Main Line (NJ Transit)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Main Line
Main Line train #1728 sits at Suffern.
Info
Type Commuter rail line
System New Jersey Transit and Metro-North Railroad
Locale North Jersey, Hudson Valley
Terminals Hoboken Terminal
Port Jervis
No. of stations 26
Operation
Owner New Jersey Transit
(Hoboken Terminal to Suffern)
Norfolk Southern Railway
(Suffern to Port Jervis, leased to and maintained by Metro-North Railroad)
Operator(s) New Jersey Transit
Rolling stock F40PH-2CAT/GP40PH-2/GP40FH-2/PL42AC locomotives
Comet coaches
Technical
Track length 152.9 km (95.0 miles)
Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in)
Line map
LUECKE
Southern Tier Line to Buffalo
BHF
Port Jervis
TUNNEL1
Shawangunk Mountains
HST
Otisville
AKRZu
route 17
HSTACC
Middletown-Town of Wallkill
AKRZu
Interstate 84
WBRÜCKE
Wallkill River
HSTACC
Campbell Hall
HSTACC
Salisbury Mills-Cornwall
WBRÜCKE
Moodna Viaduct
STRSummit
Schunemunk Mountain
HSTACC
Harriman
HST
Tuxedo
HST
Sloatsburg
BHF
Suffern
eGRENZE
New YorkNew Jersey border
HST
Mahwah
ACC
Ramsey Route 17
HSTACC
Ramsey Main St.
HST
Allendale
HST
Waldwick
HST
Ho-Ho-Kus
BHF
Ridgewood
ABZlf
Bergen County Line rejoins
HST
Glen Rock (Main Line)
HST
Hawthorne
WBRÜCKE
Passaic River
ACC
Paterson
AKRZu
Interstate 80
AKRZu
Garden State Parkway
AKRZu
US 46
HST
Clifton
HST
Passaic
HST
Delawanna
AKRZu
NJ 3
WBRÜCKE
Passaic River
HST
Lyndhurst
HST
Kingsland
TUNNEL2
Kingsland Tunnel
WBRÜCKE1
Hackensack R. via Upper Hack Lift
ABZrg
Bergen County Line diverges
TurmBHFAo
Secaucus Junction
TUNNEL1
Bergen Hill Tunnels
ACCe BOOT
Hoboken Terminal
WASSER WASSER
Hudson River

The Main Line (or Erie Main Line) is a rail line owned and operated by New Jersey Transit in the United States that runs from Suffern, New York to Hoboken, New Jersey. It runs daily commuter service and was once the former north-south main line of the Erie Lackawanna Railroad. Some trains continue as far as Port Jervis in partnership with Metro-North Railroad (see Port Jervis Line). The Bergen County Line splits off the Main Line just west of the Secaucus Junction transfer station and rejoins it at Ridgewood. Service is diesel-powered. Peak trains arrive in Hoboken on weekdays between 7:21 am and 8:54 am and leave Hoboken on weekdays between 4:15 pm and 7:02 pm. [1]

Contents

[edit] Route guide

Departing the historic (1907) Hoboken terminal, the yards for the coaches are to your left. Trains pass over several city avenues before entering the Bergen Tunnels under the New Jersey Palisades. Midway through the tunnel there are air shafts allowing light through and venting out the diesel fumes. Exiting the tunnel, the train curves right onto the Main Line at West End interlocking in Jersey City. About a mile ahead is the former connection with the Bergen line (removed in 2003 during the Secaucus Junction transfer station construction). This is where two trains collided head-on in 1996, killing two engineers and a passenger. New Jersey Turnpike Interchange 15X now is located on this site.

Shortly thereafter is the Secaucus Junction, with trains stopping for passengers to change to and from Northeast Corridor Line and North Jersey Coast Line trains on the upper level.

After the transfer station, the Main Line runs through an industrial section of Secaucus. Shortly afterwards the Bergen Line separates off on the new routing. The Main Line then crosses over the Hackensack River on the single-track Upper Hack Lift bridge, built in 1958.

The one track continues for a brief distance until it once again becomes two, under the New Jersey Turnpike's western spur. The train continues through the Meadowlands and passes the first grade crossing at Valley Brook Avenue in Lyndhurst. The line curves slightly and passes under the 1903 Kingsland tunnel. Kingsland station is shortly after the tunnel and is in an open cut. Just beyond Kingsland station is Lyndhurst station, located on an embankment.

After leaving Lyndhurst, the train crosses over the Passaic River on a bolted-shut swing bridge. The train passes under Route 3 and approaches Delawanna station.

Next stop is Passaic, which is located on an embankment. After Passaic, the Main Line has a stretch through some industrial areas before the Clifton station, which is also located on an embankment.

The Main Line passes under U.S. Route 46 and the Garden State Parkway before it crosses under and over several streets in south Paterson. This portion of the line was single-tracked, then double-tracked in a rehabilitation project in 2002. The line passes under Interstate 80 and heads into downtown Paterson. Paterson station is elevated, with a center platform.

Continuing north, the Main Line is on an elevated grade through Paterson, passing over streets. After several grade crossings in an industrial area, the tracks crosses over the Passaic River on a truss bridge. Hawthorne is the next stop, at grade level. After a long stretch, the train reaches Glen Rock station, at grade level at a crossing.

After Glen Rock station, Ridgewood Junction is reached. This is where Main Line will merge with the Bergen County Line. The line widens to three tracks. Ridgewood station is next, with Spanish-style design on the station building and platforms.

Next is Ho-Ho-Kus, also at grade. Waldwick follows with an abandoned station building on the northbound side and a footbridge connecting the two platforms. Waldwick Yard is just north of the station, and just following Waldwick Yard is a grade crossing. North of the grade crossing (which has 3 tracks) the line becomes two tracks.

Allendale and Ramsey follow, both as grade-level stations. Ramsey-Route 17 station (opened August 22, 2004) is next. It is a park-and-ride facility located off of Route 17 South in Ramsey.

Mahwah follows and is the last station in New Jersey. Crossing over the New York state line, the train arrives at Suffern, the last stop. Some trains continue past to Port Jervis. The yards are located just to the north, under the New York State Thruway overpass.

[edit] Rolling stock

All trains on the Main/Bergen/Port Jervis lines are push-pulled by diesel locomotives of almost every type of locomotive and coach except for the Multi-level vehicles utilized on the line.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] External links

New Jersey Transit