place

Lincoln Park, New Brunswick

Middlesex County, New Jersey geography stubsNeighborhoods in New Brunswick, New Jersey

Lincoln Park is an unincorporated community located within New Brunswick in Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lincoln Park, New Brunswick (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Lincoln Park, New Brunswick
Quentin Avenue, New Brunswick

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Lincoln Park, New BrunswickContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.485 ° E -74.466944444444 °
placeShow on map

Address

Quentin Avenue 15
08901 New Brunswick
New Jersey, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Jersey Avenue station
Jersey Avenue station

Jersey Avenue is a New Jersey Transit station on the Northeast Corridor Line in New Brunswick, New Jersey. It is near Jersey Avenue, in an industrial area next to a New Jersey Transit rail yard. Unlike all other stations on the Northeast Corridor Line, Jersey Avenue has low-level platforms (the rest are elevated), and, since there is no wheelchair ramp, it is the only station on the line that is not handicapped-accessible. Jersey Avenue opened in October 1963 as part of an experimental park and ride program. Jersey Avenue has a different layout than most New Jersey Transit stations. While it has two platforms, one for trains heading south toward Trenton Transit Center and one for trains heading north toward New York Penn Station, the northbound platform is not positioned across the track from the southbound platform as would normally be the case for most New Jersey Transit stations (especially those along the Northeast Corridor, which have a wider gap between platforms due to an extra track in each direction used by Amtrak). Instead, the northbound platform is set behind the southbound platform and the platforms are separated by a parking lot. With this layout, northbound trains from Trenton cannot service Jersey Avenue and thus bypass the station en route to New York. Some southbound trains do terminate at Jersey Avenue, using a siding that is also used by special northbound trains that originate at the station. In April 2014 NJT approved a contract for a design for relocation and rebuilding the station platform to permit high-level boarding, along with pedestrian overpass, vertical circulation, improved parking, and bus connection areas, as well as improvements to 5 miles of the existing Delco freight line to make it a 130 kilometers per hour (80 miles per hour) main line track for passenger trains. As of 2015, additional design and engineering work to reconfigure the station was funded, but no construction date had been scheduled.