Columbia Point.

JFK/UMass
A southbound train on the Braintree Branch platform in 2013
General information
Location599 Old Colony Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°19′14″N 71°03′09″W
Line(s)Old Colony Mainline
Ashmont branch
Braintree branch
Platforms1 side platform (Commuter Rail)
2 island platforms (Red Line)
Tracks1 (Commuter Rail)
4 (Red Line)
Connections MBTA bus: 8, 16, 41
UMass Boston shuttle
Construction
Bicycle facilitiesRacks available
Disabled accessYes
Other information
Fare zone1A (Commuter Rail)
History
OpenedNovember 5, 1927[1]
RebuiltDecember 14, 1988[1]
Previous namesColumbia (1927–1982)
Passengers
2018362 daily boardings[2] (Commuter Rail)
FY20198,012 daily boardings[3] (Red Line)
Services
Preceding station MBTA Following station
Andrew
toward Alewife
Red Line
Savin Hill
toward Ashmont
North Quincy
toward Braintree
South Station
Terminus
Greenbush Line Quincy Center
toward Greenbush
Middleborough/​Lakeville Line Quincy Center
Kingston Line Quincy Center
toward Kingston
Former services (Crescent Avenue station)
Preceding station New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Following station
South Boston
Closed ca. 1917
toward Boston
Boston–​Mattapan Savin Hill
toward Mattapan
Boston–​Braintree Savin Hill
toward Braintree

JFK/UMass station has four tracks and two island platforms for the Ashmont and Braintree branches of the Red Line, with one track and one side platform for Commuter Rail. A waiting room and fare lobby over the Red Line platforms is connected to Columbia Road, Sydney Street, and the busway on the east side of the station by footbridge. The station is fully accessible. North of the station, the complex Columbia Junction connects the two Red Line branches with the downtown tunnel and Cabot Yard lead tracks.

The Old Colony Railroad first opened through the area in 1845, with Crescent Avenue station opened in 1868 and rebuilt in 1883. The Boston Elevated Railway began construction of Columbia station on the Dorchester Extension of the Cambridge–Dorchester Tunnel in 1925. Crescent Avenue station closed in July 1927; Columbia station opened on November 5, with an additional footbridge added in 1929. Columbia station was modernized in 1970, though without a platform for South Shore (Braintree Branch) service, which started in 1971. UMass Boston moved to Columbia Point in 1974, while the Kennedy Library opened in 1979; the station was renamed JFK/UMass in 1982. A 1987–88 renovation added a platform for the Braintree Branch. Commuter Rail service on the former Old Colony, last operated in 1959, resumed in 1997. However, the platform at JFK/UMass did not open until 2001.


History



Old Colony Railroad and BERy


Columbia station in March 1928
Columbia station in March 1928

In 1845, the Old Colony Railroad opened between Boston and Plymouth, Massachusetts.[4] A station was opened at Crescent Avenue on November 2, 1868.[5] The depot building was replaced in 1883.[6]

In the early 1920s, the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) began planning an extension of the Cambridge–Dorchester Tunnel over the Shawmut Branch to Ashmont. The New York, New Haven, and Hartford Railroad, which had succeeded the Old Colony, sold the Shawmut Branch to the BERy, with service ending on September 6, 1926.[7] The mainline stations at Crescent Avenue and Savin Hill were kept open during construction.[8] Crescent Avenue station was closed on July 15, 1927, for final construction and demolished shortly thereafter.[9][10]

Crescent Avenue was replaced with Columbia station, which primarily served the residential areas to the west.[11] The station had a single island platform, 300 feet (91 m) long and varying 20–25 feet (6.1–7.6 m) wide, covered with a full-length reinforced concrete canopy.[8] It was designed to be extended southwards if future ridership required six-car trains.[11] The entrance to the station was from the Columbia Road overpass; like other stations on the Dorchester Extension, it was a rectangular red brick structure with red sandstone and Concord granite trim. The roofs of the headhouse, the stairway to the platform, and the canopy were all flashed with copper. Fare control was in the headhouse, with a waiting room on the platform. The station was designed by William D. Austin.[8]

Construction of the station began in 1925 with the reconstruction of the Columbia Road bridge.[12] The station platform was built in mid-1926.[8] Construction was completed in May 1927; the station was finished during the next several months under the possibility it would open before Savin Hill and Fields Corner.[9] The three stations ultimately opened together on November 5, 1927.[1][9]

In November 1928, the BERy began construction of a second station entrance from Sydney Street at Crescent Avenue. A footbridge was built over the southbound track at the south end of the station, with fare control located on a short extension of the platform.[13] The new entrance opened on March 18, 1929; by May, it was used by 42% of passengers at the station.[14][15] In late 1938, the footbridge was extended east over the other tracks to serve a parking area.[16][17]


MBTA era


The 1970-built north headhouse
The 1970-built north headhouse

The New Haven Railroad ended commuter service on the Old Colony lines in 1959, but subway service to Ashmont via Columbia continued. On July 28, 1965, the MBTA signed an agreement with the New Haven Railroad to purchase 11 miles (18 km) of the former Old Colony mainline from Fort Point Channel to South Braintree in order to construct a new rapid transit line along the corridor. The line was expected to be completed within two years.[1][18] On August 26, 1965, the Cambridge–Dorchester line was renamed as the Red Line as part of a rebranding by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA), which had taken over the system in 1964.[1]

In 1967, the MBTA began a station modernization program; modifications to Columbia took place in 1970.[19] A southward extension made the platform long enough for six-car trains (which were not run until 1987).[1] The original brick headhouse was replaced with a plain concrete headhouse, which opened on February 20, 1970, and the platform waiting room was removed.[20][21] The footbridge was also replaced.[20] The South Shore Branch (later the Braintree Branch) opened in 1971. Trains used two new tracks on the east side of Columbia; they did not stop in order to speed travel time between Quincy and Boston.[1]

The Columbia Point Development opened to the southeast of the station in 1954; residents of the housing development secured the 1962 closure of the city dump, which opened the peninsula to development. Ridership at Columbia station grew quickly despite the MBTA's refusal to have the South Shore Branch stop.[6]:80 Three major developments opening on Columbia Point in the 1970s—the UMass Boston campus in 1974, the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in 1979, and the Bayside Expo Center—increased the importance of the station.[22][6]:80 On December 2, 1982, the station was renamed as JFK/UMass after the campus and library.[1][21] Columbia was re-added as a secondary name in 1985 as part of a series of station name changes.[23] Repairs to the Columbia Road bridge closed the north entrance from early 1982 until January 10, 1983.[21]

The Braintree Branch platform and the overhead waiting room (left) opened in 1988, while the commuter platform (right) opened in 2001
The Braintree Branch platform and the overhead waiting room (left) opened in 1988, while the commuter platform (right) opened in 2001

In January 1980, the MBTA indicated that a $1 million renovation of the station, including a second platform, would be completed in 1982.[24] However, the project proved controversial; residents near Savin Hill station instead wanted a flyover there so that Braintree Branch trains would stop at both Savin Hill and JFK/UMass. State officials insisted that the flyover would be significantly more expensive than the second platform, and that five times as many South Shore riders were riding to JFK/UMass as to Savin Hill.[25][26] A groundbreaking ceremony for the $13.5 million project was held on July 16, 1987.[21][6] A large waiting room and fare control lobby was built over the center of the platforms, with footbridges to Sydney Street on the west and a new busway on the east. The 1970s Columbia Road entrance became exit-only; an adjacent footbridge to the lobby was added. The south footbridge was modified with a connection to the new platform, and became exit-only. The east part of the footbridge was removed and an employee building constructed in its place.[20] The platform for the Braintree Branch opened on December 14, 1988, allowing all Red Line trains to stop at the renovated station.[1][6] The renovation included elevators to both platforms, making the station accessible.[27][28][29]

Commuter rail service on the Middleborough/Lakeville and Plymouth/Kingston lines was restored in September 1997.[1] The MBTA initially did not plan to include a stop at JFK/UMass; not until November 1996 did the agency agree to built the platform.[30] Construction began in 2000, and trains began stopping on April 30, 2001.[1][30] This was the first time that mainline commuter trains stopped at the station since 1927. Several rush-hour Greenbush Line trains began to stop concurrent with that line's restoration in 2007.[1] Not all weekday commuter trains on the lines stop, however, because the station is in a single-tracked bottleneck section of the otherwise double-tracked route. All weekend trains, which operate on more limited schedules, stop at the station. Conceptual plans released in January 2012 would restore a second commuter rail track through the station, allowing many more trains to stop.[31]

JFK/UMass station was a proposed stop on the MBTA's planned Urban Ring Project.[32] The Urban Ring was to be a bus rapid transit (BRT) line designed to connect the current MBTA lines to reduce strain on the downtown stations. Under 2008 plans, the Urban Ring would access the station via Columbia Road, with a one-bay dedicated BRT platform in the existing busway.[33] The project was cancelled in January 2010.[34] In 2012 and 2013, the MBTA installed over 50 security cameras in the station—in addition to over ten already present—in response to an increase of crime in nearby areas.[35] Improvements to the station were proposed in 2014 as part of the city's bid for the 2024 Olympics, which was withdrawn in 2015.[36]

On June 11, 2019, a Red Line train derailed just north of JFK/UMass station, damaging three sheds of signal equipment that control the nearby Columbia Junction. The Red Line was limited to 10 trains per hour (instead of the usual 13–14) for three months while repairs were made.[37][38] Full service resumed on September 25, 2019.[39] On January 29, 2020, the stairs between Columbia Road and the east side of the station were taken out of service for repairs.[40] Boston University professor David K. Jones was killed when he fell through a missing section of the still-closed stairs (owned by the Department of Conservation and Recreation) on September 11, 2021.[41][42]


Station layout


Station layout
Legend
to Cabot Yard
Boston Street
Red Line
to Andrew
Dorchester Ave.
Columbia Road
JFK/
UMass
station
I-93 / US 1 / Route 3
Southeast Expressway
 
Red Line
to Savin Hill
Red Line
to North Quincy
to Quincy Center
Aerial view of the station, facing north
Aerial view of the station, facing north

JFK/UMass station is located south of Columbia Road near Kosciuszko Circle, with the Interstate 93 viaduct to the south and west and Morrissey Boulevard to the east. The Red Line has four tracks and two island platforms at the station; the west platform is served by the Ashmont branch, and the east platform by the Braintree branch.[43] (This unusual configuration is the result of the decision to not originally have the Braintree Branch stop at the station.)[6][31] East of the Red Line is a single track used by the three commuter rail lines, with a high-level side platform on its east side.[43] A two-lane busway, drop-off lane, and plaza are located east of the tracks.[20]

A waiting room and fare lobby is located over the middle of the Red Line platforms, with elevators and stairs to both platforms. Footbridges connect the lobby to the Columbia Road bridge to the north, Sydney Street to the west, and the east plaza via a ramp structure. Exit-only stairs also lead from the north ends of the Red Line platforms to Columbia Road, and from the south ends to Sydney Street at Crescent Avenue.[20] Because northbound Red Line trains arrive on two different platforms, an automatic illuminated sign in the lobby indicates which platform the next northbound train will arrive at.[31]

North of the station is a complex Red Line interlocking called Columbia Junction. The two track line from downtown Boston exits the tunnel under Dorchester Avenue about 0.4 miles (0.6 km) north of JFK/UMass station and splits into the four tracks with a flying junction. The junction also connects two yard leads from Cabot Yard, the main Red Line maintenance facility, which is located on the surface near Broadway.[43][31] South of the station, the Braintree Branch tracks cross over the commuter rail tracks via a lengthy flyover.[43] The flyover is dedicated to Milton DeVaughn, an MBTA track worker, who died in December 1993 when he fell under the wheels of an MBTA work train.[44]

In January 2012, the state's Central Transportation Planning staff released a conceptual plan for widening the Southeast Expressway which would also involve completely rearranging JFK/UMass station. The four Red Line tracks would be consolidated to two tracks sharing a single island platform, which would eliminate the awkwardness of northbound Red Line trains arriving on separate platforms. Columbia Junction would be streamlined, with the split between the Ashmont and Braintree branches moved to just south of the station. This would allow for a second commuter rail track through the station, allowing more commuter trains to stop there and eliminating a major bottleneck for the Old Colony Lines and the Greenbush Line.[31]

M Mezzanine Red Line fare control, crossover between platforms
P
Platform level
Side platform
Commuter      MBTA Commuter Rail towards South Station (Terminus)
     MBTA Commuter Rail towards points south (Quincy Center)
     CapeFLYER does not stop here →
Northbound      Red Line toward Alewife (Andrew)
Island platform
Southbound      Red Line toward Braintree (North Quincy)
Northbound      Red Line toward Alewife (Andrew)
Island platform
Southbound      Red Line toward Ashmont (Savin Hill)
G Street level Exit/entrance, buses

Bus connections


Buses at JFK/UMass in 2018
Buses at JFK/UMass in 2018

Columbia was not built as a transfer station; streetcar—and later, bus—routes mostly served Andrew and Fields Corner. Bus service to the station began in 1954 when the Columbia Point Development was constructed, and increased in 1974 when the UMass campus opened.[1] The 1988 renovations added a dedicated two-lane busway on the east side of the station.[20][29] The station is served by three MBTA bus routes:[45]

A privately operated shuttle bus connects the station with the UMass campus and the John F. Kennedy Library.[45]

During service disruptions – both planned track work and unplanned incidents – JFK/UMass is often used as the terminus of busing on either Red Line branch.[1]


References


  1. Belcher, Jonathan. "Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district" (PDF). Boston Street Railway Association.
  2. Central Transportation Planning Staff (2019). "2018 Commuter Rail Counts". Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority.
  3. "A Guide to Ridership Data". MassDOT/MBTA Office of Performance Management and Innovation. June 22, 2020. p. 8.
  4. Karr, Ronald Dale (1995). The Rail Lines of Southern New England. Branch Line Press. pp. 310–315. ISBN 0942147022.
  5. Jacobs, Warren (October 1928). "Dates of Some of the Principal Events in the History of 100 Years of the Railroad in New England. 1826-1926". Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin. Railway and Locomotive Historical Society. 17 (17): 15–28. JSTOR 43504499.
  6. Cheney, Frank (2002). Boston's Red Line: Bridging the Charles from Alewife to Braintree. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 77–80. ISBN 9780738510477.
  7. "GETS PERMISSION TO CLOSE STATIONS: N. Y., N. H. & H. Abandons Shawmut Branch Sept 6 Commission Rules It Necessary to Complete New Service". Boston Daily Globe. August 27, 1926. p. 13 via Newspapers.com.
  8. Boston Transit Department (1927). Report of the Transit Department for the Year ending December 31, 1926. City of Boston. pp. 31-32, 36–37 via Internet Archive.
  9. Boston Transit Department (1928). Report of the Transit Department for the Year ending December 31, 1927. City of Boston. pp. 26, 28, 33 via Internet Archive.
  10. "State Approves Closing of Crescent-Av Station". Boston Globe. July 19, 1927. p. 28 via Newspapers.com.
  11. "First Station Completed on Dorchester Rapid Transit". Electric Railway Journal. McGraw-Hill Company. 70 (11): 428. 10 September 1927 via Internet Archive.
  12. Boston Transit Department (1926). Report of the Transit Department for Eleven Months ending December 31, 1925. City of Boston. pp. 35–36 via Internet Archive.
  13. Boston Transit Department (1929). Report of the Transit Department for the Year ending December 31, 1928. City of Boston. pp. 28–29 via Internet Archive.
  14. Boston Transit Department (1930). Report of the Transit Department for the Year ending December 31, 1929. City of Boston. p. 55 via Internet Archive.
  15. "Novel entrance to Columbia station". Co-operation. Vol. 8, no. 5. Boston Elevated Railway. May 1929. pp. 67–68.
  16. "Columbia Station overpass to parking area". Boston Elevated Railway. December 23, 1938 via Historic New England.
  17. Twentieth Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Boston Elevated Railway Company for the Year Ending December 31, 1938. Boston Elevated Railway. 1939. pp. 21-22 via Internet Archive.
  18. Carr, Robert (July 29, 1965). "MBTA Buys Old Colony Line For a South Shore Express". The Boston Globe via Newspapers.com.
  19. Sixth Annual Report. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. 1970. pp. 12, 18 via Internet Archive.
  20. O'Regan, Gerry (2005). "MBTA Red Line". nycsubway.org. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  21. Sanborn, George M. (1992). A Chronicle of the Boston Transit System. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority via Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  22. Malone, M.E. (September 27, 1986). "Planned Red Line stop expected to give easier access to UMass area". The Boston Globe. p. 18 via Newspapers.com.
  23. Crocket, Douglas S. (July 27, 1985). "T board votes to change the names of some stations". Boston Globe. p. 26 via Newspapers.com.
  24. Richard, Ray (January 26, 1980). "A Better Day for Columbia Point / 'New' Columbia Point". The Boston Globe. pp. 1, 12 via Newspapers.com.
  25. Crocket, Douglas S. (June 28, 1984). "MBTA board approves contract for new North Station trestle". The Boston Globe. p. 27 via Newspapers.com.
  26. Crocket, Douglas S. (May 19, 1984). "MBTA says Savin Hill sign was removed as 'hazardous'". The Boston Globe. pp. 17, 20 via Newspapers.com.
  27. Tran Systems and Planners Collaborative (August 24, 2007). "Evaluation of MBTA Paratransit and Accessible Fixed Route Transit Services: Final Report" (PDF). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority.
  28. Operations Directorate Planning Division (November 1990). "Ridership and Service Statistics" (3 ed.). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. pp. 1–4 via Internet Archive.
  29. "New JFK/UMass T station opens". The Boston Globe. December 15, 1988 via Newspapers.com.
  30. Kahn, Ric (July 1, 2001). "T trains bypass new JFK stop". The Boston Globe City Weekly. pp. 1, 9 via Newspapers.com. (second page, third page)
  31. Central Transportation Planning Staff (January 2012). "Improving the Southwest Expressway: A Conceptual Plan" (PDF). Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization.
  32. "Urban Ring Phase 2 FACT SHEET" (PDF). Massachusetts Executive Office of Transportation. January 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2011.
  33. "Conceptual alignments, profiles, station locations, and typical sections" (PDF). The Urban Ring Phase 2: Revised Draft Environmental Impact Report/Statement. Massachusetts Executive Office of Transportation. November 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 28, 2013. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  34. Mullan, Jeffery B. (January 22, 2010). "Re: Urban Ring Phase 2, EOEEA #12565" (PDF). Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.
  35. Feathers, Todd (January 30, 2013). "MBTA installs 50 surveillance cameras at JFK/UMass Red Line stop to fight crime in area". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  36. Levenson, Michael; Dungca, Nicole (January 10, 2015). "Revenue to dictate difficult choices on Olympic transit projects". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  37. "Plans to Accelerate Red Line Signal Repairs" (Press release). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. June 21, 2019.
  38. Stout, Matt; Siu, Diamond Naga (June 21, 2019). "T says Red Line reduced schedule to last through summer". The Boston Globe.
  39. "Completion of Red Line Signal Repairs" (Press release). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. September 25, 2019.
  40. "Alerts: Commuter Rail". Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. January 29, 2020. Archived from the original on March 1, 2020.
  41. Fortier, Marc (September 13, 2021). "BU Professor Dies After Apparent Fall From Stairs Near MBTA Station in Boston". NBC Boston. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  42. MilNeil, Christian (September 14, 2021). "BU Professor Dies On Crumbling DCR Staircase In Dorchester". Streetsblog Massachusetts.
  43. "Ridership and Service Statistics" (PDF) (14th ed.). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. 2014.
  44. "T worker dies following accident". The Boston Globe. December 4, 1993 via Newspapers.com.
  45. "System Map". Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority.





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