University of Waterloo Station is a bus terminal and light rail station located at the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.[1] The site initially opened as a light rain station on Grand River Transit's ION light rail line in 2019, and the bus terminal for GRT buses was subsequently opened in 2022. The bus terminal is shared with GO Transit, which uses the easternmost eastbound platforms as its University of Waterloo Terminal for its intercity bus service.
University of Waterloo | |||||||||||
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General information | |||||||||||
Location | Waterloo, Ontario Canada | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 43°28′23″N 80°32′28″W / 43.47312°N 80.54107°W | ||||||||||
Platforms | Centre platform (Rail Platforms 1/2) | ||||||||||
Tracks | 2 | ||||||||||
Train operators | Grand River Transit | ||||||||||
Bus routes |
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Bus stands | 5 (Platforms 3-7) | ||||||||||
Bus operators | Grand River Transit GO Transit | ||||||||||
Connections | Laurel Trail / Trans Canada Trail | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | 2019 2022 (Bus Platforms) | (Light Rail Platform) ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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History
editBefore construction of the light rail station, GRT and intercity bus services had been slowly intensifying at a set of stops along the east end of the University of Waterloo's Ring Road near the Davis Centre building, most significantly Grand River Transit (including the 200 iXpress bus which was the predecessor of the Ion light rail system), GO Transit's 25 Waterloo–Mississauga intercity bus route,[2] and the Waterloo Undergraduate Student Association's Fed Bus service.[3] Half of the bus slips and shelters on Ring Road were removed during the construction of the Light Rail line, but the other half on the west side remain, used only by the Fed Bus service.
In 2016, with light rail infrastructure under construction, an adjacent dedicated bus station was announced. It would be east of the rail line and accessed from Phillip Street, shifting some buses off Ring Road and onto public roadways.[4] Later, in 2020, it was announced that over $3 million in additional provincial, federal, and regional funding had been granted for amenities at the new bus station.[5] This would include several heated waiting shelters and bike storage facilities.[6]
The bus terminal partially opened on January 3, 2022, and then fully opened three weeks later, serving Grand River Transit routes; GO Transit buses switched over on March 15.
Overview
editLocated on the campus of the University of Waterloo, the station primarily serves students and employees of the university. The main campus is on the west side of the station, with three engineering buildings to the south and administration buildings to the north.
The bus terminal was constructed on an existing access road between Phillip Street on the east and the University's Ring Road on the west, with a level crossing for the ION light rail line and the Laurel Trail at its western end. The Bus Terminal's road continues westward onto the campus grounds as William Tutte Way, named after University of Waterloo mathematician W.T. Tutte.
Freight Train Usage
editFrom 11 PM-5 AM, freight trains are permitted to use the tracks used by the light rail line, as the line was built along a portion of track shared with the Waterloo Spur Line, which serves industrial locations in Elmira. To protect the station structure (and the trains themselves), a gauntlet track is in place alongside Platform 1 of the station that offsets the freight track a small distance.
Services
editGrand River Transit
editLight Rail
Platform | Route | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 301 | ION Express | Northbound to Conestoga Station |
2 | Southbound to Fairway Station |
Buses
Platform | Route | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
3 | 30 | Ring Road | To University of Waterloo Station
Via Ring Road, Weekday Service Only |
3 | 31 | Columbia | Eastbound to Columbia/Sundew
Weekday Service Only |
4 | Westbound to Conestoga Station
Weekday Service Only | ||
3 | 201 | iXpress Fischer Hallman | Eastbound to Conestoga College |
4 | Westbound to Conestoga Station | ||
4 | 19 | Hazel | 19A to St. Jacob's Market |
19B to Northfield station (Waterloo) | |||
5 | 301R | ION Replacement Shuttle | Rail replacement bus service during 301 service disruptions. |
6 | 9 | Lakeshore | To Conestoga Station |
6 | 13 | Laurelwood | To The Boardwalk Station |
GO Transit
editAll GO Transit buses load at Platform 6 and unload at Platform 7.
Platform | Route | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
6C | 17 | Waterloo / Hamilton | To Hamilton GO Centre
via: |
6B | 25 | Waterloo / Mississauga | To Square One GO Terminal
via: |
25A | To Square One GO Terminal
via: | ||
25C | To Square One GO Terminal
via: | ||
25L | To Square One GO Terminal
via: | ||
6A | 30 | Kitchener | To Bramalea GO Station
via:
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30A | To Bramalea GO Station
via: |
References
edit- ^ "University of Waterloo". About ION. GrandLinq Contractors. Retrieved December 22, 2016.
- ^ "GO Transit". University of Waterloo. January 9, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2020.
- ^ "Fed Bus". University of Waterloo. March 26, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2020.
- ^ Sivaloganathan, Sujan (November 22, 2016). "Next stop: University of Waterloo Transit Station". Imprint. Retrieved July 17, 2020.
- ^ Ontario Ministry of Infrastructure (June 16, 2020). "Canada and Ontario invest in public transit and active transportation infrastructure to support Waterloo Region residents". Retrieved July 17, 2020.
- ^ Bueckert, Kate (June 16, 2020). "Transit projects to get $25M from federal and provincial governments". CBC.ca. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved July 17, 2020.