$27M Oxford station opens for all modes of transportation, is ‘future-ready’ for Amtrak

Amtrak’s Cardinal line at the station is expected to be online in 2026.
Pictured are a contingent of city of Oxford representatives at the Butler County Regional Transit Authority's grand opening of the new Chestnut Street Multimodal Station. The Butler County RTA held a grand opening celebration on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, for the new station in Oxford, Ohio, which will also be home to a new Amtrak Cardinal line stop scheduled to be operational in 2026. MICHAEL D. PITMAN/STAFF

Credit: Michael D. Pitman

Credit: Michael D. Pitman

Pictured are a contingent of city of Oxford representatives at the Butler County Regional Transit Authority's grand opening of the new Chestnut Street Multimodal Station. The Butler County RTA held a grand opening celebration on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, for the new station in Oxford, Ohio, which will also be home to a new Amtrak Cardinal line stop scheduled to be operational in 2026. MICHAEL D. PITMAN/STAFF

The $27 million Chestnut Street Multimodal Station is not just about transporting people around Butler County, said Chris Lawson, Butler County Regional Transit Authority board president.

It took a decade of planning and dedication toward a shared vision, saying, “True collaboration like this is as rare as it is remarkable.”

The 60,000-square-foot Chestnut Street Multimodal Station, which was operational in September, was formally dedicated Thursday evening, celebrating the collaborative effort by the Butler County RTA, the city of Oxford, Miami University, the Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council of Governments and the Ohio Department of Transportation.

The station was funded with federal, state and local funds, the majority coming from the Federal Transit Administration. Miami University contributed the 40-year land lease and $1.6M. RTA provided more than $3M in locally generated revenues.

“What began as a simple though powerful idea, providing more opportunities for people to move, has become a reality,” said Lawson.

Butler County Regional Transit Authority held a grand opening celebration on Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, for its new Chestnut Street Multimodal Station in Oxford, Ohio. The station will also be home to a new Amtrak Cardinal line stop scheduled to be operational in 2026. Pictured is Butler County RTA Board President Chris Lawson speaking at the new Chestnut Street station. MICHAEL D. PITMAN/STAFF

Credit: Michael D. Pitman

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Credit: Michael D. Pitman

The hub works to bring various modes of transportation to 97 W. Chestnut St. Features include not just buses, but state-of-the-art passenger waiting areas, public restrooms, bike storage, real-time transit information, passenger kiosks with customer service, and intermodal transfer bays.

The station will connect with Phase 5 of the Oxford Area Trails, which provides people with a path for bikes, scooters, and those who walk and run.

Oxford Mayor William Snavely said the Chestnut facility “provides Butler County residents freedom. That’s what it’s really about.”

“Regardless of income, it’s freedom to work, to get healthcare, to get education, to shop and to make community connections,” the mayor said. “That’s what this represents to me.”

The project also supports Oxford City Council’s major goals: sustainability, economic development and housing.

“We support sustainability, and this is a really good example of that,” Snavely said. “Economic development, giving people the ability to get to work. And housing for everyone is our third goal, and you can’t have housing for everybody if they can’t get to work. This provides all that.”

Lawson said the transportation hub on Chestnut Street is also future-ready, most notably with the anticipation of the Amtrak Cardinal line being operational in 2026.

“We’re positioned to support a future Amtrak platform at Oxford to Chicago, Cincinnati and New York. This is an infrastructure investment that will serve us for the next 50 years,” he said.

“This station is not just about buses, either. It’s about connections. Connections run deeper than routes and schedules. This is where people meet, neighbors meeting neighbors, students and seniors sharing space, and communities are knitted together.”


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For information about the Chestnut Street Station, visit butlercountyrta.com/projects/oxford-multimodal-facility.

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