Matthew H Fish
Lead Service Attendant
- Joined
- May 28, 2019
- Messages
- 499
This might seem like a minor question, but I think it is interesting, and might have important implications.
In another thread, I happened to mention that Amtrak doesn't own many of their stations---and I got curious, and looked it up, and apparently Amtrak owns almost none of their stations. But it is complicated, because some of the most important stations (like NY Penn and Chicago Union) they do own!
I can look up the ownership of individual stations, and from scanning wikipedia, it seems that stations are owned by a combination of freight railroads, state governments, city or local governments, and port authorities/transit authorities. And here also seems to be a somewhat obvious pattern that freight railroads own a lot of the lesser-used stations on long distance routes, while multimodal stations on corridor routes are owned by transit agencies. But it would be interesting to see a statistical breakdown of station ownership, including for ridership! If such a thing doesn't exist, I will probably end up making it.
It also has implications for customer experience---I will go out on a limb and guess that freight railroads are a lot less interested in whether a station has working drinking fountains and clean bathrooms than a transit agency. I think even city governments might be less responsive than transit agencies, but that is just a guess.
In another thread, I happened to mention that Amtrak doesn't own many of their stations---and I got curious, and looked it up, and apparently Amtrak owns almost none of their stations. But it is complicated, because some of the most important stations (like NY Penn and Chicago Union) they do own!
I can look up the ownership of individual stations, and from scanning wikipedia, it seems that stations are owned by a combination of freight railroads, state governments, city or local governments, and port authorities/transit authorities. And here also seems to be a somewhat obvious pattern that freight railroads own a lot of the lesser-used stations on long distance routes, while multimodal stations on corridor routes are owned by transit agencies. But it would be interesting to see a statistical breakdown of station ownership, including for ridership! If such a thing doesn't exist, I will probably end up making it.
It also has implications for customer experience---I will go out on a limb and guess that freight railroads are a lot less interested in whether a station has working drinking fountains and clean bathrooms than a transit agency. I think even city governments might be less responsive than transit agencies, but that is just a guess.