The station is designed to have an island platform, partially located under Route 4.[4] It will include a parking deck for 945 vehicles incorporated into a storage and maintenance VBF (vehicle base facility).[5] Vehicle access from Route 4 will be via Grand Avenue (concurrentCounty Route 501 and New Jersey Route 93). Approximately 6 acres (2.4 ha) of property will be acquired to build the parking deck and VBF.[6] Two other HBLR stations are planned in the city further north of Englewood Route 4 at Englewood Town Center and at Englewood Hospital, the line's terminus.[3]
The area radiating from the station site has been dubbed Englewood South. It is zoned for planned unit development (PUD) and consists mixed-use development that is undergoing a transformation from a warehouse distribution & manufacturing district into a residential, retail, and business neighborhood.[7][8]
History
Rail service in Englewood began in 1859 when the region was still known as the English Neighborhood.[9] By 1887 Erie Railroad's Northern Branch had three stops in the city: the southernmost at Nordhoff (#1919) (later Sheffield Avenue), the central depot at Englewood (#1921), and the northernmost at Highwood (#1923) (later Hudson Avenue).[10][11][12][13]
^Adams, Arthur G. (January 1, 1981). The Hudson. SUNY Press. ISBN9780791494226 – via Google Books. With the coming of the Northern Valley Railroad of New Jersey, the name Englewood was adopted. The southwestern part of town was called Nordhoff and the northwestern part was call Highwood.
^Bouton-Goldberg, Bobbie; Brown, Arnold; Buchbinder, Mary; Grossman, Betty; Levien, Lisa; Nacht, Irmari (November 24, 1998). Englewood and Englewood Cliffs. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN9780738562025 – via Google Books.