Oakville GO Station

Oakville
General information
Location214 Cross Avenue
Oakville, Ontario
Canada
Coordinates43°27′18″N 79°40′57″W / 43.45500°N 79.68250°W / 43.45500; -79.68250
Platforms1 side, 2 island platform
Tracks4
Connections GO Bus
Oakville Transit
Construction
Structure typeStaffed station
Parking2,724 spaces + 2 electric vehicle parking/charging stations
Bicycle facilitiesRack
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station code
Fare zone13
History
Opened23 May 1967
Rebuilt2012
Passengers
201013,100 (GO Train)[1]
Ranked 2nd of 62
Services
Preceding station Via Rail Following station
Aldershot
toward Windsor
Windsor–Toronto Toronto
Terminus
Aldershot
toward New York
Maple Leaf
Preceding station GO Transit Following station
Bronte
towards West Harbour
Lakeshore West Clarkson
Bronte Lakeshore West
(peak express)
Burlington Lakeshore West
(off-peak express)
Port Credit
Former services
Preceding station Via Rail Following station
Burlington
1989–1993
toward New York
Maple Leaf
Toronto
Terminus
Burlington West
1981–1989
toward New York
Preceding station Amtrak Following station
Burlington West
toward Chicago
International
1982–1990
Toronto
Terminus
Preceding station Canadian National Railway Following station
Hamilton
toward Sarnia
Grand Trunk Railway
Main Line
Sunnyside
toward Montreal
Bronte Niagara FallsToronto
Local stops
Clarkson
toward Toronto

Oakville GO Station is a GO Transit railway station and bus station in Oakville, Ontario, Canada. It is colocated and shares platforms with Via Rail's Oakville railway station.

It is a stop on GO's Lakeshore West line train service and, until October 2007, served as the western terminus for weekend service. On weekdays, one branch of the Highway 407 GO bus service, that connects with Sheridan College, Square One Bus Terminal, Bramalea GO Station, and Highway 407 Bus Terminal terminates at this station. Apart from Union Station, Oakville is the busiest station in GO Transit's network by passenger volume.[1]

It is served by Via Corridor intercity routes between Windsor and Toronto, and the joint Amtrak–Via Maple Leaf service between New York City and Toronto.

New Via Rail station building
Station platform
  1. ^ a b Tess Kalinowski (October 16, 2011). "Jammed GO train is 'already full by the time it gets here'". Toronto Star. Retrieved August 1, 2012.

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