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Centennial Station

Centennial Station
Amtrak inter-city rail station
Olympia station.jpg
Centennial (Olympia-Lacey) Amtrak Depot
Location 6600 Yelm Highway SE
Lacey, Washington 98513
 United States
Coordinates 46°59′29″N 122°47′39″W / 46.99145°N 122.79403°W / 46.99145; -122.79403Coordinates: 46°59′29″N 122°47′39″W / 46.99145°N 122.79403°W / 46.99145; -122.79403
Owned by BNSF Railway & Intercity Transit
Line(s)
Platforms 1 side platform
Tracks 2
Connections Intercity Transit
Construction
Parking Free
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code OLW
History
Opened 1993
Traffic
Passengers (2016) 63,169 Increase 2.66%
Services
Preceding station   BSicon LOGO Amtrak2.svg Amtrak   Following station
toward Los Angeles
Coast Starlight
toward Seattle
Amtrak Cascades
toward Vancouver, BC
  Former services  
toward Seattle
Pioneer
Discontinued in 1997
toward Chicago
Location
Location of the Olympia-Lacey Amtrak Station
Location of the Olympia-Lacey Amtrak Station
Location of Centennial Station within Washington

The Centennial Station (also known as Olympia–Lacey) is a train station located immediately south of Lacey, Washington, United States that also serves the capital city of Olympia. The station is served by Amtrak's (the National Railroad Passenger Corporation) Amtrak Cascades and Coast Starlight.

Local transit connections are provided by Intercity Transit. Bus routes 64 and 94 connect to Lacey and Olympia Transit centers.

The original Union Pacific station at East Olympia was demolished in the late 1960s. It was used by the pool trains that ran between Seattle and Portland by all three railroads that used the line, Northern Pacific, Great Northern, and Union Pacific. Amtrak trains during the 1970s and 1980s used a wooden shelter as East Olympia's passenger train station, however the station site was remote and had no public transport, no lighting and a pot-holed gravel parking lot with a public telephone that rarely worked.

The new Centennial Station was built by the non-profit Amtrak Depot Committee and opened in early 1993 following a six-year fundraising and lobbying effort by citizens of Thurston County. It is believed to be the only Amtrak station in the nation operated and built entirely by volunteers.

Although the Amtrak Cascades runs between Eugene, Oregon and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, there is no train that starts at one terminus and ends at the other. However, each day eight Amtrak Cascades trains (four northbound and four southbound) stop at the Centennial Station. The Coast Starlight has a simpler, less frequent schedule and runs daily in each direction between Los Angeles, California and Seattle. (The next northbound stop on both Amtrak trains is in Tacoma and the next southbound stop is in Centralia.)


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