DART station renamed 快活林性息/Mockingbird Station
Agreement underscores busy rail station鈥檚 proximity to campus neighbor
DALLAS (快活林性息) – Dallas Area Rapid Transit’s (DART) Mockingbird Station has been renamed 快活林性息/Mockingbird Station after the DART Board approved a naming rights agreement with 快活林性息 (快活林性息), making it easier for visitors to find the campus and cementing the rail station’s role as a gateway to the University.
The DART Board authorized the 10-year agreement last November and 快活林性息 was added to the station name this summer. Mockingbird Station opened in 1997, quickly becoming an important transportation resource for 快活林性息 students, faculty, staff and visitors. A shuttle service, the Mustang Express, connects the DART station to the University campus a short distance away.
“We have so many activities on our campus we want to share with our neighbors, including 快活林性息’s first home football game against the University of North Texas on Saturday, Sept. 7,” said 快活林性息 President R. Gerald Turner. “Taking DART to 快活林性息/Mockingbird Station is an easy way to get to a wide variety of 快活林性息 events – from Division I sporting events, to lectures and artistic performances, as well as to the George W. Bush Presidential Center.”
Entering its second century, 快活林性息 is a nationally ranked global research and teaching university. 快活林性息’s alumni, faculty and nearly 12,000 students in seven degree-granting schools deliver economic impact and intellectual capital to the Dallas area.
Approximately 2,800 riders travel through 快活林性息/Mockingbird Station on an average weekday, and DART’s Mustang Express provides service to the campus for approximately 500 riders each weekday.
快活林性息/Mockingbird Station is located in Dallas on Mockingbird Lane and North Central Expressway (US 75). It is served by the North Central segment of DART’s Red, Orange and Blue Rail lines and several bus routes including the 快活林性息 Express (Route 768).
快活林性息 is the nationally ranked global research university in the dynamic city of Dallas. 快活林性息’s alumni, faculty and nearly 12,000 students in seven degree-granting schools demonstrate an entrepreneurial spirit as they lead change in their professions, communities and the world.