West Bank (Metro Transit Station)

West Bank is a light rail station under construction along the Central Corridor line in Minneapolis on the West Bank campus of the University of Minnesota. Construction in the vicinity began in 2010, and the station is expected to open with the rest of the line in 2014. It will be the westernmost station to be only served by Central Corridor trains. The next station to the west, Downtown East/Metrodome, has been served by the Hiawatha Line since it opened in 2004. According to a preliminary engineering draft from June 2010, the new station will be located west of the Washington Avenue Bridge, extending from Cedar Avenue to slightly east of 19th Avenue. Because the station will be in a sunken corridor, stairways and elevators may be installed at Cedar and/or 19th Avenues to reach the platform.

The station will be located on Hennepin County Road 122, an unsigned continuation of Washington Avenue. Washington Avenue originally ran straight east-west across the Mississippi River when the first bridge for the road was built in 1884. However, the current bridge was constructed in the 1960s at a slight angle to the southwest, causing Washington Avenue to became discontinuous. Washington Avenue itself is located a block to the north, and has its eastern terminus on the West Bank at 19th Avenue, leading into the University of Minnesota Law School.

Famous quotes containing the words west, bank and/or transit:

    These emblems of twilight have seen at length,
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    In the day of his strength
    Not as a pine, but the stiff form
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    Allen Tate (1899–1979)

    A self is, by its very essence, a being with a past. One must look lengthwise backwards in the stream of time in order to see the self, or its shadow, now moving with the stream, now eddying in the currents from bank to bank of its channel, and now strenuously straining onwards in the pursuit of its chosen good.
    Josiah Royce (1855–1916)

    There’s that popular misconception of man as something between a brute and an angel. Actually man is in transit between brute and God.
    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)