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Sanford station (SunRail)

Sanford
SunRail commuter rail station
Location 2720 West State Road 46
Sanford, FL 32771
Coordinates 28°48′47″N 81°17′55″W / 28.813168°N 81.298673°W / 28.813168; -81.298673Coordinates: 28°48′47″N 81°17′55″W / 28.813168°N 81.298673°W / 28.813168; -81.298673
Owned by Florida Department of Transportation
Line(s) SunRail:
  SunRail
Platforms 2 side platforms
Tracks 5
Connections Local Transit Lynx: #34, #46E, #46W, NeighborLink #651
Construction
Structure type At-grade
Parking 232 spaces
Bicycle facilities Yes
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Fare zone Seminole
History
Opened May 1, 2014
Traffic
Passengers (2014) 262 daily
Services
Preceding station   SunRail logo.png SunRail   Following station
SunRail
Terminus
  Future services  
toward Poinciana
SunRail
Phase 2 (2017)
toward DeLand

Sanford station is a SunRail commuter rail station in Sanford, Florida. It is the penultimate station in SunRail's phase one. It opened May 1, 2014, and marks the nine-year return of regular passenger rail service to Sanford, Florida following the closure of the Amtrak station in 2005. Sanford station is the northernmost SunRail station within Seminole County, Florida.

Sanford is typical of most SunRail stations featuring canopies consisting of white aluminum poles supporting sloped green roofs and includes ticket vending machines, ticket validators, emergency call boxes, drinking fountains, and separate platforms designed for passengers in wheelchairs. The station is located along the north side of S.R. 46, diagonally across the road from the Sanford Amtrak Auto Train station. Other Amtrak trains that share the right-of-way with SunRail are the Silver Meteor and Silver Star trains, neither of which stop at either Sanford station. The station is also located just south of Rand Yard, a small rail yard used by CSX for freight car storage as well as SunRail for equipment maintenance and storage.

The Sanford station was built along tracks originally laid down by the Jacksonville, Tampa and Key West Railroad, which was acquired by the Plant System, and later by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad (ACL). Sanford's ACL Depot, however, was built along the tracks used by the South Florida Railroad, which was also acquired by the Plant System and later acquired by ACL. The original station was built by the ACL in 1913, and a new modern station replaced the original depot in 1953. As with many ACL Depots, it became a Seaboard Coast Line Railroad station when the ACL merged with the Seaboard Air Line Railroad in 1967. Like most passenger stations, it was acquired by Amtrak upon its inception in April 1971. In December of that same year, the Auto-Train Corporation built a terminal for its operations nearby. Auto-Train took passengers and their cars and other vehicles to Lorton, Virginia, and later Louisville, Kentucky. Lack of success from the Louisville expansion, high crew costs and several accidents threw the company into bankruptcy, and Auto-Train Corporation was forced to end its services in late April 1981. Amtrak acquired Auto Train in 1983, and still operates this service between Sanford and Lorton today.


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