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Yankees – East 153rd Street (Metro-North station)

Yankees–East 153rd Street
Yankees E 153rd street station.jpg
View of tracks and platforms at Yankees-E. 153rd Street station
Location Exterior Street
Concourse, Bronx, New York 10451
Coordinates 40°49′31.35″N 73°55′48.96″W / 40.8253750°N 73.9302667°W / 40.8253750; -73.9302667Coordinates: 40°49′31.35″N 73°55′48.96″W / 40.8253750°N 73.9302667°W / 40.8253750; -73.9302667
Owned by Metro-North Railroad
Line(s)
Platforms 2 island platforms
Tracks 4
Connections New York City Subway:
"4" train "B" train "D" train trains at 161st Street–Yankee Stadium
Local Transit NYCT Bus: Bx6, Bx13 (at 161st Street)
ferry/water interchangeNY Waterway
ferry/water interchangeSeaStreak
Other information
Fare zone 2
History
Opened May 23, 2009
Electrified 700V (DC) third rail
Services
Preceding station   MTA NYC logo.svg Metro-North Railroad   Following station
Hudson Line
MTA employees
toward Poughkeepsie
Hudson Line
toward Poughkeepsie
  Game days only  
Terminus Harlem Line
toward Southeast
New Haven Line

The Yankees–East 153rd Street Metro-North Railroad station serves Yankee Stadium and Highbridge, the surrounding area in the New York City borough of The Bronx. It opened on May 23, 2009. The station provides daily local service on the Hudson Line, and special service on the Harlem and New Haven lines for New York Yankees baseball games, and New York City FC soccer matches, all played at Yankee Stadium.

Approximately ten trains before and after the games serve the station and allow riders to leave from and travel to stations on all three Metro-North lines. A shuttle train also transports fans between the stadium and Grand Central Terminal, helping to reduce traffic on the subway lines used to connect to New Jersey Transit and Long Island Rail Road trains at Penn Station.

This project was promoted for several decades, and was included in the MTA's annual budget since the 1980s. Despite being part of the old Yankee Stadium renovation plan during the 1970s, plans for the station did not go ahead until the impetus from New Yankee Stadium. Metro-North's Hudson Line had active track near the site. Some connections needed to be altered to provide New Haven Line and Harlem Line service.

The station was designed to serve three Metro-North lines (Hudson, Harlem and New Haven) via existing track connections that were not normally used for revenue passenger services.

The MTA estimated that the project would cost $91 million, including $52 million that it will provide and $39 million that will be provided by New York City. The MTA paid for the new station with $40 million from an account set aside to build a new subway connection to LaGuardia Airport that was canceled due to local community opposition, and $5 million from an existing account that had money set aside for new Yankee Stadium station in prior budgets.


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Wikipedia

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