Oxnard Transit Center

The Oxnard Transit Center (formerly Oxnard Transportation Center) is an intermodal transit center in downtown Oxnard, California. It is served by Amtrak Coast Starlight and Pacific Surfliner intercity service plus Metrolink Ventura County Line commuter service.

Oxnard, CA
Morning view from the southeast of the station in 2014
General information
Other namesOxnard Transit Center
Location201 East Fourth Street
Oxnard, California
United States
Coordinates34°11′58″N 119°10′34″W
Owned byCity of Oxnard
Line(s)UP Coast Line
Platforms1 side platform
Tracks2
Bus routes
Bus stands16
Construction
Parking110 spaces
Bicycle facilitiesRacks, lockers
AccessibleYes
ArchitectJoan Briggs
Other information
StatusStaffed, station building with waiting room
Station codeAmtrak: OXN
History
Opened1987 (1987)
Previous namesOxnard Transportation Center
Passengers
FY 202259,653[1] (Amtrak only)
Services
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Santa Barbara
toward Seattle
Coast Starlight Simi Valley
Ventura Pacific Surfliner Camarillo
toward San Diego
Preceding station Metrolink Following station
Ventura–East
Terminus
Ventura County Line Camarillo
Location

Service

Oxnard Transit Center is served by eight Amtrak Pacific Surfliner trains (four in each direction) every day, with departures evenly spaced throughout the day. Six Metrolink Ventura County Line trains (three in each direction) serve the station each weekday, running during peak hours in the peak direction of travel. A single round trip operates on Saturdays. Metrolink passengers also have access to four of the Pacific Surfliner trains (two in each direction) each day through a codesharing arrangement with Amtrak.[2] Amtrak's Coast Starlight serves the station with one train daily in each direction.[3]

History

Oxnard station in May 1976

The Southern Pacific Railroad constructed a wye at Montalvo in late 1897 on the original route connecting Ventura to Los Angeles through the Santa Clara River Valley. This spur was needed for shipping construction equipment to the site of a new beet sugar refinery. A wooden railroad trestle and rail line were constructed over the Santa Clara River as the spur headed south, reaching the new settlement here on the relatively isolated coastal plain in April 1898.[4] The rail line turned here from the north–south alignment to east–west towards Camarillo as they continued building the towards Santa Susana in the Simi Valley. With the completion of the Santa Susana Tunnel connecting the line to Burbank, this became the most direct route between Los Angeles and San Francisco. The new settlement was named after the factory owner and in 1904 traffic on the coast railroad line was rerouted through Oxnard.[5]

In 1987, the current station was constructed on the northerly end of the curve while the former station remained at the southerly end. The former Oxnard depot has continued in use as a maintenance and freight yard office by Union Pacific.

Metrolink service started on April 4, 1994, after the Northridge earthquake damaged Simi Valley Freeway and the Federal Emergency Management Agency agreed to temporarily fund the extension of service. The trains were stored overnight in a temporary layover facility in the Montalvo neighborhood of Ventura where the Santa Paula Branch Line, owned by the Ventura County Transportation Commission, connects to the Coast Line.[6]

References

  1. "Amtrak Fact Sheet, Fiscal Year 2022: State of California" (PDF). Amtrak. June 2023. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  2. "Coast Starlight Timetable" (PDF). Rail Passengers Association. April 4, 2022. Retrieved September 27, 2022.
  3. San Buenaventura Research Associates (July 2005). Downtown Oxnard Historic Resources Survey Final Report (PDF) (Report). City of Oxnard. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-02.
  4. "CHATSWORTH PARK CUTOFF LINE OPENS TODAY" Los Angeles Herald 20 March 1904. Volume XXXI, Number 173, Page 2
  5. Catania, Sara (April 4, 1994). "Last of Post-Quake Metrolink Stations Opening in Oxnard". Los Angeles Times.

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