Downtown Crossing station


Downtown Crossing station, is a rapid transit station located in the Downtown Crossing retail district in downtown Boston, Massachusetts. It is the junction of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Orange Line and Red Line, and is one of four "hub stations" on the MBTA subway system. Downtown Crossing is also a major bus transfer location serving 13 MBTA bus routes, including one Silver Line route.
Downtown Crossing station is two levels deep. The upper level, which opened in 1908, stretches from Temple Place to Franklin Street under Washington Street. The lower level, which opened in 1915, reaches from Washington Street to Chauncey Street under Summer Street. Downtown Crossing is the second busiest subway station in the MBTA network, with an average of 23,478 entries per weekday in 2013. The Winter Street Concourse allows access to the Green Line at Park Street without leaving the common paid area.

Station layout

Downtown Crossing has two platform levels, both underground. The upper level serves the Orange Line and houses the CharlieCard Store, the entrance to the Winter Street Concourse, and entrances to various retailers, such as Roche Bros. and Macy's. The lower level platforms serve Red Line trains.

Accessibility

Like all Orange Line and Red Line stations, Downtown Crossing is accessible. Surface elevators are located at the Winter Street, Franklin Street, and Hawley Street entrances. An additional elevator – open business hours only – leads to the Roche Brothers store which connects to the Summer Street concourse. Because Downtown Crossing is an older station built at two different times in a dense urban area, transfers between the two lines are convoluted. There is no elevator between either of the Red Line platforms and the southbound Orange Line platform; passengers making such transfers must use the Winter Street Concourse and the Red Line elevators at Park Street.
The northbound Red Line platform has elevators at both ends of the Summer Street concourse for connections to the northbound Orange Line and to the street. The southbound Red Line platform only has an elevator at its far east end; passengers transferring to and from the northbound Orange Line must leave fare control at one end of the concourse and reenter at the other end.
A $13.57 million project added the two elevators connecting the northbound Orange Line platform to the northbound Red Line platform. Notice to proceed was given on February 18, 2016; completion was originally expected in late 2017, but delayed until June 14, 2019.
Two additional phases will complete elevator connections for all transfers. The $50 million Phase II will add an elevator between the northbound Orange Line and southbound Red Line platforms, renovate the elevator from Winter Street to the southbound Orange Line platform to also serve the southbound Red Line, and enlarge the Red Line elevator at Park Street. A $6.9 million design contract was awarded in March 2020; construction is expected to last from April 2022 to April 2024. The Phase II improvements are part of the 2006 settlement of Joanne Daniels-Finegold, et al. v. MBTA.

History

The Washington Street tunnel carrying the Main Line Elevated opened on November 30, 1908. Stations on the tunnel were built in pairs with different names and separate entrances, an appeasement to merchants on the street who desired maximal pedestrian traffic. Stations were located at Summer northbound with entrances at Summer Street and Franklin Street, and Winter southbound with entrances at Winter Street and Temple Place.
The Dorchester extension of the Cambridge tunnel was built one level below the Washington Street tunnel. Washington station opened on April 4, 1915, with additional entrances on Summer Street at Hawley Street and Chauncey Street.
As part of a system-wide rebranding by the newly formed MBTA, on January 23, 1967, the Orange Line platforms were renamed Washington as well. On May 3, 1987, the name was changed again to Downtown Crossing after the surrounding retail district, with Washington as a secondary name. The renaming, which had been approved in 1985 as part of a series of station name changes, was coordinated with the opening of the Southwest Corridor.
The 1970s saw the first major renovations to the station in decades. In 1972, the agency received a federal grant that funded two-thirds of a $14.3 million modernization program for downtown stations, including $2 million for Washington station. As part of that project, the MBTA investigated the feasibility of connecting,, Washington, and with pedestrian tunnels.
The Franklin Street entrance was originally inside a building on the north side of the street. The construction of the 350 Washington Street building beginning in 1965 demolished the older building and widened the street. A rebuilt entrance slightly to the north was incorporated into the new building. It was later replaced by a freestanding headhouse, approximately at the original location, in Shopper's Park. The MBTA proposed to make the headhouse exit-only during budget cuts in 1981. On August 10, 2015, the entrance was temporarily closed for construction of the Millennium Tower, which constructed a new sloping seating area over the entrance. The renovated headhouse reopened on September 12, 2016.
Originally, the Orange Line level had an underground concourse with several direct access points to basement entrances of various stores in the district, such as Jordan Marsh and the former Filene's department store. In 1979, the Winter Street Concourse was opened, connecting the upper level of Downtown Crossing station to the upper level of Park Street station two blocks away, utilizing an existing but previously unopened section of the concourse. Both levels of the station were substantially renovated and accessibility was improved in the mid-1980s. The 101 Arch Street building, completed in 1989, included access to the Summer Street concourse through its basement level. By 1991, a 1914-installed wooden escalator in the station was the oldest operating escalator in the world.
In August 1987, the MBTA board approved plans for an MBTA Transit Police substation in the Summer Street Concourse. The $950,000 substation opened on July 26, 1988.
Silver Line service from Downtown Crossing to began on July 24, 2002. The Temple Place entrance to the southbound Orange Line platform was reopened to allow easier transfers. On June 24, 2019, the MBTA Board awarded a $29.7 million, 16-month contract for full cleaning, wayfinding signage replacement, and other improvements at North Station, Haymarket, State, and Downtown Crossing stations., that work is expected to be complete by the end of 2020.

CharlieCard Store

A ticket counter was formerly located on the mezzanine level of the station under Winter Street east of Washington Street. On August 13, 2012, the MBTA combined customer services into the Downtown Crossing location as the "CharlieCard Store". The store provides services including obtaining special passes for blind, senior, disabled, and other users; transferring value between fare media; and the purchase of regular passes. Due to unreliable computer systems and high demand, the store experiences long wait times.

Bus connections

A number of MBTA bus routes have Downtown Crossing station as their downtown terminus. These include local routes to Charlestown, South Boston, and the North Shore, express buses which run via the Massachusetts Turnpike, and the bus rapid transit Silver Line to Dorchester.
Most routes stop on Otis Street at Summer Street, a short block east of the nearest subway entrance:
One route stops on Bedford Street at Kingston Street, an additional block to the south:
One Silver Line route serves Downtown Crossing at a midblock bus stop on Temple Place, half a block from the nearest subway entrance:
The and routes stopped at Downtown Crossing until they were cut back to Milk Street in August 2014.