The Springdale station began as a stop on the New Canaan Railroad, which was chartered May 1866 as a short branch of the New York and New Haven Railroad. The line opened on July 4, 1868. As with the rest of the New Haven Railroad, the station was acquired by Penn Central Railroad in 1969. The station's staffed ticket office closed on January 15, 1972.[3] Springdale station was reconstructed 1⁄10 mile (0.16 km) south of its previous location in 1972 in order to accommodate the new M2 Cosmopolitan railcars.
By 2010, after condominiums were built on nearby Camp Avenue, the station became more crowded.[4] In April 2010, construction started on a 400-foot, $1 million canopy on the station platform. Gar-San Corporation of Watertown won the $1.87 million contract for the project. (The company was to build an identical canopy at the Stratford train station.) A large part of the expense came from having the foundation for the canopy to be drilled into the ground because of space constraints.[4] Completion of the project was expected in December.[5]
A parking lot is located at the west side of the station off Hope Street.[8] Station parking is controlled by Stamford city government, which owns most of the parking lot.[7] The state owns a much smaller parking area at the south end of the station.[8] The parking lot has landscaping and a "period pedestal clock".[8]
^ ab[1] Springdale station Web page at Metro-North Railroad Web site, accessed July 4, 2007
^ abc[2]"Springdale Train Station Visual Inspection Report / January 2007" prepared by the Bureau of Public Transportation of the Connecticut Department of Transportation, accessed at the Connecticut Department of Transportation Web site on July 4, 2007
Category • Commons Italics denote closed/future stations and line segments. Asterisks indicate stations closed prior to the formation of Metro-North Stations south of Sloatsburg are operated and owned by NJ Transit. Stations south of Pearl River are operated by NJ Transit