Louis Stokes Station at Windermere

 Louis Stokes Station
at Windermere
RTA rapid transit station
Location 14233 Euclid Avenue
East Cleveland, Ohio 44112
Coordinates 41°31′50″N 81°35′6″W / 41.53056°N 81.58500°W / 41.53056; -81.58500Coordinates: 41°31′50″N 81°35′6″W / 41.53056°N 81.58500°W / 41.53056; -81.58500
Owned by Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority
Line(s)
Platforms 1 island platform
Tracks 2
Connections       HealthLine
3 (Superior)
28/28A (East 276–Euclid) 28A Weekdays Only
30 (East 140th–Lakeshore)
37 (East 185th–Taylor)
41/41F (Warrensville) 41F Weekdays Only
Construction
Structure type Elevated
Parking 410 spaces[1]
Disabled access Yes
History
Opened March 15, 1955
Rebuilt June 22, 1997
Previous names Windermere
Services
Preceding station   Rapid Transit   Following station
toward Airport
Red LineTerminus
Preceding station   HealthLine   Following station
Belmore Road
toward Tower City
East LineTerminus
Debra Ann Lane
toward Tower City
West LineTerminus
Location

Louis Stokes Station at Windermere is a rapid transit station on the RTA Red Line in East Cleveland, Ohio, USA. It is located on the northwest side of Euclid Avenue (U.S. Routes 6 and 20) between Bryn Mawr and Doan Roads. It is the eastern terminus of the Red Line and the bus rapid transit HealthLine.

Notable places nearby

History

Prior to being a rapid transit station, the site was the location of the Windermere Car Barn of the Cleveland Railway and its successor, the Cleveland Transit System (CTS). As streetcars were retired in favor of buses, Windermere also became a bus garage.

On February 4, 1952, CTS broke ground for its rapid transit behind the Windermere Car Barn,[2] on the same embankment as the Nickel Plate railway tracks. The new station, called simply "Windermere Station," opened with the CTS Rapid Transit on March 15, 1955.[3]

As originally constructed, the station included on the embankment level a car yard and car shops for the rapid transit and a loop to allow trains to turn around if needed (although the car sets all had operator cabs are both ends). On the south side below the tracks, there were a fare collection headhouse, three bus loading loops and a small free parking lot off Euclid Avenue, along with an elevated walkway over the bus loops to the Euclid Avenue parking lot. A pedestrian tunnel beneath the embankment carrying rapid transit and railway tracks connected the station to a larger free parking lot on the northwest side of the tracks. The entrance to the northwest parking lot was from Hayden Avenue. The Hayden bus garage was also built adjacent to the northwest lot to replace the Windermere Car Barn.

The Windermere car shops were abandoned when RTA opened its new $23-million Central Rail Maintenance Facility opened on April 29, 1984 on a 20-acre (8.1 ha) site at East 55th Street.[2] The Hayden parking lot also closed as the additional parking was not needed and use of the tunnel was perceived by most passengers as a security risk.

The original station was demolished and an entirely new station was constructed as part of RTA's program of station reconstruction beginning in the late 1990s. The new $12.7-million station opened on June 22, 1997.[4] The turnaround loop and the car shops were eliminated. In November 1997, RTA renamed the station “Louis Stokes Station at Windermere” in honor of the Congressman Louis Stokes “for his many years of unwavering support.”[2] In 1998, RTA completed a $21-million renovation of the Hayden bus garage.[2]

The property directly southwest of the Euclid Avenue parking area has been used for the construction of a Head Start Center, which was dedicated November 22, 2002.[5] It was the first Head Start Center in Greater Cleveland built next to a rapid transit station, making the facility accessible for many of the families eligible for Head Start who do not have cars.

References

  1. 2007 Park-and-Ride Inventory/Survey, NOACA 2006 Transit Network Guide, June 2007, p. 29.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "About RTA: History of Public Transit in Greater Cleveland". RTA Website. Retrieved 2007-06-03.
  3. Exner, Rich (March 14, 2005). "Red Line rapid marks 50 years in service". The Plain Dealer. p. A1. Retrieved 2007-06-02.
  4. "RTA's Red Line Rail Service to Operate from New Windermere Station" (Press release). Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority. June 20, 1997. Retrieved 2007-06-07.
  5. Perkins, Olivia (November 23, 2002). "Unique site to help put kids on track Head Start opens at RTA train stop". The Plain Dealer. p. B1. Retrieved 2007-06-02.
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