Adam Benjamin Metro Center Explained

Style:NICTD
Gary Metro
Other Name:Adam Benjamin Metro Center
Coordinates:41.6047°N -87.3383°W
Structure:Elevated
Tracks:2
Passengers:426 (average weekday)[1]
Pass Year:2019
Opened:1984
Accessible:Yes
Architect:H. Seay Cantrell Associates
Zone:5
Other Services Header:Former services
Other Services Collapsible:yes
Map State:collapsed
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Custom:
Shape:none
Line:none
Marker:rail
Marker-Color:
  1. 891b0f
Zoom:15

Gary Metro Center (also known as the Adam Benjamin Metro Center) is a multimodal commuter hub operated by the Gary Public Transportation Corporation. It was built in 1984 as an elevated replacement of the previously ground-level Broadway Street station. Named in honor of local US Representative Adam Benjamin, Jr.,[2] who died in 1982, it serves as the central bus terminal and the Downtown Gary station on the South Shore Line. It also serves as a stop for Greyhound Lines and other intercity bus systems.

It is one of three NICTD electric train stations in Gary, and serves the Genesis Convention Center and the U.S. Steel Yard baseball park, home of the Gary SouthShore RailCats baseball team. The RailCats's full name, SouthShore RailCats, honors the South Shore Line.

The station is just south of the Indiana Toll Road (I-90) and the disused Gary Union Station. The tracks of the former Baltimore and Ohio (now CSX) and New York Central Railroads (now Norfolk Southern) also lie near the station.

Structure

The station consists of a single elevated low-level island platform with mobile wheelchair lifts to allow passengers with disabilities to board and disembark. The platform can be accessed from the second floor of stairs located adjacent to Broadway as well as via the second floor of the station building.[3] The station was designed by Gary-based architectural firm H. Seay Cantrell Associates.

Bus connections

Gary Public Transportation Corporation

Local Routes

Regional Routes

Greyhound Lines

History

Gary station opened in 1908 as an inaugural stop along the new Chicago, Lake Shore and South Bend Railway; it was located at Broadway and Third. A new station building had replaced the original by the 1950s.

The modern station was dedicated on October 16, 1985.[4]

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2020 State of the System Report. SSL-4. November 2020. Metra.
  2. News: Zdravich . John . Center wins duo design award . 3 November 2024 . The Times . Newspapers.com . November 23, 1986 . Hammond, Indiana . C-5.
  3. Web site: ADA Accessibility. Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District. 26 December 2019.
  4. News: Benjamin center dedicated . 3 November 2024 . The Times . Newspapers.com . October 17, 1985 . Hammond, Indiana . A-2.