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80th Street/Eastwick station
SEPTA trolley terminal station in Philadelphia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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80th Street/Eastwick station is a SEPTA Metro trolley terminal station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is the western terminus of the T5 route and is located at Island Avenue near its former intersection with Eastwick Avenue near Interstate 95 in the Eastwick neighborhood of Southwest Philadelphia. The Eastwick station of the SEPTA Regional Rail Airport Line, which serves Philadelphia International Airport, is within about a half mile walking distance of the station using Mario Lanza Boulevard along the southern edge of the adjacent Penrose Plaza Shopping Center property. North of Eastwick Loop, the trolleys travel in an unpaved median parallel to Island Avenue until entering the street at Buist Avenue. Currently, PENNDOT is reconfiguring the Island Avenue roadway layout. In the meantime, trolleys currently end at 73rd Street and Elmwood Avenue, and a shuttle bus connects passengers from there to the loop.
Until April 25, 1975, Route 36 (T5) trolleys would continue west along what was called Eastwick Avenue out to 88th Street, where a single counterclockwise loop was built in the swamplands. This was originally the routing of former Subway Surface Streetcar Trolley Route 37, which was merged into Route 36 on November 6, 1955.
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History
The Eastwick loop in its current form was established during the 1980s. Before that point, the western terminus of the Route 36 trolley was moved around to several locations in southwestern Philadelphia. Service was cut back to 94th Street & Eastwick Avenue on September 9, 1956. A similar instance happened on 88th Street on August 15, 1962, then truncated again to its current terminus at 80th Street on April 26, 1975.
In 1985, Island Avenue was converted into a new bridge over the SEPTA Airport Line near the station. The intersection of 80th Street and Eastwick Avenue was then replaced by a frontage road loop on the north side of the tracks.[1] Today's current trolley loop is located on the northwest corner of this bridge. Some of the former termini of the line are now located within the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge at Tinicum.
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References
External links
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