Planned and proposed stations Devon A 2010 study of the New Canaan and Waterbury Branches considered the construction of a station at Devon Wye in
Milford, Connecticut, where the Waterbury Branch joins the New Haven mainline. The station would allow service to be increased on the branch by running some trains to the new station with connections to New Haven trains, rather than taking up slots on the busy mainline. The two station alternatives would have cost $73 to $114 million. For six months in 2015, a temporary Devon Transfer station served as the transfer point between mainline service and Waterbury Branch trains. The first phase of repairs to the adjacent
Housatonic River Railroad Bridge over the
Housatonic River prevented Waterbury Branch trains from accessing the normal transfer point at
Bridgeport, necessitating the temporary transfer station. The Devon Transfer station was re-activated in 2016 from April until October to accommodate additional repairs and catenary wire work.
Barnum On July 16, 2014, Connecticut Governor
Dannel Malloy approved $2.75 million for the planning of a station in the East End of
Bridgeport, Connecticut. The new station, was to be called after showman and former Bridgeport mayor
P. T. Barnum, and was planned to open in 2021. The station would have had two island platforms, allowing for improved express service on the New Haven Line, increasing capacity.
Orange After several years of contention, West Haven was chosen over
Orange in December 2001 as the site for
a new station, which opened in 2013. However, local advocates continued to push for an additional station in . In July 2011, Governor Malloy signed a bill that sought a funding source, but that committed no funds to the project. On February 1, 2017, the Connecticut State Bond Commission authorized $21 million for design work for the station, in addition to funding for the upgrade of a station on the Danbury Branch. Design on the station began in January 2017, and construction of the station was to begin in spring 2019, before being completed in fall 2021.
Georgetown In connection with the planned redevelopment of the Gilbert & Bennett Wire Mill as a residential neighborhood, reopening a
Georgetown station on the Danbury Branch has been approved, though not yet scheduled or funded. The previous station was abandoned in the 1970s due to low ridership.
Wilbur Cross Parkway The Waterbury and New Canaan Branch study also considered a new station on the Waterbury Branch as a park-and-ride station off the
Wilbur Cross Parkway near where it meets the
Merritt Parkway in Milford. The station was estimated to cost $41 million to construct. The draft EIS was due by 2010, and the final EIS by 2011. The Spring 2009 Update for the first time held out the possibility of extension all the way to Pittsfield, MA, the original route of the New Haven Berkshire Division. Trackage rights would have to be negotiated with the
Housatonic Railroad, which owns the line beyond Danbury to New Milford. Enhancements to the Danbury Branch being studied also include re-electrification of the branch (the branch was electrified from 1925 to 1961), addition of passing sidings, realignment and/or super-elevation of track to eliminate or alleviate curvature and enhance speeds, and installation of automated train control signalling. The new signal system finally began operation in 2013, but extensive work was still ongoing in 2014 because of unresolved problems with the drop gates at grade crossings. Earlier versions of the study examined service to Newtown and Brewster along the Beacon/Maybrook line, as additional branches off the Danbury Branch. These options were not recommended due to limited ridership potential versus additional cost.
Penn Station Access As part of the 2015–2019 MTA Capital Program, additional service from the New Haven Line will be provided to
New York Penn Station over the
Hell Gate Line of the Northeast Corridor, owned by Amtrak. Trackage rights and union agreements would have to be negotiated for this service. Commuter service over this line, formerly the
Harlem River Branch of the predecessor New Haven, ended in 1931. New stations will be built at , , , and . This project was dormant from approximately 2002 to 2009, but an environmental assessment was announced by Metro-North and was to be completed by 2011. The study was in conjunction with ongoing studies for the best uses of Penn Station. The study advanced a single option of full (both peak and off-peak) service to Penn on the New Haven and
Hudson Lines. However, the project was delayed. On January 8, 2014,
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo voiced support for the project in his 2014 State of the State address. New track will be installed between the Parkchester/Van Nest station and north of the Co-op City station. Three bridges along the route will be rehabilitated or replaced. Service is planned to begin in 2027 at the earliest. The opening of
East Side Access in 2023 diverted some
Long Island Rail Road trains to
Grand Central Terminal, therefore opening up slots at Penn Station for Metro-North service. During peak hours there will be between six and ten trains to Penn Station. There will be four trains per hour to Connecticut in the reverse peak direction, and there will be two trains per hour to and from Penn Station during off-peak and weekends. In a limited form, it already takes place with the Jets/Giants game-day service to the Meadowlands, although it is not intended as service to Penn.
Waterbury–Bristol–New Britain–Hartford As of February 2009, Connecticut legislators were discussing service on an old New Haven passenger line that ceased passenger service decades prior known as the Highland Line, part of the original
New England Railroad, also known as the
Central New England Railway, both eventual subsidiaries of The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad. Currently, this is a freight-only line operated by
Berkshire & Eastern. Station stops would include two in Bristol, as well as in New Britain, between Waterbury and Hartford. The next step is a preliminary scoping study, which would be followed by environmental studies. It is unknown if this will be a Metro-North extension of the Waterbury Branch.
Tappan Zee Bridge / I-287 Corridor The
New York State Department of Transportation, the
New York State Thruway Authority, and
Metro-North conducted extensive studies concerning the
replacement of the deteriorated
Tappan Zee Bridge. Proposals for rail connections to the New Haven Line were ultimately rejected as too expensive. ==See also==