Railway line in Ohio
41°28′39.8″N 81°40′30.1″W / 41.477722°N 81.675028°W / 41.477722; -81.675028
Cleveland Terminal Subdivision Map
Status Active Owner CSX Locale Cleveland Type Local freight , Inter-city rail System CSX Transportation Operator(s) CSX, Amtrak Number of tracks 2 Track gauge 4 ft 8+ 1 ⁄2 in (1,435 mm ) standard gauge
[ 1]
Port of Cleveland Main Gate
181.8
181.4
Control Point 181
181.0
179.0
Doan Brook
175.8
CP 176
Flow Polymers
Nine Mile Creek
174.8
Track #2 to Short Line
174.7
CP 175
174.0
CP 174
173.6
Station W
171.5
Station E
Euclid Creek
171.3
CP 171
The Cleveland Terminal Subdivision is a railroad line owned by CSX Transportation in the U.S. state of Ohio . The line runs from a point northeast of downtown Cleveland southwest to downtown[ 2] along the former New York Central Railroad main line.
At its east end, known as CP-175 by CSX Transportation , the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision and the Short Line Subdivision come together and become the Erie West Subdivision . Through freights diverge at this location onto the Short Line Subdivision to bypass downtown Cleveland. The west end of the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision is at a junction with the Norfolk Southern Railway 's Cleveland Line and Chicago Line , a point called CP-181 by the railroad. [ 3] [ 4]
The Cleveland Terminal Subdivision is principally used by Amtrak 's Lake Shore Limited to access Cleveland Lakefront Station , however local freights and coal trains occasionally use the line as well. Though downgraded and single-tracked, the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision still has its Traffic Control System in place. The line is dispatched from CSX's "G" desk at their dispatching office in Indianapolis, Indiana .
History
The line was built by the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad and opened in 1851.[ 5] Through mergers, leases, and takeovers, it became part of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway , New York Central Railroad , Penn Central and Conrail . When Conrail was broken up in 1999, the main line east of downtown Cleveland, including the Cleveland Terminal Subdivision, was assigned to CSX.
References