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FasTracks

FasTracks is a multibillion-dollar public transportation expansion plan under construction in metropolitan Denver, Colorado, United States. Developed by the Regional Transportation District (RTD), the plan consists of new commuter rail, light rail, and express bus services. Six new light rail, electric commuter rail and diesel commuter rail lines with a combined length of 122 miles (196 km) will be constructed under the plan. It expands on previous transportation projects, notably T-REX, and includes 57 new transit stations and stops, 21,000 new parking spaces, 18 miles (29 km) of a bus service between Denver and Boulder and the renovation of Denver Union Station as a multi-modal transportation hub.[1]

Originally envisioned to cost $4.7 billion and to be completed in 2017, voters in the eight counties that comprise the RTD approved a 0.4 percent sales tax increase in 2004. By 2010, the budget grew to $6.5 billion while projected revenues dropped to $4.1 billion.[2]

The project is not expected to be finished until after 2050.[3] Alternative funding sources, such as public-private partnerships, have been sought.[4]

The first of the six new lines envisioned in the plan, the West Corridor light rail line to Golden, Colorado, opened for revenue service on April 26, 2013. By mid-2014, construction was underway on the five other rail lines. Two commuter rail lines opened on their long-anticipated dates in 2016: the East Rail Line to Denver International Airport and the portion of the Northwest Rail Line to south Westminster. The I-225 Rail Line through Aurora opened on February 24, 2017, and the Gold Line to Wheat Ridge opened on April 26, 2019. In addition, the North Metro Rail Line to Thornton opened in 2020.

Denver Union Station underwent $200 million worth of facility improvements to turn it into the hub for new commuter and light rail lines as well as bus service in downtown Denver. The underground 22-bay bus concourse at Union Station opened on May 11, 2014, while the restaurants, bars, and hotel officially opened July 26, 2014.[5]

Progress Edit

FasTracks is being funded with federal appropriations, private contributions, and a region-wide sales tax increase. The project was allowed to begin when the sales tax portion of its funding was approved by Denver metro area voters in November 2004. The tax went into effect in January 2005.

In 2006, engineering design of the initial segment, the West Rail Line, was begun.

By spring of 2006, the environmental impact statements of all other proposed lines were underway. The municipal governments of Denver, Boulder, and Lakewood had launched detailed studies of community redevelopment possibilities around station locations. The cities of Westminster, Thornton, Aurora, Greenwood Village, Englewood, Sheridan, and Arvada are also planning transit oriented development areas around some of their proposed rail stations.

Central to the regional nature of the service package is Union Station. Special studies of its redevelopment and adaptation for multiple transport modes were conducted and engineering design work and property development work was underway in 2006.

In May 2007, a $1.5 billion budget overrun was reported. Despite service and construction reductions, by January 2010 the budget had grown to $6.5 billion (a $1.8 billion overrun). At the same time, sales tax revenue forecasts for 2017 were projected to come in much less than originally anticipated leaving the project $2.45 billion short.[6]

On April 13, 2010, the RTD board of directors decided to postpone asking voters to further increase the current sales tax. If the tax increase fails to be implemented, the full build-out of the FasTracks plan may not take place until 2042.[7]

On August 31, 2011, US Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood announced that the US Department of Transportation had approved a $1 billion grant to the Eagle P3 project, which consists of the East and Gold commuter rail lines, covering half of the $2 billion cost of the construction of the two lines.[8]

In March 2012, RTD received an unsolicited proposal to build the I-225 Corridor line from Kiewit Infrastructure Co. After determining the proposal had merit and seeking other bids, RTD selected Kiewit to build the line. In 2013, RTD received a second unsolicited proposal this time to build the North Metro Line. RTD sought bids to build the line out in multiple phases. After receiving four bids, RTD selected the partnership of Graham Contracting Ltd., Balfour Beatty Rail Inc. and Harmon Contractors Inc. (GBBH), the same group that had submitted the unsolicited proposal.[4]

On April 26, 2013, the first completed segment of the FasTracks regional transit-expansion plan was opened to the public, the W Line.

In November 2014, the first commuter rail cars arrived in Denver from the Hyundai–Rotem USA plant in Philadelphia, PA.[9]

Project details Edit

RTD Rail Expansion Map
Downtown Longmont
 
Gunbarrel
 
Boulder Junction
 
Louisville
 
Flatiron
 
Church Ranch
 
 B  Westminster
 
 G  Wheat Ridge/Ward
 
 
 
North Thornton/Hwy 7
Arvada Ridge
 
 
 
York/144th
Olde Town Arvada
 
 
 
Eastlake/124th  N 
60th & Sheridan/Arvada Gold Strike
 
 
 
Northglenn/112th
Clear Creek/Federal
 
 
 
Thornton Crossroads/104th
 
 
 
Original Thornton/88th
Pecos Junction
 
 
Commerce City/72nd
41st & Fox
 
 
48th & Brighton/National Western Center
 E  W  Union Station
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Union Station  A  B  G  N   
 
 
 
 
38th & Blake
 
 
 
35th & Downing
Pepsi Center-Elitch Gardens
 
 
 
33rd & Downing
 
 
 
30th & Downing  L 
Empower Field at Mile High
 
 
 
29th & Welton (closed)
 
 
 
27th & Welton
Auraria West
 
 
 
25th & Welton
 
 
 
 
20th & Welton
Decatur-Federal
 
 
 
 
 
 
Knox
 
 
 
 
18th & Stout | California  D  H 
Perry
 
 
 
 
16th & Stout | California  L 
Sheridan
 
 
 
 
Lamar
 
 
 
 
Theatre District–Convention Center
Lakewood–Wadsworth
 
 
 
 
Colfax at Auraria
Garrison
 
 
 
40th & Colorado
Oak
 
 
 
10th & Osage
Federal Center
 
 
 
Alameda
Red Rocks College
 
 
 
I-25 & Broadway
 W  JeffCo Gov Center–Golden
 
 
 
Evans
 
 
 
Louisiana–Pearl
Englewood
 
 
 
University of Denver
Oxford-City of Sheridan
 
 
 
Colorado
Littleton-Downtown
 
 
 
Yale
 D  Littleton-Mineral
 
 
 
Southmoor
Lucent Boulevard & C-470
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Central Park
Belleview
 
 
 
Dayton
Orchard
 
 
 
Nine Mile
Arapahoe at Village Center
 
 
 
Iliff
Dry Creek
 
 
 
Florida  H 
County Line
 
 
 
Aurora Metro Center
Lincoln
 
 
 
2nd Avenue & Abilene
Sky Ridge
 
 
 
13th Avenue
Lone Tree City Center
 
 
 
Colfax
 E  R  RidgeGate Parkway
 
 
 
Fitzsimons
 
 
 
Peoria  R 
 
40th Ave & Airport Blvd–Gateway Park
 
61st & Peña
 
Denver Airport  A   

Eagle public-private partnership Edit

The Eagle public–private partnership (P3) combines two commuter rail lines, the East Line to DIA and the Gold Line to Wheat Ridge, plus a section of the Northwest Line up to Westminster, and a maintenance facility into a single contract. Denver Transit Partners, the consortium of companies RTD selected to lead the Eagle P3 project, is responsible for the design, construction, financing, operation and maintenance of the rail lines in the contract.[10]

Construction broke ground on the Gold Line on August 26, 2010. In August 2011, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood committed $1 billion in federal money to the Eagle P3 project. In December LaHood approved a $280 million loan to advance construction. As of June 2013, the project is on track to open the rail lines under contract in 2016.[11][12]

East Rail Line (commuter rail) Edit

Being constructed as part of the Eagle P3, the East Rail Line is a 23.6-mile (38.0 km) commuter rail line between downtown Denver, Aurora, and Denver International Airport using electric multiple unit (EMU) commuter trains. To expedite travel time between downtown Denver and Denver International Airport, only six stations will be located on the line. Construction started in August 2010, and the line opened to the public on April 22, 2016.[13][14]

Gold Line (commuter rail) Edit

The second full line funded under the Eagle P3, the Gold Line is an 11.2-mile (18.0 km) commuter rail corridor that will run from Denver Union Station to Wheat Ridge, passing through Adams County and Arvada. As with the East Corridor, the RTD Board of Directors chose EMU commuter trains to run on the Gold Line. Seven new stations—with an already existing station at Union— were built for the line. It opened on April 26, 2019.[15]

I-225 Corridor (light rail) Edit

The I-225 Corridor is 10.5-mile (16.9 km) light rail line running through Aurora and facilitate a circumferential link between the Southeast Corridor and the East Line. The project will include seven new stations and provide 1,800 new parking spaces. Construction began in the spring of 2012 on a short section of the line as part of a joint contract with CDOT. Following an unsolicited proposal from Kiewit Infrastructure Co. funding was secured for the full line which opened on February 24, 2017.

North Metro Corridor (commuter rail) Edit

The North Metro Corridor is a commuter rail line that runs along an existing railroad right-of-way from Denver to 160th Avenue in Thornton. The line has eight stations on its 18.4-mile (29.6 km) route. In 2009, RTD paid $117 million to purchase the right-of-way from Union Pacific in preparation for the buildout of the North Metro line. However, with the global recession of 2009, the North Metro Corridor became a victim of financial setbacks and it was feared that the line would not be built until 2044. RTD was able to avoid delaying the construction of the line when it accepted an unsolicited offer in 2013 to build out the full line in two stages. The first phase was completed in 2020.

Northwest Rail Corridor (commuter rail) Edit

The Northwest Rail Corridor is a commuter rail project between Denver, Boulder, and Longmont. The completion of the proposed 41-mile (66 km) line, would consist of seven stations. The route would follow an existing railroad right-of-way from BNSF. The only segment of the line that has been completed to date has been up to Westminster Station. The station sits just south west of Federal and 72nd in Westminster. The line runs from Denver's Union Station to south Westminster, with plans for future segments in the distant future. The project was and still is a construction project part of the Eagle P3 project. Future segments are in an unknown phase at the moment and no construction has started on any other segments on the line. The remaining segments are currently predicted for completion by the year 2044.[16] The announcement angered many voters in the cities and suburbs north of Denver who had approved a sales tax increase in 2004 to fund the FasTracks project.[17]

The downturn in the economy and significant cost increases and delays associated with building and operating the Northwest Corridor led to the initiation of the year-long "Northwest Area Mobility Study". This was an effort between northwest area governments and transportation partners that set out to recommend alternatives to the voter approved commuter rail line that could have possibly brought near-term mobility improvements to the northwest area. The study concluded in 2014 and made a number of recommendations that were adopted by the RTD Board of Directors in June 2014.[18] One of the recommendations adopted was an interim express bus service called "Flatiron Flyer".[16][19] In summer 2018, the U.S. 36 Mayors and Commissioners Coalition was gathering support from other members to ask RTD to provide an estimate for at least weekday rush hour commuter rail service along the original corridor to Longmont.[20] The "Peak Service Plan" would carry 1,400 passengers per weekday.[21]

West Corridor (light rail) Edit

Preliminary work on the West Corridor light rail line began on May 16, 2007. During early stages of development, it was decided that the line from the Federal Center to the Jefferson County Government Center would be reduced to a single track to help cut costs. According to RTD, this change would reduce train headways from 15 minutes to 5 and make it easier for the line to run along the side of U.S. 6.[22] Upon the completion of construction the line was designated the "W Line". The 12.1 mile light rail line was opened to the public on April 26, 2013, and is the first completed segment of the FasTracks regional transit-expansion plan.

US 36 Corridor Edit

This is an 18-mile (29 km) long express bus line, branded "Flatiron Flyer", running along US 36 between Denver and Boulder, Colorado with six stops planned along the route. A joint project between CDOT and RTD, the road was widened by 40 feet in each direction to allow the addition of a high-occupancy vehicle lane instead of the trains voters approved. The project was completed in two phases, with the first phase completed in May 2010. The second phase began construction in July 2012 and opened to the public in 2016.[23] Sections of the road subsequently collapsed in summer 2019.

Extensions (light rail) Edit

There are plans for extensions to a few existing light rail lines; they include a 2.5-mile (4.0 km) extension to the Southwest Corridor, extending the line to the southwest corner of Lucent Boulevard and C-470. A 2.3-mile (3.7 km) extension to the Southeast Corridor into Lone Tree which opened to the public in May 2019; and a 0.8-mile (1.3 km) extension to the Central Corridor to connect the 30th & Downing station with the East Corridor commuter rail line at the intersection of 38th and Blake.

Economic growth/development Edit

According to RTD (2012),[24] when new development occurs near stations, it increases the likelihood that residents and workers will choose transit as their transportation mode. This reduces the growth in vehicle miles traveled (VMT) and auto trips on a constrained roadway system while, at the same time, accommodating new growth.

RTD has conducted a Quality of Life (QoL) study for the neighborhoods' impacted by FasTracks with baseline data collection starting in 2006 and continuing bi-annually to the present.[25] The QoL study tracks a number of economic and community development indicators.

Rolling stock Edit

 
RTD Silverliner at Denver Union Station.

As of 2015, FasTracks has on order 66 Hyundai Rotem Silverliner V electric multiple unit rail cars operated in a married pair configuration. These cars were initially developed by Rotem for Philadelphia's SEPTA Regional Rail in 2009, with RTD's order coming a year later in 2010. RTD's numbered 4001 through 4066, possess a number of differences from the ones operated by SEPTA, most notably the lack of low platform steps and full-width cabs.

All trains operating on the commuter rail lines will be equipped with positive train control.[26]

Criticism Edit

Denver Union Station Design Edit

The Regional Transportation District (RTD) and Denver Union Station Project Authority (DUSPA) has received significant criticism for the redevelopment of the Denver Union Station. Many public transportation advocates and planning experts maintain that the project precludes impending access of high-speed rail technology and north–south passenger rail routes such as Front Range Rail, is designed to present logistical complications for both rail and bus commuters, lacks integration of bicycle facilities and an intercity bus station, and is being modeled to perform as a stub-end terminal for current and future intercity rail routes. Many citizens and public transportation advocates have also expressed frustration with the high cost associated with the project's design and its direct impact on the agency's ability to complete all rail lines that were a part of the original voter-approved FasTracks project proposal. In 2009 the Colorado Rail Passenger Association, a local rail transportation advocacy group, filed a lawsuit against the Federal Transportation Administration for its acceptance of DUSPA's Environmental Impact Statement, which suspiciously omitted several impactful statements and comments that were contributed by the members of the community.[27]

Eminent domain Edit

The Regional Transportation District have used eminent domain to condemn properties in the path of transportation projects.[28] Several property owners have protested the taking of their properties for FasTracks lines.[29]

Federal Station relocation Edit

The Regional Transportation District proposed relocating the Gold Line Federal Station from the previously approved east side site to the west side of Federal Boulevard. Some residents opposed the move on the grounds that was only to benefit a developer who owned property near the west side site, and revitalization of the community would be better served by the east side location. RTD supported the move because the east side location was a former waste dump, and that the west side location would be more accessible for the community.[30]

On December 15, 2010, RTD announced that the Federal Station would remain on the east side of Federal and not be moved to the west side. The Adams County Commissioners, who had originally requested the change, withdrew their support under pressure from residents of a subdivision near the west site, who opposed the private developer's plan to build higher-density housing and commercial buildings around the new station site.[31]

Indefinite Northwest Rail Line delay Edit

Originally, the voter-approved plan called for a 41-mile (66 km) high-capacity commuter rail line running from Denver Union Station to Longmont, passing through North Denver, Adams County, Westminster, Broomfield, Louisville and Boulder.[32] Back in early 2008, the diesel-powered heavy rail service was expected to start running in late 2014 or early 2015 - roughly ten years after the FasTracks vote - initially with 58 trains a day, ramping up over a decade to 84 trains by 2025.[33] The completion of this original plan has been delayed until 2044 due to lower tax revenues and higher costs than expected.[34][35]

In January 2016, RTD introduced a new express bus system in the US 36 Corridor, parallel to the Northwest Rail corridor. Branded "Flatiron Flyer", it travels in high-occupancy toll lanes along US 36 between Denver and Boulder.[36][37] The consolidation of current express service between Denver and Boulder into this one system attracted criticism from Boulder residents, since increased frequencies were balanced with some service cuts - particularly to service patterns making the least number of stops between Boulder and Denver.[38][39][40] Additionally, the ITDP classified the system as "not bus rapid transit", due to the use of lanes shared with private cars along US 36, the lack of street level boarding/alighting and the lack of an off-board fare system.[41] A plan to allow Flatiron Flyer US 36 buses on shoulders during high-traffic periods required the 2016 state legislature to pass such authorization (passed Jan. 13, signed by governor Mar. 9), effective May 1.[42][43]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ (PDF). RTD. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  2. ^ Cathy Proctor (January 5, 2010). "FasTracks costs have dropped, but so have funds for project, RTD says". Denver Business Journal. Retrieved June 20, 2013.
  3. ^ "RTD Explores Money Options to Catch up on Unfinished FasTracks Trains".
  4. ^ a b Cotey, Angela (January 2015). "Denver RTD makes the case for a public-private funding approach". Progressive Railroading.
  5. ^ Libby Smith (July 2, 2014). "Union Station Investment To Drive Development". Denver, CO: CBS4. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
  6. ^ Kevin Flynn (January 19, 2010). . In Denver Times. Archived from the original on September 13, 2012.
  7. ^ Leib, Jeffrey (April 14, 2010). "RTD decides not to seek FasTracks tax hike this year". Denver Post. Retrieved April 19, 2010.
  8. ^ . Progressive Railroading. 1 September 2011. Archived from the original on 27 March 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
  9. ^ . Rtd-fastracks.com. FasTracks Regional Transportation District of Denver. Archived from the original on 23 February 2020. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  10. ^ . RTD. Archived from the original on August 24, 2011. Retrieved June 20, 2013.
  11. ^ "Eagle P3 Project Update" (PDF). RTD. March 5, 2013. Retrieved June 20, 2013.
  12. ^ . Railway Technology. Archived from the original on 3 September 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
  13. ^ . Railway Gazette International. 3 October 2010. Archived from the original on 7 October 2010. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  14. ^ "Fas Tracks". RTD: FasTracks. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  15. ^ "Fastracks Gold Line To Wheat Ridge Approved". The Denver Channel. 3 November 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  16. ^ a b Proctor, Cathy (April 10, 2015). "RTD's Phil Washington, bound for big L.A. job, talks about Denver's next big challenge". The Denver Business Journal. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  17. ^ Whaley, Monte (2012-08-10). "RTD officials face legislative grilling over commuter rail delay". The Denver Post. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  18. ^ Whaley, Monte (2013-02-04). "RTD foots bill for study of northwest transit system, cities sign on". The Denver Post. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  19. ^ Regional Transport District. "Northwest Corridor FAQ". Regional Transport District. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  20. ^ Fryar, John (15 August 2018). "Area cities consider funding rail service to Longmont". Colorado Hometown Weekly. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  21. ^ "Heard Chatter About A Bare-Bones RTD Train To Boulder? Don't Hold Your Breath | Colorado Public Radio".
  22. ^ Jeffrey Wolf; Deborah Sherman (2007-05-18). "Transportation project more than a billion dollars over budget". 9News. Retrieved 2007-05-18.
  23. ^ Aguilar, John (June 17, 2013). "U.S. 36 widening project shifts into higher gear". The Denver Post. Retrieved June 20, 2013.
  24. ^ Regional Transportation District of Denver. (2012). 2010 FasTracks Quality of Life Detailed Report. 1-86.
  25. ^ "RTD FasTracks: Home". Rtd-fastracks.com. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  26. ^ Massey, Kevin (May 14, 2015). "RTD: New Denver trains to be safer than one that crashed". KUSA. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  27. ^ .
  28. ^ Whaley, Monte (September 18, 2012). "FasTracks moves ahead with property acquisition". The Denver Post. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  29. ^ Espinoza, Annette (February 25, 2010). "Holdouts fold in fight against RTD and eminent domain". The Denver Post. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  30. ^ Leib, Jeffrey (November 13, 2010). "Adams Co. neighborhood divided on possible rail station move across street". The Denver Post. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  31. ^ Leib, Jeffrey (15 December 2010). "RTD won't move station planned for east side of Federal to west side". Denverpost.com. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  32. ^ "RTD - Northwest Rail Line". Regional Transportation District. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-09-24.
  34. ^ Whaley, Monte (August 29, 2012). "RTD defends FasTracks spending". The Denver Post. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  35. ^ Whaley, Monte (January 31, 2015). "Denver is being transformed by FasTracks, 10 years after key vote". The Denver Post. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
  36. ^ "U.S. 36 reconstruction ongoing as is branding plan". Denverpost.com. 2014-11-06. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  37. ^ Whaley, Monte (February 4, 2013). "RTD foots bill for study of northwest transit system, cities sign on". The Denver Post. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  38. ^ "Boulder council: RTD proposals have broad impacts - Boulder Daily Camera". Dailycamera.com. 2015-02-24. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  39. ^ "Boulder concerned about RTD transit plan along U.S. 36 - Boulder Daily Camera". Dailycamera.com. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  40. ^ "RTD proposes cut of direct Boulder service". Denverpost.com. 22 February 2015. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  41. ^ "U.S. 36 bus transit plan is not what it seems, group says". Denverpost.com. 25 January 2015. Retrieved 2015-04-17.
  42. ^ RTD's Denver-Boulder buses will use shoulders to bypass jams
  43. ^ "Flatiron Flyer buses OK'd to drive on U.S. 36 shoulders starting May 1". 29 April 2016.

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • The Transit Alliance - A non-profit coalition promoting expanded rail and bus transit in the Denver Metro region.

fastracks, confused, with, fastrak, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, june, 2016, multibillion, dollar, public, transportation, expansion, plan, under, construction, metr. Not to be confused with FasTrak This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2016 FasTracks is a multibillion dollar public transportation expansion plan under construction in metropolitan Denver Colorado United States Developed by the Regional Transportation District RTD the plan consists of new commuter rail light rail and express bus services Six new light rail electric commuter rail and diesel commuter rail lines with a combined length of 122 miles 196 km will be constructed under the plan It expands on previous transportation projects notably T REX and includes 57 new transit stations and stops 21 000 new parking spaces 18 miles 29 km of a bus service between Denver and Boulder and the renovation of Denver Union Station as a multi modal transportation hub 1 Originally envisioned to cost 4 7 billion and to be completed in 2017 voters in the eight counties that comprise the RTD approved a 0 4 percent sales tax increase in 2004 By 2010 the budget grew to 6 5 billion while projected revenues dropped to 4 1 billion 2 The project is not expected to be finished until after 2050 3 Alternative funding sources such as public private partnerships have been sought 4 The first of the six new lines envisioned in the plan the West Corridor light rail line to Golden Colorado opened for revenue service on April 26 2013 By mid 2014 construction was underway on the five other rail lines Two commuter rail lines opened on their long anticipated dates in 2016 the East Rail Line to Denver International Airport and the portion of the Northwest Rail Line to south Westminster The I 225 Rail Line through Aurora opened on February 24 2017 and the Gold Line to Wheat Ridge opened on April 26 2019 In addition the North Metro Rail Line to Thornton opened in 2020 Denver Union Station underwent 200 million worth of facility improvements to turn it into the hub for new commuter and light rail lines as well as bus service in downtown Denver The underground 22 bay bus concourse at Union Station opened on May 11 2014 while the restaurants bars and hotel officially opened July 26 2014 5 Contents 1 Progress 2 Project details 2 1 Eagle public private partnership 2 1 1 East Rail Line commuter rail 2 1 2 Gold Line commuter rail 2 2 I 225 Corridor light rail 2 3 North Metro Corridor commuter rail 2 4 Northwest Rail Corridor commuter rail 2 5 West Corridor light rail 2 6 US 36 Corridor 2 7 Extensions light rail 3 Economic growth development 4 Rolling stock 5 Criticism 5 1 Denver Union Station Design 5 2 Eminent domain 5 3 Federal Station relocation 5 4 Indefinite Northwest Rail Line delay 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksProgress EditFasTracks is being funded with federal appropriations private contributions and a region wide sales tax increase The project was allowed to begin when the sales tax portion of its funding was approved by Denver metro area voters in November 2004 The tax went into effect in January 2005 In 2006 engineering design of the initial segment the West Rail Line was begun By spring of 2006 the environmental impact statements of all other proposed lines were underway The municipal governments of Denver Boulder and Lakewood had launched detailed studies of community redevelopment possibilities around station locations The cities of Westminster Thornton Aurora Greenwood Village Englewood Sheridan and Arvada are also planning transit oriented development areas around some of their proposed rail stations Central to the regional nature of the service package is Union Station Special studies of its redevelopment and adaptation for multiple transport modes were conducted and engineering design work and property development work was underway in 2006 In May 2007 a 1 5 billion budget overrun was reported Despite service and construction reductions by January 2010 the budget had grown to 6 5 billion a 1 8 billion overrun At the same time sales tax revenue forecasts for 2017 were projected to come in much less than originally anticipated leaving the project 2 45 billion short 6 On April 13 2010 the RTD board of directors decided to postpone asking voters to further increase the current sales tax If the tax increase fails to be implemented the full build out of the FasTracks plan may not take place until 2042 7 On August 31 2011 US Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood announced that the US Department of Transportation had approved a 1 billion grant to the Eagle P3 project which consists of the East and Gold commuter rail lines covering half of the 2 billion cost of the construction of the two lines 8 In March 2012 RTD received an unsolicited proposal to build the I 225 Corridor line from Kiewit Infrastructure Co After determining the proposal had merit and seeking other bids RTD selected Kiewit to build the line In 2013 RTD received a second unsolicited proposal this time to build the North Metro Line RTD sought bids to build the line out in multiple phases After receiving four bids RTD selected the partnership of Graham Contracting Ltd Balfour Beatty Rail Inc and Harmon Contractors Inc GBBH the same group that had submitted the unsolicited proposal 4 On April 26 2013 the first completed segment of the FasTracks regional transit expansion plan was opened to the public the W Line In November 2014 the first commuter rail cars arrived in Denver from the Hyundai Rotem USA plant in Philadelphia PA 9 Project details EditvteRTD Rail Expansion MapLegendDowntown Longmont nbsp Gunbarrel nbsp Boulder Junction nbsp Louisville nbsp Flatiron nbsp Church Ranch nbsp B Westminster nbsp G Wheat Ridge Ward nbsp nbsp nbsp North Thornton Hwy 7Arvada Ridge nbsp nbsp nbsp York 144thOlde Town Arvada nbsp nbsp nbsp Eastlake 124th N 60th amp Sheridan Arvada Gold Strike nbsp nbsp nbsp Northglenn 112thClear Creek Federal nbsp nbsp nbsp Thornton Crossroads 104th nbsp nbsp nbsp Original Thornton 88thPecos Junction nbsp nbsp Commerce City 72nd41st amp Fox nbsp nbsp 48th amp Brighton National Western Center E W Union Station nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Union Station A B G N nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 38th amp Blake nbsp nbsp nbsp 35th amp DowningPepsi Center Elitch Gardens nbsp nbsp nbsp 33rd amp Downing nbsp nbsp nbsp 30th amp Downing L Empower Field at Mile High nbsp nbsp nbsp 29th amp Welton closed nbsp nbsp nbsp 27th amp WeltonAuraria West nbsp nbsp nbsp 25th amp Welton nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 20th amp WeltonDecatur Federal nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Knox nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 18th amp Stout California D H Perry nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 16th amp Stout California L Sheridan nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Lamar nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Theatre District Convention CenterLakewood Wadsworth nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Colfax at AurariaGarrison nbsp nbsp nbsp 40th amp ColoradoOak nbsp nbsp nbsp 10th amp OsageFederal Center nbsp nbsp nbsp AlamedaRed Rocks College nbsp nbsp nbsp I 25 amp Broadway W JeffCo Gov Center Golden nbsp nbsp nbsp Evans nbsp nbsp nbsp Louisiana PearlEnglewood nbsp nbsp nbsp University of DenverOxford City of Sheridan nbsp nbsp nbsp ColoradoLittleton Downtown nbsp nbsp nbsp Yale D Littleton Mineral nbsp nbsp nbsp SouthmoorLucent Boulevard amp C 470 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Central ParkBelleview nbsp nbsp nbsp DaytonOrchard nbsp nbsp nbsp Nine MileArapahoe at Village Center nbsp nbsp nbsp IliffDry Creek nbsp nbsp nbsp Florida H County Line nbsp nbsp nbsp Aurora Metro CenterLincoln nbsp nbsp nbsp 2nd Avenue amp AbileneSky Ridge nbsp nbsp nbsp 13th AvenueLone Tree City Center nbsp nbsp nbsp Colfax E R RidgeGate Parkway nbsp nbsp nbsp Fitzsimons nbsp nbsp nbsp Peoria R nbsp 40th Ave amp Airport Blvd Gateway Park nbsp 61st amp Pena nbsp Denver Airport A nbsp Eagle public private partnership Edit Main article Eagle P3 The Eagle public private partnership P3 combines two commuter rail lines the East Line to DIA and the Gold Line to Wheat Ridge plus a section of the Northwest Line up to Westminster and a maintenance facility into a single contract Denver Transit Partners the consortium of companies RTD selected to lead the Eagle P3 project is responsible for the design construction financing operation and maintenance of the rail lines in the contract 10 Construction broke ground on the Gold Line on August 26 2010 In August 2011 Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood committed 1 billion in federal money to the Eagle P3 project In December LaHood approved a 280 million loan to advance construction As of June 2013 the project is on track to open the rail lines under contract in 2016 11 12 East Rail Line commuter rail Edit Main article A Line RTD Being constructed as part of the Eagle P3 the East Rail Line is a 23 6 mile 38 0 km commuter rail line between downtown Denver Aurora and Denver International Airport using electric multiple unit EMU commuter trains To expedite travel time between downtown Denver and Denver International Airport only six stations will be located on the line Construction started in August 2010 and the line opened to the public on April 22 2016 13 14 Gold Line commuter rail Edit Main article G Line RTD The second full line funded under the Eagle P3 the Gold Line is an 11 2 mile 18 0 km commuter rail corridor that will run from Denver Union Station to Wheat Ridge passing through Adams County and Arvada As with the East Corridor the RTD Board of Directors chose EMU commuter trains to run on the Gold Line Seven new stations with an already existing station at Union were built for the line It opened on April 26 2019 15 I 225 Corridor light rail Edit Main article R Line RTD The I 225 Corridor is 10 5 mile 16 9 km light rail line running through Aurora and facilitate a circumferential link between the Southeast Corridor and the East Line The project will include seven new stations and provide 1 800 new parking spaces Construction began in the spring of 2012 on a short section of the line as part of a joint contract with CDOT Following an unsolicited proposal from Kiewit Infrastructure Co funding was secured for the full line which opened on February 24 2017 North Metro Corridor commuter rail Edit Main article N Line RTD The North Metro Corridor is a commuter rail line that runs along an existing railroad right of way from Denver to 160th Avenue in Thornton The line has eight stations on its 18 4 mile 29 6 km route In 2009 RTD paid 117 million to purchase the right of way from Union Pacific in preparation for the buildout of the North Metro line However with the global recession of 2009 the North Metro Corridor became a victim of financial setbacks and it was feared that the line would not be built until 2044 RTD was able to avoid delaying the construction of the line when it accepted an unsolicited offer in 2013 to build out the full line in two stages The first phase was completed in 2020 Northwest Rail Corridor commuter rail Edit Main article B Line RTD The Northwest Rail Corridor is a commuter rail project between Denver Boulder and Longmont The completion of the proposed 41 mile 66 km line would consist of seven stations The route would follow an existing railroad right of way from BNSF The only segment of the line that has been completed to date has been up to Westminster Station The station sits just south west of Federal and 72nd in Westminster The line runs from Denver s Union Station to south Westminster with plans for future segments in the distant future The project was and still is a construction project part of the Eagle P3 project Future segments are in an unknown phase at the moment and no construction has started on any other segments on the line The remaining segments are currently predicted for completion by the year 2044 16 The announcement angered many voters in the cities and suburbs north of Denver who had approved a sales tax increase in 2004 to fund the FasTracks project 17 The downturn in the economy and significant cost increases and delays associated with building and operating the Northwest Corridor led to the initiation of the year long Northwest Area Mobility Study This was an effort between northwest area governments and transportation partners that set out to recommend alternatives to the voter approved commuter rail line that could have possibly brought near term mobility improvements to the northwest area The study concluded in 2014 and made a number of recommendations that were adopted by the RTD Board of Directors in June 2014 18 One of the recommendations adopted was an interim express bus service called Flatiron Flyer 16 19 In summer 2018 the U S 36 Mayors and Commissioners Coalition was gathering support from other members to ask RTD to provide an estimate for at least weekday rush hour commuter rail service along the original corridor to Longmont 20 The Peak Service Plan would carry 1 400 passengers per weekday 21 West Corridor light rail Edit Main article W Line RTD Preliminary work on the West Corridor light rail line began on May 16 2007 During early stages of development it was decided that the line from the Federal Center to the Jefferson County Government Center would be reduced to a single track to help cut costs According to RTD this change would reduce train headways from 15 minutes to 5 and make it easier for the line to run along the side of U S 6 22 Upon the completion of construction the line was designated the W Line The 12 1 mile light rail line was opened to the public on April 26 2013 and is the first completed segment of the FasTracks regional transit expansion plan US 36 Corridor Edit Main article Flatiron Flyer This is an 18 mile 29 km long express bus line branded Flatiron Flyer running along US 36 between Denver and Boulder Colorado with six stops planned along the route A joint project between CDOT and RTD the road was widened by 40 feet in each direction to allow the addition of a high occupancy vehicle lane instead of the trains voters approved The project was completed in two phases with the first phase completed in May 2010 The second phase began construction in July 2012 and opened to the public in 2016 23 Sections of the road subsequently collapsed in summer 2019 Extensions light rail Edit There are plans for extensions to a few existing light rail lines they include a 2 5 mile 4 0 km extension to the Southwest Corridor extending the line to the southwest corner of Lucent Boulevard and C 470 A 2 3 mile 3 7 km extension to the Southeast Corridor into Lone Tree which opened to the public in May 2019 and a 0 8 mile 1 3 km extension to the Central Corridor to connect the 30th amp Downing station with the East Corridor commuter rail line at the intersection of 38th and Blake Economic growth development EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2012 According to RTD 2012 24 when new development occurs near stations it increases the likelihood that residents and workers will choose transit as their transportation mode This reduces the growth in vehicle miles traveled VMT and auto trips on a constrained roadway system while at the same time accommodating new growth RTD has conducted a Quality of Life QoL study for the neighborhoods impacted by FasTracks with baseline data collection starting in 2006 and continuing bi annually to the present 25 The QoL study tracks a number of economic and community development indicators Rolling stock Edit nbsp RTD Silverliner at Denver Union Station As of 2015 FasTracks has on order 66 Hyundai Rotem Silverliner V electric multiple unit rail cars operated in a married pair configuration These cars were initially developed by Rotem for Philadelphia s SEPTA Regional Rail in 2009 with RTD s order coming a year later in 2010 RTD s numbered 4001 through 4066 possess a number of differences from the ones operated by SEPTA most notably the lack of low platform steps and full width cabs All trains operating on the commuter rail lines will be equipped with positive train control 26 Criticism EditDenver Union Station Design Edit The Regional Transportation District RTD and Denver Union Station Project Authority DUSPA has received significant criticism for the redevelopment of the Denver Union Station Many public transportation advocates and planning experts maintain that the project precludes impending access of high speed rail technology and north south passenger rail routes such as Front Range Rail is designed to present logistical complications for both rail and bus commuters lacks integration of bicycle facilities and an intercity bus station and is being modeled to perform as a stub end terminal for current and future intercity rail routes Many citizens and public transportation advocates have also expressed frustration with the high cost associated with the project s design and its direct impact on the agency s ability to complete all rail lines that were a part of the original voter approved FasTracks project proposal In 2009 the Colorado Rail Passenger Association a local rail transportation advocacy group filed a lawsuit against the Federal Transportation Administration for its acceptance of DUSPA s Environmental Impact Statement which suspiciously omitted several impactful statements and comments that were contributed by the members of the community 27 Eminent domain Edit The Regional Transportation District have used eminent domain to condemn properties in the path of transportation projects 28 Several property owners have protested the taking of their properties for FasTracks lines 29 Federal Station relocation Edit The Regional Transportation District proposed relocating the Gold Line Federal Station from the previously approved east side site to the west side of Federal Boulevard Some residents opposed the move on the grounds that was only to benefit a developer who owned property near the west side site and revitalization of the community would be better served by the east side location RTD supported the move because the east side location was a former waste dump and that the west side location would be more accessible for the community 30 On December 15 2010 RTD announced that the Federal Station would remain on the east side of Federal and not be moved to the west side The Adams County Commissioners who had originally requested the change withdrew their support under pressure from residents of a subdivision near the west site who opposed the private developer s plan to build higher density housing and commercial buildings around the new station site 31 Indefinite Northwest Rail Line delay Edit Originally the voter approved plan called for a 41 mile 66 km high capacity commuter rail line running from Denver Union Station to Longmont passing through North Denver Adams County Westminster Broomfield Louisville and Boulder 32 Back in early 2008 the diesel powered heavy rail service was expected to start running in late 2014 or early 2015 roughly ten years after the FasTracks vote initially with 58 trains a day ramping up over a decade to 84 trains by 2025 33 The completion of this original plan has been delayed until 2044 due to lower tax revenues and higher costs than expected 34 35 In January 2016 RTD introduced a new express bus system in the US 36 Corridor parallel to the Northwest Rail corridor Branded Flatiron Flyer it travels in high occupancy toll lanes along US 36 between Denver and Boulder 36 37 The consolidation of current express service between Denver and Boulder into this one system attracted criticism from Boulder residents since increased frequencies were balanced with some service cuts particularly to service patterns making the least number of stops between Boulder and Denver 38 39 40 Additionally the ITDP classified the system as not bus rapid transit due to the use of lanes shared with private cars along US 36 the lack of street level boarding alighting and the lack of an off board fare system 41 A plan to allow Flatiron Flyer US 36 buses on shoulders during high traffic periods required the 2016 state legislature to pass such authorization passed Jan 13 signed by governor Mar 9 effective May 1 42 43 See also EditRegional Transportation DistrictReferences Edit General FasTracks Program 2013 Fact Sheet PDF RTD Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2013 Retrieved 20 June 2013 Cathy Proctor January 5 2010 FasTracks costs have dropped but so have funds for project RTD says Denver Business Journal Retrieved June 20 2013 RTD Explores Money Options to Catch up on Unfinished FasTracks Trains a b Cotey Angela January 2015 Denver RTD makes the case for a public private funding approach Progressive Railroading Libby Smith July 2 2014 Union Station Investment To Drive Development Denver CO CBS4 Retrieved July 21 2014 Kevin Flynn January 19 2010 FasTracks cost drop for 2010 includes project cuts in addition to recessionary drop in prices as RTD scales back to hold down deficit In Denver Times Archived from the original on September 13 2012 Leib Jeffrey April 14 2010 RTD decides not to seek FasTracks tax hike this year Denver Post Retrieved April 19 2010 USDOT provides 1 billion for Denver RTD s Eagle P3 commuter rail project Progressive Railroading 1 September 2011 Archived from the original on 27 March 2012 Retrieved 1 September 2011 The New Rail Cars Rtd fastracks com FasTracks Regional Transportation District of Denver Archived from the original on 23 February 2020 Retrieved 17 April 2015 Eagle P3 Project RTD Archived from the original on August 24 2011 Retrieved June 20 2013 Eagle P3 Project Update PDF RTD March 5 2013 Retrieved June 20 2013 Eagle P3 Commuter Rail Project Denver USA Railway Technology Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 1 September 2011 Urban rail news in brief October 2010 Railway Gazette International 3 October 2010 Archived from the original on 7 October 2010 Retrieved 5 October 2010 Fas Tracks RTD FasTracks a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Fastracks Gold Line To Wheat Ridge Approved The Denver Channel 3 November 2009 Retrieved 3 September 2011 a b Proctor Cathy April 10 2015 RTD s Phil Washington bound for big L A job talks about Denver s next big challenge The Denver Business Journal Retrieved 17 April 2015 Whaley Monte 2012 08 10 RTD officials face legislative grilling over commuter rail delay The Denver Post Retrieved 22 April 2013 Whaley Monte 2013 02 04 RTD foots bill for study of northwest transit system cities sign on The Denver Post Retrieved 22 April 2013 Regional Transport District Northwest Corridor FAQ Regional Transport District Retrieved 22 April 2013 Fryar John 15 August 2018 Area cities consider funding rail service to Longmont Colorado Hometown Weekly Retrieved 19 August 2018 Heard Chatter About A Bare Bones RTD Train To Boulder Don t Hold Your Breath Colorado Public Radio Jeffrey Wolf Deborah Sherman 2007 05 18 Transportation project more than a billion dollars over budget 9News Retrieved 2007 05 18 Aguilar John June 17 2013 U S 36 widening project shifts into higher gear The Denver Post Retrieved June 20 2013 Regional Transportation District of Denver 2012 2010 FasTracks Quality of Life Detailed Report 1 86 RTD FasTracks Home Rtd fastracks com Retrieved 2015 04 17 Massey Kevin May 14 2015 RTD New Denver trains to be safer than one that crashed KUSA Retrieved 30 May 2015 ColoRail sues feds over Union Station plan Whaley Monte September 18 2012 FasTracks moves ahead with property acquisition The Denver Post Retrieved 31 May 2015 Espinoza Annette February 25 2010 Holdouts fold in fight against RTD and eminent domain The Denver Post Retrieved 31 May 2015 Leib Jeffrey November 13 2010 Adams Co neighborhood divided on possible rail station move across street The Denver Post Retrieved 31 May 2015 Leib Jeffrey 15 December 2010 RTD won t move station planned for east side of Federal to west side Denverpost com Retrieved 2015 04 17 RTD Northwest Rail Line Regional Transportation District Retrieved February 11 2015 Louisville discusses impacts of train Longmont Times Call Archived from the original on 2017 09 24 Whaley Monte August 29 2012 RTD defends FasTracks spending The Denver Post Retrieved 31 May 2015 Whaley Monte January 31 2015 Denver is being transformed by FasTracks 10 years after key vote The Denver Post Retrieved 31 May 2015 U S 36 reconstruction ongoing as is branding plan Denverpost com 2014 11 06 Retrieved 2015 04 17 Whaley Monte February 4 2013 RTD foots bill for study of northwest transit system cities sign on The Denver Post Retrieved 22 April 2013 Boulder council RTD proposals have broad impacts Boulder Daily Camera Dailycamera com 2015 02 24 Retrieved 2015 04 17 Boulder concerned about RTD transit plan along U S 36 Boulder Daily Camera Dailycamera com Retrieved 2015 04 17 RTD proposes cut of direct Boulder service Denverpost com 22 February 2015 Retrieved 2015 04 17 U S 36 bus transit plan is not what it seems group says Denverpost com 25 January 2015 Retrieved 2015 04 17 RTD s Denver Boulder buses will use shoulders to bypass jams Flatiron Flyer buses OK d to drive on U S 36 shoulders starting May 1 29 April 2016 External links EditOfficial website The Transit Alliance A non profit coalition promoting expanded rail and bus transit in the Denver Metro region Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FasTracks amp oldid 1180512957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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