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Hempstead Transit Center |
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| Address | West Columbia Street Hempstead, New York |
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| Coordinates | 40°42′47″N 73°37′31″W / 40.713102°N 73.625307°WCoordinates: 40°42′47″N 73°37′31″W / 40.713102°N 73.625307°W | ||||||||||
| Lines | |||||||||||
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| Platforms | 2 island platforms | ||||||||||
| Tracks | 8 | ||||||||||
| Parking | Yes | ||||||||||
| Other information | |||||||||||
| Opened | 1872 (rail), 1993 (bus) | ||||||||||
| Rebuilt | 1881, 1913, 1943 (moved), 1963, 2002 | ||||||||||
| Electrified | May 26, 1908 750V (DC) third rail |
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| Accessible | |||||||||||
| Owned by | MTA | ||||||||||
| Fare zone | 4 | ||||||||||
| Traffic | |||||||||||
| Passengers (2006) | 3,614[1] | ||||||||||
| Services | |||||||||||
Ticket Vending Machines
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The Rosa Parks Hempstead Transit Center is the Nassau Inter-County Express system's indoor customer facility between Jackson and West Columbia Streets in Hempstead, New York. It is also the terminus for the Hempstead Branch of the Long Island Rail Road. Serving 19 routes, the transit center is the major transfer point for customers using a second Nassau Inter-County Express route or the LIRR. It offers a waiting area, transit information, MetroCard vending machines, a news-stand and restrooms.[2]
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Hempstead Station was originally built as a Central Railroad of Long Island depot sometime between October and December 1872, on the corner of Main Street and Fulton Avenue. When the Long Island Rail Road acquired the CRRLI in 1878, this Hempstead Station and terminus came with it, replacing the former 1839-built Hempstead Station, which ran along the original Hempstead Branch.[3]
The station was remodeled in July 1881, and razed in 1913. A second brick station was built in February 1913. Between December 30, 1941 and 1943, service was supended when the tracks were cut back and the station was moved to Columbia Street. A temporary station was installed 1,265 feet west of its former location until work on this project was finished. Upon the completion of this move and track work, the second station was opened again. However it was gutted in a fire on December 31, 1962 and remodeled in April 1963. This station was razed in 1998 and replaced with a much more elaborate third depot which was built between 1999 and 2002.
This station has two high-level island platforms, each eight cars long. The east platform is adjacent to Tracks 5 and 6, and the west platform is adjacent to Tracks 7 and 8.
The Hempstead Branch has eight tracks at this location. The four tracks to the east of the platforms but not adjacent to them are used for train storage.
In 1993, construction on the Hempstead Transit Center was completed and it was opened to the public. In conjunction with the new railroad station, its construction was part of a plan by Mayor James A. Garner to redevelop Hempstead and help bring it back to prominence as "Long Island's hub".[2] The original Hempstead bus terminal was located across Jackson Street on the corner of Jackson and Main streets. That area is now occupied by the Greyhound bus stop and various businesses. The new transit center can accommodate many more buses than the original terminal and allows almost half of the Nassau Inter-County Express system's routes to run through Hempstead. Although Hempstead has never reached its former level of prominence, the new terminal and railroad station, along with the establishment of many new businesses, have helped to reestablish Hempstead as the hub of Long Island.
On February 14, 2006, Nassau County Executive, Thomas Suozzi announced that Hempstead Transit Center would be renamed in honor of civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks. Suozzi said, "“To honor her memory and that of her important work, today we are renaming this vital transit hub for one of the most important figures in American history.” In addition to the renaming of the terminal, a permanent exhibit of the civil rights movement will be constructed, telling the story of the struggle for equality through the photographs of photojournalists and artists who covered the unrest of that era, including the late Moneta Sleet, Jr., Jim Peppler (a photographer for Newsday), and Herbert Randall.[4] So far, a column in the back of the bus terminal has been renovated with black marble, engraved with a large image of Rosa Parks and her story below.
At the Hempstead Transit Center, there are 19 routes operating through the terminal. Departure assignments during the day are listed below, during late night hours when the terminal is closed, all buses stop on West Columbia Street at Station Plaza immediately north of the terminal.
| Bay | Route | To | Via | Service notes |
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| 1 | N31 | Hempstead Avenue (Hempstead-Lynbrook), West Broadway, and Central Avenue |
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| 2 | N32 | Hempstead Avenue (Hempstead-Lynbrook), Broadway (Lynbrook-Woodmere), and Central Avenue | ||
| 3 | N15 | Woodfield Road and Long Beach Road | ||
| 4 | N41 | Nassau Road and Babylon Turnpike | ||
| 5 | N40 | Nassau Road and North Main Street (Freeport) | ||
| 6 | N16 | Franklin Street, Hempstead Avenue (Rockville Centre), |
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| N17 | North Village Avenue |
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| 7 | N35 | Baldwin Road/Grand Avenue | ||
| 8 | N6X | Hempstead Turnpike |
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| 9 | ||||
| 10 | N6 | |||
| 11 | ||||
| 12 | N41 | Franklin Avenue | ||
| 13 | N40 | |||
| 14 | N27 | Jackson Street/ Westbury Blvd, Oak Street, Glen Cove Road, Roslyn Road, and Glen Cove Avenue | ||
| N23 | Jackson Street/ Westbury Blvd, Oak Street, Glen Cove Road, Middle Neck Road, and New Shore Road |
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| 15 | N16 | Jackson Street/ Westbury Blvd, NCC |
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| N43 | NCC, Nassau Road/North Main Street and Uniondale Avenue |
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| 16 | N35 | Clinton Street, NCC, Post Avenue |
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| 17 | N15 | Washington Avenue |
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| 18 | N54 | Jerusalem Avenue, Washington Avenue (Seaford), Louden Avenue |
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| N55 | Jerusalem Avenue, Broadway (Route 107) |
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| 19 | N71 | Hempstead Turnpike, Carmans Road | ||
| 20 | N70 | Hempstead Turnpike, Smith Street |
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| 21 | N72 | Hempstead Turnpike, Route 109 |
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| 22 | N48 | Front Street, Carman Avenue, North Broadway (Route 106) |
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| 23 | N49 | Front Street, Newbridge Road/North Broadway | ||
| 24 | N46 | Front Street, Merrick Avenue, Prospect Avenue, East Meadow Avenue, Bellmore Road |
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| N47 |
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Front Street, Merrick Avenue, Prospect Avenue, East Meadow Avenue, Newbridge Road, Hempstead Turnpike, Front Street |
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