Modesto, CA | ||||||||||||
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General information | ||||||||||||
Location | 1700 Held Drive Modesto, California United States | |||||||||||
Coordinates | 37°40′09″N 120°54′54″W / 37.6690288°N 120.9149256°W | |||||||||||
Owned by | City of Modesto | |||||||||||
Line(s) | BNSF Stockton Subdivision[1] | |||||||||||
Platforms | 1 side platform | |||||||||||
Tracks | 1 | |||||||||||
Connections | StanRTA: 25 | |||||||||||
Construction | ||||||||||||
Parking | Yes | |||||||||||
Accessible | Yes | |||||||||||
Other information | ||||||||||||
Status | Staffed | |||||||||||
Station code | Amtrak: MOD | |||||||||||
History | ||||||||||||
Opened | November 12, 1999[2] | |||||||||||
Passengers | ||||||||||||
FY 2023 | 89,101[3] (Amtrak) | |||||||||||
Services | ||||||||||||
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Modesto station is a staffed Amtrak station in Modesto, California. It is served by the San Joaquins service. Designed by Pacific Design Associates of Modesto and VBN Architects of Oakland, the $2.4 million depot was built on four acres of former dairy pastureland.[4] The station has one platform which serves a single track.
Before November 12, 1999, trains stopped instead in Riverbank, about 4 miles north.[2][5] In the past trains also stopped at the Modesto Transportation Center, which was built by the Southern Pacific Transportation Company in 1915, and in the future rail service will move there again when the Altamont Corridor Express begins service to Modesto.[6] In October 2024, the state was awarded a $18.7 million federal grant to build a second platform at Modesto and Denair stations.[7]
Modesto is the point where the San Joaquin splits, with trains bound for the Bay Area continuing to Stockton's San Joaquin Street station and trains heading to Sacramento continuing to Stockton–Downtown station.