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Fairfield Metro station

2011 establishments in ConnecticutBuildings and structures in Fairfield, ConnecticutMetro-North Railroad stations in ConnecticutRailroad stations in Fairfield County, ConnecticutRailway stations in the United States opened in 2011
Stations on the Northeast CorridorUse mdy dates from February 2017
Metro North Station Fairfield Metro CT
Metro North Station Fairfield Metro CT

Fairfield Metro station is a commuter rail station on the Metro-North Railroad New Haven Line, located in the town of Fairfield, Connecticut. It opened as an infill station on December 5, 2011. The station has two 12-car-long side platforms serving the outer tracks of the four-track Northeast Corridor.: 22  It is fully accessible.

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

Fairfield Metro station
Constant Comment Way,

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Wikipedia: Fairfield Metro stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.1611 ° E -73.2343 °
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Address

Constant Comment Way 29
06824
Connecticut, United States
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Metro North Station Fairfield Metro CT
Metro North Station Fairfield Metro CT
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Black Rock Historic District
Black Rock Historic District

The Black Rock Historic District is a predominantly residential historic district in the Black Rock section of Bridgeport, Connecticut. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. At that time it included 109 contributing buildings. The historic district surrounds at the upper reaches of Black Rock Harbor.Black Rock was settled in 1644, and developed as a major shipping and trading center in the 1760s after a bridge over Ash Creek created a direct road connection to Fairfield Center. It was the third largest port in Connecticut at the time of the American Revolutionary War, and became the official Port of Entry for Fairfield County in 1790. The village was originally part of Fairfield before being annexed to Bridgeport in 1870. By that time the port had declined in importance. In subsequent years the once-rural village was gradually incorporated into the city's urban fabric. That portion of the district to the south of Bartram Avenue (88 buildings) is also a City of Bridgeport Local Historic District, where changes to a building's exterior that are visible from a public right-of-way must receive a Certificate of Appropriateness from the Historic District Commission. The district includes the Thomas Wheeler Sr. House (1644–80), considered the fourth-oldest house in Connecticut, at 266 Brewster Street. Other important structures include the Gershom Sturges/Benjamin Penfield House (1803-1836) at 105 Beacon Street, an example of the Greek Revival style; the Wolcott Chauncey House at 150 Seabright Avenue (1769), an example of a Colonial "Cape" house and birthplace of Commodore Isaac Chauncey; the Captain William Hall House at 87 Ellsworth Street (1856), a Gothic-Italianate villa in the "Hudson River Bracketed" mode and home to a major shipyard owner; and the Gould Brothers House at 119-21 Seabright Avenue (1868), a double-house built in the French Second Empire style for two building contractors.