Jefferson Station
Jefferson Station is a SEPTA Regional Rail station in Center City Philadelphia. It serves as the eastern terminus of the Center City Commuter Connection tunnel. Beneath Market Street it sits, running between 10th and 12th Streets. The station connects you to the Reading Terminal Market, the Pennsylvania Convention Center, and Center City East destinations. Originally called Reading Terminal because of its link to the Reading Railroad's historic train shed, it got renamed Jefferson Station in 2014 after a naming rights agreement with Thomas Jefferson University.[1]
History
The original Reading Terminal opened in 1893. Above it rose a grand train shed that became one of Philadelphia's most recognizable landmarks. This space handled both the Reading Railroad's commuter traffic and intercity service, and that single-span roof was no small engineering feat. Below the shed, the Reading Terminal Market opened that same year and quickly became the city's premier public market.[1]
Things changed over the decades. Passenger numbers dropped and the railroads struggled financially. When the Reading Company filed for bankruptcy in 1971, Conrail took over commuter operations before SEPTA eventually stepped in. The train shed itself lost its purpose once Amtrak consolidated intercity service at 30th Street Station. It didn't sit empty for long, though. The structure was converted to house the Pennsylvania Convention Center.[1]
The Center City Commuter Connection opened in 1984. A new underground station replaced what had been at street level, allowing trains to run through the tunnel rather than terminating at Reading Terminal. Passengers now continue on to Suburban Station and 30th Street Station. This through-routing had immediate benefits, improving service efficiency while the underground design replaced the historic platforms above.[1]
By 2014, the station got a new name. Market East Station became Jefferson Station following a naming rights deal with Thomas Jefferson University, whose Center City campus and hospital sit nearby. Some people weren't happy about losing the historic Reading Terminal name, but Jefferson has stuck around and is used consistently now.[1]
Station Design
Multiple levels sit beneath Market Street. They're packed with platforms serving all SEPTA Regional Rail lines. The 1980s aesthetic dominates the design rather than anything resembling the historic terminal above. You'll find connections here: to Market East station (serving the Market-Frankford Line), to the Reading Terminal Market itself, and to the Gallery shopping complex (now called Fashion District Philadelphia). All three create an interconnected web of transit and retail.[1]
Platform levels connect directly to the tracks where Regional Rail trains pass through. Since this is the eastern tunnel terminus, every line stops here, which means you've got access to the entire regional rail network. Getting the station built took serious excavation work beneath existing buildings and streets. Construction crews had to coordinate around live transit operations and building foundations.[1]
Elevators link the platform and concourse levels with street-level entrances. The 1980s construction made accessibility easier compared to older stations that need retrofitting now. They've also improved wayfinding to help you navigate the station's multiple levels and numerous connections.[1]
Connection to Reading Terminal Market
You can reach the Reading Terminal Market directly from the station without stepping out on the street. That's particularly valuable during bad weather. It's helped keep the market vibrant over the years. The market itself is diverse: prepared food vendors, produce merchants, specialty retailers. Whether you're a commuter grabbing lunch or a tourist exploring Philadelphia's food scene, there's something here.[1]
Operations
All SEPTA Regional Rail lines serve Jefferson Station. Trains run through the Center City tunnel to Suburban Station and 30th Street Station. That central location makes it accessible from anywhere in the regional network. Frequency depends on the time of day. Rush hour brings trains every few minutes; off-peak service runs less often.[1]
The station's location matters for Center City East destinations: the Convention Center, Chinatown, Independence Mall, and the Thomas Jefferson University complex. Not every commuter headed east continues all the way to Suburban Station. Some get off here, which distributes passenger loads across the tunnel stations. You can also transfer at adjacent Market East to catch the Market-Frankford Line for east-west rapid transit.[1]
See Also
- Reading Terminal Market
- 30th Street Station
- Suburban Station
- SEPTA Regional Rail
- Pennsylvania Convention Center