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PASSENGER STATION TRACK TO PLATFORM EDGE DISTANCE

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PASSENGER STATION TRACK TO PLATFORM EDGE DISTANCE
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, May 19, 2006 9:11 PM
I am modelling an HO station. I need to know the protypical or HO distance between the edge of the platform and the ends of the ties or the platform edge and the closest rail.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, May 19, 2006 10:00 PM
See other post.
  • Member since
    April 2003
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, May 19, 2006 10:11 PM
Ctrl C and Ctrl V are your new best friend. To wit:

According to the "Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Standard Plans for Maintenance of Way and Construction", dated December 1907, the edge of a low platform should be 2'-6" from the inside of the nearest rail, or 4'-10 1/4" from track centerline. The edge should also be 4" higher than the top of the rail and slope up to the station building at a rate of 1/4" per foot. The station building should be a minimum of 16'-0" from the edge of platform.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, May 19, 2006 11:14 PM
They certainly are.

More info.

The modern AAR standard low platform is 8" above top of rail (TOR) and 5' to 5'-2" off centerline in order to clear the trucks and side sills of a plate F car (including an Amtrak Superliner, gallery car, or commute bilevel). These measurements can vary by location (for example, technically such a national standard platform violates the archaic Texas Clearance Law, although we and others have worked around that on occasion), but typically the initial (as constructed) paved platform height can run from TOR up to 8-9" TOR, or less if it is an older platform and numerous track lifts have been done. I have seen platforms below top of tie, particularly on lines that downgraded their passenger service early and earnestly (SP is a good example). Many platforms, particularly at multi-track stations, were originally designed and constructed at TOR to facilitate installation of service and passenger crossings without reconstruction of the platform to provide ramps (an issue with the modern 8" TOR platform). Additionally, some of these platforms also included paved surfaces between the rails, thus requiring a platform height at TOR.

Gravel and dirt platforms are typically at top of tie or a little below, up to edge of the the ballast crib.

Since the 1980's, a new modern platform also requires a 2' wide tactile surface along the track edge(s) for the length of the platform, in a contrasting color, in order to meet the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Retrofits to existing platforms in use are also generally required for some systems.

Prior to that time, a 3-4" yellow or white line was painted on the platform approximately 2' from the edge as a safety warning.

You should check data for your prototype (assuming you are modeling one) as to station setback and platform height and clearance, as the numbers can and do vary. And remember, depending on era, what was actually on the ground may vary considerably from as-built.

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