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Wikipedia

Green Line (MBTA)

The Green Line is a light rail system run by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) in the Boston, Massachusetts, metropolitan area. It is the oldest MBTA subway line, and with tunnel sections dating from 1897, the oldest subway in North America.[4] It runs underground through downtown Boston, and on the surface into inner suburbs via six branches on radial boulevards and grade-separated alignments. With an average daily weekday ridership of 137,700 in 2019, it is the third most heavily used light rail system in the country.[1] The line was assigned the green color in 1967 during a systemwide rebranding because several branches pass through sections of the Emerald Necklace of Boston.[5][6][7]

Green Line
Green Line train composed of a Kinki Sharyo Type 7 (rear) and an AnsaldoBreda Type 8 (front) on the C branch
Overview
OwnerMassachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
LocaleBoston, Brookline, Cambridge, Medford, Newton, and Somerville, Massachusetts
Termini
Stations70
Service
TypeLight rail
SystemMBTA subway
Services4 (B branch, C branch, D branch, E branch)
Rolling stockKinki Sharyo Type 7
AnsaldoBreda Type 8
CAF Type 9
Daily ridership137,700 (Q4 2019)[1]
History
OpenedSeptember 1, 1897 (1897-09-01) (Tremont Street subway)
Technical
Line length26.7 miles (43.0 km) [2]
CharacterSubway, grade-separated surface ROW, viaduct, median reservation, street running
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Minimum radius33 feet (10 m)[3]
ElectrificationOverhead line600 V DC
Route map

Mystic Valley Parkway
proposed
Medford/​Tufts
Ball Square
Magoun Square
Gilman Square
East Somerville
Union Square
Lechmere
Lechmere
closed 2020
Science Park
North Station
Canal Street Incline (
closed
2004
)
Haymarket
Government Center
Park Street
Boylston
Arlington
Copley
Copley Junction
Hynes Convention Center
Kenmore
Cleveland Circle
Reservoir

The four branches are the remnants of a large streetcar system, which began in 1856 with the Cambridge Horse Railroad and was consolidated into the Boston Elevated Railway several decades later. The branches all travel downtown through the Tremont Street subway, the oldest subway tunnel in North America. The Tremont Street subway opened its first section on September 1, 1897, to take streetcars off overcrowded downtown streets; it was extended five times over the next five decades. The streetcar system peaked in size around 1930 and was gradually replaced with trackless trolleys and buses, with cuts as late as 1985. The new D branch opened on a converted commuter rail line in 1959. The Green Line Extension project extended two branches into Somerville and Medford in 2022.

Route description

 
Schematic map of Green Line branches and stations

The Green Line's core is the central subway, a group of tunnels which run through downtown Boston.[8] The Tremont Street subway runs roughly north–south through downtown, with stations at Boylston, Park Street, Government Center, Haymarket, and North Station – all with connections to other lines of the MBTA subway system. The Boylston Street subway runs roughly east–west through the Back Bay neighborhood, with stations at Arlington, Copley, Hynes Convention Center, and Kenmore; it connects to the Tremont Street subway at Boylston. The Huntington Avenue subway diverges from the Boylston Street subway at a flat junction west of Copley, running southwest with stations at Prudential and Symphony.[9]: 96  A branch of the Tremont Street subway, disused since 1962, runs south from Boylston to the former Pleasant Street incline.

The Green Line has four western surface branches, each with a letter designation:

B and C branch service terminates at Government Center, while D and E branch service continues north from downtown Boston. North of North Station, the line inclines up to the Lechmere Viaduct, which crosses the Charles River with an elevated station at Science Park. The elevated Lechmere station is located on the Green Line Extension viaduct, which continues north to a flying junction with two branches:

Former branches

The Green Line A branch was the northernmost of the branches, running from the Blandford Street portal (still used by the B branch), west to Watertown, mostly street-running. The 57 bus replaced the streetcar line in 1969. The A branch diverged from Commonwealth Avenue west of Boston University and ran to a terminus in Watertown, across the Charles River from Watertown Square, until 1969. Although the route-letter scheme had been introduced two years prior to its closure, the "A" designation was never signed on streetcars to Watertown. It was, however, included in the destination signs on the Boeing-Vertol LRVs ordered in the mid-1970s, when reopening service to Watertown was under consideration. The "A" line tracks remained in non-revenue service to access maintenance facilities at Watertown until 1994.

The Pleasant Street portal hosted two services in its final days. The 9 to City Point ended in 1953, and the 43 to Egleston was cut back to Lenox Street in 1956, cut back to the portal in 1961, and ended operation in 1962. Prior to that, the 48 ran out Tremont Street to Dover Street and Washington Street, ending at Dudley, and last running in 1938.

The last two routes to continue beyond the Canal Street portal both ran to Sullivan. The 92 ran via Main Street, last running in 1948, and the 93 via Bunker Hill Street last ran in 1949. Until 1997 trains continued to use the portal and its North Station surface station as a terminal.

In addition to the lines that later became the E branch, the predecessors to the 58 and 60 split in Brookline, one branch running into the current "E" tracks and into the Boylston Street portal, and the other running up Brookline Street to end at Massachusetts Avenue station. These were truncated in 1932 into a shorter route from Brookline Village to the subway via the Boylston Street portal, which itself stopped running in 1938 (being cut back to Brigham Circle short-turn trips), three years before the closure of that portal.

The last "foreign" cars to operate in the subway were those of the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, running from the Canal Street portal to the Brattle Loop at Scollay Square until 1935. It was then that the old Mystic River Bridge to Chelsea was closed to streetcars and the lines were replaced by bus service; the next year the BERy bought the Eastern Mass Chelsea Division and through-routed it with its lines connecting to the East Boston Tunnel at Maverick.

Rolling stock

Like the three other MBTA subway lines, the line uses standard gauge tracks. However, instead of heavy rail metro rolling stock, the Green Line uses modern streetcars (light rail vehicles) as heavy rail stock would be inappropriate for the surface branches with their numerous grade crossings.

Listing

Active fleet

Rolling stock as of July 2021:[2][10][11]

Year Built Manufacturer Model Image Length Width Fleet Numbers Quantity
1986–1988 Kinki Sharyo Type 7 LRV [ja]   72 ft (22 m) 104 in (2.64 m) 3600–3699 100 (83 active, all overhauled)
1997   3700–3719 20 (15 active, all overhauled)
1998–2007 AnsaldoBreda Type 8 LRV   74 ft (23 m) 104 in (2.64 m) 3800–3894 95 (92 active)
2018–2020 CAF USA Type 9 LRV   3900–3923 24 (all active)

Retired fleet

Only MBTA operated vehicles are included here, not cars from the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) era.

Years in Service Manufacturer Model Image Length Width Fleet Numbers Quantity
1976–2007 Boeing Vertol US Standard Light Rail Vehicle   71 ft (22 m) 104 in (2.64 m) 3400–3543 144 (31 units cancelled)
1937–1985[a] Pullman Standard PCC streetcar   48 ft (15 m) 100 in (2.54 m) 3000–3346 344 (2 cars scrapped before 1964)
  1. ^ 10 PCC streetcars are currently in revenue service on the Mattapan line.

History

Early rolling stock

 
PCC streetcars on the D branch in 1965

When it opened at the end of the 19th century, the Tremont Street subway was not intended as a full-scale rapid transit line (though it was built to pre-metro standards), but to allow ordinary streetcars to bypass the worst street congestion in downtown Boston.[4][12] Operations by several different companies were eventually consolidated into the Boston Elevated Railway, which ran a mixture of car types. After receiving a test unit in 1937, the BERy began to standardize on PCC streetcars, acquiring 320 units between 1941 and 1951 plus an additional 25 in 1959 to phase out the last older cars.[10]

Two older streetcars are on display on the unused outer inbound track at Boylston station, which formerly carried cars coming from the Pleasant Street portal. Car #5734, a Type 5 A-1 car built in 1924 and retired in 1959, is owned by the Seashore Trolley Museum, but resides semipermanently in Boston. PCC #3295, built in 1951 and retired in 1986, is owned by the MBTA.[10] The cars were formerly used for fantrips, the most recent one being in 1998.

Boeing LRV

 
Boeing LRV on the C branch in 2005

In the early 1970s, light rail—which had largely disappeared from North America after the slow decline of streetcar systems from the 1920s to the 1950s—was reintroduced as a method of urban renewal less expensive than conventional metro systems.[13] In 1971, as part of a program to supply further work to defense contractors as the Vietnam War wound down, the Urban Mass Transit Administration selected Boeing Vertol as systems manager for a project to design a new generic light rail vehicle. The UMTA hoped that this "US Standard Light Rail Vehicle" would jumpstart the development of transit lines just as the standardized PCC streetcars had done decades prior.[14]

Boston (with its older streetcar tunnel systems) and San Francisco (with a new Muni Metro streetcar tunnel being built as part of BART construction) were chosen as the testbeds for this new rolling stock.[13][15] The vehicle was designed as the largest rolling stock that would fit through the Tremont Street tunnel, the Muni Metro's Twin Peaks Tunnel, and SEPTA's subway–surface lines tunnel.[12] The new cars were faster—a top speed of 50 miles per hour (80 km/h) versus the PCC's 36 miles per hour (58 km/h)—and had an articulated middle section for higher capacity.[12]

Boeing began construction of 175 cars for the MBTA in May 1973.[14] The first LRVs entered service on the D branch in December 1976 but were immediately beset with problems. Certain cars frequently derailed on tight turns in the Riverside, Boston College and Lechmere yards. Battery trays, air conditioners—mounted under the cars, continually drawing in dirt and debris from under the car when in the tunnels—and air compressors all suffered numerous failures; the plug-style doors had trouble sealing properly; and traction motors failed sooner than expected.[16]

Desperate for reliable rolling stock, in 1977 MBTA launched an overhaul program to extend the availability of its older PCC cars. A total of 34 cars, primarily out-of-service wrecks and parts cars, were rebuilt to as-new condition.[16] As of 2022, some of these rebuilt PCC cars still run on the Ashmont–Mattapan High Speed Line.[10][16]

After years of fighting between the MBTA and Boeing-Vertol, both sides reached a settlement in 1979. MBTA was allowed to reject the final 40 SLRVs, and Boeing would return $40 million to MBTA for the cost of repairs and modifications to several cars.[17][18]

Modern fleet

 
Type 7 (left) and Type 8 streetcars at Tappan Street in 2012
 
Type 9 streetcar in 2018

In the early 1980s, with a final settlement with Boeing in place, MBTA started looking for new equipment to supplement and replace the problematic LRVs.

In 1980, the MBTA tested Canadian Light Rail Vehicles for three months to determine whether they could be used on the Green Line.[19] The MBTA ultimately found them unsuitable.

Ultimately, the MBTA purchased LRVs from the Japanese firm Kinki Sharyo. These Type 7 were designed with the best features of the US SLRV, the Canadian LRV, and the PCC cars. A total of 120 Type 7 vehicles were purchased, 100 were delivered between 1986 and 1988, and an additional 20 cars ordered and delivered in 1997.[20]

Low-floor LRVs were added starting in 1998, allowing for accessible boarding directly from slightly raised platforms. MBTA ordered 100 of these Type 8 cars from Italian company AnsaldoBreda.[10] The first Type 8s entered revenue service in March 1999, and quickly proved problematic and difficult to maintain: the first cars failed every 400 miles (640 km), far short of the 9,000 miles (14,000 km) specified by the MBTA, and were prone to derailment at higher speeds as well as brake problems, echoing the problems with the Boeing stock. In December 2004, the MBTA canceled orders for the cars still to be delivered as part of the authority's nine-year, US$225 million deal with Breda.[21] One year later, in December 2005 the MBTA announced that it had entered into a restructuring of the deal, reducing the order to 85 cars (with spare parts to be provided in lieu of the 15 remaining cars), and providing for the remaining payment under the original deal only if the cars met performance requirements.[22] Construction of the last car under the order was completed on December 14, 2006.[23] Ultimately, 10 additional cars would be assembled and delivered in late 2007, with five spare shells retained (95 cars in service). The MBTA was criticized for their failure to assess Bredas' reliability before entering into the deal, and during delivery. The agency was also forced to spend an additional US$9.5 million to modify tracks to prevent derailments and the Type 8 fleet was unable to be used on the D branch (where cars reach full speed) after those modifications were complete in 2008.[5]

As the final Type 8s were delivered, the last of the Boeing-Vertol cars were retired in March 2007 and all except ten of the cars were scrapped.[24] Of the remaining cars, six were sold to the US Government and are now in Pueblo, Colorado for testing purposes, one was given to the Seashore Trolley Museum, and three were retained by the MBTA for work service.

In 2006, as part of a legal settlement, the MBTA committed to always operate at least one low-floor car in each train, with no trains consisting only of Type 7 cars.[25]

Of the 120 Type 7 cars, 103 were overhauled by Alstom in Hornell, New York. The work includes new propulsion systems, climate control systems and interiors as well as exterior work. The pilot car for the program left in October 2012 and was returned in November 2014, with the last car overhauled in April 2019.[26][10]

Twenty-four new Type 9 Green Line cars were delivered between 2017 and 2020. Revenue service began in late 2018 and all 24 cars were planned to enter service by the fall of 2019, although actual acceptance continued through 2021. The Type 9 cars will provide additional rolling stock to allow for Green Line Extension operations, and will not replace any of the existing fleet.[27] The cars were made by CAF USA, Inc., with the shells and frames made in Spain, and final assembly and testing done at their plant in Elmira, New York.[28] As of March 2017, the first unit had been expected to enter passenger service in Spring 2018, with all 24 cars in service by the end of the year.[29] The first Type 9 car, #3900, began revenue service on December 21, 2018.[30]

Future fleet

 
Render of a planned Type 10 "Supercar" LRV

Planning for a Type 10 fleet—which would replace all Type 7 and Type 8 cars in the mid-2020s—began in 2018 with plans for a fully low floor fleet.[31][32] At 113 feet (34 m) long, Type 10 cars would be significantly longer than the existing fleet, and carry twice as many passengers as existing cars.[33] The MBTA released a request for proposals in December 2019, with notice to proceed expected to be given in 2021. In June 2021, the MBTA indicated that the initial order would be for 102 LRVs operating as single-car trains, with two-car trains deferred for a later project with federal funding. Manufacturer bids were due in July 2021.[34]: 9 

The MBTA awarded a $811 million contract to CAF USA on August 31, 2022, to manufacture 102 seven-segment Type 10 "Supercar" LRVs. Four pilot vehicles are to be delivered in spring 2026, with deliveries of two LRVs per month from spring 2027 to spring 2031.[35] The contract included options for additional LRVs.[36] As a separately-funded project, Lake Street Yard will be fully reconstructed to support Type 10 vehicles, with Riverside Yard and the GLX Vehicle Maintenance Facility also modified.[37] When the Type 10 cars are delivered, the Type 9 fleet is expected to be transferred over to the Ashmont–Mattapan High-Speed Line, replacing the PCC streetcars.[33]

Accessibility

 
A low-floor Type 8 car at Longwood station, which has slightly raised platforms for accessible boarding

The Red Line, Blue Line, and Orange Line run rapid transit cars and use stations with high platforms level with the car floor providing easy access for the disabled. The Green Line originated as a streetcar line, and used a variety of streetcars before converting to light rail vehicles.

Originally all the Green Line stations had platforms at track level, and passengers had to ascend several steps up into the vehicles. This limited accessibility for persons with disabilities. To address this issue and comply with changing federal and state laws, additional facilities have been added:[38]

  • Wheelchair lifts have been provided at some stops. They are rolled up to the car door and the lift mechanism is operated using a hand crank. They are quite time-consuming to operate, causing significant delays when used during peak periods.
  • Short platforms level with car floors, accessed by ramps, were installed just before or after selected stations. Because the car door arrangement required a large gap between the platform and the car, a bridge plate attached to the raised platform had to be positioned after the train stopped with a door at that platform.
  • The MBTA has followed the worldwide trend of operating low-floor streetcars. Platforms are being raised slightly to about the height of a street curb. Low-floor cars have remotely controlled bridge plates at the center doors to allow wheelchairs and strollers to reach the car floor a few inches higher.[citation needed] As of 2022, the D branch will be the first branch to be completely retrofitted with raised platforms as part of this program.[39]

History

Beginning in the 1850s, Boston sprouted a large network of horsecar lines, the first public transit in the city. The West End Street Railway was created by the state legislature in 1887 to build a single line, but soon consolidated many of the existing lines into a single privately owned system with consistent fares and route designations. The Allston – Park Square line (which served the general area of the A branch) was the first section to be converted to electric traction in 1889. It used modified existing horsecars outfitted with Frank J. Sprague's revolutionary electrical equipment, which had first been demonstrated the previous year in Richmond, Virginia.[40]: 9–10  In 1897, the West End Street Railway property was handed over to the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) in the form of a 24-year lease, and the companies were ultimately combined.

By the early 1890s, the sheer quantity of streetcars during peak periods was clogging the streets of downtown Boston. The Tremont Street subway, the first passenger subway in North America, was opened in stages in 1897 and 1898, with underground stations at Boylston, Park Street, Scollay Square, Adams Square, and Haymarket. The Main Line Elevated was run through the tunnel from 1901, displacing through-running streetcars,[40]: 19–21  until it was rerouted to its own Washington Street Tunnel in 1908, and the streetcars were returned to the Tremont tunnel.[40]: 27 

Though initially intended merely to clear streetcars from the busiest sections of downtown streets, the Tremont Street subway became useful as a rapid transit service in its own right. The 1912 completion of the Causeway Street Elevated and Lechmere Viaduct extended grade-separated service to Lechmere Square in Cambridge, and in 1922 the Lechmere transfer station was built. In 1914, the Boylston Street subway opened as a westward extension to just short of Kenmore Square, and in 1933 Kenmore station and short tunnel extensions towards two surface lines were added. In 1941, the Huntington Avenue subway and its two additional underground stations removed the last surface streetcars from downtown Boston.

Beginning in the 1930s, the massive surface streetcar system was "bustituted" with buses and trackless trolleys which had lower operating costs and more flexible routes. As the 1950s closed out, the only remaining streetcar lines were the Watertown Line, Commonwealth Avenue Line, Beacon Street Line, Arborway Line, and the Lenox Street Line plus several short turn services. In 1959, the Boston and Albany Railroad's Highland Branch was converted to the Riverside Line, a fully grade-separated suburban service. In 1961, the last through service to Lenox Street via the Pleasant Street portal ended, though a Pleasant Street – Boylston shuttle continued for one more year. In 1963, part of the original subway was rebuilt under Government Center, abandoning and partially demolishing Adams Square station.

In 1947, the now-bankrupt BERy was replaced by the public Metropolitan Transit Authority (M.T.A.). The new agency was unpopular, even spawning a popular protest song; in 1964, it was replaced with the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority which had an expanded funding area to preserve suburban commuter rail lines. In 1967, as part of a systemwide rebranding that included new station names and color names for the transit lines, the remaining streetcar services were designated the "Green Line" because several of them traveled near the Emerald Necklace park system. The streetcar lines were given letter designations: "A" to the Watertown Line, "B" to the Commonwealth Avenue Line, "C" to the Beacon Street Line, "D" to the Riverside Line, and "E" to the Arborway Line.

The Watertown Line ran mostly in mixed traffic after diverging from Commonwealth Avenue; it was permanently replaced with buses in 1969. The section of the Arborway Line past Heath Street was "temporarily" – ultimately permanently – bustituted in 1985. In 2001, with new low-floor streetcars entering service, the MBTA began retrofitting underground stations and major surface stops with low raised platforms for accessibility for all. In 2004, the Causeway Street Elevated was replaced with a new tunnel under the Boston Garden, which consolidated the Orange Line and Green Line at a new North Station "superstation", while continuing to connect to Commuter Rail service north of Boston.

The name "Green Line" was assigned in 1967 as part of a major reorganization of the MBTA system's branding.[5] In the 1970s, the Green Line and all other MBTA lines were re-evaluated by the Boston Transportation Planning Review for region-wide efficacy and future modernization alternatives initiated as far as physical plant and operating measures.

Operations and signaling

 
Trains on the D branch operate using wayside signals.

As of February 2022, each of the four branches operate on 7 or 7.5-minute headways during weekday peak hours, and 7.5 to 12 minute headways at other times. Vehicle usage ranges from 44 trains (88 cars) to 60 trains (120 cars).[41]

Unlike the MBTA heavy rail subway lines, the Green Line has only limited central control and monitoring. This also means that it has lagged behind the other three rail lines in the availability of countdown signs and "next train" arrival information. The line is signalled with advisory wayside signals, except on surface portions in street medians or in-street running. Wayside signal territory stretches from Lechmere to the surface portals at Kenmore, and along the entire length of the D–Riverside branch. There are no automatic protection devices, but the cars have track brakes, giving the ability to stop quickly under control of the operator. Interlockings are controlled through a wayside Automatic Vehicle Identification (AVI) system that relies on the operator properly entering the destination manually on a roto-wheel in the train cab at the beginning of a run.

The line is monitored from the Operations Control Center (OCC). Responsibility for controlling service is shared by the control room and field personnel along the right of way. Track circuit and signal indications are not transmitted to the operational personnel sites. In lieu of track circuit indications, the AVI system is displayed in the control room to provide a periodic update to train position wherever AVI detectors exist. The AVI system user interface was solely text based until the current control room was opened, in which a new schematic display based on AVI data was instituted. Track circuit indications are available digitally in signal houses at the Park Street interlocking, at the new North Station interlocking, and at the new Kenmore interlocking, but are not transmitted to OCC. In January 2013, the MBTA announced plans to add full vehicle location tracking on the Green Line for countdown signs and smartphone applications, including using AVI data in the tunnels and GPS receivers on the surface lines.[42] The first real-time data—location data on the surface lines—became available in October 2014. Full tracking was expected by early 2015.[43]

The MBTA typically runs two-car trains at all times. The last scheduled use of one-car trains on weekdays was in March 2007.[5] Three-car trains were added on the B and D branches in 2010 – their first use since 2005 – and a four-car train was tested in April 2011.[5] In March 2011, the number of three-car trains was substantially increased, including use on the E branch.[5][44] However, three-car trains suffered from reliability problems and slow boarding.[45] The use of three-car trains ended in March 2016.[5]

The MBTA approved a $82.6 million contract in May 2019 for a train protection system for the Green Line. The system will enforce red signals and automatically stop a train if it approaches another train too closely.[46] The project was 28% complete by December 2021; installation of in-vehicle electronics was scheduled to be complete by September 2023, with wayside installation complete in June 2024 and full operation that December.[47] A reallocation of funds in January 2022 shortened the project timeline, with completion expected in 2023.[48] However, in January 2023, an NTSB report found that the project had been delayed to June 2025.[49]

Turnarounds

 
A test train on the loop at Kenmore station in 2019

Aside from the terminal stations, several locations have turnaround loops or crossover switches where trains can reverse direction for short turns. Two of these, where northbound trains can turn southbound, are regularly used as the downtown terminals for the branches:

Several other loops and crossovers are not used in regular revenue service, but may be used during construction work or service disruptions, or for non-revenue trains:[2]

  • At Government Center, the Brattle Loop allows southbound trains to turn northbound.
  • At Park Street, a loop connects the inner tracks. The MBTA plans to add a crossover to allow through movements from the terminating (inner) northbound platform at Park Street are expected to increase capacity and reliability.[50]
  • At Kenmore, a loop allows eastbound (inbound) C and D branch trains to turn westbound.
  • On the B branch, a pocket track at Blandford Street allows trains to reverse in either direction. It is sometimes used to reverse westbound trains to provide extra service in the subway. Occasionally-used crossovers are located at Babcock Street, Washington Street, and east of Boston College.
  • On the C branch, occasionally-used crossovers are located at St. Mary's Street and Coolidge Corner.
  • On the D branch, occasionally-used crossovers are located west of Fenway, Brookline Hills, Beaconsfield, Reservoir, Newton Highlands, and Waban. At Reservoir, the spur tracks to Reservoir Carhouse have platforms for short turn trains.
  • On the E branch, crossovers are located at Prudential, Northeastern University, and Brigham Circle, along with a siding at Northeastern. The Brigham Circle crossover is frequently used for short turns during traffic congestion on the street-running section of the line.

Location tracking

 
Activated countdown signs at Kenmore station in August 2015

The Red, Orange, and Blue lines have block signalling systems that make tracking the location of trains easier. Signs in most station on those lines began to display real-time train information in late 2012 and early 2013, while data feeds have been available for smartphone applications since 2010.[42] However, the wayside signalling system used in the Green Line's tunnels and the D branch does not provide for that level of tracking, nor do the basic stop/go signals used on the street-level branch lines. In January 2013, the MBTA announced plans to provide full tracking data for the Green Line by 2015, allowing use of smartphone applications and in-station countdown signs.[42] The $13.4 million system is funded by MassDOT; it uses existing Automatic Vehicle Identification (AVI) systems plus additional sensors in the tunnels, and GPS receivers on the surface sections.[51]

In September 2013, the MBTA announced that "Next Train" signs would be unveiled at Kenmore that month.[52] On October 23, 2014, location tracking data became available for Green Line trains above ground. Arrival predictions for surface stations – including the activation of countdown signs along the D branch – and underground tracking and predictions were to be rolled out in two phases by early 2015.[43] In March 2015, the MBTA announced that enough AVI equipment had been installed to allow the release of some underground data by April.[51] Most underground data was live by August, but trains near Park Street and Boylston waited until September.

The first predictive countdown signs on the Green Line were activated at Newton Centre and Newton Highlands on April 24, 2015, followed shortly by other D branch stations.[53] Countdown signs at Kenmore and Hynes were activated in August 2015. Signs at Copley and Arlington plus eastbound-only signs from Boylston through Science Park were activated in October 2015.[54] The final set of signs – those on the westbound platforms of Science Park through Boylston – were activated in January 2016. Because holding and short-turning trains at the downtown terminals makes time-based predictions unreliable, the signs instead show how many stops away a train is.[55]

Projects

Somerville/Medford extension

 
Map of the Green Line Extension. Nearby parts of the Red Line and Orange Line are also shown.

The Green Line Extension (GLX) project added two new branches into the northern suburbs of Somerville and Medford. The project opened in two phases in 2022 at a total cost of $2.28 billion. The rebuilt Lechmere station and the Union Square Branch to Union Square opened on March 21, 2022, as an extension of the D branch (briefly the E branch). The Medford Branch opened to Medford/​Tufts on December 12, 2022 as an extension of the E branch, with intermediate stations at East Somerville, Gilman Square, Magoun Square, and Ball Square.[56][57] The total project cost is estimated to be $2.28 billion: $0.996 billion from the federal government and $1.28 billion from the state. Daily ridership on the extension is projected to be 45,000 by 2030.[58]

The GLX begins at the north end of the Lechmere Viaduct, with a new elevated line continuing north for about 0.6 miles (0.97 km) parallel to the O'Brien Highway. The former surface-level Lechmere station will be replaced by an elevated station on the new alignment. The two branches split with an aerial flying junction on the Red Bridge viaduct in the Inner Belt area. The Union Square Branch runs 0.7 miles (1.1 km) west from Red Bridge, sharing the Fitchburg Line right of way. The Medford Branch runs 3.0 miles (4.8 km) northwest from Red Bridge, sharing the Lowell Line right of way. Like the existing D branch, the new branches are fully grade-separated, with no level crossings. A new vehicle storage yard and maintenance facility is located in the Inner Belt area, with leads from both branches at Red Bridge. An extension of the Somerville Community Path runs along the Medford Branch south of Lowell Street, with a high bridge carrying it above the Red Bridge viaduct.

An extension north from Lechmere was first proposed in the 1920s, and again several times during the 20th century. To settle a lawsuit with the Conservation Law Foundation to mitigate increased automobile emissions from the Big Dig, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts agreed in 1990 to extend the Green Line from Lechmere to Medford Hillside through Somerville and Medford, two suburbs underserved by the MBTA relative to their population densities, commercial importance, and proximity to Boston. After delays in planning, the state agreed in 2006 to complete the project by 2014.[59] The preferred alternative from the 2009 Draft Environmental Impact Report added the Union Square Branch; the Medford Branch terminus was set as College Avenue, with a potential future extension to Mystic Valley Parkway.

The planned completion was delayed to 2018 in 2011, and to 2020 in 2014.[60][61] A groundbreaking ceremony was held in December 2012.[62] The project was expected to cost about $2.2 billion, with half of that paid by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA). However, in 2015 it became clear that the project would cost $3 billion, putting its future in doubt.[63] The project was value engineered to reduce its cost: station designs were simplified, several bridge reconstructions eliminated, the Community Path extension shortened, and the maintenance facility reduced in size.[64][65] The FTA approved the modified $2.3 billion plan on April 4, 2017.[66] The contact was rebid with a provision for the optional restoration of six of the elements deleted in the 2016 plan. The winning bid, selected in November 2017, included six optional elements, including canopies and additional elevators at stations, public art, a full-size vehicle maintenance facility, and the full extension of the Community Path to East Cambridge.[67][68] Construction reached 20% completion in November 2019; it was over 50% completed by October 2020, and 80% by June 2021.[69][70][71]

Accessibility renovations

 
Government Center station under reconstruction in September 2014

The majority of the Green Line opened by 1959, long before the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act mandated that new construction be fully accessible. The MBTA began modifying Red, Orange, and Blue Line stations for accessibility in the late 1980s; however, Green Line stations were not modified until the late 1990s, when the Type 8 vehicles were under construction. The MBTA began the Light Rail Accessibility Program in 1996.[72]: 30  Because modifying the numerous stations all at once would be prohibitively expensive, the MBTA designated "key stations" – largely those with high ridership or bus connections – for prioritization.[73]

Riverside station was completely rebuilt with raised accessible platforms around 1998. North Station and Park Street (both of which already had elevators from previous projects) were outfitted with portable lifts for temporary accessibility around 2000, as were Lechmere and ten surface stations.[73] Between 2001 and 2003, 16 surface stations (4 on the B branch, 4 on the C branch, 3 on the D branch, and 5 on the E branch) were retrofitted with raised platforms.[74] The 13 B, C, and E branch stations collectively cost $32 million.[75] Construction of raised platforms was completed at Park Street and Haymarket around 2003; Prudential was also reconstructed that year by the developer of 111 Huntington Avenue. The fully accessible underground "superstation" at North Station opened in 2004.[5] Wooden mini-high platforms, allowing level boarding on older Type 7 LRVs, were installed at eight Green Line stations in 2006–07 as part of the settlement of Joanne Daniels-Finegold, et al. v. MBTA.[25][76]

Renovations for accessibility were completed at Arlington in 2009,[77] Kenmore and Copley in 2010,[78][79] and Science Park in 2011.[80] A two-year closure of Government Center ended in 2016 with the opening of the accessible transfer station.[81] This left only Hynes Convention Center and Symphony (both with renovations planned for the mid-2020s) and Boylston as inaccessible stations in the central subway.[36] As part of the Green Line Extension, Lechmere was replaced by a fully accessible elevated station in 2022.

Other projects have moved towards full accessibility of the surface branches. Woodland was made accessible in 2006.[82] Renovations completed in 2009 made Longwood accessible for the first time, and replaced the lifts at Boston College and Brookline Village.[83][84] A reconstruction of Brookline Hills (replacing lifts) was completed in 2022.[85] Construction of two accessible stations (Babcock Street and Amory Street) on the B branch to replace four non-accessible stations took place in 2021.[86] Temporary work to make Newton Highlands accessible was done in 2019; a full reconstruction will begin in 2022.[87] Renovations for the four remaining non-accessible D branch stations are planned to begin in mid-2023.[36] Construction of additional accessibility modifications on the B and C branches is expected to take place in 2023–24.[36] In 2021, the MBTA indicated plans to modify the Heath Street–Brigham Circle section of the E branch with accessible platforms to replace the existing non-accessible stopping locations.[34]: 7 

Station listing

This listing includes only the Green Line section between Lechmere and Kenmore, which are served by multiple branches. For stops served by only one branch, see Green Line B branch § Station listing, Green Line C branch § Station listing, Green Line D branch § Station listing, and Green Line E branch § Station listing. All stations in the central subway have prepaid fare areas (fare control).

Location Station Branches Opened Notes and connections
East Cambridge   Lechmere D, E March 21, 2022 The Lechmere Viaduct opened on June 1, 1912, with a direct connection to surface lines until July 9, 1922. The surface station was open from July 10, 1922, to May 23, 2020.
  MBTA bus: 69, 80, 87, 88
  EZRide
West End   Science Park August 20, 1955
North End   North Station June 28, 2004 Original surface station was open from September 3, 1898, to March 27, 1997. Elevated station was open from June 1, 1912, to June 24, 2004.
  MBTA subway:  Orange 
  MBTA Commuter Rail: Fitchburg, Lowell, Haverhill, Newburyport/Rockport
  MBTA bus: 4
  Amtrak: Downeaster
  Haymarket September 3, 1898   MBTA subway:  Orange 
  MBTA bus: 4, 92, 93, 111, 191, 192, 193, 194, 325, 326, 352, 354, 426, 428, 434, 450
Downtown Boston   Government Center B, C, D, E   MBTA subway:  Blue 
  MBTA bus: 191, 192, 193, 352, 354
  Park Street September 1, 1897   MBTA subway:  Red   Silver  (SL5)
  MBTA bus: 43, 55, 191, 192, 193
At Downtown Crossing:    Orange ;   7, 11, 501, 504, 505, 553, 554, 556, 558
Boylston   MBTA subway:  Silver  (SL5)
  MBTA bus: 43, 55, 191, 192, 193
Back Bay   Arlington November 13, 1921   MBTA bus: 9, 55, 192, 193
  Copley October 3, 1914   MBTA bus: 9, 10, 39, 55, 170, 192, 193, 502, 503
Hynes Convention Center B, C, D   MBTA bus: 1, 55, 193
Fenway–Kenmore   Kenmore October 23, 1932   MBTA bus: 8, 19, 57, 57A, 60, 65, 193
At Lansdowne:   Framingham/Worcester

Incidents and accidents

 
Type 7 car wrecked in the May 2008 accident

On May 28, 2008, two D branch trains collided in Newton. The operator of one of the trains was killed and numerous riders were taken to area hospitals with injuries of varying degrees of seriousness. While it was originally thought that cell phone use was responsible for the accident, the cause was officially determined to be an episode of micro-sleep caused by the driver's sleep apnea.[88]

On May 8, 2009, two trolleys rear-end collided underground between Park Street and Government Center when the driver of one of the trolleys, 24-year-old Aiden Quinn, was text messaging his girlfriend while driving.[89] Quinn had run through a red light before the crash, which injured 46 people. MBTA officials estimated that the cost of the crash was $9.6 million.[90] A strict ban on cell phone usage by MBTA operators was later enacted.[91]

On October 8, 2012, two E branch trolleys collided in the 700 block of Huntington Avenue near Brigham Circle when one derailed into the other, injuring three people including a train operator.[92] The next month on November 29, two trolleys collided at low speed at Boylston, injuring several dozen passengers.[93]

On March 10, 2014, a D branch trolley with passengers aboard derailed in the tunnel just west of Kenmore Station, near the flat junction between the "D" and "C" branches. A second train had to brake suddenly to avoid hitting the derailed train.[94] Ten people were treated for moderate injuries.[95]

In October 2016, The Boston Globe reported that the Green Line had the highest number of derailments and accidents on light rail lines in the United States in 2015. The number of incidents had been increasing for several years due to deferred maintenance on tracks and wheels, which resulted in more low-speed derailments of Type 8 cars.[96]

On July 30, 2021, two B branch trains collided at Babcock Street, causing 25 injuries.[97]

As part of its crash investigations, the National Transportation Safety Board recommended in 2009 that the Green Line be outfitted with positive train control to prevent collisions. The MBTA decided in 2012 not to implement PTC, estimating the cost at $645 million to $721 million. In 2015, as crashes continued to happen, the NTSB complained the agency was moving too slowly identifying a feasible alternative. In 2019, the MBTA awarded a contract to implement a similar safety system by 2024, at a cost of $170 million. A train would automatically brake if a driver violates a traffic signal, or if cameras or radar detect an obstacle.[98]

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External links

KML is from Wikidata
  • MBTA – Green Line
  • MBTA – Green Line Extension

green, line, mbta, green, line, light, rail, system, massachusetts, transportation, authority, mbta, boston, massachusetts, metropolitan, area, oldest, mbta, subway, line, with, tunnel, sections, dating, from, 1897, oldest, subway, north, america, runs, underg. The Green Line is a light rail system run by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority MBTA in the Boston Massachusetts metropolitan area It is the oldest MBTA subway line and with tunnel sections dating from 1897 the oldest subway in North America 4 It runs underground through downtown Boston and on the surface into inner suburbs via six branches on radial boulevards and grade separated alignments With an average daily weekday ridership of 137 700 in 2019 it is the third most heavily used light rail system in the country 1 The line was assigned the green color in 1967 during a systemwide rebranding because several branches pass through sections of the Emerald Necklace of Boston 5 6 7 Green LineGreen Line train composed of a Kinki Sharyo Type 7 rear and an AnsaldoBreda Type 8 front on the C branchOverviewOwnerMassachusetts Bay Transportation AuthorityLocaleBoston Brookline Cambridge Medford Newton and Somerville MassachusettsTerminiNorth east terminals Union Square D Medford Tufts E Government Center B and C South west terminals Boston College B Cleveland Circle C Riverside D Heath Street E Stations70ServiceTypeLight railSystemMBTA subwayServices4 B branch C branch D branch E branch Rolling stockKinki Sharyo Type 7AnsaldoBreda Type 8CAF Type 9Daily ridership137 700 Q4 2019 1 HistoryOpenedSeptember 1 1897 1897 09 01 Tremont Street subway TechnicalLine length26 7 miles 43 0 km 2 CharacterSubway grade separated surface ROW viaduct median reservation street runningTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeMinimum radius33 feet 10 m 3 ElectrificationOverhead line 600 V DCRoute mapLegendMystic Valley Parkway proposedMedford TuftsBall SquareMagoun SquareGilman SquareEast SomervilleUnion SquareGreen Line ExtensionLechmereLechmere closed 2020Lechmere Viaductover Charles RiverScience ParkCauseway Street Elevated closed2004 Orange Line North StationCanal Street Incline closed2004 Haymarket Orange Line Government CenterPark StreetTremont Street subwayBoylstonBoylston Street subwayArlingtonCopleyCopley JunctionE branchE branchPrudentialSymphonyNortheastern UniversityMuseum of Fine ArtsLongwood Medical AreaBrigham CircleFenwood RoadMission ParkRiverwayBack of the HillHeath StreetArborway Line closed 1985Forest Hills Orange Line ArborwayHynes Convention CenterKenmoreB branchB branchBlandford Street PortalBlandford StreetBoston University EastBoston University CentralAmory StreetBabcock StreetA branch closed 1969 Packards CornerHarvard AvenueGriggs StreetAllston StreetWarren StreetWashington StreetSutherland RoadChiswick RoadChestnut Hill AvenueSouth StreetBoston CollegeC branchC branchSt Mary s Street PortalSt Mary s StreetHawes StreetKent StreetSt Paul StreetCoolidge CornerSummit AvenueBrandon HallFairbanks StreetWashington SquareTappan StreetDean RoadEnglewood AvenueD branchD branchFenway PortalFenwayLongwoodBrookline VillageBrookline HillsBeaconsfieldCleveland CircleReservoirD branchD branchChestnut HillNewton CentreNewton HighlandsEliotWabanWoodlandRiversideRiverside Yard Framingham Worcester Line This diagram viewtalkeditThe four branches are the remnants of a large streetcar system which began in 1856 with the Cambridge Horse Railroad and was consolidated into the Boston Elevated Railway several decades later The branches all travel downtown through the Tremont Street subway the oldest subway tunnel in North America The Tremont Street subway opened its first section on September 1 1897 to take streetcars off overcrowded downtown streets it was extended five times over the next five decades The streetcar system peaked in size around 1930 and was gradually replaced with trackless trolleys and buses with cuts as late as 1985 The new D branch opened on a converted commuter rail line in 1959 The Green Line Extension project extended two branches into Somerville and Medford in 2022 Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Former branches 2 Rolling stock 2 1 Listing 2 1 1 Active fleet 2 1 2 Retired fleet 2 2 History 2 2 1 Early rolling stock 2 2 2 Boeing LRV 2 2 3 Modern fleet 2 2 4 Future fleet 3 Accessibility 4 History 5 Operations and signaling 5 1 Turnarounds 5 2 Location tracking 6 Projects 6 1 Somerville Medford extension 6 2 Accessibility renovations 7 Station listing 8 Incidents and accidents 9 References 10 External linksRoute description Edit Schematic map of Green Line branches and stations The Green Line s core is the central subway a group of tunnels which run through downtown Boston 8 The Tremont Street subway runs roughly north south through downtown with stations at Boylston Park Street Government Center Haymarket and North Station all with connections to other lines of the MBTA subway system The Boylston Street subway runs roughly east west through the Back Bay neighborhood with stations at Arlington Copley Hynes Convention Center and Kenmore it connects to the Tremont Street subway at Boylston The Huntington Avenue subway diverges from the Boylston Street subway at a flat junction west of Copley running southwest with stations at Prudential and Symphony 9 96 A branch of the Tremont Street subway disused since 1962 runs south from Boylston to the former Pleasant Street incline The Green Line has four western surface branches each with a letter designation The B branch runs west in a tunnel from Kenmore surfacing in the median of Commonwealth Avenue at Blandford Street It runs 4 2 miles 6 8 km on Commonwealth Avenue through Boston University Allston and Brighton to Boston College station The C branch runs southwest in a tunnel from Kenmore surfacing in the median of Beacon Street at St Mary s Street It runs 2 9 miles 4 7 km on Beacon Street through Brookline to Cleveland Circle station The D branch diverges from the C branch tunnel southwest of Kenmore surfacing at Fenway station It runs 9 7 miles 15 6 km though Brookline and Newton along the grade separated Highland branch a former Boston and Albany Railroad commuter rail line to Riverside station The E branch runs southwest through the Huntington Avenue subway from Copley surfacing in the median of Huntington Avenue at Northeastern University station It runs 2 6 miles 4 2 km along Huntington Avenue and South Huntington Avenue to Heath Street with the outer 0 7 miles 1 1 km west of Brigham Circle in mixed traffic rather than a dedicated median Until 1985 the line continued south through Jamaica Plain to Arborway 5 B and C branch service terminates at Government Center while D and E branch service continues north from downtown Boston North of North Station the line inclines up to the Lechmere Viaduct which crosses the Charles River with an elevated station at Science Park The elevated Lechmere station is located on the Green Line Extension viaduct which continues north to a flying junction with two branches The Union Square Branch runs 0 7 miles 1 1 km west to Union Square station via the Fitchburg Line right of way It is operated as part of the D branch The Medford Branch runs 3 0 miles 4 8 km northwest to Medford Tufts station via the Lowell Line right of way It is operated as part of the E branch Former branches Edit For a more comprehensive list see Boston area streetcar lines The Green Line A branch was the northernmost of the branches running from the Blandford Street portal still used by the B branch west to Watertown mostly street running The 57 bus replaced the streetcar line in 1969 The A branch diverged from Commonwealth Avenue west of Boston University and ran to a terminus in Watertown across the Charles River from Watertown Square until 1969 Although the route letter scheme had been introduced two years prior to its closure the A designation was never signed on streetcars to Watertown It was however included in the destination signs on the Boeing Vertol LRVs ordered in the mid 1970s when reopening service to Watertown was under consideration The A line tracks remained in non revenue service to access maintenance facilities at Watertown until 1994 The Pleasant Street portal hosted two services in its final days The 9 to City Point ended in 1953 and the 43 to Egleston was cut back to Lenox Street in 1956 cut back to the portal in 1961 and ended operation in 1962 Prior to that the 48 ran out Tremont Street to Dover Street and Washington Street ending at Dudley and last running in 1938 The last two routes to continue beyond the Canal Street portal both ran to Sullivan The 92 ran via Main Street last running in 1948 and the 93 via Bunker Hill Street last ran in 1949 Until 1997 trains continued to use the portal and its North Station surface station as a terminal In addition to the lines that later became the E branch the predecessors to the 58 and 60 split in Brookline one branch running into the current E tracks and into the Boylston Street portal and the other running up Brookline Street to end at Massachusetts Avenue station These were truncated in 1932 into a shorter route from Brookline Village to the subway via the Boylston Street portal which itself stopped running in 1938 being cut back to Brigham Circle short turn trips three years before the closure of that portal The last foreign cars to operate in the subway were those of the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway running from the Canal Street portal to the Brattle Loop at Scollay Square until 1935 It was then that the old Mystic River Bridge to Chelsea was closed to streetcars and the lines were replaced by bus service the next year the BERy bought the Eastern Mass Chelsea Division and through routed it with its lines connecting to the East Boston Tunnel at Maverick Rolling stock EditLike the three other MBTA subway lines the line uses standard gauge tracks However instead of heavy rail metro rolling stock the Green Line uses modern streetcars light rail vehicles as heavy rail stock would be inappropriate for the surface branches with their numerous grade crossings Listing Edit Active fleet Edit Rolling stock as of July 2021 update 2 10 11 Year Built Manufacturer Model Image Length Width Fleet Numbers Quantity1986 1988 Kinki Sharyo Type 7 LRV ja 72 ft 22 m 104 in 2 64 m 3600 3699 100 83 active all overhauled 1997 3700 3719 20 15 active all overhauled 1998 2007 AnsaldoBreda Type 8 LRV 74 ft 23 m 104 in 2 64 m 3800 3894 95 92 active 2018 2020 CAF USA Type 9 LRV 3900 3923 24 all active Retired fleet Edit Only MBTA operated vehicles are included here not cars from the Boston Elevated Railway BERy era Years in Service Manufacturer Model Image Length Width Fleet Numbers Quantity1976 2007 Boeing Vertol US Standard Light Rail Vehicle 71 ft 22 m 104 in 2 64 m 3400 3543 144 31 units cancelled 1937 1985 a Pullman Standard PCC streetcar 48 ft 15 m 100 in 2 54 m 3000 3346 344 2 cars scrapped before 1964 10 PCC streetcars are currently in revenue service on the Mattapan line History Edit Early rolling stock Edit PCC streetcars on the D branch in 1965 When it opened at the end of the 19th century the Tremont Street subway was not intended as a full scale rapid transit line though it was built to pre metro standards but to allow ordinary streetcars to bypass the worst street congestion in downtown Boston 4 12 Operations by several different companies were eventually consolidated into the Boston Elevated Railway which ran a mixture of car types After receiving a test unit in 1937 the BERy began to standardize on PCC streetcars acquiring 320 units between 1941 and 1951 plus an additional 25 in 1959 to phase out the last older cars 10 Two older streetcars are on display on the unused outer inbound track at Boylston station which formerly carried cars coming from the Pleasant Street portal Car 5734 a Type 5 A 1 car built in 1924 and retired in 1959 is owned by the Seashore Trolley Museum but resides semipermanently in Boston PCC 3295 built in 1951 and retired in 1986 is owned by the MBTA 10 The cars were formerly used for fantrips the most recent one being in 1998 Boeing LRV Edit Main article US Standard Light Rail Vehicle Boeing LRV on the C branch in 2005 In the early 1970s light rail which had largely disappeared from North America after the slow decline of streetcar systems from the 1920s to the 1950s was reintroduced as a method of urban renewal less expensive than conventional metro systems 13 In 1971 as part of a program to supply further work to defense contractors as the Vietnam War wound down the Urban Mass Transit Administration selected Boeing Vertol as systems manager for a project to design a new generic light rail vehicle The UMTA hoped that this US Standard Light Rail Vehicle would jumpstart the development of transit lines just as the standardized PCC streetcars had done decades prior 14 Boston with its older streetcar tunnel systems and San Francisco with a new Muni Metro streetcar tunnel being built as part of BART construction were chosen as the testbeds for this new rolling stock 13 15 The vehicle was designed as the largest rolling stock that would fit through the Tremont Street tunnel the Muni Metro s Twin Peaks Tunnel and SEPTA s subway surface lines tunnel 12 The new cars were faster a top speed of 50 miles per hour 80 km h versus the PCC s 36 miles per hour 58 km h and had an articulated middle section for higher capacity 12 Boeing began construction of 175 cars for the MBTA in May 1973 14 The first LRVs entered service on the D branch in December 1976 but were immediately beset with problems Certain cars frequently derailed on tight turns in the Riverside Boston College and Lechmere yards Battery trays air conditioners mounted under the cars continually drawing in dirt and debris from under the car when in the tunnels and air compressors all suffered numerous failures the plug style doors had trouble sealing properly and traction motors failed sooner than expected 16 Desperate for reliable rolling stock in 1977 MBTA launched an overhaul program to extend the availability of its older PCC cars A total of 34 cars primarily out of service wrecks and parts cars were rebuilt to as new condition 16 As of 2022 update some of these rebuilt PCC cars still run on the Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line 10 16 After years of fighting between the MBTA and Boeing Vertol both sides reached a settlement in 1979 MBTA was allowed to reject the final 40 SLRVs and Boeing would return 40 million to MBTA for the cost of repairs and modifications to several cars 17 18 Modern fleet Edit Type 7 left and Type 8 streetcars at Tappan Street in 2012 Type 9 streetcar in 2018 In the early 1980s with a final settlement with Boeing in place MBTA started looking for new equipment to supplement and replace the problematic LRVs In 1980 the MBTA tested Canadian Light Rail Vehicles for three months to determine whether they could be used on the Green Line 19 The MBTA ultimately found them unsuitable Ultimately the MBTA purchased LRVs from the Japanese firm Kinki Sharyo These Type 7 were designed with the best features of the US SLRV the Canadian LRV and the PCC cars A total of 120 Type 7 vehicles were purchased 100 were delivered between 1986 and 1988 and an additional 20 cars ordered and delivered in 1997 20 Low floor LRVs were added starting in 1998 allowing for accessible boarding directly from slightly raised platforms MBTA ordered 100 of these Type 8 cars from Italian company AnsaldoBreda 10 The first Type 8s entered revenue service in March 1999 and quickly proved problematic and difficult to maintain the first cars failed every 400 miles 640 km far short of the 9 000 miles 14 000 km specified by the MBTA and were prone to derailment at higher speeds as well as brake problems echoing the problems with the Boeing stock In December 2004 the MBTA canceled orders for the cars still to be delivered as part of the authority s nine year US 225 million deal with Breda 21 One year later in December 2005 the MBTA announced that it had entered into a restructuring of the deal reducing the order to 85 cars with spare parts to be provided in lieu of the 15 remaining cars and providing for the remaining payment under the original deal only if the cars met performance requirements 22 Construction of the last car under the order was completed on December 14 2006 23 Ultimately 10 additional cars would be assembled and delivered in late 2007 with five spare shells retained 95 cars in service The MBTA was criticized for their failure to assess Bredas reliability before entering into the deal and during delivery The agency was also forced to spend an additional US 9 5 million to modify tracks to prevent derailments and the Type 8 fleet was unable to be used on the D branch where cars reach full speed after those modifications were complete in 2008 5 As the final Type 8s were delivered the last of the Boeing Vertol cars were retired in March 2007 and all except ten of the cars were scrapped 24 Of the remaining cars six were sold to the US Government and are now in Pueblo Colorado for testing purposes one was given to the Seashore Trolley Museum and three were retained by the MBTA for work service In 2006 as part of a legal settlement the MBTA committed to always operate at least one low floor car in each train with no trains consisting only of Type 7 cars 25 Of the 120 Type 7 cars 103 were overhauled by Alstom in Hornell New York The work includes new propulsion systems climate control systems and interiors as well as exterior work The pilot car for the program left in October 2012 and was returned in November 2014 with the last car overhauled in April 2019 26 10 Twenty four new Type 9 Green Line cars were delivered between 2017 and 2020 Revenue service began in late 2018 and all 24 cars were planned to enter service by the fall of 2019 although actual acceptance continued through 2021 The Type 9 cars will provide additional rolling stock to allow for Green Line Extension operations and will not replace any of the existing fleet 27 The cars were made by CAF USA Inc with the shells and frames made in Spain and final assembly and testing done at their plant in Elmira New York 28 As of March 2017 update the first unit had been expected to enter passenger service in Spring 2018 with all 24 cars in service by the end of the year 29 The first Type 9 car 3900 began revenue service on December 21 2018 30 Future fleet Edit Render of a planned Type 10 Supercar LRV Planning for a Type 10 fleet which would replace all Type 7 and Type 8 cars in the mid 2020s began in 2018 with plans for a fully low floor fleet 31 32 At 113 feet 34 m long Type 10 cars would be significantly longer than the existing fleet and carry twice as many passengers as existing cars 33 The MBTA released a request for proposals in December 2019 with notice to proceed expected to be given in 2021 In June 2021 the MBTA indicated that the initial order would be for 102 LRVs operating as single car trains with two car trains deferred for a later project with federal funding Manufacturer bids were due in July 2021 34 9 The MBTA awarded a 811 million contract to CAF USA on August 31 2022 to manufacture 102 seven segment Type 10 Supercar LRVs Four pilot vehicles are to be delivered in spring 2026 with deliveries of two LRVs per month from spring 2027 to spring 2031 35 The contract included options for additional LRVs 36 As a separately funded project Lake Street Yard will be fully reconstructed to support Type 10 vehicles with Riverside Yard and the GLX Vehicle Maintenance Facility also modified 37 When the Type 10 cars are delivered the Type 9 fleet is expected to be transferred over to the Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line replacing the PCC streetcars 33 Accessibility Edit A low floor Type 8 car at Longwood station which has slightly raised platforms for accessible boarding See also MBTA accessibility The Red Line Blue Line and Orange Line run rapid transit cars and use stations with high platforms level with the car floor providing easy access for the disabled The Green Line originated as a streetcar line and used a variety of streetcars before converting to light rail vehicles Originally all the Green Line stations had platforms at track level and passengers had to ascend several steps up into the vehicles This limited accessibility for persons with disabilities To address this issue and comply with changing federal and state laws additional facilities have been added 38 Wheelchair lifts have been provided at some stops They are rolled up to the car door and the lift mechanism is operated using a hand crank They are quite time consuming to operate causing significant delays when used during peak periods Short platforms level with car floors accessed by ramps were installed just before or after selected stations Because the car door arrangement required a large gap between the platform and the car a bridge plate attached to the raised platform had to be positioned after the train stopped with a door at that platform The MBTA has followed the worldwide trend of operating low floor streetcars Platforms are being raised slightly to about the height of a street curb Low floor cars have remotely controlled bridge plates at the center doors to allow wheelchairs and strollers to reach the car floor a few inches higher citation needed As of 2022 update the D branch will be the first branch to be completely retrofitted with raised platforms as part of this program 39 History EditSee also History of the MBTA and Boston area streetcar lines Beginning in the 1850s Boston sprouted a large network of horsecar lines the first public transit in the city The West End Street Railway was created by the state legislature in 1887 to build a single line but soon consolidated many of the existing lines into a single privately owned system with consistent fares and route designations The Allston Park Square line which served the general area of the A branch was the first section to be converted to electric traction in 1889 It used modified existing horsecars outfitted with Frank J Sprague s revolutionary electrical equipment which had first been demonstrated the previous year in Richmond Virginia 40 9 10 In 1897 the West End Street Railway property was handed over to the Boston Elevated Railway BERy in the form of a 24 year lease and the companies were ultimately combined By the early 1890s the sheer quantity of streetcars during peak periods was clogging the streets of downtown Boston The Tremont Street subway the first passenger subway in North America was opened in stages in 1897 and 1898 with underground stations at Boylston Park Street Scollay Square Adams Square and Haymarket The Main Line Elevated was run through the tunnel from 1901 displacing through running streetcars 40 19 21 until it was rerouted to its own Washington Street Tunnel in 1908 and the streetcars were returned to the Tremont tunnel 40 27 Though initially intended merely to clear streetcars from the busiest sections of downtown streets the Tremont Street subway became useful as a rapid transit service in its own right The 1912 completion of the Causeway Street Elevated and Lechmere Viaduct extended grade separated service to Lechmere Square in Cambridge and in 1922 the Lechmere transfer station was built In 1914 the Boylston Street subway opened as a westward extension to just short of Kenmore Square and in 1933 Kenmore station and short tunnel extensions towards two surface lines were added In 1941 the Huntington Avenue subway and its two additional underground stations removed the last surface streetcars from downtown Boston Beginning in the 1930s the massive surface streetcar system was bustituted with buses and trackless trolleys which had lower operating costs and more flexible routes As the 1950s closed out the only remaining streetcar lines were the Watertown Line Commonwealth Avenue Line Beacon Street Line Arborway Line and the Lenox Street Line plus several short turn services In 1959 the Boston and Albany Railroad s Highland Branch was converted to the Riverside Line a fully grade separated suburban service In 1961 the last through service to Lenox Street via the Pleasant Street portal ended though a Pleasant Street Boylston shuttle continued for one more year In 1963 part of the original subway was rebuilt under Government Center abandoning and partially demolishing Adams Square station In 1947 the now bankrupt BERy was replaced by the public Metropolitan Transit Authority M T A The new agency was unpopular even spawning a popular protest song in 1964 it was replaced with the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority which had an expanded funding area to preserve suburban commuter rail lines In 1967 as part of a systemwide rebranding that included new station names and color names for the transit lines the remaining streetcar services were designated the Green Line because several of them traveled near the Emerald Necklace park system The streetcar lines were given letter designations A to the Watertown Line B to the Commonwealth Avenue Line C to the Beacon Street Line D to the Riverside Line and E to the Arborway Line The Watertown Line ran mostly in mixed traffic after diverging from Commonwealth Avenue it was permanently replaced with buses in 1969 The section of the Arborway Line past Heath Street was temporarily ultimately permanently bustituted in 1985 In 2001 with new low floor streetcars entering service the MBTA began retrofitting underground stations and major surface stops with low raised platforms for accessibility for all In 2004 the Causeway Street Elevated was replaced with a new tunnel under the Boston Garden which consolidated the Orange Line and Green Line at a new North Station superstation while continuing to connect to Commuter Rail service north of Boston The name Green Line was assigned in 1967 as part of a major reorganization of the MBTA system s branding 5 In the 1970s the Green Line and all other MBTA lines were re evaluated by the Boston Transportation Planning Review for region wide efficacy and future modernization alternatives initiated as far as physical plant and operating measures Operations and signaling Edit Trains on the D branch operate using wayside signals As of February 2022 update each of the four branches operate on 7 or 7 5 minute headways during weekday peak hours and 7 5 to 12 minute headways at other times Vehicle usage ranges from 44 trains 88 cars to 60 trains 120 cars 41 Unlike the MBTA heavy rail subway lines the Green Line has only limited central control and monitoring This also means that it has lagged behind the other three rail lines in the availability of countdown signs and next train arrival information The line is signalled with advisory wayside signals except on surface portions in street medians or in street running Wayside signal territory stretches from Lechmere to the surface portals at Kenmore and along the entire length of the D Riverside branch There are no automatic protection devices but the cars have track brakes giving the ability to stop quickly under control of the operator Interlockings are controlled through a wayside Automatic Vehicle Identification AVI system that relies on the operator properly entering the destination manually on a roto wheel in the train cab at the beginning of a run The line is monitored from the Operations Control Center OCC Responsibility for controlling service is shared by the control room and field personnel along the right of way Track circuit and signal indications are not transmitted to the operational personnel sites In lieu of track circuit indications the AVI system is displayed in the control room to provide a periodic update to train position wherever AVI detectors exist The AVI system user interface was solely text based until the current control room was opened in which a new schematic display based on AVI data was instituted Track circuit indications are available digitally in signal houses at the Park Street interlocking at the new North Station interlocking and at the new Kenmore interlocking but are not transmitted to OCC In January 2013 the MBTA announced plans to add full vehicle location tracking on the Green Line for countdown signs and smartphone applications including using AVI data in the tunnels and GPS receivers on the surface lines 42 The first real time data location data on the surface lines became available in October 2014 Full tracking was expected by early 2015 43 The MBTA typically runs two car trains at all times The last scheduled use of one car trains on weekdays was in March 2007 5 Three car trains were added on the B and D branches in 2010 their first use since 2005 and a four car train was tested in April 2011 5 In March 2011 the number of three car trains was substantially increased including use on the E branch 5 44 However three car trains suffered from reliability problems and slow boarding 45 The use of three car trains ended in March 2016 5 The MBTA approved a 82 6 million contract in May 2019 for a train protection system for the Green Line The system will enforce red signals and automatically stop a train if it approaches another train too closely 46 The project was 28 complete by December 2021 installation of in vehicle electronics was scheduled to be complete by September 2023 with wayside installation complete in June 2024 and full operation that December 47 A reallocation of funds in January 2022 shortened the project timeline with completion expected in 2023 48 However in January 2023 an NTSB report found that the project had been delayed to June 2025 49 Turnarounds Edit A test train on the loop at Kenmore station in 2019 Aside from the terminal stations several locations have turnaround loops or crossover switches where trains can reverse direction for short turns Two of these where northbound trains can turn southbound are regularly used as the downtown terminals for the branches At North Station a pair of pocket tracks allow reversing As of November 2022 update no trains use this turnaround except in a delay At Government Center a loop under City Hall Plaza As of 2022 update this is the terminal of the B and C branches Several other loops and crossovers are not used in regular revenue service but may be used during construction work or service disruptions or for non revenue trains 2 At Government Center the Brattle Loop allows southbound trains to turn northbound At Park Street a loop connects the inner tracks The MBTA plans to add a crossover to allow through movements from the terminating inner northbound platform at Park Street are expected to increase capacity and reliability 50 At Kenmore a loop allows eastbound inbound C and D branch trains to turn westbound On the B branch a pocket track at Blandford Street allows trains to reverse in either direction It is sometimes used to reverse westbound trains to provide extra service in the subway Occasionally used crossovers are located at Babcock Street Washington Street and east of Boston College On the C branch occasionally used crossovers are located at St Mary s Street and Coolidge Corner On the D branch occasionally used crossovers are located west of Fenway Brookline Hills Beaconsfield Reservoir Newton Highlands and Waban At Reservoir the spur tracks to Reservoir Carhouse have platforms for short turn trains On the E branch crossovers are located at Prudential Northeastern University and Brigham Circle along with a siding at Northeastern The Brigham Circle crossover is frequently used for short turns during traffic congestion on the street running section of the line Location tracking Edit Activated countdown signs at Kenmore station in August 2015 The Red Orange and Blue lines have block signalling systems that make tracking the location of trains easier Signs in most station on those lines began to display real time train information in late 2012 and early 2013 while data feeds have been available for smartphone applications since 2010 42 However the wayside signalling system used in the Green Line s tunnels and the D branch does not provide for that level of tracking nor do the basic stop go signals used on the street level branch lines In January 2013 the MBTA announced plans to provide full tracking data for the Green Line by 2015 allowing use of smartphone applications and in station countdown signs 42 The 13 4 million system is funded by MassDOT it uses existing Automatic Vehicle Identification AVI systems plus additional sensors in the tunnels and GPS receivers on the surface sections 51 In September 2013 the MBTA announced that Next Train signs would be unveiled at Kenmore that month 52 On October 23 2014 location tracking data became available for Green Line trains above ground Arrival predictions for surface stations including the activation of countdown signs along the D branch and underground tracking and predictions were to be rolled out in two phases by early 2015 43 In March 2015 the MBTA announced that enough AVI equipment had been installed to allow the release of some underground data by April 51 Most underground data was live by August but trains near Park Street and Boylston waited until September The first predictive countdown signs on the Green Line were activated at Newton Centre and Newton Highlands on April 24 2015 followed shortly by other D branch stations 53 Countdown signs at Kenmore and Hynes were activated in August 2015 Signs at Copley and Arlington plus eastbound only signs from Boylston through Science Park were activated in October 2015 54 The final set of signs those on the westbound platforms of Science Park through Boylston were activated in January 2016 Because holding and short turning trains at the downtown terminals makes time based predictions unreliable the signs instead show how many stops away a train is 55 Projects EditSomerville Medford extension Edit Map of the Green Line Extension Nearby parts of the Red Line and Orange Line are also shown The Green Line Extension GLX project added two new branches into the northern suburbs of Somerville and Medford The project opened in two phases in 2022 at a total cost of 2 28 billion The rebuilt Lechmere station and the Union Square Branch to Union Square opened on March 21 2022 as an extension of the D branch briefly the E branch The Medford Branch opened to Medford Tufts on December 12 2022 as an extension of the E branch with intermediate stations at East Somerville Gilman Square Magoun Square and Ball Square 56 57 The total project cost is estimated to be 2 28 billion 0 996 billion from the federal government and 1 28 billion from the state Daily ridership on the extension is projected to be 45 000 by 2030 58 The GLX begins at the north end of the Lechmere Viaduct with a new elevated line continuing north for about 0 6 miles 0 97 km parallel to the O Brien Highway The former surface level Lechmere station will be replaced by an elevated station on the new alignment The two branches split with an aerial flying junction on the Red Bridge viaduct in the Inner Belt area The Union Square Branch runs 0 7 miles 1 1 km west from Red Bridge sharing the Fitchburg Line right of way The Medford Branch runs 3 0 miles 4 8 km northwest from Red Bridge sharing the Lowell Line right of way Like the existing D branch the new branches are fully grade separated with no level crossings A new vehicle storage yard and maintenance facility is located in the Inner Belt area with leads from both branches at Red Bridge An extension of the Somerville Community Path runs along the Medford Branch south of Lowell Street with a high bridge carrying it above the Red Bridge viaduct An extension north from Lechmere was first proposed in the 1920s and again several times during the 20th century To settle a lawsuit with the Conservation Law Foundation to mitigate increased automobile emissions from the Big Dig the Commonwealth of Massachusetts agreed in 1990 to extend the Green Line from Lechmere to Medford Hillside through Somerville and Medford two suburbs underserved by the MBTA relative to their population densities commercial importance and proximity to Boston After delays in planning the state agreed in 2006 to complete the project by 2014 59 The preferred alternative from the 2009 Draft Environmental Impact Report added the Union Square Branch the Medford Branch terminus was set as College Avenue with a potential future extension to Mystic Valley Parkway The planned completion was delayed to 2018 in 2011 and to 2020 in 2014 60 61 A groundbreaking ceremony was held in December 2012 62 The project was expected to cost about 2 2 billion with half of that paid by the Federal Transit Administration FTA However in 2015 it became clear that the project would cost 3 billion putting its future in doubt 63 The project was value engineered to reduce its cost station designs were simplified several bridge reconstructions eliminated the Community Path extension shortened and the maintenance facility reduced in size 64 65 The FTA approved the modified 2 3 billion plan on April 4 2017 66 The contact was rebid with a provision for the optional restoration of six of the elements deleted in the 2016 plan The winning bid selected in November 2017 included six optional elements including canopies and additional elevators at stations public art a full size vehicle maintenance facility and the full extension of the Community Path to East Cambridge 67 68 Construction reached 20 completion in November 2019 it was over 50 completed by October 2020 and 80 by June 2021 69 70 71 Accessibility renovations Edit Government Center station under reconstruction in September 2014 The majority of the Green Line opened by 1959 long before the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act mandated that new construction be fully accessible The MBTA began modifying Red Orange and Blue Line stations for accessibility in the late 1980s however Green Line stations were not modified until the late 1990s when the Type 8 vehicles were under construction The MBTA began the Light Rail Accessibility Program in 1996 72 30 Because modifying the numerous stations all at once would be prohibitively expensive the MBTA designated key stations largely those with high ridership or bus connections for prioritization 73 Riverside station was completely rebuilt with raised accessible platforms around 1998 North Station and Park Street both of which already had elevators from previous projects were outfitted with portable lifts for temporary accessibility around 2000 as were Lechmere and ten surface stations 73 Between 2001 and 2003 16 surface stations 4 on the B branch 4 on the C branch 3 on the D branch and 5 on the E branch were retrofitted with raised platforms 74 The 13 B C and E branch stations collectively cost 32 million 75 Construction of raised platforms was completed at Park Street and Haymarket around 2003 Prudential was also reconstructed that year by the developer of 111 Huntington Avenue The fully accessible underground superstation at North Station opened in 2004 5 Wooden mini high platforms allowing level boarding on older Type 7 LRVs were installed at eight Green Line stations in 2006 07 as part of the settlement of Joanne Daniels Finegold et al v MBTA 25 76 Renovations for accessibility were completed at Arlington in 2009 77 Kenmore and Copley in 2010 78 79 and Science Park in 2011 80 A two year closure of Government Center ended in 2016 with the opening of the accessible transfer station 81 This left only Hynes Convention Center and Symphony both with renovations planned for the mid 2020s and Boylston as inaccessible stations in the central subway 36 As part of the Green Line Extension Lechmere was replaced by a fully accessible elevated station in 2022 Other projects have moved towards full accessibility of the surface branches Woodland was made accessible in 2006 82 Renovations completed in 2009 made Longwood accessible for the first time and replaced the lifts at Boston College and Brookline Village 83 84 A reconstruction of Brookline Hills replacing lifts was completed in 2022 85 Construction of two accessible stations Babcock Street and Amory Street on the B branch to replace four non accessible stations took place in 2021 86 Temporary work to make Newton Highlands accessible was done in 2019 a full reconstruction will begin in 2022 87 Renovations for the four remaining non accessible D branch stations are planned to begin in mid 2023 36 Construction of additional accessibility modifications on the B and C branches is expected to take place in 2023 24 36 In 2021 the MBTA indicated plans to modify the Heath Street Brigham Circle section of the E branch with accessible platforms to replace the existing non accessible stopping locations 34 7 Station listing EditThis listing includes only the Green Line section between Lechmere and Kenmore which are served by multiple branches For stops served by only one branch see Green Line B branch Station listing Green Line C branch Station listing Green Line D branch Station listing and Green Line E branch Station listing All stations in the central subway have prepaid fare areas fare control Location Station Branches Opened Notes and connectionsEast Cambridge Lechmere D E March 21 2022 The Lechmere Viaduct opened on June 1 1912 with a direct connection to surface lines until July 9 1922 The surface station was open from July 10 1922 to May 23 2020 MBTA bus 69 80 87 88 EZRideWest End Science Park August 20 1955North End North Station June 28 2004 Original surface station was open from September 3 1898 to March 27 1997 Elevated station was open from June 1 1912 to June 24 2004 MBTA subway Orange MBTA Commuter Rail Fitchburg Lowell Haverhill Newburyport Rockport MBTA bus 4 Amtrak Downeaster Haymarket September 3 1898 MBTA subway Orange MBTA bus 4 92 93 111 191 192 193 194 325 326 352 354 426 428 434 450Downtown Boston Government Center B C D E MBTA subway Blue MBTA bus 191 192 193 352 354 Park Street September 1 1897 MBTA subway Red Silver SL5 MBTA bus 43 55 191 192 193At Downtown Crossing Orange 7 11 501 504 505 553 554 556 558Boylston MBTA subway Silver SL5 MBTA bus 43 55 191 192 193Back Bay Arlington November 13 1921 MBTA bus 9 55 192 193 Copley October 3 1914 MBTA bus 9 10 39 55 170 192 193 502 503Hynes Convention Center B C D MBTA bus 1 55 193Fenway Kenmore Kenmore October 23 1932 MBTA bus 8 19 57 57A 60 65 193At Lansdowne Framingham WorcesterIncidents and accidents EditThis section contains information of unclear or questionable importance or relevance to the article s subject matter Relevant discussion may be found on Talk Green Line MBTA Please help improve this section by clarifying or removing indiscriminate details If importance cannot be established the section is likely to be moved to another article pseudo redirected or removed Find sources Green Line MBTA news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Type 7 car wrecked in the May 2008 accident On May 28 2008 two D branch trains collided in Newton The operator of one of the trains was killed and numerous riders were taken to area hospitals with injuries of varying degrees of seriousness While it was originally thought that cell phone use was responsible for the accident the cause was officially determined to be an episode of micro sleep caused by the driver s sleep apnea 88 On May 8 2009 two trolleys rear end collided underground between Park Street and Government Center when the driver of one of the trolleys 24 year old Aiden Quinn was text messaging his girlfriend while driving 89 Quinn had run through a red light before the crash which injured 46 people MBTA officials estimated that the cost of the crash was 9 6 million 90 A strict ban on cell phone usage by MBTA operators was later enacted 91 On October 8 2012 two E branch trolleys collided in the 700 block of Huntington Avenue near Brigham Circle when one derailed into the other injuring three people including a train operator 92 The next month on November 29 two trolleys collided at low speed at Boylston injuring several dozen passengers 93 On March 10 2014 a D branch trolley with passengers aboard derailed in the tunnel just west of Kenmore Station near the flat junction between the D and C branches A second train had to brake suddenly to avoid hitting the derailed train 94 Ten people were treated for moderate injuries 95 In October 2016 The Boston Globe reported that the Green Line had the highest number of derailments and accidents on light rail lines in the United States in 2015 The number of incidents had been increasing for several years due to deferred maintenance on tracks and wheels which resulted in more low speed derailments of Type 8 cars 96 On July 30 2021 two B branch trains collided at Babcock Street causing 25 injuries 97 As part of its crash investigations the National Transportation Safety Board recommended in 2009 that the Green Line be outfitted with positive train control to prevent collisions The MBTA decided in 2012 not to implement PTC estimating the cost at 645 million to 721 million In 2015 as crashes continued to happen the NTSB complained the agency was moving too slowly identifying a feasible alternative In 2019 the MBTA awarded a contract to implement a similar safety system by 2024 at a cost of 170 million A train would automatically brake if a driver violates a traffic signal or if cameras or radar detect an obstacle 98 References Edit a b Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2019 PDF American Public Transportation Association February 27 2020 a b c Ridership and Service Statistics PDF 14th ed Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 2014 Booz Allen amp Hamilton Inc 1995 Applicability of Low Floor Light Rail Vehicles in North America PDF Transit Cooperative Research Program Retrieved August 7 2013 a b Most Doug January 26 2014 The bigger dig Boston Globe Retrieved January 22 2016 a b c d e f g h i Belcher Jonathan Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district PDF Boston Street Railway Association Sanborn George M 1992 A Chronicle of the Boston Transit System Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Archived from the original on November 27 2019 Retrieved January 21 2016 via MIT Curiosity Carcards PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Malikova Alexandra A June 2012 MBTA Green Line 3 Car Train Operating Plans to Enhance Reliability and Capacity Master s Thesis PDF Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Retrieved August 7 2013 Clarke Bradley H 2003 Streetcar Lines of the Hub The 1940s Boston Street Railway Association ISBN 0938315056 a b c d e f The MBTA Vehicle Inventory Page NETransit Retrieved September 23 2018 Green Line Fleet Type 7 Overhaul Project Update and Final Engineering Services PDF MBTA com December 10 2018 Archived from the original PDF on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 15 2018 a b c Diamant Emanuel S et al Spring 1976 Light Rail Transit A State of the Art Review United States Department of Transportation Retrieved August 7 2013 a b Thompson Gregory L November 2003 Defining an Alternative Future Birth of the Light Rail Movement in North America PDF Transportation Research Board Retrieved August 7 2013 a b History Light Rail Vehicle Rapid Transit Car Boeing Retrieved August 7 2013 Vuchic Vukan R October 1972 Light Rail Transit Systems A Definition and Evaluation Report Urban Mass Transportation Administration US Department of Transportation Retrieved December 20 2018 a b c Moore Scott Boston s Green Line Crisis NETransit Archived from the original on April 6 2004 Retrieved August 7 2013 Sheley Jr W H November 10 1980 Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority s Termination of Contract for Light Rail Vehicles PSAD 81 11 PDF Report United States General Accounting Office Retrieved December 22 2018 Sullivan Kathleen September 14 1998 Muni knew about trolley lemons in 70s Test runs in Boston found major trouble in many systems The San Francisco Examiner p A Retrieved December 7 2012 A Chronicle of the Boston Transit System Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 1981 p 14 via Internet Archive Boston MBTA Green Line Technical Data PDF Kinki Sharyo Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2014 Retrieved August 7 2013 Flint Anthony MBTA Halts Purchase of Green Line Lemons mirrored copy The Boston Globe December 12 2004 Daniel Mac December 17 2005 Green Line seeks zippier service with upgrade plan The Boston Globe Archived from the original on January 25 2007 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link archived as of January 25 2007 Bredas The Boston Globe December 14 2006 Archived from the original on January 24 2007 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link archived as of January 24 2007 End of the line for T pioneers The Boston Globe March 16 2007 Retrieved August 7 2013 a b Settlement Agreement PDF Joanne Daniels Finegold et al v MBTA April 10 2006 pp 10 11 Annear Steve November 18 2014 First of Refurbished Green Line Trolleys Heads Back Home Boston Retrieved November 25 2014 Annear Steve May 13 2014 New Green Line Trains Will Hit the Tracks by 2017 Boston Retrieved May 20 2014 CAF wins Boston Green Line order Railway Gazette May 16 2014 Retrieved May 20 2014 Green Line Type 9 Project Update PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority March 27 2017 p 11 New MBTA Green Line Car goes into Passenger Service Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority December 21 2018 Green Line Transformation Program Future Capacity Study Update Fiscal amp Management Control Board PDF MBTA May 7 2018 Retrieved February 10 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Brelsford Laura May 26 2020 SWA Initiatives May 2020 PDF p 18 a b Vaccaro Adam January 31 2020 Next on the MBTA spending spree bigger Green Line cars The Boston Globe Boston Globe Retrieved February 10 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Pena Angel June 21 2021 Green Line Transformation GLT Update PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Pena Angel Wolfgang Bill August 31 2022 RFP No 367F 19 Type 10 Supercar Update and Procurement Award PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority a b c d System Wide Accessibility Initiatives December 2022 PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Department of System Wide Accessibility December 6 2022 Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority FY23 27 Capital Investment Plan CIP Proposed PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority March 2022 pp 66 67 MBTA gt About the MBTA gt Transit Projects gt Transit Projects and Accessibility Archived from the original on January 18 2012 Retrieved October 23 2018 MBTA reaches 75 percent design completion on Green Line D branch accessibility improvements project Mass Transit Magazine Retrieved September 26 2022 a b c Cudahy Brian J 1972 Change at Park Street Under the story of Boston s subways Brattleboro Vt S Greene Press ISBN 0 8289 0173 2 Belcher Jonathan January February 2022 MBTA Vehicle Inventory as of February 28 2022 Rollsign Vol 59 no 1 2 Boston Street Railway Association p 9 a b c Rocheleau Matt January 22 2013 MBTA Mobile apps will be able to track Green Line trains by 2015 Boston Globe Retrieved January 22 2013 a b CUSTOMERS ARE NOW ABLE TO TRACK GREEN LINE TRAINS Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority October 23 2014 Retrieved October 28 2014 Green Line to nearly triple the number of 3 car trains Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority March 16 2011 Vaccaro Adam May 3 2016 Why is the Green Line so crowded Boston Globe Green Line Train Protection System GLTPS System Integration Contract PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority May 20 2019 GLTPS Monthly Review and Lookahead PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority December 15 2021 New Funding Accelerates Green Line Train Protection System Project Timeline Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority February 25 2022 Dolven Taylor January 5 2023 Green Line crash would have been prevented if MBTA had installed train tech earlier NTSB finds Boston Globe Archived from the original on January 5 2023 MBTA Capital Investment Program FY15 FY19 PDF MBTA March 12 2014 p 124 Retrieved April 23 2015 a b MBTA installing underground tracking system for Green Line trolleys Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority March 3 2015 Retrieved March 12 2015 Annear Steve September 18 2013 The MBTA s Green Line Is Getting Next Train Electronic Information Boards Boston Magazine Retrieved September 18 2013 Green Line s First Countdown Signs Go Live in Newton Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority April 24 2015 Retrieved April 25 2015 Roberts Sarah October 6 2015 Green Line to get countdown clocks in downtown stations Boston Globe Retrieved October 6 2015 Levenson Eric January 20 2016 Why the Green Line s new countdown clocks measure stops away instead of time Boston Globe Retrieved January 20 2016 MacCormack Terry March 21 2022 Baker Polito Administration Celebrates Opening of the Green Line Extension Press release Government of Massachusetts MBTA Celebrates Opening of the Green Line Extension Medford Branch Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority December 12 2022 About the Green Line Extension Project Massachusetts Department of Transportation Retrieved September 28 2020 Cummings Claire August 9 2007 Proponents rap delay to extend Green Line The Boston Globe Retrieved August 26 2007 Byrne Matt August 1 2011 State Green Line extension will be delayed til 2018 boston com The Boston Globe Retrieved August 1 2011 Metzger Andy Green Line Extension Cost Rises To 2 Billion WBUR Retrieved February 10 2015 Green Line Extension Phase 1 Construction Begins Commonwealth Conversation Transportation Massachusetts Department of Transportation December 11 2012 Retrieved December 15 2012 Vaccaro Adam December 14 2015 Transit officials won t commit additional state money to Green Line extension Boston Globe Retrieved December 15 2015 Interim Project Management Team Report Green Line Extension Project Report to the MBTA Fiscal and Management Control Board and the MassDOT Board of Directors Submitted May 9 2016 Vaccaro Adam May 13 2019 Somerville s getting a brand new bike path with the Green Line extension Is it wide enough The Boston Globe Dungca Nicole April 4 2017 Feds OK Green Line extension costs securing project s future Boston Globe Retrieved April 4 2017 Jessen Klark November 17 2017 Green Line Extension Project Design Build Team Firm Selected Press release Massachusetts Department of Transportation MBTA chooses winning bidder for Green Line extension and awards its biggest contract ever The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com Retrieved November 22 2017 Thompson Katie November 15 2019 Construction on Green Line extension 20 percent complete WCVB Baker Polito Administration Transportation Officials Visit Green Line Extension Project Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority October 1 2020 Dalton John June 21 2021 Green Line Extension Update PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority p 19 Official Audit Report Issued June 16 2014 Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority For the period January 1 2005 through December 31 2012 PDF Report Auditor of the Commonwealth June 16 2014 a b Executive Summary PDF Program of Mass Transportation Boston Regional Metropolitan Planning Organization January 2004 pp 2 9 Archived from the original PDF on February 20 2012 Ridership amp Service Statistics 9 ed Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 2004 p 2 19 via Internet Archive Planned Accessibility Projects On Board the Green Line Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Archived from the original on August 10 2004 Green Line Stations Upgraded to Improve Accessibility PDF TRANSReport Boston Regional Metropolitan Planning Organization June 2007 Archived from the original PDF on January 16 2011 Bierman Noah June 2 2009 Arlington T station reopens with disabled access Boston Globe Retrieved May 23 2012 Rocheleau Matt September 14 2010 Copley station project nears end historic church plans repairs Boston Globe Retrieved May 23 2012 Moskowitz Eric April 25 2010 Kenmore station upgrades done finally Boston Globe p B2 via Newspapers com Trolley service to resume as project end Boston Globe November 3 2011 Retrieved May 23 2012 Moskowitz Eric March 21 2016 Government Center reopens Boston Globe Retrieved March 21 2016 MPO Agency Notes PDF TRANSreport Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization April 2006 via Internet Archive Rocheleau Matt September 28 2012 MBTA to hold meeting on 20m project to rebuild Boston College Station Boston Globe Access in Motion 2009 Calendar PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 2009 Archived from the original PDF on January 2 2010 Brookline Hills Station Accessibility Improvements Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority January 10 2022 New Babcock Street and Amory Street Stations Open November 15 Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority November 12 2021 System Wide Accessibility Initiatives December 2021 PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Department of System Wide Accessibility December 2021 pp 3 4 Collision Between Two Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Green Line Trains Newton Massachusetts May 28 2008 NTSB RAR 09 02 PDF Report National Transportation Safety Board July 14 2009 Archived from the original PDF on October 16 2011 Trolley Driver Was Texting Girlfriend At Time Of Crash 46 Injured In Green Line Crash Archived February 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine WCVB Boston May 8 2009 Texting Trolley Driver Is Transgendered Male ABC News May 11 2009 Trolley Crash Inspires Tougher Cell Phone Policy NTSB Still Investigating Crash Archived February 22 2012 at the Wayback Machine WCVB May 9 2009 Accident involving two Green Line trolleys www wcvb com Retrieved October 8 2012 Moskowitz Erik et al November 29 2012 35 taken to hospital after two trolleys collide at Boylston MBTA station Boston Globe Retrieved November 29 2012 Tempera Jacqueline Martine Powers March 10 2014 Seven injured as MBTA Green Line train derails near Kenmore Station Boston com Retrieved March 11 2014 Green Line train derails it was intense Boston Herald March 10 2014 Retrieved March 10 2014 Dungca Nicole October 13 2016 The Green Line had the most derailments in the nation last year The Boston Globe Retrieved October 13 2016 Crimaldi Laura July 31 2021 NTSB investigating Green Line crash that left 25 injured MBTA operator placed on leave Boston Globe Laura Crimaldi Elizabeth Koh Globe August 15 2021 On the T s Green Line another serious crash and questions about the lack of safety technology The Boston Globe External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to MBTA Green Line KML file edit help Template Attached KML Green Line MBTA KML is from Wikidata MBTA Green Line MBTA Green Line Extension Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Green Line MBTA amp oldid 1132940324, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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