Brookfield
The platforms of Brookfield station in September 2016.
General information
Location8858 Burlington Avenue
Brookfield, Illinois
Coordinates41°49′19″N 87°50′36″W / 41.8220°N 87.8432°W / 41.8220; -87.8432
Owned byVillage of Brookfield
Line(s)BNSF Chicago Subdivision
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks3
ConnectionsPace Bus
Construction
ParkingYes
Bicycle facilitiesBicycle racks at Burlington and Forest Avenues
AccessibleYes, partial[note 1]
Other information
Fare zoneC
History
OpenedJune 15, 1889[1][2]
Rebuilt1981
Previous namesGrossdale (18891905)
Passengers
2018546 (average weekday)[3]Decrease 4.5%
Rank93 out of 236[3]
Services
Preceding station Metra Following station
Congress Park
Weekday Limited
toward Aurora
BNSF Hollywood
Former services
Preceding station Burlington Route Following station
Congress Park
toward Aurora
Suburban Service Hollywood
toward Chicago
Location

Brookfield is one of three stations on Metra's BNSF Line in Brookfield, Illinois. The station is 12.3 miles (19.8 km) from Union Station, the east end of the line.[4] In Metra's zone-based fare system, Brookfield is in zone C. As of 2018, Brookfield is the 93rd busiest of Metra's 236 non-downtown stations, with an average of 546 weekday boardings.[3] A staffed station is on the south side of the three tracks.

History

The old Brookfield station, now a museum.

Brookfield station was originally built in 1889 as Grossdale station, when Samuel Eberly Gross, a Chicago lawyer, began selling building lots platted from farms and woodlands he had acquired along both sides of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad line. Brookfield itself was originally known as "Grossdale," the name a request by Gross in return for the land used by the railroad.[2] The station was the first building Gross erected in the new subdivision. In 1981 the original station house was moved across the tracks onto the corner of Brookfield Avenue and Forest Avenue, and now houses the Brookfield Historical Society. The current Brookfield station serves as a standard commuter railroad station, while the old Grossdale station has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1982.[5]

Bus connections

Pace

  • "Route 331 – Cumberland/5th Avenue". PaceBus.com. Chicago: Pace Suburban Bus Service.

References

  1. At partially accessible stations, customers using mobility devices can access and use trains; however, the stations may not have other accessibility features such as accessible bathrooms, Braille signage, visual display announcements, etc.


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