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H Street/Benning Road Line

The H Street/Benning Road Line is a currently operating line of DC Streetcar. It has eight stations and began operation on February 27, 2016. The 2.4-mile (3.9 km) line runs along H Street NE and Benning Road NE in Washington, D.C.[1] In September 2016 service was increased from six days a week to seven, and with shorter 12-minute headways.[8]

H Street/Benning Road Line
A streetcar at the line's Oklahoma Avenue terminus in June 2016
Overview
OwnerGovernment of the District of Columbia
Area servedH Street NE and Benning Road
LocaleWashington, D.C., U.S.
Transit typeStreetcar
Number of stations8[1] (5 planned)
Daily ridership3,513 (May 2018)[2]
Annual ridership1,094,000 (2017)[3][4]
20.75%
Operation
Began operationFebruary 27, 2016 (2016-02-27)[5]
Operator(s)RATP Group[6]
CharacterStreet running and elevated
Number of vehicles6
Train length66.04 ft (20,130 mm)[7]
Headway12 minutes[8]
Technical
System length2.4 mi (3.9 km)[1]
No. of tracks1 and 2
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Minimum radius of curvature52 ft (16 m)[7]
Electrification750 V DC, overhead wires
Top speed43 mph (70 km/h)[7]
Route map

History Edit

Since the dismantling of Washington, D.C.'s original streetcar lines, the corridor had been served by Metrobus's X2 route.

In 2003, Mayor Anthony A. Williams unveiled a draft Strategic Development Plan which proposed redeveloping and revitalizing six blighted areas of the city, including H Street NE and Benning Road.[9] Among the proposals to revitalize H Street was the construction of a streetcar line to downtown D.C. in five to 10 years.[9] The plan was formalized during the next year.[10] Residents and business owners in the area were cautious about the plan, fearing traffic congestion and threats to pedestrian safety in an area which needed greater auto and foot traffic.[10]

On January 20, 2006, the District of Columbia Department of Transportation announced that it would build a $13 million streetcar line on H Street NE, from Union Station to Benning Road and the Minnesota Avenue Metro station as part of its Great Streets initiative,[11][12] on much of the same route established by the Columbia Railway Company in 1870.[13] Construction was originally planned to begin in the spring of 2007 (to coincide with extensive improvements to parking and lighting and the beautification of H Street NE) and end in 2009.[14]

Extension dropped; track construction Edit

 
Construction of the H Street NE/Benning Road Line in October 2009

By 2008, the extension to the Minnesota Avenue Metro station had been dropped, and the H Street streetcar line was being designed to link up with a planned downtown streetcar line running along the same route as the downtown routes of the DC Circulator bus.[15]

Streetcar tracks were installed on H Street as part of the H Street/Benning Road Great Streets project that was started in December 2007 and ended on June 30, 2011.[16][17][18][19] Plans in 2009 were for the streetcar to start operation in 2011, but city engineers, had yet to determine how to get power to the cars, identify locations for the cars to turn around, or find land for a car storage facility for use at night when the line was not running.[16]

Planned extension to Benning Road Metro Edit

In April 2010, DDOT officials announced that they intended to build a $74 million, two-mile (3.2 km) extension of the H Street line that would link with the Benning Road Metro station.[20] The district had applied for a $25 million federal grant to help pay for the extension.[20] DDOT also announced a plan to link the line to Union Station, in order to connect the H Street line's eastern terminus with the Union Station Metro and Amtrak.[20] The city said it owned a right-of-way underneath the existing Amtrak railroad tracks on which it would build the extension.[20] In September 2017, the district issued an RFQ for engineering work related to the extension.[21]

The city also began encouraging riders to travel along the H Street corridor to Benning Road in 2009. The "H Street Shuttle" was founded in early 2009 by the H Street Business Cooperative (a nonprofit group of retailers whose businesses line H Street) to promote travel into the business district.[22] The shuttle ran between the Gallery Place and Minnesota Avenue Metro stations, making just four stops along the way.[22] The city provided $130,000 in operating funds in 2009 (although the shuttle did not run for a short period in November 2009 due to funding cut-offs).[22] The shuttle also encountered public safety problems, as fistfights sometimes broke out between rowdy youths riding the shuttle.[23] The shuttle has also had eggs thrown at it, been shot at with BB guns, and youth have attempted to slash its tires while it made stops.[23] Although it was intended to be a temporary measure to bring customers into the retail corridor while streetcar construction occurred, D.C. officials said they would fund the shuttle only through the end of 2010.[23]

Electrification dispute Edit

Local preservationist groups such as the Committee of 100 on the Federal City as well as regional planning bodies like the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) have opposed the current design of the streetcar system, which relies on overhead electrical wires and a pantograph to conduct power to the streetcar motor.[24] Opponents of the design cite an 1889 federal law banning such systems in Georgetown and the historic center city (defined by the Florida Avenue NE and NW south to the Potomac and Anacostia rivers).[24] The NCPC has also opposed use of the wires along H Street NE, the 11th Street bridges, and in Anacostia.[24] These groups have proposed a design change that would rely on wireless technologies, such as battery-powered vehicles which rely on conduit current collection (in which a metal arm or "plow" is inserted into a channel in the street and draws power from cables under the roadway).[24] But District of Columbia officials say the current overhead lines are not visually obtrusive, and that conduit collection systems are costly and break down easily in cities with wet climates.[24]

 
A pantograph on a DC Streetcar during a public display in 2010

City transportation planning officials have also proposed building a system that would run on wires outside the historic core but switch to a hybrid battery/conduit system inside the area.[24] On May 31, 2010, 12 of the council's 13 members co-sponsored a bill to exempt the H Street Line from the 1888 and 1889 laws that banned overhead electrification in the city's historic core.[25] The legislation required that the mayor's office develop a citywide plan by 2014 to determine where additional overhead electrification could be permitted.[25] The Committee of 100 supported the planning requirement,[26] and the legislation passed the council on June 29, 2010.[27]

But in late June 2010, the chair of the National Capital Planning Commission, L. Preston Bryant Jr., sent a letter to the Federal Transit Administration demanding that $25 million in federal money intended for the streetcar project be withheld until the NCPC and city reached agreement regarding the overhead electrification issue.[28] The NCPC said they had legal advice which indicated that only Congress had the power to rescind the 1888 and 1889 laws.[28] City council members, who had been negotiating with the NCPC, said the NCPC's action was a sign of bad faith in the talks.[28] DDOT Director Gabe Klein said the NCPC was "blackmailing" city leaders, and that the NCPC was overstepping its boundary as a purely advisory body.[27] Klein asked Bryant to rescind his letter, arguing that Bryant had purposefully misstated the city's plans for overhead electrification (claiming it would install overhead wires on the National Mall and near Congress) and asserting that the H Street Line was not covered by the 1888 and 1889 laws.[27] Klein also cited two previous legal opinions which concluded the city had the power to rescind the 1800s legislation.[27] On July 13, 2010, the D.C. Council passed legislation to allow the overhead wires along Benning Road and H Street NE.[29] The legislation specifically banned the wires around the National Mall and along Pennsylvania Avenue between Capitol Hill and the White House, and established a process for seeking public and other input on whether wires should be used elsewhere in the city.[29]

Funding issue, plans revised Edit

Funding for the DC Streetcar system became an issue in 2010. D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty proposed spending $60 million to $70 million in his fiscal 2011 budget to complete the H Street Line and purchase six trams, with a goal of activating the line in the spring of 2012.[30] Funding for other lines would be withheld until the city was assured that the H Street Line was a success.[30] Fenty also released the results of a study commissioned by the Downtown DC Business Improvement District (BID) and researched by the Brookings Institution, Robert Charles Lesser & Co. research firm, and Reconnecting America (a non-profit public transit advocacy group) which found that the DC Streetcar system could increase the value of businesses along the H Street Line by $1.1 billion over 20 years.[30]

Fenty proposed levying a $375 million tax on businesses on the H Street Line to help pay for the streetcar system.[30] But on May 25, 2010, the D.C. City Council voted to delete $49 million in proposed streetcar funding in order to help close a $550 million budget deficit.[31] DC Streetcar advocates accused Sarah Campbell, capital budget director for the City Council, for deleting the funds, pointing out that Campbell is also a member of the Committee of 100 on the Federal City (which opposed the streetcar system as currently planned).[31] DDOT Director Gabe Klein accused the Council of killing the program.[31] Campbell denied both allegations.[31] The Washington Post reported that the budget battle may have been sparked by Council Chair Vincent C. Gray, who was likely to challenge Fenty for the Democratic nomination for mayor in September 2010.[32] The following day, after hundreds of angry phone calls from residents, the Council restored the funds by agreeing to borrow the money.[32]

On October 23, 2010, D.C. transportation officials published a revised plan for the DC Streetcar system. The new plan envisioned opening the H Street/Benning Road and Anacostia lines in March or April 2012.[33] It also significantly scaled back the Anacostia Line, truncating the northern end of the line at the Anacostia Metro station.[33] The plan estimated the cost of constructing the two lines at $194 million, with operating costs at about $8 million per year.[33] DDOT officials said they believed 6,350 riders per day would pay the $1 fare in the system's first year, with ridership tripling to 23,450 riders a day in 2015.[33] The cars would be equipped to accept SmarTrip cards but not cash, and officials said anyone transferring from Metro to the DC Streetcar system using a SmarTrip card would ride for free.[33] The streetcars were expected to operate every 10 to 15 minutes, seven days a week, during the same hours Metro's rail system was in operation.[33]

Funding for completion of the two lines was still unclear, however. DDOT had applied for a $110 million federal grant, but had already lost a competition for an $18 million grant.[33] City planners said they continued to look at tapping into a $180 million fund designed to service Metro's debt, enacting BID or zoning taxes in areas affected by the streetcar system, or creating public-private partnerships that would tap into private money for construction in exchange for tax breaks or concessions by the city.[33] The overhead electrical wire issue also remained unresolved in the plan (although battery-operated cars were mentioned).[33] Finally, the plan laid out a process for selecting a third party to operate the system (which may or may not be Metro).[33] Funding issues continued to raise concern in other ways, too. The rising cost of the project became an issue in the reelection bid of D.C. City Council member Tommy Wells, whose ward encompasses H Street.[34] The City Council held a hearing on the newly unveiled plan on November 16.[35] Five days later, angry business owners along H Street demanded a tax refund and a moratorium on tax sales during a second council hearing.[36] Business owners said construction of the streetcar line had caused sales to drop by as much as 70 percent, and City Council member Jim Graham introduced legislation establishing a $7 million fund to help businesses impacted by the construction.[36]

Proposed 2013 introduction Edit

On August 22, 2011, DDOT announced the first streetcars would roll on the H Street line in the summer of 2013.[37]

In late August 2011, DDOT announced the H Street Line would begin operation in the summer of 2013.[37] City officials said all platform stops had been constructed along the route, but overhead electricity lines, turnarounds at each end of the line, a streetcar overnight holding facility ("car barn"), maintenance facility, and three power substations remained to be built.[37] The holding and maintenance facility would likely be constructed at the eastern end of the line, officials said, and might also contain training facilities in streetcar operation for local high school students.[37] DDOT said that one of the major remaining issues confronting the line was the completion of the western terminus at Union Station. Originally, DDOT had wanted to cut through the footing of the bridge carrying H Street over the Amtrak rail lines, allowing streetcars to pass under the railroad tracks and access a streetcar platform on Union Station's west side.[37] However, Amtrak declined to allow DDOT permission to use this space, as the railroad intended to access it for high-speed rail in the future.[37] DDOT said it was considering three new options: 1) Running streetcars over the bridge; 2) Adding about five blocks of additional streetcar track to allow streetcar riders to get off at the NoMa–Gallaudet U Metro station; and 3) Asking Amtrak for turnaround space under the existing Amtrak railroad track.[37] DDOT said four companies had bid to design and construct these remaining pieces of the H Line, and another was being sought to operate the line.[37] DDOT officials also said they were considering extending the H Street Line to the Benning Road Metro station as well as down K Street NW to Washington Circle.[37]

In January 2012, the D.C. Office of Planning released a report which asserted that the streetcar system had the potential to create 7,700 new jobs and added as much as $8 billion in new development over a 10-year period.[38] The system could also increase office building property values by $5.8 billion, and residential property values by $1.6 billion,[38] exceeding by 600 to 1,000 percent the cost of building the system.[39] The study also said that 4,000 to 12,000 households would move back into the District of Columbia from the suburbs,[39] and the number of people living on or near a streetcar line would triple.[38] The report "conservatively" projected that up to $291 million in annual tax revenues would be generated by the fully completed streetcar system.[39] Chris Leinberger of the Brookings Institution told The Washington Post that the streetcar system had the potential to finally move development out of the northwest quadrant of the city into the underdeveloped northeast and southeast.[38] But not everything about streetcars was positive. The report also said streetcars would also be likely to worsen traffic congestion on Benning Road SE, Columbia Road NW, Florida Avenue NW and Florida Avenue NE, Georgia Avenue NW, and K Street NW,[38] and might make it "prohibitively expensive" for small businesses to exist along the lines.[39]

New task force Edit

Concerned that the streetcar project was not well-managed and losing public support, D.C. Council member Mary Cheh introduced legislation to create a task force that would study whether the streetcar project should be removed from DDOT's jurisdiction and placed under a separate streetcar authority.[40]

Service changes Edit

In December 2011, the city announced that the H Street/Benning Road line would be routed over the H Street Bridge (colloquially known as the "Hopscotch Bridge" because of modern art on the bridge which depicts children playing hopscotch).[41] Planners said that the trolley would still connect with Union Station, but did not say how.

Controversy Edit

 
Interior of a streetcar making a test or training run on DC Streetcar's H Street NE line
 
Control panel of a streetcar running on DC Streetcar's H Street NE line

Several controversies arose over the H Street/Benning Road line in early 2012. According to United Streetcar, a streetcar manufacturing company based in Oregon, the city awarded United Streetcar $8.7 million in contracts to build trolley cars for the H Street/Benning Road line. Contracts were awarded in June 2011 and again in September 2011.[42] On December 16, 2011, D.C. City Councilwoman Mary Cheh filed a "disapproval resolution" with the mayor's office, placing a 40-day hold on the contract after questions arose as to whether the contract called for the construction of two trolley cars (as the city claimed) or three (as Cheh believed).[43] On December 21, 2011, Inekon Group filed a protest of the award with the D.C. Contract Appeals Board, claiming that cost/price trade-off analysis used by the city was inappropriate.[42] Streetcar proponents worried that the protest could delay the contract by up to 2.5 years,[43] but DDOT moved much more quickly and canceled the contracts in early January 2012 after a formal internal review.[42] In February, DDOT began the contract solicitation process anew.[44] Due to the contract controversy, DDOT said it might begin running the H Street/Benning Road line with just three streetcars instead of five. D.C. City Council member Tommy Wells pressed DDOT to wait until it could run five trolley cars, arguing that with just three cars the streetcar system would not be convenient enough for passengers.[44] Council member Mary Cheh, chair of the council's transportation committee, said the DDOT's management of the streetcar project had lost the confidence of the public and that she would seek legislation establishing an independent authority to run the system.[44] A new contract for vehicles was awarded in April, again to United Streetcar.[45]

At about the same time, DDOT announced a plan to build a $13 million, 14,000-square-foot (1,300 m2) trolley car barn, operations base, and maintenance facility on the grounds of Spingarn High School (which is near the eastern terminus of the line). The facility would house only a few cars at first, but would be able to accommodate 12 cars.[46] Residents of the Kingman Park neighborhood opposed the facility on the grounds that it would be noisy, near a public school, cause traffic congestion, and cause a reduction in property values. They demanded that DDOT seek approval from the local Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC), but DDOT officials said that the site did not require ANC or other legislative approval.[46]

Budget proposal, contract awarded, further controversy Edit

 
DC Streetcar yard and the temporary storage facility (car barn) at the corner of Benning Road and 26th Street NE
 
Construction site of the DC Streetcar permanent Car Barn Training Center (CBTC II) at the corner of Benning Road and 26th Street NE

In March 2012, D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray proposed a six-year, $237 million capital expenditure budget that would continue to expand the DC Streetcar system.[47] But just a few days later, District officials admitted that it would cost $64.5 million to operate the first two lines during their first five years of operation — but the city only had revenues to pay for about 58 percent of those costs.[48] Nonetheless, the city reaffirmed its commitment to opening the H Street line in 2013, and announced it had signed a contract with Oregon Iron Works subsidiary United Streetcar to buy two more streetcars for $8.7 million.[49] Additional controversy over the future of the streetcar system occurred in June 2012 when the Cato Institute (an American libertarian think tank) issued a study denouncing government-built streetcar systems for being too costly, inefficient, and unable to generate economic revitalization.[50]

In mid-June 2012, the city signed a $50 million contract with Dean Facchina LLC (a joint venture between M.C. Dean, Inc. and Facchina Construction Company) to design and construct the car barn, power system, and turnarounds for the H Street line. Mayor Vincent Gray said the contract was a sign that the city was going to adhere to a summer 2013 opening. But a few days later, D.C. Council member Marion Barry filed paperwork that placed a 45-day "hold" on the automatic council approval of the contract. Barry argued that too much money was being spent on a system that served too few people.[51] Barry withdrew his objection just a few days later after Gray assured him that D.C. residents would be hired for construction jobs on the project.[52]

Financing the system continued to generate controversy in June 2012. Mayor Gray opened a city office in Shanghai to promote Chinese trade with and investment in the District of Columbia. In his talks with Chinese trade officials, he discussed having the Exim Bank of China fund the system's construction.[53] Gray said that Chinese officials expressed surprise that it would take the city 20 years to build out the entire system, and Chinese officials suggested they could fund all or part of the $1.5 billion streetcar project in exchange for all or a portion of the fares generated by it.[54] After the meeting, Gray told the media that an independent financing authority might be needed to finance the streetcar system.[53] Even as Gray was suggesting that the city government continue to build and run the DC Streetcar system, DDOT officials released a "request for information" (RFI) to construction and operations contractors regarding the proposed construction schedule, financing, and governance of the project. The RFI noted that, if the city privatized the entire streetcar project, it would seek a 30-year contract and give the private entity a free hand in designing, financing, and constructing the streetcar system (although the city would retain final say over fares).[55]

D.C. Council member Tommy Wells said he opposed any privatization effort. He argued a private company would seek to raise fares, reduce the number of routes built, and provide low-quality service to gain the highest profit.[56] Wells also expressed his belief no private company would want to serve Ward 8, where the city's poorest but most mass transit-dependent population lives.[54] DDOT countered by saying that although building the system would cost $1.2 billion (which included purchasing 50 streetcars), it would only cost $65 million a year to operate (compared to DC Circulator buses, which need $70 million a year to operate). DDOT also said its RFI was intended to see if there was a market for building and operating its streetcar system, and not a request for proposals.[57]

As the city's RFI was being considered, DDOT announced it had signed a five-year, $4 million contract with RATP Dev McDonald Transit Associates (RDMT), a subsidiary of RATP Group, to operate the H Street/Benning Roadline. The contract also assigned training and the operation of maintenance facilities to RDMT.[6]

Future in jeopardy Edit

In September 2012, the future of the H Street line was thrown into question. DDOT had long planned to build its streetcar barn on the grounds of Spingarn High School. But the Kingman Park Civic Association filed an application with the D.C. Historic Preservation Review Board to have Spingarn High School declared a city landmark. That would force DDOT to find a new location for the car barn. On October 8, 2012, DDOT director Terry Bellamy told the D.C. Council that the civic association's actions would push the opening of the H Street line into early 2014, even if landmark status was not awarded to the high school. Bellamy expressed optimism, however, that the H Street line would still open, and said that DDOT was already planning to extend it to Minnesota Avenue. He also said the city was still working on plans to open an Anacostia line in Ward 8. D.C. Council members, however, expressed dismay at DDOT's apparent lack of a strategic plan for the streetcar system. They also voiced scepticism that DDOT was planning ahead and concern that more problems (similar to the Spingarn High School issue) would continue to plague the system because of poor planning.[58]

Testing and fares Edit

 
Inekon-built car 101 being towed along H Street on the night of December 13, 2013, during the first tests to the check track and platform clearances with a streetcar

In April 2014, DDOT estimated that the H Street Line would open in the fall of 2014. A temporary car barn at the former Spingarn High School was scheduled for completion in July. Testing of the system would take several weeks, and then the system would need to be certified for operation by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), which would take another 60 to 80 days. DDOT also said it needed to take delivery of a sixth streetcar, likely in June, before any testing could begin.[59]

DDOT also began the process of setting the system's fare in the spring of 2014. Mayor Gray proposed a $1 fare, which would require a $4.65 million subsidy to meet the H Street Line's anticipated yearly operating cost of $5.1 million. On April 29, however, DDOT Director Terry Bellamy suggested the fare might be as high as $1.50 for SmarTrip farecard users and $2 for cash users (the same fare structure proposed for the DC Circulator bus system).[59]

With a decision on the fare structure still months off, Council Member Marion Barry threatened to cancel all funding for all planned DC Streetcar lines. Barry argued that the rider subsidy was too high and that the $800 million planned for construction of the remaining lines could be better used for road maintenance and school construction.[59]

Completion Edit

 
A streetcar running on H Street NE during the testing phase in October 2015

On December 17, 2012, DC Streetcar officials said only 20 percent of the H Street line remained to be completed, and that they anticipated streetcars to be rolling in October 2013.[60]

On December 13, 2013, the first streetcar was placed on the tracks on the H Street line.[61]

As of April 2014, the H Street Line's western terminus was still planned for the Hopscotch Bridge (a bridge which connects H Street NE to North Capitol Street).[59]

Testing on the H Street-Benning Road Line began in August 2014, with a planned opening date for the line in late 2014 (or possibly early 2015 if there are delays in the testing process).[62]

After more delays, the line had been tentatively projected to open in January 2015,[58] but on January 16 the DDOT's director Leif Dormsjo announced that the Department would no longer issue any estimates for an opening date and that he intended to reorganize the project's management team.[63] On July 9, 2015, in a Washington Post article detailing problems with the heaters for the rails, Dormsjo indicated it would be "months" before the trolley line opened.[64]

 
A streetcar in service on H Street in March 2016

On February 21, 2015, a brief flash fire was ignited on the top of a streetcar in simulated service.[65] In early March 2015, DDOT suggested that the project may be scrapped entirely, if an outside review being conducted by the American Public Transportation Association found "fatal flaws",[66] but the findings, released on March 16, found no "fatal flaws" in the project.[67][68]

Dan Malouff, a writer for the Greater Greater Washington website, reported on July 10, 2015, that a review prepared for the DDOT had identified 33 causes for continued delay in rolling out fare service.[69][70] He said that none of the reported causes for delay were considered "fatal", but the DDOT had not yet responded to the report with a prediction as to when all the problems would be attended to.

The DC Streetcar's H Street/Benning line began public service operations on February 27, 2016.[71]

Station listing Edit

The entire line is in Washington, D.C., and serves 8 stops:[72]

The Benning Road extension would add 5 more stations:[21]

References Edit

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  45. ^ Neibauer, Michael (August 22, 2012). "D.C. buying third streetcar from Oregon Iron Works". The Washington Business Journal. Retrieved November 14, 2014.
  46. ^ a b Jenkins, Chris L. "D.C. Trolley Car Barn Angers Kingman Park Residents." Washington Post. February 6, 2012.
  47. ^ Neibauer, Michael. "No New Taxes in Gray's $5.85B D.C. Budget Proposal." Washington Business Journal. March 23, 2012.
  48. ^ Neibauer, Michael. "D.C. Trying to Figure Out How to Pay for 42% of Streetcar Costs." Washington Business Journal. March 30, 2012.
  49. ^ "D.C. to Buy Two Streetcars for $8.7 Million." Associated Press. April 5, 2012.
  50. ^ McDuffee, Allen. "Cato Wages War on 'Streetcar Conspiracy'." Washington Post. June 14, 2012. Accessed November 6, 2012.
  51. ^ Craig, Tim. "Marion Barry Tries to Halt D.C. Streetcar Work." Washington Post. June 19, 2012. Accessed November 6, 2012.
  52. ^ DeBonis, Mike. "DeEvening Links: The Streetcar Rolls On." Washington Post. June 25, 2012. Accessed November 6, 2012.
  53. ^ a b O'Connell, Jonathan. "Gray Looks Abroad for Investment." Washington Post. July 8, 2012. Accessed November 6, 2012.
  54. ^ a b Berman, Mark and Craig, Tim. "D.C. Wants Input on Privatized Streetcar System." Washington Post. June 26, 2012. Accessed November 6, 2012.
  55. ^ Berman, Mark and Craig, Tim. "D.C. Wants Input on Privatized Streetcar System." Washington Post. June 26, 2012.
  56. ^ Craig, Tim. "Wells No Fan of Private Streetcars." Washington Post. June 26, 2012. Accessed November 6, 2012.
  57. ^ Halsey III, Ashley and Craig, Tim. "D.C. Tries to Entice Private Sector to Jump Into Streetcar Project." Washington Post. June 27, 2012. Accessed November 6, 2012.
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  60. ^ "H/Benning Phase 2 Construction" (PDF). DCStreetcar.com. DDOT. December 17, 2012. Retrieved December 25, 2012.
  61. ^ Dan Malouff (December 16, 2013). "Streetcar arrives on H Street". Greater Greater Washington.
  62. ^ Di Caro, Martin (July 15, 2014). "DDOT Best-Case Scenario Targets November Opening For D.C. Streetcar". WAMU 88.5. Retrieved August 5, 2014.
  63. ^ "Well, the streetcar works in the snow". Greater Greater Washington.
  64. ^ Laris, Michael (July 9, 2015). "As costs were cut, D.C.'s streetcars were left frozen in tracks". Washington Post. p. B1. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  65. ^ The D.C. Streetcar's Latest Problem: Catching on Fire February 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  66. ^ "Transportation director: DC streetcar may never open". Associated Press. March 7, 2015. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
  67. ^ "APTA Peer Review Finds DC Streetcar Can Open". DDOT. March 16, 2015. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
  68. ^ Laris, Michael (March 20, 2015). "District streetcar line can open following fixes, industry group says". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
  69. ^ Dan Malouff (July 9, 2015). "33 things DDOT must fix to open the DC Streetcar". Greater Greater Washington.
  70. ^ "American Public Transportation Association, Peer Review, for District Department of Transportation, Washington DC" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. June 17, 2015.
  71. ^ Laris, Michael (February 27, 2016). "D.C. streetcar makes its first voyages on H Street. 'Is it really happening?'". Washington Post. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  72. ^ . DCStreetcar.com. DDOT. Archived from the original on February 25, 2016. Retrieved December 23, 2017.

External links Edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • DC Streetcar Website
  • DC DDOT Streetcar Project October 1, 2018, at the Wayback Machine

street, benning, road, line, this, article, about, streetcar, line, route, benning, road, street, line, currently, operating, line, streetcar, eight, stations, began, operation, february, 2016, mile, line, runs, along, street, benning, road, washington, septem. This article is about the streetcar line For the bus route see Benning Road H Street Line The H Street Benning Road Line is a currently operating line of DC Streetcar It has eight stations and began operation on February 27 2016 The 2 4 mile 3 9 km line runs along H Street NE and Benning Road NE in Washington D C 1 In September 2016 service was increased from six days a week to seven and with shorter 12 minute headways 8 H Street Benning Road LineA streetcar at the line s Oklahoma Avenue terminus in June 2016OverviewOwnerGovernment of the District of ColumbiaArea servedH Street NE and Benning RoadLocaleWashington D C U S Transit typeStreetcarNumber of stations8 1 5 planned Daily ridership3 513 May 2018 2 Annual ridership1 094 000 2017 3 4 20 75 OperationBegan operationFebruary 27 2016 2016 02 27 5 Operator s RATP Group 6 CharacterStreet running and elevatedNumber of vehicles6Train length66 04 ft 20 130 mm 7 Headway12 minutes 8 TechnicalSystem length2 4 mi 3 9 km 1 No of tracks1 and 2Track gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeMinimum radius of curvature52 ft 16 m 7 Electrification750 V DC overhead wiresTop speed43 mph 70 km h 7 Route mapLegendBenning Road ExtensionBenning Road ExtensionBenning Road42nd Street39th Street34th StreetAnacostia RiverKingman IslandAnacostia RiverOklahoma Avenue19th Street15th StreetBenning RoadH Street13th Street8th Street5th Street3rd StreetUnion StationThis diagram viewtalkedit Contents 1 History 1 1 Extension dropped track construction 1 2 Planned extension to Benning Road Metro 1 3 Electrification dispute 1 4 Funding issue plans revised 1 5 Proposed 2013 introduction 1 6 New task force 1 7 Service changes 1 8 Controversy 1 9 Budget proposal contract awarded further controversy 1 10 Future in jeopardy 1 11 Testing and fares 1 12 Completion 2 Station listing 3 References 4 External linksHistory EditSince the dismantling of Washington D C s original streetcar lines the corridor had been served by Metrobus s X2 route In 2003 Mayor Anthony A Williams unveiled a draft Strategic Development Plan which proposed redeveloping and revitalizing six blighted areas of the city including H Street NE and Benning Road 9 Among the proposals to revitalize H Street was the construction of a streetcar line to downtown D C in five to 10 years 9 The plan was formalized during the next year 10 Residents and business owners in the area were cautious about the plan fearing traffic congestion and threats to pedestrian safety in an area which needed greater auto and foot traffic 10 On January 20 2006 the District of Columbia Department of Transportation announced that it would build a 13 million streetcar line on H Street NE from Union Station to Benning Road and the Minnesota Avenue Metro station as part of its Great Streets initiative 11 12 on much of the same route established by the Columbia Railway Company in 1870 13 Construction was originally planned to begin in the spring of 2007 to coincide with extensive improvements to parking and lighting and the beautification of H Street NE and end in 2009 14 Extension dropped track construction Edit nbsp Construction of the H Street NE Benning Road Line in October 2009By 2008 the extension to the Minnesota Avenue Metro station had been dropped and the H Street streetcar line was being designed to link up with a planned downtown streetcar line running along the same route as the downtown routes of the DC Circulator bus 15 Streetcar tracks were installed on H Street as part of the H Street Benning Road Great Streets project that was started in December 2007 and ended on June 30 2011 16 17 18 19 Plans in 2009 were for the streetcar to start operation in 2011 but city engineers had yet to determine how to get power to the cars identify locations for the cars to turn around or find land for a car storage facility for use at night when the line was not running 16 Planned extension to Benning Road Metro Edit In April 2010 DDOT officials announced that they intended to build a 74 million two mile 3 2 km extension of the H Street line that would link with the Benning Road Metro station 20 The district had applied for a 25 million federal grant to help pay for the extension 20 DDOT also announced a plan to link the line to Union Station in order to connect the H Street line s eastern terminus with the Union Station Metro and Amtrak 20 The city said it owned a right of way underneath the existing Amtrak railroad tracks on which it would build the extension 20 In September 2017 the district issued an RFQ for engineering work related to the extension 21 The city also began encouraging riders to travel along the H Street corridor to Benning Road in 2009 The H Street Shuttle was founded in early 2009 by the H Street Business Cooperative a nonprofit group of retailers whose businesses line H Street to promote travel into the business district 22 The shuttle ran between the Gallery Place and Minnesota Avenue Metro stations making just four stops along the way 22 The city provided 130 000 in operating funds in 2009 although the shuttle did not run for a short period in November 2009 due to funding cut offs 22 The shuttle also encountered public safety problems as fistfights sometimes broke out between rowdy youths riding the shuttle 23 The shuttle has also had eggs thrown at it been shot at with BB guns and youth have attempted to slash its tires while it made stops 23 Although it was intended to be a temporary measure to bring customers into the retail corridor while streetcar construction occurred D C officials said they would fund the shuttle only through the end of 2010 23 Electrification dispute Edit Local preservationist groups such as the Committee of 100 on the Federal City as well as regional planning bodies like the National Capital Planning Commission NCPC have opposed the current design of the streetcar system which relies on overhead electrical wires and a pantograph to conduct power to the streetcar motor 24 Opponents of the design cite an 1889 federal law banning such systems in Georgetown and the historic center city defined by the Florida Avenue NE and NW south to the Potomac and Anacostia rivers 24 The NCPC has also opposed use of the wires along H Street NE the 11th Street bridges and in Anacostia 24 These groups have proposed a design change that would rely on wireless technologies such as battery powered vehicles which rely on conduit current collection in which a metal arm or plow is inserted into a channel in the street and draws power from cables under the roadway 24 But District of Columbia officials say the current overhead lines are not visually obtrusive and that conduit collection systems are costly and break down easily in cities with wet climates 24 nbsp A pantograph on a DC Streetcar during a public display in 2010City transportation planning officials have also proposed building a system that would run on wires outside the historic core but switch to a hybrid battery conduit system inside the area 24 On May 31 2010 12 of the council s 13 members co sponsored a bill to exempt the H Street Line from the 1888 and 1889 laws that banned overhead electrification in the city s historic core 25 The legislation required that the mayor s office develop a citywide plan by 2014 to determine where additional overhead electrification could be permitted 25 The Committee of 100 supported the planning requirement 26 and the legislation passed the council on June 29 2010 27 But in late June 2010 the chair of the National Capital Planning Commission L Preston Bryant Jr sent a letter to the Federal Transit Administration demanding that 25 million in federal money intended for the streetcar project be withheld until the NCPC and city reached agreement regarding the overhead electrification issue 28 The NCPC said they had legal advice which indicated that only Congress had the power to rescind the 1888 and 1889 laws 28 City council members who had been negotiating with the NCPC said the NCPC s action was a sign of bad faith in the talks 28 DDOT Director Gabe Klein said the NCPC was blackmailing city leaders and that the NCPC was overstepping its boundary as a purely advisory body 27 Klein asked Bryant to rescind his letter arguing that Bryant had purposefully misstated the city s plans for overhead electrification claiming it would install overhead wires on the National Mall and near Congress and asserting that the H Street Line was not covered by the 1888 and 1889 laws 27 Klein also cited two previous legal opinions which concluded the city had the power to rescind the 1800s legislation 27 On July 13 2010 the D C Council passed legislation to allow the overhead wires along Benning Road and H Street NE 29 The legislation specifically banned the wires around the National Mall and along Pennsylvania Avenue between Capitol Hill and the White House and established a process for seeking public and other input on whether wires should be used elsewhere in the city 29 Funding issue plans revised Edit Funding for the DC Streetcar system became an issue in 2010 D C Mayor Adrian Fenty proposed spending 60 million to 70 million in his fiscal 2011 budget to complete the H Street Line and purchase six trams with a goal of activating the line in the spring of 2012 30 Funding for other lines would be withheld until the city was assured that the H Street Line was a success 30 Fenty also released the results of a study commissioned by the Downtown DC Business Improvement District BID and researched by the Brookings Institution Robert Charles Lesser amp Co research firm and Reconnecting America a non profit public transit advocacy group which found that the DC Streetcar system could increase the value of businesses along the H Street Line by 1 1 billion over 20 years 30 Fenty proposed levying a 375 million tax on businesses on the H Street Line to help pay for the streetcar system 30 But on May 25 2010 the D C City Council voted to delete 49 million in proposed streetcar funding in order to help close a 550 million budget deficit 31 DC Streetcar advocates accused Sarah Campbell capital budget director for the City Council for deleting the funds pointing out that Campbell is also a member of the Committee of 100 on the Federal City which opposed the streetcar system as currently planned 31 DDOT Director Gabe Klein accused the Council of killing the program 31 Campbell denied both allegations 31 The Washington Post reported that the budget battle may have been sparked by Council Chair Vincent C Gray who was likely to challenge Fenty for the Democratic nomination for mayor in September 2010 32 The following day after hundreds of angry phone calls from residents the Council restored the funds by agreeing to borrow the money 32 On October 23 2010 D C transportation officials published a revised plan for the DC Streetcar system The new plan envisioned opening the H Street Benning Road and Anacostia lines in March or April 2012 33 It also significantly scaled back the Anacostia Line truncating the northern end of the line at the Anacostia Metro station 33 The plan estimated the cost of constructing the two lines at 194 million with operating costs at about 8 million per year 33 DDOT officials said they believed 6 350 riders per day would pay the 1 fare in the system s first year with ridership tripling to 23 450 riders a day in 2015 33 The cars would be equipped to accept SmarTrip cards but not cash and officials said anyone transferring from Metro to the DC Streetcar system using a SmarTrip card would ride for free 33 The streetcars were expected to operate every 10 to 15 minutes seven days a week during the same hours Metro s rail system was in operation 33 Funding for completion of the two lines was still unclear however DDOT had applied for a 110 million federal grant but had already lost a competition for an 18 million grant 33 City planners said they continued to look at tapping into a 180 million fund designed to service Metro s debt enacting BID or zoning taxes in areas affected by the streetcar system or creating public private partnerships that would tap into private money for construction in exchange for tax breaks or concessions by the city 33 The overhead electrical wire issue also remained unresolved in the plan although battery operated cars were mentioned 33 Finally the plan laid out a process for selecting a third party to operate the system which may or may not be Metro 33 Funding issues continued to raise concern in other ways too The rising cost of the project became an issue in the reelection bid of D C City Council member Tommy Wells whose ward encompasses H Street 34 The City Council held a hearing on the newly unveiled plan on November 16 35 Five days later angry business owners along H Street demanded a tax refund and a moratorium on tax sales during a second council hearing 36 Business owners said construction of the streetcar line had caused sales to drop by as much as 70 percent and City Council member Jim Graham introduced legislation establishing a 7 million fund to help businesses impacted by the construction 36 Proposed 2013 introduction Edit On August 22 2011 DDOT announced the first streetcars would roll on the H Street line in the summer of 2013 37 In late August 2011 DDOT announced the H Street Line would begin operation in the summer of 2013 37 City officials said all platform stops had been constructed along the route but overhead electricity lines turnarounds at each end of the line a streetcar overnight holding facility car barn maintenance facility and three power substations remained to be built 37 The holding and maintenance facility would likely be constructed at the eastern end of the line officials said and might also contain training facilities in streetcar operation for local high school students 37 DDOT said that one of the major remaining issues confronting the line was the completion of the western terminus at Union Station Originally DDOT had wanted to cut through the footing of the bridge carrying H Street over the Amtrak rail lines allowing streetcars to pass under the railroad tracks and access a streetcar platform on Union Station s west side 37 However Amtrak declined to allow DDOT permission to use this space as the railroad intended to access it for high speed rail in the future 37 DDOT said it was considering three new options 1 Running streetcars over the bridge 2 Adding about five blocks of additional streetcar track to allow streetcar riders to get off at the NoMa Gallaudet U Metro station and 3 Asking Amtrak for turnaround space under the existing Amtrak railroad track 37 DDOT said four companies had bid to design and construct these remaining pieces of the H Line and another was being sought to operate the line 37 DDOT officials also said they were considering extending the H Street Line to the Benning Road Metro station as well as down K Street NW to Washington Circle 37 In January 2012 the D C Office of Planning released a report which asserted that the streetcar system had the potential to create 7 700 new jobs and added as much as 8 billion in new development over a 10 year period 38 The system could also increase office building property values by 5 8 billion and residential property values by 1 6 billion 38 exceeding by 600 to 1 000 percent the cost of building the system 39 The study also said that 4 000 to 12 000 households would move back into the District of Columbia from the suburbs 39 and the number of people living on or near a streetcar line would triple 38 The report conservatively projected that up to 291 million in annual tax revenues would be generated by the fully completed streetcar system 39 Chris Leinberger of the Brookings Institution told The Washington Post that the streetcar system had the potential to finally move development out of the northwest quadrant of the city into the underdeveloped northeast and southeast 38 But not everything about streetcars was positive The report also said streetcars would also be likely to worsen traffic congestion on Benning Road SE Columbia Road NW Florida Avenue NW and Florida Avenue NE Georgia Avenue NW and K Street NW 38 and might make it prohibitively expensive for small businesses to exist along the lines 39 New task force Edit Concerned that the streetcar project was not well managed and losing public support D C Council member Mary Cheh introduced legislation to create a task force that would study whether the streetcar project should be removed from DDOT s jurisdiction and placed under a separate streetcar authority 40 Service changes Edit In December 2011 the city announced that the H Street Benning Road line would be routed over the H Street Bridge colloquially known as the Hopscotch Bridge because of modern art on the bridge which depicts children playing hopscotch 41 Planners said that the trolley would still connect with Union Station but did not say how Controversy Edit nbsp Interior of a streetcar making a test or training run on DC Streetcar s H Street NE line nbsp Control panel of a streetcar running on DC Streetcar s H Street NE lineSeveral controversies arose over the H Street Benning Road line in early 2012 According to United Streetcar a streetcar manufacturing company based in Oregon the city awarded United Streetcar 8 7 million in contracts to build trolley cars for the H Street Benning Road line Contracts were awarded in June 2011 and again in September 2011 42 On December 16 2011 D C City Councilwoman Mary Cheh filed a disapproval resolution with the mayor s office placing a 40 day hold on the contract after questions arose as to whether the contract called for the construction of two trolley cars as the city claimed or three as Cheh believed 43 On December 21 2011 Inekon Group filed a protest of the award with the D C Contract Appeals Board claiming that cost price trade off analysis used by the city was inappropriate 42 Streetcar proponents worried that the protest could delay the contract by up to 2 5 years 43 but DDOT moved much more quickly and canceled the contracts in early January 2012 after a formal internal review 42 In February DDOT began the contract solicitation process anew 44 Due to the contract controversy DDOT said it might begin running the H Street Benning Road line with just three streetcars instead of five D C City Council member Tommy Wells pressed DDOT to wait until it could run five trolley cars arguing that with just three cars the streetcar system would not be convenient enough for passengers 44 Council member Mary Cheh chair of the council s transportation committee said the DDOT s management of the streetcar project had lost the confidence of the public and that she would seek legislation establishing an independent authority to run the system 44 A new contract for vehicles was awarded in April again to United Streetcar 45 At about the same time DDOT announced a plan to build a 13 million 14 000 square foot 1 300 m2 trolley car barn operations base and maintenance facility on the grounds of Spingarn High School which is near the eastern terminus of the line The facility would house only a few cars at first but would be able to accommodate 12 cars 46 Residents of the Kingman Park neighborhood opposed the facility on the grounds that it would be noisy near a public school cause traffic congestion and cause a reduction in property values They demanded that DDOT seek approval from the local Advisory Neighborhood Commission ANC but DDOT officials said that the site did not require ANC or other legislative approval 46 Budget proposal contract awarded further controversy Edit nbsp DC Streetcar yard and the temporary storage facility car barn at the corner of Benning Road and 26th Street NE nbsp Construction site of the DC Streetcar permanent Car Barn Training Center CBTC II at the corner of Benning Road and 26th Street NEIn March 2012 D C Mayor Vincent Gray proposed a six year 237 million capital expenditure budget that would continue to expand the DC Streetcar system 47 But just a few days later District officials admitted that it would cost 64 5 million to operate the first two lines during their first five years of operation but the city only had revenues to pay for about 58 percent of those costs 48 Nonetheless the city reaffirmed its commitment to opening the H Street line in 2013 and announced it had signed a contract with Oregon Iron Works subsidiary United Streetcar to buy two more streetcars for 8 7 million 49 Additional controversy over the future of the streetcar system occurred in June 2012 when the Cato Institute an American libertarian think tank issued a study denouncing government built streetcar systems for being too costly inefficient and unable to generate economic revitalization 50 In mid June 2012 the city signed a 50 million contract with Dean Facchina LLC a joint venture between M C Dean Inc and Facchina Construction Company to design and construct the car barn power system and turnarounds for the H Street line Mayor Vincent Gray said the contract was a sign that the city was going to adhere to a summer 2013 opening But a few days later D C Council member Marion Barry filed paperwork that placed a 45 day hold on the automatic council approval of the contract Barry argued that too much money was being spent on a system that served too few people 51 Barry withdrew his objection just a few days later after Gray assured him that D C residents would be hired for construction jobs on the project 52 Financing the system continued to generate controversy in June 2012 Mayor Gray opened a city office in Shanghai to promote Chinese trade with and investment in the District of Columbia In his talks with Chinese trade officials he discussed having the Exim Bank of China fund the system s construction 53 Gray said that Chinese officials expressed surprise that it would take the city 20 years to build out the entire system and Chinese officials suggested they could fund all or part of the 1 5 billion streetcar project in exchange for all or a portion of the fares generated by it 54 After the meeting Gray told the media that an independent financing authority might be needed to finance the streetcar system 53 Even as Gray was suggesting that the city government continue to build and run the DC Streetcar system DDOT officials released a request for information RFI to construction and operations contractors regarding the proposed construction schedule financing and governance of the project The RFI noted that if the city privatized the entire streetcar project it would seek a 30 year contract and give the private entity a free hand in designing financing and constructing the streetcar system although the city would retain final say over fares 55 D C Council member Tommy Wells said he opposed any privatization effort He argued a private company would seek to raise fares reduce the number of routes built and provide low quality service to gain the highest profit 56 Wells also expressed his belief no private company would want to serve Ward 8 where the city s poorest but most mass transit dependent population lives 54 DDOT countered by saying that although building the system would cost 1 2 billion which included purchasing 50 streetcars it would only cost 65 million a year to operate compared to DC Circulator buses which need 70 million a year to operate DDOT also said its RFI was intended to see if there was a market for building and operating its streetcar system and not a request for proposals 57 As the city s RFI was being considered DDOT announced it had signed a five year 4 million contract with RATP Dev McDonald Transit Associates RDMT a subsidiary of RATP Group to operate the H Street Benning Roadline The contract also assigned training and the operation of maintenance facilities to RDMT 6 Future in jeopardy Edit In September 2012 the future of the H Street line was thrown into question DDOT had long planned to build its streetcar barn on the grounds of Spingarn High School But the Kingman Park Civic Association filed an application with the D C Historic Preservation Review Board to have Spingarn High School declared a city landmark That would force DDOT to find a new location for the car barn On October 8 2012 DDOT director Terry Bellamy told the D C Council that the civic association s actions would push the opening of the H Street line into early 2014 even if landmark status was not awarded to the high school Bellamy expressed optimism however that the H Street line would still open and said that DDOT was already planning to extend it to Minnesota Avenue He also said the city was still working on plans to open an Anacostia line in Ward 8 D C Council members however expressed dismay at DDOT s apparent lack of a strategic plan for the streetcar system They also voiced scepticism that DDOT was planning ahead and concern that more problems similar to the Spingarn High School issue would continue to plague the system because of poor planning 58 Testing and fares Edit nbsp Inekon built car 101 being towed along H Street on the night of December 13 2013 during the first tests to the check track and platform clearances with a streetcarIn April 2014 DDOT estimated that the H Street Line would open in the fall of 2014 A temporary car barn at the former Spingarn High School was scheduled for completion in July Testing of the system would take several weeks and then the system would need to be certified for operation by the Federal Transit Administration FTA which would take another 60 to 80 days DDOT also said it needed to take delivery of a sixth streetcar likely in June before any testing could begin 59 DDOT also began the process of setting the system s fare in the spring of 2014 Mayor Gray proposed a 1 fare which would require a 4 65 million subsidy to meet the H Street Line s anticipated yearly operating cost of 5 1 million On April 29 however DDOT Director Terry Bellamy suggested the fare might be as high as 1 50 for SmarTrip farecard users and 2 for cash users the same fare structure proposed for the DC Circulator bus system 59 With a decision on the fare structure still months off Council Member Marion Barry threatened to cancel all funding for all planned DC Streetcar lines Barry argued that the rider subsidy was too high and that the 800 million planned for construction of the remaining lines could be better used for road maintenance and school construction 59 Completion Edit nbsp A streetcar running on H Street NE during the testing phase in October 2015On December 17 2012 DC Streetcar officials said only 20 percent of the H Street line remained to be completed and that they anticipated streetcars to be rolling in October 2013 60 On December 13 2013 the first streetcar was placed on the tracks on the H Street line 61 As of April 2014 the H Street Line s western terminus was still planned for the Hopscotch Bridge a bridge which connects H Street NE to North Capitol Street 59 Testing on the H Street Benning Road Line began in August 2014 with a planned opening date for the line in late 2014 or possibly early 2015 if there are delays in the testing process 62 After more delays the line had been tentatively projected to open in January 2015 58 but on January 16 the DDOT s director Leif Dormsjo announced that the Department would no longer issue any estimates for an opening date and that he intended to reorganize the project s management team 63 On July 9 2015 in a Washington Post article detailing problems with the heaters for the rails Dormsjo indicated it would be months before the trolley line opened 64 nbsp A streetcar in service on H Street in March 2016On February 21 2015 a brief flash fire was ignited on the top of a streetcar in simulated service 65 In early March 2015 DDOT suggested that the project may be scrapped entirely if an outside review being conducted by the American Public Transportation Association found fatal flaws 66 but the findings released on March 16 found no fatal flaws in the project 67 68 Dan Malouff a writer for the Greater Greater Washington website reported on July 10 2015 that a review prepared for the DDOT had identified 33 causes for continued delay in rolling out fare service 69 70 He said that none of the reported causes for delay were considered fatal but the DDOT had not yet responded to the report with a prediction as to when all the problems would be attended to The DC Streetcar s H Street Benning line began public service operations on February 27 2016 71 Station listing EditThe entire line is in Washington D C and serves 8 stops 72 Union Station 3rd Street 5th Street 8th Street 13th Street 15th Street 19th Street Oklahoma AvenueThe Benning Road extension would add 5 more stations 21 Kingman Island 34th Street 39th Street 42nd Street Benning RoadReferences Edit a b c H Benning DCStreetcar com DDOT Retrieved May 24 2016 Ridership Reports DCStreetcar com DDOT Retrieved June 10 2018 Happy Anniversary DC Streetcar DCStreetcar com DDOT Retrieved March 3 2018 Celebrating One Year of Service DCStreetcar com DDOT Retrieved February 27 2017 Martin Di Caro February 27 2016 After 50 Year Hiatus Streetcars are Running Again in Washington D C American University Radio Retrieved February 27 2016 a b D C Picks Firm to Run First Streetcar Line Washington Examiner July 12 2012 Retrieved November 6 2012 a b c TRIO Low floor Tram Technical Data inekon trams com Inekon Trams Retrieved September 4 2016 a b Di Caro Martin August 25 2016 Coming Soon To D C Streetcar Sunday Service And Shorter Wait Times WAMU Retrieved September 18 2016 a b Wilgoren Debbi New Residences Stores To Transform H Street Washington Post March 13 2003 a b Deane Daniela H Street NE The Next Hot Spot Washington Post June 12 2004 Sinzinger Kathryn January 23 2006 Streetcars to return The Common Denominator Archived from the original on November 19 2006 Schwartzman Paul Turning Northeast s H Street Into Main Street Washington Post February 9 2006 Lee Virginia C Cary Silverman Winter 2005 2006 Shaw on the Move Part II Milestones in Shaw Transportation PDF Shaw Main Street News Shaw Main Streets pp 10 14 Archived from the original PDF on March 11 2016 Retrieved January 11 2007 Thompson Robert A Working Cure for the Trolley Blues Washington Post October 15 2006 Sun Lena H Streetcars Could Be Running on D C Roads by Late Next Year Washington Post July 13 2008 a b Hohmann James September 20 2009 Anacostia Streetcar Track Installation Begins The Washington Post Retrieved August 30 2014 Proposed Alignments District Department of Transportation Archived from the original on November 23 2008 Retrieved December 2 2008 D C Announces Construction of Streetcar Infrastructure WJLA TV January 31 2008 Archived from the original on October 11 2008 Retrieved December 2 2008 DDOT 2011 Annual Report PDF Retrieved February 28 2018 a b c d Rein Lisa D C Seeks Federal Funds to Extend Streetcar Line Washington Post April 21 2010 a b Goff Karen October 3 2017 D C streetcar s Benning Road extension moves forward with engineering solicitation Washington Business Journal Retrieved December 22 2017 a b c Alcindor Yamiche D C Finds Funds to Put H Street Shuttle Back on Road Again Washington Post December 8 2009 a b c Rosiak Luke H St Shuttle Continues Through Year Washington Post October 25 2010 a b c d e f Rein Lisa Overhead Wires and Red Tape Entangles D C s Bid for Streetcars Washington Post April 5 2010 a b Rein Lisa D C Seeks to Lift Ban on Overhead Wires Washington Post June 1 2010 DeBonis Mike Gray Gets Flak Over Late Night Flip Flop on Streetcar Funds Washington Post June 3 2010 a b c d Halsey III Ashley Dispute Deepens on Overhead Wires for D C Trolley Washington Post July 2 2010 a b c O Connell Jonathan Funding for D C Streetcar System at Issue During Overhead Wiring Dispute Washington Post June 26 2010 a b Marimow Ann E Council Clears Tracks For Trolley Cars Washington Post July 13 2010 a b c d O Connell Jonathan Commercial Property Owners May Be Asked to Pay for Part of Streetcar Costs Washington Post May 17 2010 a b c d Norton Monica Council Votes to Strip Funds for Streetcars Washington Post May 26 2010 a b Craig Tim and Stewart Nikita Gray Reverses Course to Back D C Streetcars After Late Night Budget Maneuver Washington Post May 27 2010 a b c d e f g h i j Kravitz Derek October 24 2010 Details Emerge for D C Streetcars Set to Begin in 2012 Washington Post Craig Tim GOP Hitching Ride on Fenty s Coattails Into Four Council Races Washington Post October 28 2010 Rosiak Luke Committee Voting on DC Streetcars Washington Post November 17 2010 a b Douglas Danielle H Street Storeowners Seek Tax Relief Washington Post November 22 2010 a b c d e f g h i Halsey III Ashley D C Wants Streetcars to Roll By Mid 2013 Washington Post August 22 2010 Accessed 201 08 23 a b c d e Ho Catherine Study Streetcars Could Bring 8B in Development for D C Washington Post January 29 2012 Accessed April 2 2012 a b c d Neibauer Michael Benefits of D C Streetcar Network in the Billions of Dollars Washington Business Journal January 25 2012 Alpert David DDOT Hasn t Earned Public s Trust on Streetcars Washington Post February 28 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 Halsey III Ashley December 7 2011 D C streetcar to run across Hopscotch Bridge The Washington Post a b c Neibauer Michael D C Cancels Proposed Streetcar Deal Washington Business Journal January 11 2012 Accessed April 2 2012 a b Neibauer Michael Czech Company Protests D C Streetcar Award Washington Business Journal December 23 2011 a b c DeBonis Mike How Many Streetcars Will H Street Get Washington Post February 23 2012 Accessed April 2 2012 Neibauer Michael August 22 2012 D C buying third streetcar from Oregon Iron Works The Washington Business Journal Retrieved November 14 2014 a b Jenkins Chris L D C Trolley Car Barn Angers Kingman Park Residents Washington Post February 6 2012 Neibauer Michael No New Taxes in Gray s 5 85B D C Budget Proposal Washington Business Journal March 23 2012 Neibauer Michael D C Trying to Figure Out How to Pay for 42 of Streetcar Costs Washington Business Journal March 30 2012 D C to Buy Two Streetcars for 8 7 Million Associated Press April 5 2012 McDuffee Allen Cato Wages War on Streetcar Conspiracy Washington Post June 14 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 Craig Tim Marion Barry Tries to Halt D C Streetcar Work Washington Post June 19 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 DeBonis Mike DeEvening Links The Streetcar Rolls On Washington Post June 25 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 a b O Connell Jonathan Gray Looks Abroad for Investment Washington Post July 8 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 a b Berman Mark and Craig Tim D C Wants Input on Privatized Streetcar System Washington Post June 26 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 Berman Mark and Craig Tim D C Wants Input on Privatized Streetcar System Washington Post June 26 2012 Craig Tim Wells No Fan of Private Streetcars Washington Post June 26 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 Halsey III Ashley and Craig Tim D C Tries to Entice Private Sector to Jump Into Streetcar Project Washington Post June 27 2012 Accessed November 6 2012 a b Laris Michael Aratani Lori December 31 2014 D C fails to make good on promise to open streetcar project by end of year The Washington Post Retrieved January 2 2015 a b c d Neibauer Michael On D C Streetcar Possible Fare Barry s Angst National Harbor s Joy and More on the Launch Date Washington Business Journal April 30 2014 Accessed April 30 2014 H Benning Phase 2 Construction PDF DCStreetcar com DDOT December 17 2012 Retrieved December 25 2012 Dan Malouff December 16 2013 Streetcar arrives on H Street Greater Greater Washington Di Caro Martin July 15 2014 DDOT Best Case Scenario Targets November Opening For D C Streetcar WAMU 88 5 Retrieved August 5 2014 Well the streetcar works in the snow Greater Greater Washington Laris Michael July 9 2015 As costs were cut D C s streetcars were left frozen in tracks Washington Post p B1 Retrieved July 10 2015 The D C Streetcar s Latest Problem Catching on Fire Archived February 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Transportation director DC streetcar may never open Associated Press March 7 2015 Retrieved March 8 2015 APTA Peer Review Finds DC Streetcar Can Open DDOT March 16 2015 Retrieved March 24 2015 Laris Michael March 20 2015 District streetcar line can open following fixes industry group says The Washington Post Retrieved March 24 2015 Dan Malouff July 9 2015 33 things DDOT must fix to open the DC Streetcar Greater Greater Washington American Public Transportation Association Peer Review for District Department of Transportation Washington DC PDF American Public Transportation Association June 17 2015 Laris Michael February 27 2016 D C streetcar makes its first voyages on H Street Is it really happening Washington Post Retrieved February 27 2016 Transit Map DCStreetcar com DDOT Archived from the original on February 25 2016 Retrieved December 23 2017 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to DC Streetcar KML file edit help Template Attached KML H Street Benning Road LineKML is from Wikidata DC Streetcar Website DC DDOT Streetcar Project Archived October 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title H Street Benning Road Line amp oldid 1175516128, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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