Spring Mill station

Railway station in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spring Mill stationmap

Spring Mill station is a suburban commuter railroad station on the SEPTA Manayunk/Norristown Line in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. Its official address is Station Avenue near Hector Street, Conshohocken (ZIP code 19428), but it is actually in the Spring Mill section of Whitemarsh Township. The station is located south of Hector Street, where North Lane deadends at the Schuylkill River.

Quick Facts General information, Location ...
Spring Mill
Spring Mill station in April 2012. The Schuylkill River Trail is visible to the right.
General information
Location98 Station Avenue,
Conshohocken, Pennsylvania 19428
Owned bySEPTA
Line(s)Norristown Branch
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks2
Connections Schuylkill River Trail
Construction
Parking154 spaces
AccessibleYes
Other information
Fare zone3
History
ElectrifiedFebruary 5, 1933[1]
Passengers
2017509 boardings
521 alightings
(weekday average)[2]
Rank49 of 146
Services
Preceding station SEPTA Following station
Conshohocken Manayunk/Norristown Line Miquon
Former services
Preceding station Reading Railroad Following station
Conshohocken
toward Elm Street
Norristown Branch Miquon
Location
Close

The original station was established by the Reading Railroad about 1880, and took its name from the nearby 18th-century grist mill.

In FY 2013, Spring Mill station had a weekday average of 378 boardings and 358 alightings.[3] It has a 154-space parking lot, and is handicapped-accessible. The Schuylkill River Trail passes next to the station.

Due to the proximity of the Schuylkill River and a pair of tributary streams, the station is periodically subjected to flooding, resulting in the temporary suspension of all service on the Manayunk/Norristown Line.[4][5] A project to replace the line's signal system is underway in 2013 that is intended to confine future flooding closures on the line to the section above Miquon station, by allowing partial service further down the line instead of no service on the line at all.[6]

References

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