MacArthur station (BART)
MacArthur station is a Bay Area Rapid Transit station in the Temescal District of Oakland, California. 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.
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 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 opened on May 21, 1973; it was extended to San Francisco on September 16, 1974, when the Transbay Tube opened. Richmond–Daly City service via MacArthur began on April 19, 1976.
The station included several pieces of public art: an abstract mural by Mark Adams over a staircase, 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 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.