UNC Charlotte Main Station
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
The UNC Charlotte Main Station is the northern terminus of the Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) Lynx Blue Line. This light rail service connects UNC Charlotte’s main campus with its Center City Campus and extends to I-485, 18.9 miles to the south. The 9.3-mile section that links the main campus to uptown Charlotte, known as the Blue Line Extension (BLE) opened for service on Friday March 16, 2018. On that day UNC Charlotte’s Main Station was packed with approximately 1,000 students, faculty, and staff eager to be among the first to take the 22-minute ride to Center City and to enjoy the many festivities organized along the line.
The distinctive sculptural seating located in the plaza on Cameron Boulevard between Main Station and Wallis Hall was commissioned by CATS and designed by Boston artist Mikyoung Kim, who also created the images on the station platform shelters. The undulating perforated stainless steel seating becomes even more dynamic at night when a choreographed lighting program is activated by pedestrians tripping motion sensors. The platform images, which are inspired by maps and time zones, respond to the shifting light cast by the daily movement of the sun shining through the glass. The installations are intended to communicate a message of movement, transformation, and flux.
Images
UNC Charlotte cheerleaders and mascot Norm celebrate the opening of the LYNX Blue Line Extension March 16, 2018
Crowds of students, faculty, and staff gather to celebrate the opening day of the LYNX Blue Line Extension, March 16, 2018
UNC Charlotte Main Station
Light Rail Main Station, UNC Charlotte
LYNX Blue Line Extension groundbreaking, July 18, 2013 uptown Charlotte.
LYNX Blue Line Extension groundbreaking celebration, July 18, 2013 uptown Charlotte.
Construction along the LYNX Blue Line Extension, March 27, 2014.
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
The opening of UNC Charlotte Main was the culmination of over three decades of work by Charlotte officials and the university to better connect the campus to the center city. UNC Charlotte’s location almost ten miles north of Uptown was originally chosen based on the availability of sufficient land to allow for institutional expansion and proximity to future major thoroughfares. However, as the university’s fourth chancellor, Chancellor Philip L. Dubois lamented, the distance between the main campus and Uptown was seen as “the most difficult 10 miles in Charlotte,” and had discouraged opportunities for town and gown interconnectedness. Chancellor Dubois recalled that soon after he became chancellor in the summer of 2005 Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory strongly urged him to support the idea of extending the Lynx Blue Line north to the university campus. At that time, the construction of the southern leg of the Lynx Blue line connecting center city to I-485 on the outskirts of Pineville was just getting underway and the university had purchased a parcel of land at East 9th Street and North Brevard for the future site of UNC Charlotte’s Center City Campus – now the Dubois Center.
Mayor McCrory recalled that Dubois’ response to his request was: “bring it on”. Previous concerns had been that bringing the rail line onto campus would disrupt the quiet pedestrian nature of the University, and that it would be preferable to build the rail line adjacent to, but not on to the campus. Charlotte Area Transport, however, felt strongly that it was important to build a station on campus to assure sufficient ridership for cost effectiveness. By 2006 a route was chosen that suited both parties, bringing the railway along North Tryon Street well to the north side of campus to avoid disruption to campus walkability, yet still siting the Main Station within a short distance of the future Student Union (opened in 2009), and close to student residence halls.
The next several years were spent building public and campus support for the project while lining up the budget to fund it. Ultimately the BLE cost a total of $1.16 million. Fifty percent of funding for the BLE was provided by the Federal Transit Administration, twenty-five percent came from the state of North Carolina, UNC Charlotte donated $6 million in land and improvements, and a Mecklenburg County half-cent sales tax covered the rest of the cost. The architecture and engineering firm STV was the principal designer for the project, which added 11 new stations, improved sidewalks, and green landscaping to the Blue Line. Four of the stations were designed to provide extensive park-and-ride facilities.
Ground was broken for construction of the new line on July 18, 2013. CATS divided construction work for the project between numerous contractors, including Balfour Beatty US and the Lane Construction Corporation. Although the project met significant challenges due to complexities of working along the Norfolk Southern Railroad, moving utilities, and bringing the rail line up the median of North Tryon Street, construction was completed by the federal government’s deadline of March 2018.
For Chancellor Dubois, bringing light rail onto campus lined up perfectly with the University’s strategic objective to deepen community connections. Throughout the planning and construction, Dubois stressed the opportunities that light rail would bring to the Charlotte community and to UNC Charlotte. In testimony to the Metropolitan Transit Commission he stated:
“It’s a sound investment, good for the public, good for the environment, good for economic development, good for land use, and good for a community that continues to struggle with residential sprawl and strip mall development.”
And in his annual letter to campus in Spring of 2018 he declared:
“This opens unlimited opportunities for the entire University community in terms of new access to internships and employment for students; programs and events at both campuses; sports, cultural and entertainment options; and much more.”
Development opportunities along the BLE began with the construction of the line itself which generated more than 9,000 jobs and infused an estimated $285 million into the local economy. By the time of the line’s completion, significant numbers of apartments, offices, restaurants, shops and other businesses had been constructed along the new rail corridor. Development boomed in particular in the neighborhoods of Optimist Park, NoDa, and University City, showing no sign of easing up. However, the 2020 census has revealed that development associated with Charlotte’s Blue Line rail corridor, north and south, is displacing people in historically Black and low-income neighborhoods due to gentrification and steeply increasing land values.
Sources
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Testimony of Chancellor Phiip L. Dubois to to the Metropolitan Transit Commission, October 25, 2006, Chancellor’s office
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All Aboard: Check Out Four Celebrations Scheduled For Light Rail’s Opening Day, Inside UNC Charlotte. March 9th 2018. Accessed September 9th 2021. https://inside.charlotte.edu/news-features/2018-03-09/all-aboard-check-out-four-celebrations-scheduled-light-rail%E2%80%99s-opening-day.
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Israel, Mae. "County rail system ahead?." The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte) August 8th 1985. , Metro sec.
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Wright, Will L.. How Charlotte’s light rail sped up a ‘takeover’ of historically-Black neighborhoods, The Charlotte Observer. August 20th 2021. Accessed September 9th 2021. https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/local/article253543834.html.
Mikyoung Kim Design, City of Charlotte. Accessed September 9th 2021. https://charlottenc.gov/cats/transit-planning/art-in-transit/completed-projects/Pages/uncc-station.aspx.
Marani, Matthew. Hear My Train A Comin': Charlotte's light rail extension connects UNC Charlotte to the city center, The Architects Newspaper. March 26th 2018. Accessed September 9th 2021. https://www.archpaper.com/2018/03/charlotte-delivers-light-rail-extension/.
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UNC Charlotte
UNC Charlotte
UNC Charlotte
UNC Charlotte Communications, Division of University Advancement, Media Assets
UNC Charlotte Official Flickr, photograph by Wade Bruton
UNC Charlotte Official Flickr, photograph by Wade Bruton
UNC Charlotte Official Flickr, photograph by Wade Bruton