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Re: (rshsdepot) Scranton, PA (CNJ)
- Subject: Re: (rshsdepot) Scranton, PA (CNJ)
- From: "James Kelling" <james.kelling_@_nara.gov>
- Date: Tue, 07 Aug 2007 09:41:06 -0400
The article refers to the CRNJ freight station; the passenger station is long gone.
J. Kelling
>>> I95BERNIEW_@_aol.com 8/6/2007 6:49 PM >>>
From today's Times-Tribune.
Bernie Wagenblast
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Three city projects to coincide BY DAVID SINGLETON
STAFF WRITER
One is a remnant of the cityâ€*s transportation past; the other represents its
transportation future. Fittingly, thereâ€*s a bridge in between.
The confluence of three projects will transform the western end of
Lackawanna Avenue into a bustling construction zone by the end of the year and into
2008.
When itâ€*s all over, the 116-year-old Central New Jersey depot will be
transformed into a restaurant and retail complex, and the new Scranton Intermodal
Transportation Center will be the place to catch a bus or get a taxi downtown.
Spanning the Lackawanna River and linking the two projects will be the
rebuilt Lackawanna Avenue Bridge.
â€*Itâ€*s going to be a pretty busy end of town,†said Kurt Kempter,
development director for the County of Lackawanna Transit System, which is building the
$11 million intermodal center.
The Central New Jersey depot at West Lackawannna and North Sixth avenues is
where the public is likely to see the first activity.
Developer Jerry Donahue, who heads the partnership that bought the landmark
in 2000, said bids for the masonry work will be sought soon, followed by bids
for the general contracting work.
â€*What we are doing is going through and dotting the Iâ€*s and crossing the Tâ€*
s with the expectation construction will begin in 2007,†he said.
After $4.45 million worth of renovations, the depot is expected to open in
November 2008.
COLTS is also aiming for a November 2008 opening for the long-awaited,
6,500-square-foot intermodal center, which will serve as a hub for COLTS and
commercial buses, along with taxis and â€" if passenger rail service to New York is
ever restored â€" commuter trains.
It will be built on the southern side of Lackawanna Avenue on a 2.24-acre
site that is now the parking lot for the State Office Building.
Legislation authorizing the sale of the property to COLTS breezed through
the General Assembly last spring, and state officials are now reviewing the
paperwork.
COLTS bid the project in June 2006, when state approval of the sale appeared
imminent, but it will have to be bid again because of the time lapse, Mr.
Kempter said. That wonâ€*t happen until the deed is transferred.
â€*Weâ€*re going to wait until everything is in order and we have actual
possession of the land,†said Mr. Kempter, adding the agency wants to start
construction by November.
The final project, reconstruction of the Lackawanna Avenue Bridge, is also
likely to go out to bid this fall, Mayor Chris Doherty said.
The state Department of Transportation, which is administering the estimated
$3 million project for the city, anticipates it will be completed within 18
months.
The bridge will be closed during construction. Alternative routes for
traffic to and from West Scranton have already been devised.
â€*This is ready to go,†Mr. Doherty said. â€*Itâ€*s going be a big project.â€
Contact the writer: dsingleton_@_timesshamrock.com
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The Railroad Station Historical Society maintains a database of existing
railroad structures at: http://www.rrshs.org
To Unsubscribe: http://lists.railfan.net/rshsdepot-photo/unsub.html
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