The current, permanent station and facilities opened on August 26, 2013, replacing a temporary train station named Saint-Hubert that had been set up several hundred meters to the east since December 2003.[4] The new installations include longer, permanent platforms that allow access to all cars of the train, new shelters and a tunnel allowing access to both platforms.
The new station is equipped with a work of public art, a sculpture by Marie-France Brière titled Zigzag. It stands opposite the station building.[5]