Upton–Avenue Market station
Upton – Avenue Market | |||||||||||
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Metro SubwayLink station | |||||||||||
Upton station in April 2019. | |||||||||||
General information | |||||||||||
Location | 1702 Pennsylvania Avenue Baltimore, Maryland, 21217 | ||||||||||
Owned by | Maryland Transit Administration | ||||||||||
Platforms | 1 island platform | ||||||||||
Tracks | 2 | ||||||||||
Connections | MTA Maryland Buses | ||||||||||
Construction | |||||||||||
Parking | No | ||||||||||
Accessible | Yes | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | November 21, 1983 | ||||||||||
Passengers | |||||||||||
2017 | 1,551 daily[1] | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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Upton–Avenue Market station (formerly known simply as Upton station) is an underground Metro SubwayLink station in West Baltimore, Maryland located near the intersection of Pennsylvania Avenue and Laurens Street. The station takes its name from the surrounding Upton neighborhood and the nearby Avenue Market at 1700 Pennsylvania Avenue. It is the ninth most northern and western station on the line.
History
Upton–Avenue Market station was referred to as the Laurens Street station during its planning and construction, in reference to the street which intersects Pennsylvania Avenue nearby.[2]
Excavation and construction
The Laurens Street section of tunnels at Upton–Avenue Market station were constructed in a cut-and-cover operation through deeply weathered residual rock from a parent granitic gneiss material. Extensive exploration and mapping of the subsurface conditions was conducted prior to excavation and construction in order to obtain a detailed understanding of the heterogeneous mixture of soft and hard residual material at the site. This profile informed the support and mining procedures implemented for the project. Classification of the residual materials informed the tunnel design, which was supported by liner plates, steel ribs, posts, wall plates, and invert struts; the final lining was made from reinforced, cast in-place concrete. The presence of hard, dense rock-like fragments among the residual material necessitated some blasting methods in addition to conventional earth excavation methods.[3]
References
- ^ Metro SubwayLink Cornerstone Plan (PDF) (Report). Maryland Department of Transportation, Maryland Transit Administration. August 28, 2019. p. 15. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
- ^ "Laurens station bid $36 million". The Sun. February 1, 1978. p. C2.
- ^ Myers-Böhlke, Brenda (1983). A characterization of deep weathering profiles in foliated, metamorphic rocks for tunneling and shaft sinking (Doctoral). University of California, Berkeley.
External links
- Laurens Street entrance from Google Maps Street View
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- Owings Mills
- Old Court
- Milford Mill
- Reisterstown Plaza
- Rogers Avenue
- West Cold Spring
- Mondawmin
- Penn-North
- Upton–Avenue Market
- State Center
- Lexington Market
- Charles Center
- Shot Tower
- Johns Hopkins Hospital
- Hunt Valley
- Pepper Road
- McCormick Road
- Gilroy Road
- Warren Road
- Fairgrounds
- Timonium
- Lutherville
- Falls Road
- Mount Washington
- Cold Spring Lane
- Woodberry
- North Avenue
- Penn Station
- Mt. Royal/MICA
- Cultural Center
- Mt. Vernon
- Lexington Market
- Baltimore Arena
- Convention Center
- Camden Station
- Stadium/Federal Hill
- Westport
- Cherry Hill
- Patapsco
- Baltimore Highlands
- Nursery Road
- North Linthicum
- Linthicum
- Ferndale
- Glen Burnie
- BWI Business District
- BWI Airport
- Bethesda Metro
- Connecticut Avenue
- Lyttonsville
- 16th Street–Woodside
- Silver Spring Metro
- Silver Spring Library
- Dale Drive
- Manchester Place
- Long Branch
- Piney Branch Road
- Takoma Langley
- Riggs Road
- Adelphi Road–UMGC–UMD
- Campus Drive–UMD
- Baltimore Avenue–College Park–UMD
- College Park Metro–UMD
- Riverdale Park North–UMD
- Riverdale Park–Kenilworth
- Beacon Heights–East Pines
- Glenridge
- New Carrollton Metro
- Connecting services:
- MARC Train
- Amtrak
- Washington Metro
- Italics denote future stations.
39°18′18.17″N 76°38′11.8″W / 39.3050472°N 76.636611°W / 39.3050472; -76.636611
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