Posts Tagged ‘Amtrak to Troy MI’

Troy Station Stop Suspended for No. 350

July 17, 2015

Due to track work, Wolverine Service No. 350 Will Not Stop in Troy, Michigan, Monday through Saturdays through Sept. 30.

In a service advisory, Amtrak said the action is result of track improvements being made in in Indiana and Michigan.

Amtrak is directing passengers using train 350 to instead board or disembark at Dearborn, Detroit, Royal Oaks or Pontiac. No. 350 is scheduled to arrive in Troy at 2:36 p.m. from Chicago and other intermediate stops.

All other Wolverine Service trains will continue to offer daily service to Troy.

Wolverines To Begin Serving Troy on Oct. 14

October 11, 2014

Amtrak’s Wolverine Service trains will begin serving the new Troy Transit Center in suburban Detroit on Oct. 14.

Subsequently, Wolverine trains will stop for the final time at the nearby Birmingham station on Oct. 13. The Troy Transit Center is located approximately one quarter mile southeast of the Birmingham station.

The Troy station is located at 1201 Doyle Drive. Amtrak said the scheduled arrival times for Wolverine Service trains at Troy will be the same as at Birmingham.

The Wolverines operate between Chicago and Detroit (Pontiac). The Troy station is located on tracks owned by Canadian National (former Grand Trunk Western).

Grand Opening Planned for Troy Station

October 9, 2014

A grand opening ceremony to mark the opening of the Troy (Mich.) Multi-Modal Transit Center will be held on Oct. 14.

The center is expected soon to replace nearby Birmingham as a suburban Detroit stop for Amtrak’s Chicago-Detroit (Pontiac) Wolverine Service.

The Troy city council has approved a 20-year lease agreement with Amtrak that will cover all costs to operate the center. The genesis of the center dates to 2000 when a nearby property owner gave the city title to the land needed to build it. But a dispute over ownership of the land landed in court. That dispute was recently resolved.

Amtrak Poised to Begin Service in Troy, Mich.

September 28, 2014

After delays lasting more than a decade and many trips through the courts, the Troy Transit Center is poised to open within a month and become an Amtrak station.

The suburban Detroit facility would replace Amtrak’s Birmingham station on the Chicago-Detroit (Pontiac) Wolverine Service route.

The transit center, located at Maple and Coolidge Higwhay, is expected to also serve regional bus routes and taxi services.

The City of Troy was finally able to approve a lease agreement with Amtrak, which had withheld its support until the city had taken ownership of the 2.7 acres of land on which the transit center sits.

“We’re very pleased to take the next step in the process,” Troy Mayor Dane Slater said. “I’m excited that we are on schedule for the transit center to open in the fall.”

Troy will be reimbursed for all operational costs and maintenance expenses. The lease will extend for 20 years with a 10-year option to renew.

The lease approval finally moved along after Oakland County Circuit Judge Leo Bowman issued an order on Aug. 15 transferring to Troy the title to the land on which the multimodal facility sits.

The order required the city to pay $1.05 million — the independently appraised value of the 2.7-acre property near Maple and Coolidge Highway — to developer Grand/Sakwa Properties, which owned the surrounding shopping center.

The land containing the transit center was deeded to the city in 2000 as part of a negotiated court settlement that granted an intense mixed-use commercial and residential development not allowed by the city’s zoning ordinances.

The land was sold to Troy for $1 as a part of a 1999 consent judgment, amended in 2000, that allowed Grand/Sakwa to build a 77-acre mixed-use commercial/residential development, even though Troy’s zoning ordinance at the time did not allow such developments.

Grand/Sakwa agreed to give the land for the transit center provided that the money for the center was secured by 2010. Troy landed an $8.4 million federal grant for the transit center, but Grand/Sakwa said it was not acquired before the 10-year deadline. Therefore, the developer said, the land reverted back to it.

Troy offered $550,000 for the site, based on a 2010 appraisal before the transit center was built.

Despite the court proceedings dragging on, the Troy City Council approved a scaled-down version of the transit center in January 2012.

The 28,000-square-foot center was completed last fall at a cost of $6.3 million. In May 2013, the court of appeals granted the reversion of the parcel. Troy initiated a condemnation case, allowing the city to purchase the land.