Main Street Station, Richmond Transportation

Main Street Station anchors Richmond Transportation

Richmond Transportation

Airport

Richmond International Airport (RIC) is a midesize airport that hosts 200 daily flights. It features daily non-stop flights to Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Cleveland, New York, Poston, Detroit, Chicaho, Toronto and Minneapolis.

Car Rentals: a the airport are provided by Avis, Budget, Enterprise, Hertz, National, and Thrifty. Greater Richmond Transit Company (804-358-4782) offers public buses to the Richmond Terminal and to downtown and greater Richmond locations. Limousines: Groome Transportation (804-222-7222) limo sedans are available curbside of the Baggage Claim area. Two more providers are CMC Limousine (804-360-2122) and Gill’s Limousine (804-714-0458).

Trains Station

Richmond is served by two Amtrak train stations. The renovated, neo-classical Union Station located at 1500 East Main Street downtown, and the other station is at 7519 Staples Mill Road in the northern suburbs. Richmond receives service on these Amtrak routes:

Northeast Regional: Boston-New Haven-NYC-Philadelphia-Baltimore-DC-Richmond-Newport News
Carolinian/Piedmont: Charlotte-Greensboro-Durham-Raleigh-Richmond-DC-Baltimore-Philadelphia-NYC
Silver Service/Palmetto: NYC-Philadelphia-Baltimore-DC-Richmond-Raleigh-Charleston-Savannah-Jacksonville-Orlando-Miami

Amtrak Northeast Regional runs 7 daily roundtrips. Amtrak Carolinian/Piedmont and Palmetto/Silver Service run 2 trains in each direction, daily.

Raleigh-Richmond-Washington is a U.S. High Speed Rail Corridor designated for upgrading to 110 mph Amtrak service. A new bridge across the Potomac River and 23 miles of tracks are being upgraded by 2026 and more upgrades are coming by 2030 for 14 daily Amtrak frequency between Washington to Richmond. After 2030, Amtrak service between Richmond and Raleigh will also become faster and more frequent.

Tours

In the Beginning … Virginia Tour
Elegba Folklore Society presents this interpretive tour of unmarked sites in Richmond’s history. Elegba may well be the ultimate Afrocentric Richmond cultural event. With all of their festival and community contacts, if they don’t know where it is, you won’t be able to find it. Tourists board a bus to visit sites where monuments do not exist. These sites tell the other story not listed in common history books. Tour leader techniques include call-and-response, vocal and instrumental music, narrative presentations and dialogue. Participants can immerse themselves in past occurrences that impact our perspectives today.
ADDRESS: 101 East Broad Street, Richmond, VA
PHONE: 804-644-3900
WEBSITE: https://efsinc.org

Metro Richmond Visitor Centers
The centers also sell tour tickets, specialty gift items, Virginia products and souvenirs.
ADDRESS: 403 North 3rd Street
PHONE: 804-783-7450
WEBSITE: http://www.visitrichmondva.com

Cruises

Venture Richmond
Enjoy 35-minute historically narrated tours or private charters of the James River & Kanawha Canal along the historic Canal Walk in covered boats holding up to 38 passengers; boats departs on the hour from the Turning Basin.
ADDRESS: 14th and Dock Streets downtown
PHONE: 804-649-2800
WEBSITE: http://www.venturerichmond.com/experiences/canalcruises.html

Freeways

Richmond Freeway Network is generally well maintained, but freeway signage into Downtown is poor. In Virginia, radar detectors are illegal and must be removed from the dashboard. I-295 and I-64 freeways are often crowded on weekends and holidays to/from Virginia Beach. When traffic is flowing, Richmond is 90 minutes from Virginia Beach and 105 minutes from Washington.

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