place

Woodcrest station

1980 establishments in New JerseyCherry Hill, New JerseyPATCO Speedline stations in New JerseyRailway stations in Camden County, New JerseyRailway stations in the United States opened in 1980
PATCOTrainWoodcrestStation
PATCOTrainWoodcrestStation

Woodcrest station is a station on the PATCO Lindenwold Line rapid transit system. The station is located in the Woodcrest section of Cherry Hill, New Jersey, at the intersection of Woodcrest Road and Melrose Avenue. Woodcrest is the first stop in the outermost (formerly "Blue") fare zone.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Woodcrest station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Woodcrest station
East Essex Avenue,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Woodcrest stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.87045 ° E -75.01117 °
placeShow on map

Address

Woodcrest (Woodcrest PATCO)

East Essex Avenue
08034
New Jersey, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q8032539)
linkOpenStreetMap (5358314923)

PATCOTrainWoodcrestStation
PATCOTrainWoodcrestStation
Share experience

Nearby Places

Cherry Hill Arena

The Cherry Hill Arena was an indoor arena located in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, built in 1959. It was originally known as the Ice House and renamed the Delaware Valley Gardens before assuming its most familiar name. The arena, which seated 4,416, was the home of the short-lived Jersey Larks of the Eastern Hockey League in 1960-61 and hosted occasional home games of the NBA Philadelphia Warriors. In 1964 EHL hockey returned to the arena in the form of the Jersey Devils, who would be the arena's longest-lasting tenants, surviving until the EHL folded in 1973. Early in the 1973–1974 hockey season, the New York Golden Blades of the World Hockey Association moved to the arena and played there as the New Jersey Knights for the rest of the season. Sports Illustrated later described Cherry Hill Arena as "perhaps the worst facility" used by any WHA team, noting that it lacked showers in the dressing room for visiting teams, who had to dress at a Holiday Inn two miles away, and that the arena's ice surface was not even level, giving the home team a distinct home advantage as the visitors would have to skate uphill to the opponent's goal.By 1978 the arena had been renamed The Centrum. The Jersey Aces of the Northeastern Hockey League began the 1978-79 season as tenants at the Centrum, but moved to Hampton, Virginia, after a handful of home games. The Cherry Hill Arena was demolished in the 1980s and replaced by a shopping center, the main tenant of which was – at different times – a Kmart and three grocery stores, a Super G, Stop & Shop, and lastly a Hung Vuong Food Market (Former Shoprite). Another shopping center, called the Centrum Shops, uses the arena's final name but is located across Brace Road from the arena site. The Arena was owned by David Baird IV, CEO of Haddonfield Lumber.