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Kitchener railway station

Kitchener
Via Rail and GO Transit station
Kitchener station wide.jpg
Location 126 Weber St. West
Kitchener, ON
Coordinates 43°27′20″N 80°29′35″W / 43.45556°N 80.49306°W / 43.45556; -80.49306Coordinates: 43°27′20″N 80°29′35″W / 43.45556°N 80.49306°W / 43.45556; -80.49306
Owned by Via Rail
Platforms 1 side platform
Tracks 2
Connections BSicon BUS1.svgGrand River Transit
Construction
Structure type Heritage station building
Parking Central Systems Auto Parks
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code GO Transit: KITC
Fare zone 27
History
Opened 1897
Previous names Grand Trunk Railway
CN Rail
Services
Preceding station   VIA Rail Canada simplified.svg Via Rail   Following station
toward Sarnia
Sarnia–Toronto
toward Toronto
GO Transit logo.svg GO Transit
Terminus Kitchener
  Former services  
BSicon LOGO Amtrak2.svg Amtrak
toward Chicago
International Limited
toward Toronto
Designated 2006
Reference no. 4571

The Kitchener railway station is located in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada, slightly to the northeast of downtown Kitchener, at 126 Weber Street West, near the corner of Victoria Street. It is a heritage building containing a waiting room and ticket counter built beside a set of tracks also used as a freight yard. A separate building to the east of the passenger area, originally built in 1925 as a freight building, now serves as the headquarters for the Goderich–Exeter Railway.

The station is served by two daily Via Rail trains in each direction running between Sarnia and Toronto via London. There are also four daily GO Transit trains which depart eastbound to Toronto on weekday mornings and return westbound in the afternoon. In the times or directions that train service is not operating, GO bus route 30 Kitchener provides express service to Bramalea GO Station where passengers can connect to off-peak trains.Grand River Transit routes 4, 6, 20, 34 and 204 stop near to the station on either Weber Street or Victoria Street.

The station was built in 1897 by the Grand Trunk Railway to replace a smaller station built in 1856. The station originally included a prominent clock tower. A second tower was added to the station after a 1908 fire. In 1966, Canadian National Railway (CN), by this point the owner of the station, removed the clock tower and the other roof features. In 1983, CN threatened to demolish the station, but Via Rail, who had assumed responsibility for CN's passenger services in 1978, opted to retain it. Under the provisions of Canada's Heritage Railway Stations Protection Act, it was designated a railway heritage structure as of February 15, 1994.

The International Limited was operated jointly by Via Rail and Amtrak between Chicago and Toronto. The service, which had started in 1982, was discontinued in 2004.


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