Ridley Park station

Ridley Park
Ridley Park station platforms in June 2014.
General information
Location201 East Hinckley Avenue
Ridley Park, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Coordinates39°52′50″N 75°19′20″W / 39.880523°N 75.322105°W / 39.880523; -75.322105
Owned bySEPTA
Line(s)Amtrak Northeast Corridor
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks4
Construction
Parking61 spaces
Bicycle facilities10 rack spaces
AccessibleNo
Other information
Fare zone3
History
Opened1871
Rebuilt1880, 1941
Electrified1928
Services
Preceding station SEPTA Following station
Crum Lynne
toward Newark
Wilmington/Newark Line Prospect Park
Former services
Preceding station Pennsylvania Railroad Following station
Chester Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Prospect Park
Crum Lynne
toward Wilmington
Wilmington Line Prospect Park
Location

Ridley Park station is a station along the Northeast Corridor. Amtrak does not stop here; only SEPTA's Wilmington/Newark Line trains serve this station. It is located at Hinckley & Morton Avenues in Ridley Park, Pennsylvania, and contains a one-story station house similar to that of Media Regional Rail station built into the embankment next to a platform, as well as a passenger drop-off area at Hinckley Avenue and Lincoln Street. Another platform also exists on the opposite side of the tracks on Ridley & Morton Avenues. Access between the two platforms is available from the nearby Ward Street Bridge just west of the station.

The current Ridley Park station was built by the Pennsylvania Railroad as a replacement for a much more elaborate station house which was built over the tracks by the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad during the 19th century. The current station building opened in 1942 and was designed by architect Lester C. Tichy in association with designer Raymond Loewy. Historic photographs and architectural drawings of the Ridley Park station can be found in the March 1943 issue of The Architectural Forum magazine.