Andover
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Looking west to the Pequest Fill, the planned Andover Station would serve the restored Lackawanna Cut-Off line.
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Location | Roseville Road Andover Township, New Jersey |
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Coordinates | 40°58′53″N 74°43′49″W / 40.98139°N 74.73028°WCoordinates: 40°58′53″N 74°43′49″W / 40.98139°N 74.73028°W | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Owned by | New Jersey Transit | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Line(s) | None | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Platforms | 1 side platform (planned) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Tracks | 0 (1 planned) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Construction | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parking | 125 spaces (planned) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Fare zone | 19 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
History | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Opened | 2018 (planned) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Andover is a planned New Jersey Transit passenger railroad station in Andover Township, in Sussex County, New Jersey, United States, providing service on its Lackawanna Cut-Off line. The line remains under construction. The station will be built at a site on Andover's Roseville Road, about 1.1 miles (1.8 km) from U.S. Route 206 and about 0.9 miles (1.5 km) from County Route 517. On the rail line, it will be located about 7.3 miles (11.7 km) west of Port Morris Junction at milepost 53.0.
Anticipated construction at the site includes a station and platform with 125 parking spaces (up from the initially planned 65 spaces). Preparation to restore trackage between Port Morris and Andover was originally to begin in 2010 but was delayed until early 2011 due to a dispute over the exact location of the Andover Station area. Another delay was caused while environmental permits were sought. In August 2017, an agreement with a local landowner appeared to have cleared the way for the necessary environmental permits, and service is projected to start in 2020.
The Andover station will be the terminus of the line, but plans exist for extending the Lackawanna Cut-Off line west of Andover.
From 1908 to 1911, the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad (DL&W) built a level-graded 28.5-mile (45.9 km) railroad line. This route, known as the Lackawanna Cut-Off, ran west from Port Morris Junction in Roxbury Township near the south end of Lake Hopatcong in northwestern New Jersey (about 45 miles (72 km) west-northwest of New York City) and to Slateford Junction near the Delaware Water Gap in northeastern Pennsylvania. With its rural landscape, tall fills, deep rock cuts, and two large viaducts, the line became renowned as a scenic highlight of the railroad's main line between Hoboken, New Jersey, and Buffalo, New York. Through the use of fewer and less-sharp curves, no steep hills, and no grade crossings, the route was faster and 11 miles (18 kilometres) shorter than the Lackawanna Old Road, the rail line it replaced. The DL&W constructed structures on the new line of reinforced concrete, and the roadbed itself required the movement of millions of tons of fill material using techniques similar to those on the Panama Canal.