Does Glenville have a train station?
No. Glenville residents should test the real route to Greenwich, Port Chester, or another New Haven Line station, including parking and peak-hour driving.
Neighborhoods
Glenville is the Greenwich neighborhood where the map label is only the start. The real question is whether the western-Greenwich routine—village errands, school routes, civic center, station drive, and Westchester access—fits your week.
Glenville is western Greenwich with a smaller village center, practical errands, and more Westchester-facing route choices than Greenwich Avenue or Old Greenwich. The daily test is not whether the address says Greenwich; it is how the week moves between home, school, the village core, the train, and cross-border routes.
The neighborhood works best for people who want Greenwich services and a quieter residential rhythm, but do not need every errand, dinner, beach day, or commute to start from downtown Greenwich.
The village core sits around Glenville Street, Weaver Street, and Pemberwick Road. It gives Glenville a recognizable center, but the surrounding streets can feel much more residential and car-dependent.
The Mill is the most visible mixed-use anchor, useful for dining, service, office, and residential context. Treat it as one anchor, not the entire neighborhood story.
Bendheim Western Greenwich Civic Center is an important western Greenwich resource for civic and recreation use; check the Town page for current programs, hours, and rental details.
Glenville School, Western Middle School, and Greenwich High School are the school names families often start with, but school assignment should always be verified by exact address through Greenwich Public Schools.
Glenville does not have its own Metro-North station. Depending on the address, residents may test Greenwich, Port Chester, or another New Haven Line station, then decide based on the real drive, parking, train timing, and peak-hour traffic.
The western position makes Westchester, King Street, I-684, the Merritt Parkway / Route 15 corridor, and cross-town Greenwich routes part of the practical comparison. That same geography means downtown, beaches, and some after-school plans can feel farther than they look on a map.
Do not call Glenville broadly walkable. Some homes are close to the village center; others need a car for nearly every routine errand.
Glenville tends to fit buyers and renters who want a Greenwich address with a quieter western-Greenwich rhythm, practical access toward Westchester, and less dependence on Greenwich Avenue as the center of daily life.
Before choosing it, compare the same weekday loop against Byram, Pemberwick, downtown Greenwich, Cos Cob, and backcountry: school drop-off, station route, grocery/coffee errands, one after-school activity, and one weekend plan.
No. Glenville residents should test the real route to Greenwich, Port Chester, or another New Haven Line station, including parking and peak-hour driving.
Usually not as the default assumption. Addresses near Glenville Street may work for some local errands, but many Glenville routines still depend on driving to the train, schools, activities, beaches, and downtown Greenwich.