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Capital Line

The Edmonton LRT Capital Line is a light rail transit line running from northeast Edmonton to the south. Operated by the Edmonton Transit Service, the line provides access to Downtown Edmonton and the University of Alberta. The Capital Line currently consists of fifteen stations, six of which are underground. Seven stations are shared with the Metro Line.

Capital Line
Capital Line crossing the North Saskatchewan River
Overview
LocaleEdmonton
Termini
Stations15
Service
TypeLight rail
SystemEdmonton Light Rail Transit
Operator(s)Edmonton Transit Service
Depot(s)D.L. MacDonald Yard
History
OpenedApril 22, 1978
Technical
Line length21 km (13.0 mi)
Number of tracks2
CharacterSurface line outside of city centre, subway style line under downtown and the UofA.
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Operating speed80 kilometres per hour (50 mph) maximum[1]
Route map

History Edit

On April 22, 1978, the line opened between Belvedere and Central stations. At the time (and for another 37 years) the system consisted solely of the single line. It was not named the Capital Line until 2012 when expansion plans were revealed for additional lines.[2]

The 1980s were a decade of expansion for the Capital Line. It expanded northwards toward Clareview in 1981, and westwards toward Bay and Corona, under the downtown core in 1983. Another underground extension was completed in 1989 with the opening of Grandin, now known as Government Centre.

One station opened in the 1990s, University, in August 1992. The underground station was connected to the downtown leg by the Dudley B. Menzies Bridge.

During the 2000s, under the mayorship of Stephen Mandel, the Capital Line was expanded southward. Health Sciences opened in 2006, the first new station in 14 years. In 2009, McKernan/Belgravia and South Campus opened, followed by Southgate and Century Park in 2010.

After the completion of the south leg of the Capital Line, city council shifted their efforts towards the new Metro Line.

Future Edit

 
Approved LRT lines and stations

South expansion Edit

In January 2008, Mayor Stephen Mandel announced that the southern leg will be extended further south along 111 Street to Anthony Henday Drive, and then west to 127 Street SW. There will be a station and a 1,100-car Park and Ride between 127 Street and 135 Street at Ellerslie Road. A new LRT maintenance facility will also be built as part of the extension. Eventually, the LRT will continue south for another stop at 41 Avenue SW. City council approved the route to the Ellerslie Station, and for construction to begin on the Park and Ride in July 2009.[3] Construction of the Heritage Valley Park and Ride began in May 2018, and was completed in December 2019.[4] The Transit Centre provides shuttle service to and from Century Park Transit Centre until the Capital Line LRT is extended to Ellerslie Road.[5]

In June 2017, additional preliminary engineering from Century Park to Ellerslie Road was started to review and refresh the 2010 preliminary design, bring the project up to current standards and reflect the principles of Urban LRT. This work was completed in the end of 2018 and looked at the feasibility of adding a station adjacent to Twin Brooks and the potential for crossings to be raised or lowered, from street level, at 9 and 12 Avenues on 111 Street, and at Ellerslie Road. Integration of the stations into the adjacent communities, with respect to aesthetics and materials, was also reviewed.[6] On June 22, 2021, City Council approved the amended plan that includes an elevated station and crossing at Ellerslie Road, and a stop in Twin Brooks.[7]

The 'Capital Line South Phase 1' extension continues to be high floor LRT and is 4.5 km (2.8 mi) long and includes:[8]

  • An underpass at 23 Avenue, bridges crossing Blackmud Creek and Anthony Henday Drive
  • An at-grade station at Twin Brooks
  • An operations and maintenance facility south of Anthony Henday Drive
  • A combined at-grade Heritage Valley North LRT station, transit centre, and Heritage Valley Park and Ride facility on Ellerslie Road, between 127 Street and 135 Street

In July 2021, the Phase 1 extension was announced as being fully funded with C$ 1 billion in commitments from the city, province, and federal government. The project is expect to begin construction once the Capital Line extension business case has been approved by the Government of Canada's Treasury Board.[9]

In May 2023, due to budget concerns, the plan for an elevated crossing over Ellerslie Road along with an elevated Heritage Valley North Station was changed to an at-grade crossing and an at grade station. A future grade-separated crossing and station will be studied and would be a part of the second extension phase if approved. Other alternatives considered included the deferral of the Twin Brooks station to a future project and changing the material of a sound barrier from wood to concrete, brick or similar materials.[10][11]

In 2022, Phase 1 of the Capital Line extension began early construction works for the underpass at 23 Avenue. The process to select a contractor began in 2022, with the final selection of a contractor expected to take place in late 2023 or early 2024. Major LRT is expected to commence in 2024.[12]

The City of Edmonton is also looking into extending the line even further, now known as 'Capital Line South Phase 2', adding 3 additional stations; Provincial Lands, Heritage Valley and Desrochers. These three stations names, are placeholders and may change once the stations are built. In 2017, the Government of Alberta announced that a new state of the art hospital would be built near the corner of Ellerslie Road and 127 Street SW.[13] There are no specific plans or timeline for an extension to the Edmonton International Airport and Leduc, but an expansion to the airport is the city's long-term goal.[14][15] In late April 2012, the city launched bus route 747 from Century Park Station to the airport.[16]

Northeast expansion Edit

In 2008, Edmonton City Council approved a plan to extend the Capital Line northeast by one station to Gorman Towne Centre.[17] On April 30, 2009, Mayor Stephen Mandel announced a $210 million project to extend the LRT system to a new Gorman Station. The expansion beyond Clareview Station was planned to continue along the CN right-of-way to a station and park-and-ride north of 153 Avenue and Victoria Trail. The plan would have received funding from three levels of government. However, funding was shifted to the Metro Line in July 2009 as city officials saw that line as a higher priority for the city. The city has not ruled out a near-future extension to Gorman.[18] The City completed preliminary engineering on this project in 2010, however there is no budget or timeline for design and construction.[19]

From a land use planning perspective, the City of Edmonton has approved two area structure plans beyond Gorman and Anthony Henday Drive[20] that depict different alignments for further LRT extension into Edmonton's far northeast. Adopted in 2010, the Edmonton Energy and Technology Park Area Structure Plan depicts extension of the LRT along 50 Street across Manning Drive to the north, and then generally paralleling Manning Drive to approximately Highway 28A.[21] This ASP qualifies that this "is a potential alignment only, and will be updated to reflect the completed planning for the Northeast LRT when a final route is determined."[21]

Adopted in 2013, the Horse Hill ASP depicts extension of the LRT along 50 Street to the north, and then northeast along Fort Road to Meridian Street before crossing Manning Drive in a northwesterly direction into the Edmonton Energy and Technology Park.[22] This ASP qualifies that "extension of LRT service will be subject to LRT system planning and design, as well as the availability of funding" and that the alignment it depicts "is preliminary and subject to change."[22]

The Capital Line Northeast is part of the Transportation Master Plan's vision to expand LRT service to all sectors of the city by 2040. Preliminary engineering for an LRT extension north of Clareview station was completed in 2010. The city will move forward to design and construction once funding becomes available.

The preliminary engineering project ends at a future station in the Gorman area, north of 153 Avenue and east of the CN tracks.

The project includes:[23]

  • A 2.9 km extension north of Clareview station, primarily within the existing CN right-of-way
  • LRT station at Gorman, north of 153 Avenue
  • Multi-use trail from Clareview station to 151 Avenue, with provision for future connections to adjacent park areas
  • Street-level LRT crossings at 144 Avenue and 153 Avenue

Coliseum relocation and additional station Edit

As part of the redevelopment of the Northlands exhibition grounds, plans are in the works to move the current Coliseum station further north and build an additional station to the south of the current Edmonton Expo Centre.[24] More detailed plans and public engagement are scheduled for late 2019.[24]

Stations Edit

Station Grade-Level Transfer Area Opened Location
Clareview Surface Northeast April 26, 1981 53°36′6″N 113°24′41″W / 53.60167°N 113.41139°W / 53.60167; -113.41139 (Clareview)
Belvedere Surface Northeast April 22, 1978 53°35′18″N 113°25′58″W / 53.58833°N 113.43278°W / 53.58833; -113.43278 (Belvedere)
Coliseum Surface Northeast April 22, 1978 53°34′14″N 113°27′30″W / 53.57056°N 113.45833°W / 53.57056; -113.45833 (Coliseum)
Stadium Surface Northeast April 22, 1978 53°33′36″N 113°28′15″W / 53.56000°N 113.47083°W / 53.56000; -113.47083 (Stadium)
Churchill Underground   Metro Line[a] Downtown April 22, 1978 53°32′39″N 113°29′21″W / 53.54417°N 113.48917°W / 53.54417; -113.48917 (Churchill)
Central Underground   Metro Line Downtown April 22, 1978 53°32′28″N 113°29′31″W / 53.54111°N 113.49194°W / 53.54111; -113.49194 (Central)
Bay/Enterprise Square Underground   Metro Line Downtown June 21, 1983 53°32′27″N 113°29′54″W / 53.54083°N 113.49833°W / 53.54083; -113.49833 (Bay/Enterprise Square)
Corona Underground   Metro Line Downtown June 21, 1983 53°32′27″N 113°30′21″W / 53.54083°N 113.50583°W / 53.54083; -113.50583 (Corona)
Government Centre Underground   Metro Line Downtown September 1989 53°32′10″N 113°30′37″W / 53.53611°N 113.51028°W / 53.53611; -113.51028 (Grandin)
University Underground   Metro Line South August 23, 1992 53°31′30″N 113°31′19″W / 53.52500°N 113.52194°W / 53.52500; -113.52194 (University)
Health Sciences/Jubilee Surface   Metro Line South January 3, 2006 53°31′13″N 113°31′33″W / 53.52028°N 113.52583°W / 53.52028; -113.52583 (Health Sciences/Jubilee)
McKernan/Belgravia Surface South April 26, 2009 53°30′47″N 113°31′34″W / 53.51306°N 113.52611°W / 53.51306; -113.52611 (McKernan/Belgravia)
South Campus/Fort Edmonton Park Surface South April 26, 2009 53°30′10″N 113°31′43″W / 53.50278°N 113.52861°W / 53.50278; -113.52861 (South Campus)
Southgate Surface South April 25, 2010 53°29′8″N 113°31′0″W / 53.48556°N 113.51667°W / 53.48556; -113.51667 (Southgate)
Century Park Surface South April 25, 2010 53°27′27″N 113°30′59″W / 53.45750°N 113.51639°W / 53.45750; -113.51639 (Century Park)

Notes Edit

  1. ^ A surface station connecting to the Valley Line is scheduled to open in 2023.

References Edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Siemens. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 September 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2011.
  2. ^ Hoang, Linda (January 31, 2013). "City announces five new LRT line names including 'Energy Line,' 'Capital Line'". CTV News Edmonton. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  3. ^ (PDF). City of Edmonton. July 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-16. Retrieved 2010-04-24.
  4. ^ Thompson, Jeremy (August 31, 2020). "$30M Heritage Valley Park-and-Ride complete but unused for 7 months". CTV Edmonton. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  5. ^ "Capital Line - Heritage Valley Park & Ride". City of Edmonton. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  6. ^ "Capital Line South - Face Sheet" (PDF). City of Edmonton. September 2018. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  7. ^ Bartko, Karen (June 22, 2021). "South Edmonton LRT extension approved with elevated station at Ellerslie Road". Global News Edmonton. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  8. ^ "Capital Line South". City of Edmonton. from the original on September 23, 2020. Retrieved April 28, 2021.
  9. ^ "Capital Line South Extension". Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  10. ^ Boothby, Lauren (May 23, 2023). "Edmonton's Capital Line LRT extension to be scaled back but Twin Brooks station stays". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved June 14, 2023.
  11. ^ City Council - Agenda (June 14,2023)(PDF). City of Edmonton. June 2023. Retrieved June 14, 2023.
  12. ^ "Capital Line - South | City of Edmonton". www.edmonton.ca. Retrieved 2023-06-15.
  13. ^ Ehrkamp, Laura. "New state-of-the-art hospital for south Edmonton". Government of Alberta. Retrieved August 9, 2018.
  14. ^ Johnston, Scott (2017-12-06). "Iveson to make setting aside land for train to airport a priority in 2018". Global News. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  15. ^ Dion, Andrea (2021-06-22). "Edmonton city council approves $1B LRT expansion project". CTV News. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  16. ^ . City of Edmonton. Archived from the original on October 7, 2012. Retrieved May 27, 2012.
  17. ^ City of Edmonton - Northeast to Gorman LRT 2012-08-19 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ . Edmonton Journal. 2009-07-02. Archived from the original on July 5, 2009. Retrieved 2009-09-05.
  19. ^ . City of Edmonton. Archived from the original on August 19, 2012. Retrieved May 27, 2012.
  20. ^ (PDF). City of Edmonton. May 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 17, 2013. Retrieved October 16, 2013.
  21. ^ a b (PDF) (PDF). City of Edmonton. May 2011. pp. 66–67 (PDF pages 69–70). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-17. Retrieved October 16, 2013.
  22. ^ a b (PDF) (PDF). City of Edmonton. July 2013. pp. 34 & 54 (PDF page 38 & 58). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 17, 2013. Retrieved October 16, 2013.
  23. ^ "Capital Line Northeast". City of Edmonton. Retrieved August 9, 2018.
  24. ^ a b Cook, Dustin (23 April 2019). "City moves forward with 'transit villages' plan for Northlands site". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved 23 April 2019.

External links Edit

  • Edmonton Transit System
  • Capital Line LRT Extension Fly-through - Century Park to Heritage Valley on YouTube published by the City of Edmonton. Animated tour of the Capital Line extension south of Century Park.

capital, line, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, april, 2022, edmonton, light, rail, transit, line, running, from, northeast, edmonton, south, operated, edmonton, transit. This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2022 The Edmonton LRT Capital Line is a light rail transit line running from northeast Edmonton to the south Operated by the Edmonton Transit Service the line provides access to Downtown Edmonton and the University of Alberta The Capital Line currently consists of fifteen stations six of which are underground Seven stations are shared with the Metro Line Capital LineCapital Line crossing the North Saskatchewan RiverOverviewLocaleEdmontonTerminiClareviewCentury ParkStations15ServiceTypeLight railSystemEdmonton Light Rail TransitOperator s Edmonton Transit ServiceDepot s D L MacDonald YardHistoryOpenedApril 22 1978TechnicalLine length21 km 13 0 mi Number of tracks2CharacterSurface line outside of city centre subway style line under downtown and the UofA Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeOperating speed80 kilometres per hour 50 mph maximum 1 Route map Contents 1 History 2 Future 2 1 South expansion 2 2 Northeast expansion 2 3 Coliseum relocation and additional station 3 Stations 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message On April 22 1978 the line opened between Belvedere and Central stations At the time and for another 37 years the system consisted solely of the single line It was not named the Capital Line until 2012 when expansion plans were revealed for additional lines 2 The 1980s were a decade of expansion for the Capital Line It expanded northwards toward Clareview in 1981 and westwards toward Bay and Corona under the downtown core in 1983 Another underground extension was completed in 1989 with the opening of Grandin now known as Government Centre One station opened in the 1990s University in August 1992 The underground station was connected to the downtown leg by the Dudley B Menzies Bridge During the 2000s under the mayorship of Stephen Mandel the Capital Line was expanded southward Health Sciences opened in 2006 the first new station in 14 years In 2009 McKernan Belgravia and South Campus opened followed by Southgate and Century Park in 2010 After the completion of the south leg of the Capital Line city council shifted their efforts towards the new Metro Line Future Edit nbsp Approved LRT lines and stationsSouth expansion Edit In January 2008 Mayor Stephen Mandel announced that the southern leg will be extended further south along 111 Street to Anthony Henday Drive and then west to 127 Street SW There will be a station and a 1 100 car Park and Ride between 127 Street and 135 Street at Ellerslie Road A new LRT maintenance facility will also be built as part of the extension Eventually the LRT will continue south for another stop at 41 Avenue SW City council approved the route to the Ellerslie Station and for construction to begin on the Park and Ride in July 2009 3 Construction of the Heritage Valley Park and Ride began in May 2018 and was completed in December 2019 4 The Transit Centre provides shuttle service to and from Century Park Transit Centre until the Capital Line LRT is extended to Ellerslie Road 5 In June 2017 additional preliminary engineering from Century Park to Ellerslie Road was started to review and refresh the 2010 preliminary design bring the project up to current standards and reflect the principles of Urban LRT This work was completed in the end of 2018 and looked at the feasibility of adding a station adjacent to Twin Brooks and the potential for crossings to be raised or lowered from street level at 9 and 12 Avenues on 111 Street and at Ellerslie Road Integration of the stations into the adjacent communities with respect to aesthetics and materials was also reviewed 6 On June 22 2021 City Council approved the amended plan that includes an elevated station and crossing at Ellerslie Road and a stop in Twin Brooks 7 The Capital Line South Phase 1 extension continues to be high floor LRT and is 4 5 km 2 8 mi long and includes 8 An underpass at 23 Avenue bridges crossing Blackmud Creek and Anthony Henday Drive An at grade station at Twin Brooks An operations and maintenance facility south of Anthony Henday Drive A combined at grade Heritage Valley North LRT station transit centre and Heritage Valley Park and Ride facility on Ellerslie Road between 127 Street and 135 StreetIn July 2021 the Phase 1 extension was announced as being fully funded with C 1 billion in commitments from the city province and federal government The project is expect to begin construction once the Capital Line extension business case has been approved by the Government of Canada s Treasury Board 9 In May 2023 due to budget concerns the plan for an elevated crossing over Ellerslie Road along with an elevated Heritage Valley North Station was changed to an at grade crossing and an at grade station A future grade separated crossing and station will be studied and would be a part of the second extension phase if approved Other alternatives considered included the deferral of the Twin Brooks station to a future project and changing the material of a sound barrier from wood to concrete brick or similar materials 10 11 In 2022 Phase 1 of the Capital Line extension began early construction works for the underpass at 23 Avenue The process to select a contractor began in 2022 with the final selection of a contractor expected to take place in late 2023 or early 2024 Major LRT is expected to commence in 2024 12 The City of Edmonton is also looking into extending the line even further now known as Capital Line South Phase 2 adding 3 additional stations Provincial Lands Heritage Valley and Desrochers These three stations names are placeholders and may change once the stations are built In 2017 the Government of Alberta announced that a new state of the art hospital would be built near the corner of Ellerslie Road and 127 Street SW 13 There are no specific plans or timeline for an extension to the Edmonton International Airport and Leduc but an expansion to the airport is the city s long term goal 14 15 In late April 2012 the city launched bus route 747 from Century Park Station to the airport 16 Northeast expansion Edit In 2008 Edmonton City Council approved a plan to extend the Capital Line northeast by one station to Gorman Towne Centre 17 On April 30 2009 Mayor Stephen Mandel announced a 210 million project to extend the LRT system to a new Gorman Station The expansion beyond Clareview Station was planned to continue along the CN right of way to a station and park and ride north of 153 Avenue and Victoria Trail The plan would have received funding from three levels of government However funding was shifted to the Metro Line in July 2009 as city officials saw that line as a higher priority for the city The city has not ruled out a near future extension to Gorman 18 The City completed preliminary engineering on this project in 2010 however there is no budget or timeline for design and construction 19 From a land use planning perspective the City of Edmonton has approved two area structure plans beyond Gorman and Anthony Henday Drive 20 that depict different alignments for further LRT extension into Edmonton s far northeast Adopted in 2010 the Edmonton Energy and Technology Park Area Structure Plan depicts extension of the LRT along 50 Street across Manning Drive to the north and then generally paralleling Manning Drive to approximately Highway 28A 21 This ASP qualifies that this is a potential alignment only and will be updated to reflect the completed planning for the Northeast LRT when a final route is determined 21 Adopted in 2013 the Horse Hill ASP depicts extension of the LRT along 50 Street to the north and then northeast along Fort Road to Meridian Street before crossing Manning Drive in a northwesterly direction into the Edmonton Energy and Technology Park 22 This ASP qualifies that extension of LRT service will be subject to LRT system planning and design as well as the availability of funding and that the alignment it depicts is preliminary and subject to change 22 The Capital Line Northeast is part of the Transportation Master Plan s vision to expand LRT service to all sectors of the city by 2040 Preliminary engineering for an LRT extension north of Clareview station was completed in 2010 The city will move forward to design and construction once funding becomes available The preliminary engineering project ends at a future station in the Gorman area north of 153 Avenue and east of the CN tracks The project includes 23 A 2 9 km extension north of Clareview station primarily within the existing CN right of way LRT station at Gorman north of 153 Avenue Multi use trail from Clareview station to 151 Avenue with provision for future connections to adjacent park areas Street level LRT crossings at 144 Avenue and 153 AvenueColiseum relocation and additional station Edit As part of the redevelopment of the Northlands exhibition grounds plans are in the works to move the current Coliseum station further north and build an additional station to the south of the current Edmonton Expo Centre 24 More detailed plans and public engagement are scheduled for late 2019 24 Stations EditStation Grade Level Transfer Area Opened LocationClareview Surface Northeast April 26 1981 53 36 6 N 113 24 41 W 53 60167 N 113 41139 W 53 60167 113 41139 Clareview Belvedere Surface Northeast April 22 1978 53 35 18 N 113 25 58 W 53 58833 N 113 43278 W 53 58833 113 43278 Belvedere Coliseum Surface Northeast April 22 1978 53 34 14 N 113 27 30 W 53 57056 N 113 45833 W 53 57056 113 45833 Coliseum Stadium Surface Northeast April 22 1978 53 33 36 N 113 28 15 W 53 56000 N 113 47083 W 53 56000 113 47083 Stadium Churchill Underground nbsp Metro Line a Downtown April 22 1978 53 32 39 N 113 29 21 W 53 54417 N 113 48917 W 53 54417 113 48917 Churchill Central Underground nbsp Metro Line Downtown April 22 1978 53 32 28 N 113 29 31 W 53 54111 N 113 49194 W 53 54111 113 49194 Central Bay Enterprise Square Underground nbsp Metro Line Downtown June 21 1983 53 32 27 N 113 29 54 W 53 54083 N 113 49833 W 53 54083 113 49833 Bay Enterprise Square Corona Underground nbsp Metro Line Downtown June 21 1983 53 32 27 N 113 30 21 W 53 54083 N 113 50583 W 53 54083 113 50583 Corona Government Centre Underground nbsp Metro Line Downtown September 1989 53 32 10 N 113 30 37 W 53 53611 N 113 51028 W 53 53611 113 51028 Grandin University Underground nbsp Metro Line South August 23 1992 53 31 30 N 113 31 19 W 53 52500 N 113 52194 W 53 52500 113 52194 University Health Sciences Jubilee Surface nbsp Metro Line South January 3 2006 53 31 13 N 113 31 33 W 53 52028 N 113 52583 W 53 52028 113 52583 Health Sciences Jubilee McKernan Belgravia Surface South April 26 2009 53 30 47 N 113 31 34 W 53 51306 N 113 52611 W 53 51306 113 52611 McKernan Belgravia South Campus Fort Edmonton Park Surface South April 26 2009 53 30 10 N 113 31 43 W 53 50278 N 113 52861 W 53 50278 113 52861 South Campus Southgate Surface South April 25 2010 53 29 8 N 113 31 0 W 53 48556 N 113 51667 W 53 48556 113 51667 Southgate Century Park Surface South April 25 2010 53 27 27 N 113 30 59 W 53 45750 N 113 51639 W 53 45750 113 51639 Century Park Notes Edit A surface station connecting to the Valley Line is scheduled to open in 2023 References Edit SD160 Light Rail Vehicle PDF Siemens Archived from the original PDF on 29 September 2012 Retrieved 2 February 2011 Hoang Linda January 31 2013 City announces five new LRT line names including Energy Line Capital Line CTV News Edmonton Retrieved June 27 2016 South LRT Extension PDF City of Edmonton July 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 16 Retrieved 2010 04 24 Thompson Jeremy August 31 2020 30M Heritage Valley Park and Ride complete but unused for 7 months CTV Edmonton Retrieved June 23 2021 Capital Line Heritage Valley Park amp Ride City of Edmonton Retrieved June 23 2021 Capital Line South Face Sheet PDF City of Edmonton September 2018 Retrieved June 23 2021 Bartko Karen June 22 2021 South Edmonton LRT extension approved with elevated station at Ellerslie Road Global News Edmonton Retrieved June 23 2021 Capital Line South City of Edmonton Archived from the original on September 23 2020 Retrieved April 28 2021 Capital Line South Extension Retrieved September 27 2021 Boothby Lauren May 23 2023 Edmonton s Capital Line LRT extension to be scaled back but Twin Brooks station stays Edmonton Journal Retrieved June 14 2023 City Council Agenda June 14 2023 PDF City of Edmonton June 2023 Retrieved June 14 2023 Capital Line South City of Edmonton www edmonton ca Retrieved 2023 06 15 Ehrkamp Laura New state of the art hospital for south Edmonton Government of Alberta Retrieved August 9 2018 Johnston Scott 2017 12 06 Iveson to make setting aside land for train to airport a priority in 2018 Global News Retrieved 2021 01 01 Dion Andrea 2021 06 22 Edmonton city council approves 1B LRT expansion project CTV News Retrieved 2021 01 01 Edmonton International Airport Service City of Edmonton Archived from the original on October 7 2012 Retrieved May 27 2012 City of Edmonton Northeast to Gorman LRT Archived 2012 08 19 at the Wayback Machine NAIT LRT line a go after feds approve funding report Edmonton Journal 2009 07 02 Archived from the original on July 5 2009 Retrieved 2009 09 05 Northeast LRT to Gorman City of Edmonton Archived from the original on August 19 2012 Retrieved May 27 2012 Plans in Effect PDF City of Edmonton May 2013 Archived from the original PDF on October 17 2013 Retrieved October 16 2013 a b Edmonton Energy and Technology Park Area Structure Plan Office Consolidation PDF PDF City of Edmonton May 2011 pp 66 67 PDF pages 69 70 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 17 Retrieved October 16 2013 a b Horse Hill Area Structure Plan Office Consolidation PDF PDF City of Edmonton July 2013 pp 34 amp 54 PDF page 38 amp 58 Archived from the original PDF on October 17 2013 Retrieved October 16 2013 Capital Line Northeast City of Edmonton Retrieved August 9 2018 a b Cook Dustin 23 April 2019 City moves forward with transit villages plan for Northlands site Edmonton Journal Retrieved 23 April 2019 External links EditEdmonton Transit System Edmonton Transit System Future LRT Capital Line LRT Extension Fly through Century Park to Heritage Valley on YouTube published by the City of Edmonton Animated tour of the Capital Line extension south of Century Park Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capital Line amp oldid 1177420781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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