Raising the dead: PATCO Franklin Square ghost station reopens after 46 years
The train station beneath Franklin Square park has been closed since 1979. A $29.3 million renovation wakes it up to a new neighborhood.
4 months ago
File - A PATCO train pulls into a station (Kimberly Paynter/WHYY)
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PATCO is changing up weekday overnight service on the Speedline to “address safety and cleanliness concerns,” which includes stopping owl service for six months beginning in September.
Starting Monday, the first phase of the rollout will temporarily close specific stations from midnight to 4:30 a.m. and reopen them on a rotating two-week basis to “allow for focused cleaning, maintenance, and safety operations,” according to a release.
Here’s the list of service changes:
Phase two will begin Sept. 1, which will completely suspend weekday overnight service on the PATCO Speedline for six months to “address ongoing conditions in the city-owned concourse areas and to create time and space for cleaning, maintenance, and public safety work to take place more effectively.”
The closures are part of a collaborative effort with PATCO, the Delaware River Port Authority and the city of Philadelphia. James Schultz, DRPA board chairman, said the partnership “has been instrumental in increasing the safety and security of our employees and customers.”
“We are taking meaningful steps to enhance safety, improve system cleanliness, and ensure PATCO remains a dependable and secure transit option for the communities we serve,” Schultz said.
Weekend overnight service will not be affected during the service changes. Trains will run from 4:30 a.m. on Fridays to 11:59 p.m. on Sundays.