New York, Westchester & Boston Railway, November 17, 1916.
The New York, Westchester & Boston Railway was an electric commuter railroad in the Bronx and Westchester County in operation from 1912 until 1937. For most of its history it was operated by the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad. This Westchester Avenue Station was designed by famed architect Cass Gilbert, and completed in 1908. The Gothic style building is richly decorated with terra cotta tiles. This was one of 12 stations Gilbert was commissioned to design for the railroad, and one of the handful that were actually constructed. The style of this station displays details that Gilbert would repeat a few years later on his NYC magnum opus, the Woolworth Building.
Service to the station ceased in 1931, with the line being completely out of service by 1937. With the introduction of the subway to this area of the Bronx in the 1920s, the stations on this line never saw the commuting traffic that had been planned for.
Today the station is abandoned, overgrown, and nearly in ruin. The station, which partially projects over the tracks below, has been listed on the Landmarks Conservancy's list of endangered places for years. In 2012 a proposal was created for the restoration and reuse of the building, but as of 2018, this project does not seem to have commenced.