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G Line (Los Angeles Metro)

The G Line (formerly the Orange Line) is a bus rapid transit line in Los Angeles, California, operated by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro). It operates between Chatsworth and North Hollywood stations in the San Fernando Valley. The 17.7-mile (28.5 km)[1] G Line uses a dedicated, exclusive right-of-way for the entirety of its route with 17 stations located at approximately one-mile (1.6 km) intervals; fares are paid via TAP cards at vending machines on station platforms before boarding to improve performance. It is one of the two lines in the Los Angeles Metro Busway system.

G Line
G Line bus traveling on the exclusive busway near Chatsworth
Overview
Other name(s)Orange Line (2005–2020)
OwnerLos Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority
Line number901
Termini
Stations17
Websitemetro.net/riding/guide/g-line
Service
TypeBus rapid transit
SystemLos Angeles Metro Busway
Depot(s)Division 8 (West San Fernando Valley)
Rolling stockNew Flyer Xcelsior XE60
Ridership4,162,794 (2022) 24%
History
OpenedOctober 29, 2005; 18 years ago (2005-10-29)
Technical
Line length17.7 miles (28.5 km)[1]
CharacterAt-grade in private right-of-way
Operating speed55 mph (89 km/h) (max.)
20 mph (32 km/h) (avg.)[2]
Route map

The line, which opened on October 29, 2005, follows part of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company's former Burbank Branch Line, which provided passenger rail service from 1904 to 1920; it was subsequently used by Pacific Electric streetcars from 1911 to 1952. At North Hollywood station, the G Line connects with the B Line subway, which offers service to Downtown Los Angeles via Hollywood. The G Line Bikeway runs alongside part of the route.

In 2020, the line was renamed from Orange Line to the G Line while retaining the color orange in its square icon as part of a complete renaming of lines by Metro.[3][4][5][6]

Service description edit

Because of its many differences from standard bus service, Metro has branded the G Line as part of the region's network of light and heavy rail lines, and it appears on the same system map as the rail lines. The buses are painted in the silver-and-gray color scheme of Metro Rail vehicles. The G Line is rarely referred to by its line number (901), but it sometimes appears on documents and destination signage.

The G Line's icon color, and former Orange Line name, were inspired by the many citrus trees that once blanketed the San Fernando Valley. In the planning stages, the G Line was known as the San Fernando Valley East-West Transitway and later the Metro Rapidway.

Operation edit

G Line buses operate 24 hours a day.[7] At peak hours (between 6 am and 7 pm eastbound, 5 am and 6 pm westbound), every other bus is a short turn, only operating between North Hollywood and Canoga station.

Station list edit

The following is the complete list of stations, from west to east.

Stations Date Opened Neighborhood Major connections and notes[8][9]
Chatsworth June 30, 2012 Chatsworth   Pacific Surfliner and    
Park and ride: 609 spaces
Nordhoff
Roscoe Canoga Park
Sherman Way Park and ride: 207 spaces
Canoga December 27, 2006[10] Park and ride: 246 spaces
De Soto October 29, 2005 Winnetka
Pierce College Park and ride: 392 spaces
Tampa Tarzana
Reseda Park and ride: 442 spaces
Balboa Lake Balboa Park and ride: 273 spaces
Woodley Van Nuys
Sepulveda Park and ride: 260 spacess
  Future connection to Sepulveda Transit Corridor
Van Nuys Park and ride: 307 spaces
  Future connection to East San Fernando Valley Light Rail Transit Project (2030)
Woodman Valley Glen
Valley College
Laurel Canyon/Valley Village Valley Village
North Hollywood North Hollywood   
Park and ride: 1,085 spaces

Ridership edit

Annual ridership
Year Ridership
2009 6,825,390
2010 7,087,074 +3.8%
2011 7,522,082 +6.1%
2012 8,528,167 +13.4%
2013 9,164,407 +7.5%
2014 8,742,210 −4.6%
2015 8,422,122 −3.7%
2016 7,754,858 −7.9%
2017 7,373,450 −4.9%
2018 7,008,626 −4.9%
2019 6,714,108 −4.2%
2020 3,523,695 −47.5%
2021 3,358,303 −4.7%
2022 4,162,794 +24.0%
Source: Metro[11]

History edit

The majority of the G Line is built on part of the former Southern Pacific Railroad Burbank branch, part of which saw Pacific Electric Red Car service (see San Fernando Line and Owensmouth Line);[12] passenger service on this segment ended in 1952,[citation needed] but the right-of-way remained undeveloped and was acquired by Metro in 1991.[12] As the Metro Rail system was being designed in the 1990s, initial plans were to build an extension of the Metro Red Line there, since the purchased right-of-way's eastern terminus was at the site of the planned North Hollywood station. However, political developments stymied these plans: community objections to surface transit along the route resulted in a 1991 law mandating that any line along the route be built as a deep-bore tunnel,[13][14] but a 1998 ballot measure driven by perceptions of mismanagement banned the use of county sales tax to fund subway tunneling.[15][16][17] Prevented from using the route for rail, Metro proceeded to create its first bus rapid transit line along the corridor, and despite further lawsuits from area residents,[18] the line opened on October 29, 2005, at a final cost of US$324 million or US$23 million per mile (US$485 million and US$34.5 million in 2022 adjusted for inflation).[19]

Then-County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky said they initially mirrored the busway concept based on a similar transit system he, then-Mayor Richard Riordan, and other elected officials toured in Curitiba, Brazil.[20]

On June 23, 2009 construction began on a four-mile (6.4 km) extension from Canoga northward along the Southern Pacific trackbed[21] to the Metrolink station in Chatsworth. Metro's board approved the plan on September 28, 2006, and it was completed in 2012 at a cost of US$215 million (US$274 million in 2022 adjusted for inflation).[22][23][24] This created two branches at the western end of the line beyond Canoga station; the older branch proceeded outside the busway on city streets to Warner Center. In 2018, this branch was eliminated and replaced with a frequent service local shuttle, leaving the entirety of the Orange Line on the dedicated right-of-way.[25]

Proposed developments edit

Grade separation and crossing gates edit

 
Orange Line bus crossing a level crossing at Burbank Boulevard and Fulton Avenue

In the first year that the busway was open, there were ten injury collisions between vehicles and buses, which were heavily covered in the media. Metro noted that the buses had about the same accident rate as other bus lines in the city on a per-mile basis,[26][27] and has stated that the line's accident rate is "less than half" of Metro's entire fleet of buses.[28] They also pointed out that the A Line also had a significant number of collisions in its early years.[29] Under pressure, Metro ordered buses to slow from 25–30 mph (40–48 km/h) to 10 mph (16 km/h) at intersections.[30][31] Starting in December 2005, red light cameras were installed at most intersections.[32]

 
Prototype grade crossing with red lights and "Busway Crossing" crossbucks, the very first in the United States

As part of the enhancement package to the LA Metro system approved by voters in 2016 with Measure M, in October 2017, Metro recommended a series of improvements to the Orange Line. These include quad-crossing gates at 34 intersections and constructing a mile-long elevated section between Sepulveda and Van Nuys Boulevard. These improvements would eliminate much of the time Orange Line buses spend waiting at red lights, would allow buses to cross intersections at higher speeds, and cut end-to-end travel time along the entire route by 29%. Projected construction costs are US$283 million.

Metro advertised a design–build project in February 2022 to convert 41 existing signalized intersections on the G Line from transit signal priority to preemption using railroad-grade-crossing-style gates and flashing light signals (similar to the prototype proof of concept at the Hayvenhurst Avenue pedestrian crossing). The project also calls for building an aerial busway and two aerial stations to grade separate three other intersections (Sepulveda, Vesper, and Van Nuys). The plans require all work to be compatible with the future conversion of the busway to the light rail.[33] Pre-construction has started[when?] with the LADWP burying the aerial power lines at the busway intersection with Sepulveda in Van Nuys. As of October 2022, Metro expects construction to begin in 2023, and the project will be completed in 2026.[34]

Capacity enhancements edit

There is concern that the G Line will soon reach its engineered capacity and has exceeded its designed capacity during peak periods.[35] Adding more buses requires platooning (running convoys of two or more buses together), similar to what rail achieves in having multiple cars per train. And while the proposed change in the previous project from priority to preemption at signalized intersections will decrease delays to G Line buses, it will come at the cost of increasing cross-street travel times and reducing their capacity since priority balances the timing needs of busway traffic with cross-traffic versus the more disruptive railroad-style preemption.[33] Another alternative involves using longer vehicles to increase each bus's capacity. In 2015, California passed a bill allowing buses up to 82 feet long to operate on the G Line busway (longer than the existing 65-foot-long articulated buses.)[36]

Conversion to light rail edit

In April 2015, a report prepared for Metro estimated that conversion of the G Line to light rail would take two to three years and cost between US$1.2 and 1.7 billion. This price would include both upgraded infrastructure and the purchase of rail vehicles. The report noted that if not upgraded in some way shortly, the G Line would soon reach capacity at rush hours.[37] Full conversion to light rail is planned to take place by 2050.[38] Different braking distances of LRT vs. BRT might be an essential concern of safety tests.

Incidents edit

On October 27, 2005, two days before the line's official opening, a motorist driving with a suspended license ran a red light and collided with an eastbound bus at Vesper Avenue. There were no injuries.[39]

In November 2005, there were two collision-caused injuries. In the first, a fare inspector on the bus was taken to a hospital for minor injuries after a 65-year-old female driver made an illegal right turn against a red light and struck an Orange Line bus near the crossing at Corbin Avenue in Reseda.[40] In the second, one person was seriously injured and 14 others hospitalized after an elderly motorist ran a red light while using a mobile phone.[41] After the second collision, Metro instructed all buses to slow down at intersections[30] and installed white strobe lights on the sides of the buses to improve visibility. They said they would review any and all ideas to improve safety on the line.[31]

In October 2006, a delivery truck hit the side of a bus. One person was seriously injured, and 16 received minor injuries.[42]

Fleet edit

 
G Line bus using on-route charger at North Hollywood station

The G Line has a dedicated fleet of 60-foot (18 m) articulated buses that each have 57 seats—about 50% more than 40-foot (12 m) non-articulated buses—and have three doors (versus two on non-articulated buses). The G Line uses a proof-of-payment system whereby fares are paid before boarding, so the buses do not have any onboard fare collection equipment. The G Line fleet is stored and maintained at Metro's Division 8 depot in Chatsworth, which has direct access to the busway.

Prior to 2021, the former G Line fleet used NABI 60-BRT buses which ran on compressed natural gas (CNG). In 2021, all NABI 60-BRT buses were replaced with 40 New Flyer Xcelsior XE60 battery-electric articulated buses.[43] Additional features of the battery-electric buses include dual air conditioning units, two additional hub-mounted motors on the middle axle, an active suspension system, USB charging ports at each seat, and public Wi-Fi. They also lack the large cooling fans of the CNG buses, which makes them quieter.[43]

Each battery-electric bus has a battery capacity of 320 kW-hr,[44] which provides a range of about 150 miles (240 km). There are ten 150 kW slow chargers at the bus depot, as well as 450 and 600 kW on-route rapid chargers at the Canoga, Chatsworth, and North Hollywood stations. The on-route chargers, which are manufactured by Siemens to the SAE J3105-1 standard, add about 40 miles (64 km) of range from a seven to ten-minute charge.[44] Both types of chargers have overhead pantographs that connect to roof-mounted contacts on the buses. The depot chargers use a one-to-many scheme, whereby 150 kW from a single charger is distributed to multiple overhead pantographs.[44][45] The electrification project cost US$80 million, including the buses (US$1.15 million each), charging equipment, and infrastructure improvements.[43]

Bike path edit

 
Bike path near Sepulveda station

The G Line Bikeway is an active transportation bicycle path that shares the right-of-way with the G Line busway.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Facts At A Glance". Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. June 2023. from the original on March 19, 2023. Retrieved June 22, 2023.
  2. ^ Stanger, Richard (2007). "An Evaluation of Los Angeles's Orange Line Busway" (PDF). Journal of Public Transportation. 10 (1): 103–119. doi:10.5038/2375-0901.10.1.5 – via Reconnecting America.
  3. ^ . LAist. September 25, 2019. Archived from the original on September 26, 2019.
  4. ^ Scauzillo, Steve (December 13, 2018). "Because they're out of colors, LA Metro will rename all its train lines and rapid busways with letters in 2019". Los Angeles Daily News. Retrieved December 14, 2018.
  5. ^ Newton, Damien (November 20, 2018). "Metro Moves Ahead with Changes to How They Name Rail/BRT". Streetsblog LA. Retrieved December 14, 2018.
  6. ^ "Meet the Line Letters: Information for Metro Employees" (PDF). LACMTA. December 2019. Retrieved January 7, 2020.
  7. ^ "Orange line timetable" (PDF). Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority. June 24, 2018. Retrieved June 24, 2018.
  8. ^ "Metro B Line (Red)". www.metro.net. Retrieved July 23, 2020.
  9. ^ "Metro Parking Lots by Line". www.metro.net. Retrieved July 23, 2020.
  10. ^ "New Canoga Station, Park & Ride Lot Opens on Western Terminus of Metro Orange Line". Metro.net (Press release). December 27, 2006.
  11. ^ "Metro Ridership". Metro.net. Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. February 2020. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  12. ^ a b Curtiss, Aaron (April 7, 1996). "Tracks to the Past". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
  13. ^ Covarrubias, Amanda (October 18, 2005). "Is a Busway the Valley Way?". Los Angeles Times. pp. A1.
  14. ^ Lopez, Steve (July 27, 2001). "Hahn Tiptoes in Front of Buses, Is Flattened". Los Angeles Times.
  15. ^ Broverman, Neal (February 4, 2014). "State Could be About to Repeal Ban on Light Rail in the Valley". LA Curbed. Retrieved October 16, 2015.
  16. ^ "Legal arguments against the busway".
  17. ^ "Public utilities code section 130250-130265". Archived from the original on December 12, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2010.
  18. ^ Liu, Caitlin; and Times Staff Writers (March 13, 2003). "Valley Busway Opponents Told to Reimburse MTA". Los Angeles Times.
  19. ^ Covarrubias, Amanda; Liu, Caitlin (November 3, 2005). "Crashes Heighten Busway Concerns". Los Angeles Times. Times Staff Writers. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  20. ^ "Beverly Hills View | Zev Yaroslavsky". October 3, 2014.
  21. ^ "Item 44 Program Management Project Budget and Schedule Status" (PDF). Metro. January 18, 2012. p. 3. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
  22. ^ Guccione, Jean. "MTA to Run Orange Line Busway to Chatsworth" September 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Los Angeles Times. September 29, 2006. B1.
  23. ^
  24. ^ "Canoga Park-Chatsworth busway construction kickoff Wednesday" June 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Sue Doyle, Daily News, Retrieved June 23, 2008
  25. ^ "Service Council approves new Warner Center circulator connecting with Orange Line". February 8, 2018.
  26. ^ "Similar bumpy roads for transit in L.A., Houston – Crashes raised safety concerns for light rail here and California's Bus Rapid Transit". December 26, 2005.
  27. ^ Liu, Caitlin. "Six Hurt in Latest Orange Line Crash" September 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Los Angeles Times. December 8, 2005.
  28. ^ LA Times – Orange Line bus crash hurts 17
  29. ^ Wells, John V (July 18, 2000). "Train Whistle at Rail Grade Crossings". Congressional Testimony.
  30. ^ a b Liu, Caitlin and Amanda Covarrubias. "Orange Line Model Beset by Crashes" October 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Los Angeles Times. November 4, 2005.
  31. ^ a b Liu, Caitlin. "Orange Line Buses May Get Strobe Light Signals" October 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Los Angeles Times. November 18, 2005.
  32. ^ Liu, Caitlin. "After Crashes, Red-Light Cameras to Be Installed at 12 Orange Line Crossings" September 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times. December 15, 2005. B1.
  33. ^ a b "LA Metro Solicitation No. PS85661 (G Line BRT Improvements Progressive Design Build)". LA Metro Vendor Portal.
  34. ^ "G Line (Orange) Improvements Project".
  35. ^ "Busway so popular, it's nearing capacity" (PDF).
  36. ^ McGreevy, Patrick (October 4, 2015). "L.A. County MTA may use even longer buses in San Fernando Valley". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 19, 2022.
  37. ^ Nelson, Laura J. (April 10, 2015). "Report: Converting Metro's Orange Line to rail could cost $1.7 billion". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 31, 2015.
  38. ^ Olga, Grigoryants (July 17, 2018). "LA's Metro says improvements are in the works for the Orange Line, with light rail in mind". Los Angeles Daily News. Retrieved July 17, 2018.
  39. ^ Liu, Caitlin. "Car Hits Bus on Transitway Test Run, Raising Concerns for Safety" October 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Los Angeles Times, October 28, 2005.
  40. ^ "Car Collides With Orange Line Bus". ABC7. November 2, 2005. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
  41. ^ "Busway Safety Controls Boosted 10 MPH Speed Ordered Entering Intersections". ...in the aftermath of Wednesday's collision that sent 15 people to the hospital, one with a severe injury. The collision, one of two Wednesday, was caused by a 78-year-old motorist who ran a red light, possibly while talking on a cell phone.
  42. ^ Silverstein, Stuart (October 24, 2006). "Orange Line bus crash hurts 17". Los Angeles Times. A crowded Orange Line bus collided with a delivery truck in the east San Fernando Valley on Monday afternoon, leaving one person seriously hurt and 16 others apparently with minor injuries, authorities said.
  43. ^ a b c Sotero, Dave (October 14, 2021). "Metro announces fully electric bus fleet on the G Line (Orange)". The Source. Retrieved October 14, 2021.
  44. ^ a b c Final Rollout Plan (PDF) (Report). Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. March 2021. p. 2-3.
  45. ^ Linton, Joe (January 27, 2020). "Eyes on the Street: Electric Chargers on the G (Orange) Line". Streetsblog Los Angeles. Retrieved February 15, 2021.

External links edit

KML is not from Wikidata
  • G Line page at LA Metro
  • LA Metro: Orange Line Extension – 4 miles (6.4 km) extension under construction from Canoga Station north to Chatsworth Metrolink Station (2012).
  • Light Rail Now: "A Bus by Any Other Name Is Still ... a Train ? " – by The Light Rail Now project.
  • Biking the Orange Line

line, angeles, metro, confused, with, orange, county, line, gtrans, line, formerly, orange, line, rapid, transit, line, angeles, california, operated, angeles, county, metropolitan, transportation, authority, metro, operates, between, chatsworth, north, hollyw. Not to be confused with Orange County Line or GTrans The G Line formerly the Orange Line is a bus rapid transit line in Los Angeles California operated by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority Metro It operates between Chatsworth and North Hollywood stations in the San Fernando Valley The 17 7 mile 28 5 km 1 G Line uses a dedicated exclusive right of way for the entirety of its route with 17 stations located at approximately one mile 1 6 km intervals fares are paid via TAP cards at vending machines on station platforms before boarding to improve performance It is one of the two lines in the Los Angeles Metro Busway system G LineG Line bus traveling on the exclusive busway near ChatsworthOverviewOther name s Orange Line 2005 2020 OwnerLos Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation AuthorityLine number901TerminiChatsworthNorth HollywoodStations17Websitemetro wbr net wbr riding wbr guide wbr g lineServiceTypeBus rapid transitSystemLos Angeles Metro BuswayDepot s Division 8 West San Fernando Valley Rolling stockNew Flyer Xcelsior XE60Ridership4 162 794 2022 24 HistoryOpenedOctober 29 2005 18 years ago 2005 10 29 TechnicalLine length17 7 miles 28 5 km 1 CharacterAt grade in private right of wayOperating speed55 mph 89 km h max 20 mph 32 km h avg 2 Route mapShow interactive mapLegend Ventura County Lineto Ventura EastChatsworth Ventura County Lineto Union StationNordhoffRoscoeSherman WayWarner Center Discontinued2018CanogaDe SotoPierce CollegeTampaResedaBalboaWoodleyI 405SepulvedaVan NuysWoodmanValley CollegeLaurel Canyon Valley VillageSR 170North Hollywood B Lineto Union StationAll stations are accessibleThis diagram viewtalkeditShow diagram mapThe line which opened on October 29 2005 follows part of the Southern Pacific Transportation Company s former Burbank Branch Line which provided passenger rail service from 1904 to 1920 it was subsequently used by Pacific Electric streetcars from 1911 to 1952 At North Hollywood station the G Line connects with the B Line subway which offers service to Downtown Los Angeles via Hollywood The G Line Bikeway runs alongside part of the route In 2020 the line was renamed from Orange Line to the G Line while retaining the color orange in its square icon as part of a complete renaming of lines by Metro 3 4 5 6 Contents 1 Service description 1 1 Operation 1 2 Station list 1 3 Ridership 2 History 3 Proposed developments 3 1 Grade separation and crossing gates 3 2 Capacity enhancements 3 3 Conversion to light rail 4 Incidents 5 Fleet 6 Bike path 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksService description editBecause of its many differences from standard bus service Metro has branded the G Line as part of the region s network of light and heavy rail lines and it appears on the same system map as the rail lines The buses are painted in the silver and gray color scheme of Metro Rail vehicles The G Line is rarely referred to by its line number 901 but it sometimes appears on documents and destination signage The G Line s icon color and former Orange Line name were inspired by the many citrus trees that once blanketed the San Fernando Valley In the planning stages the G Line was known as the San Fernando Valley East West Transitway and later the Metro Rapidway Operation edit G Line buses operate 24 hours a day 7 At peak hours between 6 am and 7 pm eastbound 5 am and 6 pm westbound every other bus is a short turn only operating between North Hollywood and Canoga station Station list edit The following is the complete list of stations from west to east Stations Date Opened Neighborhood Major connections and notes 8 9 Chatsworth June 30 2012 Chatsworth nbsp Pacific Surfliner and nbsp nbsp Park and ride 609 spacesNordhoffRoscoe Canoga ParkSherman Way Park and ride 207 spacesCanoga December 27 2006 10 Park and ride 246 spacesDe Soto October 29 2005 WinnetkaPierce College Park and ride 392 spacesTampa TarzanaReseda Park and ride 442 spacesBalboa Lake Balboa Park and ride 273 spacesWoodley Van NuysSepulveda Park and ride 260 spacess nbsp Future connection to Sepulveda Transit CorridorVan Nuys Park and ride 307 spaces nbsp Future connection to East San Fernando Valley Light Rail Transit Project 2030 Woodman Valley GlenValley CollegeLaurel Canyon Valley Village Valley VillageNorth Hollywood North Hollywood nbsp Park and ride 1 085 spacesRidership edit Annual ridership Year Ridership 2009 6 825 390 2010 7 087 074 3 8 2011 7 522 082 6 1 2012 8 528 167 13 4 2013 9 164 407 7 5 2014 8 742 210 4 6 2015 8 422 122 3 7 2016 7 754 858 7 9 2017 7 373 450 4 9 2018 7 008 626 4 9 2019 6 714 108 4 2 2020 3 523 695 47 5 2021 3 358 303 4 7 2022 4 162 794 24 0 Source Metro 11 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues History editMain article History of Los Angeles Metro Rail and Busway The majority of the G Line is built on part of the former Southern Pacific Railroad Burbank branch part of which saw Pacific Electric Red Car service see San Fernando Line and Owensmouth Line 12 passenger service on this segment ended in 1952 citation needed but the right of way remained undeveloped and was acquired by Metro in 1991 12 As the Metro Rail system was being designed in the 1990s initial plans were to build an extension of the Metro Red Line there since the purchased right of way s eastern terminus was at the site of the planned North Hollywood station However political developments stymied these plans community objections to surface transit along the route resulted in a 1991 law mandating that any line along the route be built as a deep bore tunnel 13 14 but a 1998 ballot measure driven by perceptions of mismanagement banned the use of county sales tax to fund subway tunneling 15 16 17 Prevented from using the route for rail Metro proceeded to create its first bus rapid transit line along the corridor and despite further lawsuits from area residents 18 the line opened on October 29 2005 at a final cost of US 324 million or US 23 million per mile US 485 million and US 34 5 million in 2022 adjusted for inflation 19 Then County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky said they initially mirrored the busway concept based on a similar transit system he then Mayor Richard Riordan and other elected officials toured in Curitiba Brazil 20 On June 23 2009 construction began on a four mile 6 4 km extension from Canoga northward along the Southern Pacific trackbed 21 to the Metrolink station in Chatsworth Metro s board approved the plan on September 28 2006 and it was completed in 2012 at a cost of US 215 million US 274 million in 2022 adjusted for inflation 22 23 24 This created two branches at the western end of the line beyond Canoga station the older branch proceeded outside the busway on city streets to Warner Center In 2018 this branch was eliminated and replaced with a frequent service local shuttle leaving the entirety of the Orange Line on the dedicated right of way 25 Proposed developments editGrade separation and crossing gates edit nbsp Orange Line bus crossing a level crossing at Burbank Boulevard and Fulton AvenueIn the first year that the busway was open there were ten injury collisions between vehicles and buses which were heavily covered in the media Metro noted that the buses had about the same accident rate as other bus lines in the city on a per mile basis 26 27 and has stated that the line s accident rate is less than half of Metro s entire fleet of buses 28 They also pointed out that the A Line also had a significant number of collisions in its early years 29 Under pressure Metro ordered buses to slow from 25 30 mph 40 48 km h to 10 mph 16 km h at intersections 30 31 Starting in December 2005 red light cameras were installed at most intersections 32 nbsp Prototype grade crossing with red lights and Busway Crossing crossbucks the very first in the United StatesAs part of the enhancement package to the LA Metro system approved by voters in 2016 with Measure M in October 2017 Metro recommended a series of improvements to the Orange Line These include quad crossing gates at 34 intersections and constructing a mile long elevated section between Sepulveda and Van Nuys Boulevard These improvements would eliminate much of the time Orange Line buses spend waiting at red lights would allow buses to cross intersections at higher speeds and cut end to end travel time along the entire route by 29 Projected construction costs are US 283 million Metro advertised a design build project in February 2022 to convert 41 existing signalized intersections on the G Line from transit signal priority to preemption using railroad grade crossing style gates and flashing light signals similar to the prototype proof of concept at the Hayvenhurst Avenue pedestrian crossing The project also calls for building an aerial busway and two aerial stations to grade separate three other intersections Sepulveda Vesper and Van Nuys The plans require all work to be compatible with the future conversion of the busway to the light rail 33 Pre construction has started when with the LADWP burying the aerial power lines at the busway intersection with Sepulveda in Van Nuys As of October 2022 Metro expects construction to begin in 2023 and the project will be completed in 2026 34 Capacity enhancements edit There is concern that the G Line will soon reach its engineered capacity and has exceeded its designed capacity during peak periods 35 Adding more buses requires platooning running convoys of two or more buses together similar to what rail achieves in having multiple cars per train And while the proposed change in the previous project from priority to preemption at signalized intersections will decrease delays to G Line buses it will come at the cost of increasing cross street travel times and reducing their capacity since priority balances the timing needs of busway traffic with cross traffic versus the more disruptive railroad style preemption 33 Another alternative involves using longer vehicles to increase each bus s capacity In 2015 California passed a bill allowing buses up to 82 feet long to operate on the G Line busway longer than the existing 65 foot long articulated buses 36 Conversion to light rail edit In April 2015 a report prepared for Metro estimated that conversion of the G Line to light rail would take two to three years and cost between US 1 2 and 1 7 billion This price would include both upgraded infrastructure and the purchase of rail vehicles The report noted that if not upgraded in some way shortly the G Line would soon reach capacity at rush hours 37 Full conversion to light rail is planned to take place by 2050 38 Different braking distances of LRT vs BRT might be an essential concern of safety tests Incidents editOn October 27 2005 two days before the line s official opening a motorist driving with a suspended license ran a red light and collided with an eastbound bus at Vesper Avenue There were no injuries 39 In November 2005 there were two collision caused injuries In the first a fare inspector on the bus was taken to a hospital for minor injuries after a 65 year old female driver made an illegal right turn against a red light and struck an Orange Line bus near the crossing at Corbin Avenue in Reseda 40 In the second one person was seriously injured and 14 others hospitalized after an elderly motorist ran a red light while using a mobile phone 41 After the second collision Metro instructed all buses to slow down at intersections 30 and installed white strobe lights on the sides of the buses to improve visibility They said they would review any and all ideas to improve safety on the line 31 In October 2006 a delivery truck hit the side of a bus One person was seriously injured and 16 received minor injuries 42 Fleet edit nbsp G Line bus using on route charger at North Hollywood stationThe G Line has a dedicated fleet of 60 foot 18 m articulated buses that each have 57 seats about 50 more than 40 foot 12 m non articulated buses and have three doors versus two on non articulated buses The G Line uses a proof of payment system whereby fares are paid before boarding so the buses do not have any onboard fare collection equipment The G Line fleet is stored and maintained at Metro s Division 8 depot in Chatsworth which has direct access to the busway Prior to 2021 the former G Line fleet used NABI 60 BRT buses which ran on compressed natural gas CNG In 2021 all NABI 60 BRT buses were replaced with 40 New Flyer Xcelsior XE60 battery electric articulated buses 43 Additional features of the battery electric buses include dual air conditioning units two additional hub mounted motors on the middle axle an active suspension system USB charging ports at each seat and public Wi Fi They also lack the large cooling fans of the CNG buses which makes them quieter 43 Each battery electric bus has a battery capacity of 320 kW hr 44 which provides a range of about 150 miles 240 km There are ten 150 kW slow chargers at the bus depot as well as 450 and 600 kW on route rapid chargers at the Canoga Chatsworth and North Hollywood stations The on route chargers which are manufactured by Siemens to the SAE J3105 1 standard add about 40 miles 64 km of range from a seven to ten minute charge 44 Both types of chargers have overhead pantographs that connect to roof mounted contacts on the buses The depot chargers use a one to many scheme whereby 150 kW from a single charger is distributed to multiple overhead pantographs 44 45 The electrification project cost US 80 million including the buses US 1 15 million each charging equipment and infrastructure improvements 43 Bike path editMain article G Line Bikeway nbsp Bike path near Sepulveda stationThe G Line Bikeway is an active transportation bicycle path that shares the right of way with the G Line busway See also edit nbsp Greater Los Angeles portal nbsp Buses portal List of Los Angeles Metro Busway stations List of Los Angeles bike pathsReferences edit a b Facts At A Glance Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority June 2023 Archived from the original on March 19 2023 Retrieved June 22 2023 Stanger Richard 2007 An Evaluation of Los Angeles s Orange Line Busway PDF Journal of Public Transportation 10 1 103 119 doi 10 5038 2375 0901 10 1 5 via Reconnecting America Ignore Those Line A Signs Metro s Blue Line Will Reopen As The A Line LAist September 25 2019 Archived from the original on September 26 2019 Scauzillo Steve December 13 2018 Because they re out of colors LA Metro will rename all its train lines and rapid busways with letters in 2019 Los Angeles Daily News Retrieved December 14 2018 Newton Damien November 20 2018 Metro Moves Ahead with Changes to How They Name Rail BRT Streetsblog LA Retrieved December 14 2018 Meet the Line Letters Information for Metro Employees PDF LACMTA December 2019 Retrieved January 7 2020 Orange line timetable PDF Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transit Authority June 24 2018 Retrieved June 24 2018 Metro B Line Red www metro net Retrieved July 23 2020 Metro Parking Lots by Line www metro net Retrieved July 23 2020 New Canoga Station Park amp Ride Lot Opens on Western Terminus of Metro Orange Line Metro net Press release December 27 2006 Metro Ridership Metro net Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority February 2020 Retrieved December 1 2020 a b Curtiss Aaron April 7 1996 Tracks to the Past Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 31 2021 Covarrubias Amanda October 18 2005 Is a Busway the Valley Way Los Angeles Times pp A1 Lopez Steve July 27 2001 Hahn Tiptoes in Front of Buses Is Flattened Los Angeles Times Broverman Neal February 4 2014 State Could be About to Repeal Ban on Light Rail in the Valley LA Curbed Retrieved October 16 2015 Legal arguments against the busway Public utilities code section 130250 130265 Archived from the original on December 12 2012 Retrieved October 6 2010 Liu Caitlin and Times Staff Writers March 13 2003 Valley Busway Opponents Told to Reimburse MTA Los Angeles Times Covarrubias Amanda Liu Caitlin November 3 2005 Crashes Heighten Busway Concerns Los Angeles Times Times Staff Writers Retrieved May 9 2022 Beverly Hills View Zev Yaroslavsky October 3 2014 Item 44 Program Management Project Budget and Schedule Status PDF Metro January 18 2012 p 3 Retrieved December 26 2013 Guccione Jean MTA to Run Orange Line Busway to Chatsworth Archived September 23 2012 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times September 29 2006 B1 extension diagram Canoga Park Chatsworth busway construction kickoff Wednesday Archived June 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine Sue Doyle Daily News Retrieved June 23 2008 Service Council approves new Warner Center circulator connecting with Orange Line February 8 2018 Similar bumpy roads for transit in L A Houston Crashes raised safety concerns for light rail here and California s Bus Rapid Transit December 26 2005 Liu Caitlin Six Hurt in Latest Orange Line Crash Archived September 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times December 8 2005 LA Times Orange Line bus crash hurts 17 Wells John V July 18 2000 Train Whistle at Rail Grade Crossings Congressional Testimony a b Liu Caitlin and Amanda Covarrubias Orange Line Model Beset by Crashes Archived October 19 2012 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times November 4 2005 a b Liu Caitlin Orange Line Buses May Get Strobe Light Signals Archived October 19 2012 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times November 18 2005 Liu Caitlin After Crashes Red Light Cameras to Be Installed at 12 Orange Line Crossings Archived September 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times December 15 2005 B1 a b LA Metro Solicitation No PS85661 G Line BRT Improvements Progressive Design Build LA Metro Vendor Portal G Line Orange Improvements Project Busway so popular it s nearing capacity PDF McGreevy Patrick October 4 2015 L A County MTA may use even longer buses in San Fernando Valley Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 19 2022 Nelson Laura J April 10 2015 Report Converting Metro s Orange Line to rail could cost 1 7 billion Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 31 2015 Olga Grigoryants July 17 2018 LA s Metro says improvements are in the works for the Orange Line with light rail in mind Los Angeles Daily News Retrieved July 17 2018 Liu Caitlin Car Hits Bus on Transitway Test Run Raising Concerns for Safety Archived October 19 2012 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times October 28 2005 Car Collides With Orange Line Bus ABC7 November 2 2005 Retrieved December 26 2013 Busway Safety Controls Boosted 10 MPH Speed Ordered Entering Intersections in the aftermath of Wednesday s collision that sent 15 people to the hospital one with a severe injury The collision one of two Wednesday was caused by a 78 year old motorist who ran a red light possibly while talking on a cell phone Silverstein Stuart October 24 2006 Orange Line bus crash hurts 17 Los Angeles Times A crowded Orange Line bus collided with a delivery truck in the east San Fernando Valley on Monday afternoon leaving one person seriously hurt and 16 others apparently with minor injuries authorities said a b c Sotero Dave October 14 2021 Metro announces fully electric bus fleet on the G Line Orange The Source Retrieved October 14 2021 a b c Final Rollout Plan PDF Report Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority March 2021 p 2 3 Linton Joe January 27 2020 Eyes on the Street Electric Chargers on the G Orange Line Streetsblog Los Angeles Retrieved February 15 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to G Line Los Angeles Metro KML file edit help Template Attached KML G Line Los Angeles Metro KML is not from Wikidata G Line page at LA Metro LA Metro Orange Line Extension 4 miles 6 4 km extension under construction from Canoga Station north to Chatsworth Metrolink Station 2012 Orange Line history Light Rail Now A Bus by Any Other Name Is Still a Train by The Light Rail Now project Biking the Orange Line Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title G Line Los Angeles Metro amp oldid 1181149986, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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