Could flipping board at 30th Street Station in Philadelphia be staying after all?

Wednesday, December 12, 2018
PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- There's a glimmer of hope that the flipping board at Philadelphia's 30th Street Station may not be clicking its last clack anytime soon.

Rep. Brendan Boyle told Action News on Tuesday that Amtrak may reconsider the plan to replace the board with a digital sign.

Boyle said that came during a lengthy discussion with Amtrak CEO Richard Anderson.

According to Boyle, Anderson said the company will "re-examine" the issue in January.

Could flipping board at 30th Street Station be staying after all?


Amtrak announced the plan to replace the board, officially known as a Solari board, late last month.

Any change in that decision would have to happen soon. The replacement is scheduled for January.

If it is removed, the flipping board would reportedly be sent to The Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania in Strasburg, about 60 miles west of Philadelphia in Amish country.

End of an era: Flipping board at 30th Street Station to be replaced in January


The old-time clicking sound of the flipping panels on the iconic schedule board is all too familiar to many people traveling through 30th Street Station.

"You can be anywhere in the station and hear the flips-- plip, plip, plip, plip, plip, plip, plip-- and then you look up to see if anything has changed," said Jolon McNeill of Mt. Airy. "They can't get rid of this."

The world-famous board has been at 30th Street Station since the 1970s.

Once prevalent at airports and train stations around the world, they are now nearly extinct due to aging software and the parts used to run them.
The past and future of Philadelphia's amazing 30th Street Station - 6abc Discovery

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