Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Crafton Station on the West Busway

Crafton Station on the West Busway

With St. Philip’s Church in the background.

Most Pittsburghers probably don’t think of the busways as very interesting phenomena, so give old Pa Pitt a few moments of your time and he will try to make even a busway interesting.

First of all, Pittsburgh is one of the very few cities that did “bus rapid transit” routes as real metro lines for buses. The three busways—South, East, and West—don’t mix with street traffic or even have at-grade intersections.

Second, although the busways as busways are products of the late twentieth century, they all have roots much earlier. We started building the West Busway in 1851. It is a curious fact of our busways that they are almost one-to-one replacements for the old commuter-rail routes that started working in the middle 1800s. Even the stations are mostly in the same places; the Crafton busway station is just a few yards from where the railroad station used to be.

Part of the West Busway is a subway tunnel between Sheraden and Ingram. Construction on the Cork Run Tunnel began in 1851; after many interruptions; it was finally finished in 1865.

So if you ride the West Busway today, you are riding 174 years of history. Take time to think about that the next time you have to get somewhere, and you may conclude that even busways can be interesting as well as useful.

West Busway crossing Crennell Avenue at the Crafton station
The West Busway crossing Crennell Avenue at the Crafton station. Camera: Olympus E-20N.


One response to “Crafton Station on the West Busway”

  1. von Hindenburg

    Part of what makes the East Busway possible is the sad fact that the old Pennsy mainline is now only double tracked, instead of quad. Even as NS finds new ways to pile more freight traffic onto the line, it’s just so difficult for someone born in America in the late 20th/early 21st century to conceive of how much traffic there was on the line decades ago.

    I tried to use it when I commuted downtown, but standing for 45 minutes on a packed bus, for a ride that was considerably longer than my morning commute and not much shorter than the evening one, as well as not much cheaper, once I’d found some questionably free parking… was not ideal. Plus, they’ve since improved it, but at that time, the Beulah Church Park and Ride stop was a patch of mud, accessed across a busy road, sloping down a steep hill into a graveyard.

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