MacArthur station is a
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART)
station in the
Temescal District of
Oakland, California
Oakland is a city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area in the U.S. state of California. It is the county seat and most populous city in Alameda County, California, Alameda County, with a population of 440,646 in 2020. A major We ...
. It is the largest station in the BART system, being the only one with four platform tracks. Service through MacArthur is timed for cross-platform transfers between the southbound lines that pass through the station. MacArthur station is located in the median of
SR 24 just north of its interchange with
I-580. The station is perpendicular to 40th Street and MacArthur Boulevard. The surrounding neighborhood is mostly low-density residential, making MacArthur station primarily a commuting hub.
[MacArthur BART access feasibility study](_blank)
''BART'' Retrieved 24 August 2010
History
By August 1965, the city of Oakland wanted to call the station "MacArthur", while BART preferred "Oakland North". A BART committee selected "MacArthur" in October 1965, rejecting a proposal for "Temescal". The BART Board approved the name in December 1965.
MacArthur station opened on September 11, 1972, as the northern terminus of the inaugural BART line (now the Orange Line) which ran to .
Due to a national strike that year by elevator constructors, elevator construction on the early stations was delayed. Elevators at most of the initial stations, including MacArthur, were completed in the months following the opening. Service was extended north to on January 29, 1973. A second line between MacArthur and (now the Yellow Line) opened on May 21, 1973; it was extended to San Francisco on September 16, 1974, when the
Transbay Tube
The Transbay Tube is an underwater rail tunnel that carries Bay Area Rapid Transit's four transbay lines under San Francisco Bay between the cities of San Francisco and Oakland, California, Oakland in California. The tube is long, and attaches ...
opened.
Richmond–Daly City service via MacArthur (now the Red Line) began on April 19, 1976.
The station included several pieces of public art: an abstract mural by
Mark Adams over a staircase (which Adams later replaced with two murals after the stairs were removed for an elevator in 2000), and tile mosaics by Adams and Alfonso Pardiñas in the fare lobby.
On July 22, 2018,
a man stabbed three women at the station, killing one of them. Sunday-only service to the station on the
Dublin/Pleasanton line was operated from February 11, 2019 to February 10, 2020.
BART and the City of Oakland began planning in 1993 for
transit-oriented development (TOD) to replace the surface parking lot east of the station.
Construction of a 450-space BART parking garage at the southern end of the site began in mid-2011; it opened on September 15, 2014. A 90-unit residential building was constructed in 2013–2016, followed by a 385-unit residential complex with of retail space constructed in 2015–2020.
The latter project included a reconstruction of the plaza outside the station: planters were removed, a new concrete surface added, and a 200-space bike station was built. The work took place from June 2018 to August 2019.
The final phase of TOD – a 24-story, 403-unit residential tower with of retail space – was completed in early 2021.
, BART does not anticipate development on a smaller agency-owned parcel on the west side of SR 24 until the 2030s.
Station layout
MacArthur station has two island platforms and four tracks, allowing
cross-platform interchange
A cross-platform interchange is a type of Interchange station, interchange between different lines at a metro (or other railway) station. The term originates with the London Underground; such layouts exist in other networks but are not commonly ...
s between lines. Outer tracks 1 and 2 serve the and ; Track 1 goes northbound towards , and Track 2 goes southbound towards and San Francisco. Inner tracks 3 and 4 serve the ; Track 3 goes northbound toward , and Track 4 goes southbound toward San Francisco. Connections between the lines are timed for southbound passengers, while is the transfer point for northbound service. MacArthur tends to be crowded in the morning due to high transfer volume between two lines where only a few people get off while many are trying to board.
Southbound trains converge to single track towards downtown Oakland; San Francisco-bound trains depart before Berryessa-bound trains.
Bus connections
MacArthur station is served by several
AC Transit routes: local route 57 on 40th Street, local route 18 on Martin Luther King Jr. Way to the west, and local route 6 and All-nighter route 800 on
Telegraph Avenue to the east. Several shuttle routes stop on Walter Miles Way on the east side of the station entrance. These include
Early Bird Express route 705,
Emery-Go-Round buses serving
Emeryville, the Caltrans Bay Bridge Bike Shuttle, three Kaiser Shuttle routes, and four
Alta Bates shuttle routes.
References
External links
BART – MacArthur
{{Oakland, California
Bay Area Rapid Transit stations in Alameda County, California
Stations on the Orange Line (BART)
Stations on the Yellow Line (BART)
Stations on the Red Line (BART)
Railway stations in Oakland, California
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1972