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METRORail

METRORail is the 22.7-mile (36.5 km)[6] light rail system in Houston, Texas (United States). In 2022, the system had a ridership of 12,176,700, or about 44,300 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2023. METRORail ranks as the second most-traveled light rail system in the Southern United States and the 12th most-traveled light rail system in the United States, and has the highest ridership per mile for light rail systems in the Southern US.[7] METRORail is operated by the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County (METRO).

METRORail
Southbound two-car Siemens S70/H1 METRORail train on Red Line, departing downtown Houston (2007)
Overview
OwnerMetropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County
LocaleHouston, Texas
Transit typeLight rail/Tram
Number of lines3 (2 planned)
Number of stations39[1]
Daily ridership44,300 (weekdays, Q3 2023)[2]
Annual ridership12,176,700 (2022)[3]
Chief executiveTom Lambert
HeadquartersLee P. Brown METRO Administration Building
1900 Main Street[4]
Operation
Began operationJanuary 1, 2004; 20 years ago (2004-01-01)
CharacterAt grade, with street running sections
Number of vehicles51 Siemens S70
39 CAF Urbos LRV
14 Siemens S700[a]
Train lengthTwo cars[5]
Headway6–20 minutes[1]
Technical
System length22.7 mi (36.5 km) (2012)[6]
(planned 24.4 mi (39.3 km))[failed verification]
No. of tracks2
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Minimum radius of curvature350 ft (107 m)
ElectrificationOverhead line, 600–750 V DC
System map
Northline Transit Center/HCC Red Line
Melbourne/North Lindale
Lindale Park
Cavalcade
Moody Park
Fulton/North Central
Quitman/Near Northside
Burnett Transit Center
UH–Downtown
          Theater District
Preston
Central Station               
Main Street Square
Convention District
Bell
EaDo/Stadium
Downtown Transit Center
McGowen
Coffee Plant/Second Ward
Ensemble/HCC
Lockwood/Eastwood
Wheeler
Altic/Howard Hughes
Museum District
Cesar Chavez/67th Street
Hermann Park/Rice University
Magnolia Park Transit Center Green Line
Leeland/Third Ward
Dryden/TMC
Elgin/Third Ward
TSU/UH Athletics District
Smith Lands
UH South/University Oaks
Stadium Park/Astrodome
Red Line Fannin South
Palm Center Transit Center Purple Line
Key
Red Line
Transit center
Green Line
Station
Purple Line
Transfer station
Green and Purple lines

All stations are accessible

History edit

Predecessors edit

Streetcars operated in Houston from 1868 to 1940.[8]: 33  The first streetcar service was a horse-drawn railcar operated by the Houston City Railroad Company along McKinney Street.[8]: 35–36  Because of its slow speed and light passenger traffic, the nascent line foundered in 1869;[8]: 36 [9]: 68  it was succeeded by the Houston City Street Railway (HCSR), which was founded in 1870 and began revenue operation in 1874 with routes following busy merchant districts along Congress Avenue and Main Street, the latter of which ran to one of the first sites of the Texas State Fair;[8]: 36 [9]: 68  the area was subsequently developed and is now Midtown, Houston.[10] A competing service, the Bayou City Street Railway, was started in 1883 with a single route along Texas Avenue, but it was purchased and folded into HCSR later that year.[9]: 69  A new competitor, also named Bayou City Street Railway, was founded in 1889; the new Bayou City was purchased and consolidated into HCSR in 1890 by Oscar Carter, who also announced plans to electrify the system.[8]: 37 [9]: 70 

By 1892, electrification of the existing streetcar lines was complete and extensions began past the immediate downtown/central Houston area (within a 1+12 mi (2.4 km) radius of the Harris County Courthouse), including the Houston Heights suburb, which was developed by Carter and required streetcar service due to its distance from central Houston.[8]: 37 [9]: 70–71  HCSR was acquired by the Houston Electric Company in 1901, which was managed by Stone & Webster and continued to expand the service,[8]: 37–38 [9]: 76  including the start of interurban service to Galveston provided by the affiliated Galveston–Houston Electric Railway[11]: 7  in 1911.[8]: 38 [9]: 88  However, the popularity of privately-owned automobiles began to displace demand for streetcar service and the system stopped expanding after 1927.[8]: 42 [9]: 86–88  Several streetcar lines were converted to conventional bus lines in 1936, and the right-of-way for the Interurban was sold in 1940, later being reused for the Gulf Freeway.[8]: 42 [9]: 87–89  The last streetcar completed its run early in the morning of June 9, 1940, and the rails were later removed and scrapped during World War II.[8]: 42 

A 'sample' monorail line was built in Houston in 1955;[12] the Trailblazer operated over a 1,600 ft (490 m) line at Arrowhead Park with a peak speed of 10 mph (16 km/h), starting on February 18, 1956. The monorail ceased operation in September of that year[13] and subsequently was moved to Fair Park in Dallas for the Texas State Fair, where it continued to run until 1964.[14]

False starts edit

Rapid Transit Lines, the successor to HCSR and Houston Electric, proposed a rapid transit system as a long-range project under the 1971 "Transit Action Program" (TAP), developed by Alan M. Voorhees and Associates, largely laid out along the radial spokes centered in the Inner Loop, tracing the city's major freeways.[15][16][17] TAP would be implemented in two stages. In Stage 1, 40 mi (64 km) of rapid transit routes would be built, including fixed rail lines serving the southwest, west, and northeast parts of Houston (with a downtown subway), and three bus-exclusive lanes along the North, Gulf, and South freeways.[18]: II.1  Stage 1 was planned to complete in the 1970s at an estimated cost of $800 million.[19]: 48–49  Under Stage 2, scheduled for completion before 1990, the Stage 1 rail lines would be extended and two more would be added, bringing the total system to 80 mi (130 km).[18]: II.1  TAP would have been the technical basis for the proposed Houston Area Rapid Transit Authority (HARTA), but a referendum to form HARTA was "soundly defeated" in 1973.[18]: II.2 [20] The city of Houston purchased Rapid Transit Lines in April 1974 for $5.3 million and renamed it the Houston Transit System ("HouTran").[18]: II.2 

 
Proposed alignment of the Southwest/Westpark corridor, Heavy Rail alternative including subway under Fannin

Houston formed the Office of Public Transportation in January 1975 to plan the region's public transportation system, and began working on an update of TAP.[18]: II.3, II.4  After METRO was formed in 1978/79, an initial Phase I alternatives analysis identified multiple potential transit corridors, and under Phase II, proposed in 1980, the "Southwest/Westpark" corridor (along what is now the Westpark Tollway) was prioritized for further study.[18]: II.7–11  The proposed Southwest/Westpark corridor would have run 13.1 mi (21.1 km), generally parallel to the Southwest Freeway, with equal lengths west and east of the West Inner Loop. The planned route would run from downtown Houston along Main Street to approximately Elgin, and west from Elgin to West Belt along existing public and rail rights-of-way.[18]: s.2  Service options that could be operated along the corridor included a dedicated busway on an elevated structure (carrying 203,500 daily riders at an estimated capital construction cost of $878 million),[18]: s.6  an elevated light rail system (213,400 daily passengers; $1.297 billion),[18]: s.7  a light rail subway (226,800 daily; $1.572 billion),[18]: s.9  or a grade-separated heavy rail system with subway through the central business district (223,700 daily, $1.366 billion).[18]: s.10  At the time, it was estimated that 9.5 million person-trips were made per day in Harris County; of those, 98.7% were taken using private vehicles.[21]: I-4 

METRO updated its 1980 Southwest/Westpark corridor proposal and extended the eastern terminus north by 5.1 mi (8.2 km), combining it with the proposed North corridor as the "Houston Rail Rapid Transit Project"; the extended line now ran north past I-10 and the North Inner Loop to Crosstimbers.[21]: II-38, II-39  The design called for 11.5 mi (18.5 km) of elevated tracks, 1.9 mi (3.1 km) of subway, and 4.8 mi (7.7 km) at-grade.[21]: II-39  The system would have 17 passenger stations (eight aerial, six at-grade, and three subway), and included a new railyard/maintenance facility at Cavalcade.[21]: II-48, II-65  The 1983 proposal was rejected by Houston voters via referendum.[22][23][24] Light voter turnout was blamed for the defeat of the $2.35 billion proposal, which included the purchase of approximately 400 new buses and construction of a 18.5 mi (29.8 km) heavy rail system.[17][25][26] The capital cost of the rail system alone was estimated at $1.436 billion, including 130 new rail vehicles.[21]: II-69 

In the wake of the 1983 defeat, METRO began work on a regional transit plan, integrating inputs from city, county, and state governments and developing three options for implementation: A (bus routes only), B (light rail loop and radial bus routes), or C (light rail with supplemental bus routes); after approximately 250 meetings were held in 1984 and 1985, citizens overwhelmingly supported Option C, with planned light rail service to operate along Main Street within the inner loop (I-610).[27] Longtime Houston Mayor Kathryn Whitmire appointed Bob Lanier to chair METRO in 1988;[28]: 160  Lanier shepherded a voter referendum that year which passed, approving the Phase 2 Regional Mobility Plan which included 20-mile (32 km) of fixed guideway transit.[29] Under the 1988 referendum, METRO would devote 14 of its sales tax revenue on roads, 12 on improving bus service, and the remaining 14 on developing the fixed guideway plans,[30] but Lanier showed reluctance to follow through on developing plans for a fixed guideway, questioning the projected ridership numbers, and Whitmire fired him in late December 1989.[28]: 160 [31] Incensed, Lanier released a memorandum attacking the mayor's rail transit plans, and Whitmire responded by holding a press conference on Lanier's front lawn during his annual Christmas party.[28]: 160 

Houston was the largest city in the United States without a rail system after the 1990 opening of the Blue Line in Los Angeles. After issuing an RFP in July 1990, METRO received five proposals for the design and development of the fixed guideway system.[32]: 95, 107, 110  In March 1991, METRO approved a plan to develop a monorail system similar to the one operating at Walt Disney World in Orlando at an estimated cost of $1.27 billion, operating along the extended Southwest/Westpark corridor between the Houston Galleria and downtown Houston.[33] The proposed monorail system would operate with an initial 14 mi (23 km) segment servicing western residential regions west of downtown to Beltway 8 (Sam Houston Tollway), with construction planned to start in 1993 and revenue service to begin by 1998. Future planned expansions included one leg that would connect downtown with the Texas Medical Center and Astrodome to the south, and another leg connecting downtown to Texas Southern University and the University of Houston.[32]: 113–114  In 1991, U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay removed $65 million in federal funding for the rail line and after Lanier was elected mayor of Houston in 1992, defeating Whitmire, the plan was stopped.[24] Lanier's election was seen as a second referendum on the monorail plan; the funding was diverted to road projects and police patrols instead.[30]

Main Street Line edit

After these setbacks, Houston drew up a rail plan without federal subsidies[34] and published it in 1997 as the Houston METRO 2020 Regional Transit Plan.[35]: 5  The Houston city council approved the light rail project in November 2000 and set a January 25, 2001 date for a groundbreaking ceremony, but councilmember Rob Todd filed a lawsuit opposing construction, claiming the METRO organization was a "private business" and subject to Houston City Charter provisions requiring a public vote on business use of its streets;[36][37] the ceremony was cancelled following a temporary restraining order, issued by Judge Tony Lindsay on January 18.[38][39] Todd was joined as co-plaintiff by Allan Vogel, one of 1,100 residents who signed a petition seeking a public vote on the light rail plan.[40] Judge Lindsay later recused herself from the case due to her personal ties to Todd and her husband's public opposition to METRO. She was succeeded by District Judge John P. Devine,[38] who issued an injunction on February 2, halting work on the light rail project and holding up contract awards.[36][41][42][43] A second lawsuit was filed by four property owners.[44]

The injunction issued by Judge Devine in Todd's lawsuit was reversed on appeal on March 9, 2001.[37][45] Ground was broken on the original 7.5-mile long (12.1 km), 16-station portion of the Main Street (now Red) Line on March 13, 2001.[46] The Texas Supreme Court upheld the appellate court ruling on June 28.[47] That November, voters approved Proposition 1, which allowed the light rail project to continue, but required public referendums for future extensions, and rejected Proposition 3, which would have initiated a public referendum on continuing the initial project.[48]

 
Initial Red Line segment (as opened Jan 1, 2004)

The initial segment runs between UH–Downtown (northern terminus) and Fannin South (southern terminus).[46] The opening of METRORail, which took place on January 1, 2004, came 64 years after the previous streetcar system had been shut down.[49] At the time, two extensions to the north and east were already in planning, and a concept was advanced for a third extension west.[50]

The cost of the initial segment was $324 million.[51] Tom DeLay strongly opposed construction of the METRORail line and twice blocked federal funding for the system in the United States House of Representatives.[23] Thus the Metrorail was built without any federal funding until November 2011 when a $900 million grant was approved for expansions, under an executive order issued by President Barack Obama.[52]

In spite of the opposition of some groups to the Metrorail, surveys conducted by Stephen Klineberg and Rice University have shown consistent increases in support of rail transport and decreases in support for bigger and better roads/highways in the Houston metropolitan area in recent years.[53][54][55] Klineberg considers these changes a "paradigm shift" or "sea change" on attitudes towards mass transit.[53][55][56]

Phase II edit

METRORail Phase II was included as part of the METRO Solutions Transit System Plan (aka Metro Solutions Plan or 2025 Regional Transit Plan) that was placed before voters on the November 4, 2003 ballot. Phase II included six proposed light rail segments to complement and extend the Main Street line, then under construction.[57]

2003 METRORail Phase II expansion plan[57]
Name Length Stations Termini Status
North Hardy 5.4 mi (8.7 km) 4 UH-Downtown Northline Opened Dec 21, 2013 as Main Street Line extension
Southeast 9.9 mi (15.9 km) 13 Downtown Palm Center Truncated line opened May 23, 2015 as Southeast Line
Harrisburg 6.0 mi (9.7 km) 4 Dowling Gulfgate Center Truncated line opened May 23, 2015 as East End Line
Westpark 6.6 mi (10.6 km) 4 Hillcroft T.C. Wheeler T.C. Reconfigured as one segment of a planned METRORapid BRT line.[58]
Uptown/West Loop 4.4 mi (7.1 km) 7 Bellaire Northwest T.C. Reconfigured as BRT; truncated line opened Aug 23, 2020 as Silver Line[59]
Inner Katy 7.4 mi (11.9 km) 6 Northwest T.C. Downtown Proposed right-of-way removed during widening of Katy Freeway.[60] Reconfigured as BRT.[61]

Voters approved the $1.23 billion Phase II expansion of the as-yet unopened system, including four new lines.[62] Critics of the system opposed METRO for spending public funds for "educational advertisements" about the proposed system, which critics claimed promote the referendum.[63] Critics further claimed that the main political action committee (PAC) supporting the bond had a conflict of interest because it received over US$100,000 in contributions from contractors and equipment suppliers for METRORail who stood to gain financially from its expansion.[63] By 2004, Rep. DeLay was hailing the leadership team at METRO for both its "vision for a mobile Houston region, and the kind of open minds and flexible management style it will take to realize that vision", adding that "[METRO] are holding a forum to look at all forms of technology and how those technologies fit into the mobility in Houston"; at least one observer noted that DeLay was advocating for "innovative rail solutions", not light rail.[64]

In 2004, an alternatives analysis selected a shorter route for the Southeast Corridor.[65]: S-4 

The North and Southeast corridors received their records of decision from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) in July 2008.[66][67] Construction began in July 2009 on the 5.3-mile long (8.5 km) North/Red Line Extension (North Corridor), including nine stations from UH–Downtown to the Northline Transit Center Station. The 6.6-mile (10.6 km) Purple Line (Southeast Corridor), with ten stations, and the 3.3-mile (5.3 km) Green Line, with nine stations, also began construction in July 2009.[68] According to the project schedules, the Red Line Extension would enter revenue service by 2013[69] and the Green Line by 2014.[70] However, METRO announced on September 9, 2010 that the opening dates for the Red Line Extension, Purple and Green lines had been pushed back to 2014[71] and by September 2014, the start date had slipped back to April 4, 2015.[72]

In November 2009, METRO applied for a $900 million grant from the Federal Transit Administration to fund future construction. Allegations were made that METRO lied about the income from their sales tax revenue to allow them to gain $900 million in federal funds for all five planned rail expansions.[73] However, city officials found no such attempt by METRO to mislead them,[74] but the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) continued to withhold its approval for the money until further figures can be examined.[75] On December 8, 2011, the FTA finally announced the award. The award of $900 million was broken into two $450 million grants from the New Starts transit program, to fund construction of the Red Line Extension and Purple lines.[76] METRO offered the public a chance to name stations on its expansion lines.[77]

Part of the funding allocated by the FTA under its New Starts program for the North, Southeast, and University Corridor projects included up to US$205 million to expand the LRV fleet to 104 vehicles and replace the existing 19 LRVs on the Red Line.[78]: 3  METRO selected a public-private partnership model for the North and Southeast corridors, where the contracted firm would be responsible for vehicle procurement and operation and maintenance of those lines, and entered a contract with Washington Group International (WGI); METRO/WGI issued a request for proposals for 103 firm new vehicles and an option of up to 75 additional vehicles on August 31, 2007.[78]: 3–4  Although the FTA reminded METRO about federal procurement rules on multiple occasions, METRO told prospective bidders that Buy America rules did not apply (presumably because the RFP was issued by the private contractor) and awarded a contract to CAF on March 4, 2009.[78]: 4–5, 12  Later that month, METRO requested a Buy America waiver for two pilot vehicles which would be assembled by CAF in Spain; the FTA denied the waiver request, stating that CAF had signed a certificate of compliance with Buy America requirements.[78]: 5  METRO proceeded to use local funds to pursue the pilot vehicle procurement, and the FTA opened an investigation in April 2010.[78]: 7  Ultimately, the CAF contract was canceled and 13 of the US$42 million contract was refunded to METRO.[79]

 
Consolidated map of proposed expansions, including Phase II lines as updated in 2010 and METRONext planned extensions. Proposed METRONext extension of Red Line to Sugar Land truncated.

The North/Red Line extension opened on December 21, 2013 (ahead of its projected early 2014 opening),[80] increasing the line to its current total of 12.8 miles (20.6 km) and 24 stations.[81][80][82] Central Station was added to the Red Line to provide transfers to/from the Purple and Green lines.[83]

After numerous delays, all but two stations on the eastern end of the Green Line opened on May 23, 2015,[72] while Cesar Chavez/67th Street and Magnolia Park [84] entered service on January 11, 2017 after the construction of an overpass.[85] Both the Purple and Green lines, together costing $1.3 billion, share a track segment in downtown, then run east and diverge.[86]

Cancellations and BRT conversions edit

Plans for the Inner Katy rail line (east of Loop 610) under the METRO Solutions Plan (2003) conflicted with existing plans to widen the Katy Freeway west of Loop 610 to Texas State Highway 6. A Major Investment Study for the Katy Freeway Expansion was started in 1994 and approved in October 1997; the draft and final environmental impact statements were completed by August 30, 2002.[87]: 2, 28  In preparation, TxDOT purchased a portion of the right-of-way for the old Katy Railroad from Union Pacific (UP) in 1992 for $78 million,[88] and the UP was scheduled to begin track removal in the last half of 1997. In all, 28 mi (45 km) of track were removed from Katy/Fort Bend Road in Brookshire to Canal Street in Houston.[89] The adopted alternative for the expanded freeway called for an at-grade roadway with a total right-of-way width of 475 ft (145 m); in each direction, there would be two managed lanes closest to the center, flanked by four main lanes, up to two auxiliary lanes, and three frontage road lanes.[90]: 2, 28  That year, a Memorandum of Understanding was signed between TxDOT, METRO, and Harris County, which identified requirements for the managed lanes, including prioritization of METRO buses and an option to convert those lanes to light rail transit in the future.[91]: 24  The Gulf Coast Institute criticized the contradictions between TxDOT, which selected the managed lanes over rail due to insufficient projected transit demand, and METRO's Solutions Plan, which noted that a Katy line could "offer the potential for sizeable transit volume".[92]: 11  By 2005, the Inner Katy corridor had been dropped from METRO Solutions.[93][94]

METRO began negotiations with Southern Pacific (SP) to acquire the tracks and right-of-way alongside the Eastex Freeway that were formerly owned by the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railroad and a conceptual agreement was reached in December 1992; METRO would re-use the line for commuter rail service.[95] However, after METRO decided to purchase a subset of the original agreement at a fraction of the agreed-upon price, SP sued and the a settlement was reached in 1997, with METRO purchasing 58 mi (93 km) for $72 million. Shortly after the purchase was completed, business interests pressured METRO into selling a portion of the right-of-way to the Harris County Toll Road Authority, which was eventually developed into the Westpark Tollway.[96]: 127–128  By 2006, a proposed revised corridor along Richmond was drawing opposition from local business owners and Texas Rep. Martha Wong, who advocated for a route along Westpark instead.[97] In August 2010, a budget shortfall of $49 million was announced by METRO, which halted progress on the University Line. The line had received a final Federal Record of Decision letter from the FTA in July[98] but METRO had not announced a construction schedule or funding plan.[99] Since then, BRT service has been proposed along the corridor instead.[100]

METRO published the "Uptown-West Loop Planning Study" in 2004, which was a proposed light rail line along Post Oak Boulevard and West Inner Loop, connecting new stations at Bellaire (at the junction with U.S. Route 59) and Northwest Transit Center (at the junction with I-10). In the alternatives analysis, bus rapid transit (BRT) service was considered and dismissed as an alternative to light rail, due to the reduced capacity of BRT vehicles and the strong community preference for rail.[101]: S-24  Due to lack of funds, it was announced in early 2013 that the Uptown Line will be constructed initially as a bus rapid transit (BRT) line. The design will feature the ability to easily convert the line to light rail in the future. This will allow the line to be functional as early as 2017.[102]

Following METRO's 2010 annual audit, the agency decided to cancel the Burnett Plaza project. US$41 million was spent on the initial design of the proposed intermodal terminal.[79] This was part of a US$168 million asset liquidation. The price of the land US$21 million is valued separately.[103] US$61 million of the liquidation was listed as "unrealized assets", including charges for redundant design contractors and changes.[79]

Future plans edit

METRO put the METRONext Moving Forward Plan before Houston area voters in November 2019; voters approved the $3.5 billion bond by a margin of nearly two-to-one.[104] Bonds issued will be used to extend existing light rail service. The Red Line will be expanded North to the North Shepherd park & ride, and both the Green and Purple lines will be expanded east and south to William P Hobby Airport, and west to the Houston Municipal Courthouse.[105][106]: 17–20  In addition, new BRT lines would be set up along corridors that had previously been identified for light rail transit including Inner Katy and University; another new BRT line would bridge the gap between the northern terminus of the Red Line and Bush Airport, and a new north-south BRT service would operate along the western leg of Beltway 8.[107]

A long extension or possible commuter rail line from Fannin South to Sugar Land and beyond has been studied since 2004. The route would parallel U.S. 90A in the existing right-of-way used by the Glidden subdivision owned by UP.[108]

Operations edit

The light rail lines operate all 7 days of the week. They begin operations at 3:30 a.m. weekdays and 4:30 a.m. weekends and end service at 12:30 a.m. Monday through Thursday nights, 2:45 a.m. Friday and Saturday nights and, 12:30 a.m. Sunday nights. Scheduled train frequency varies from 6 minutes during the day to 20 minutes off-peak.

The light rail lines can handle three-minute headways during peak hours[109] and have a design capacity of 8,000 people/hour in each direction while using two-car trains with such a headway.[110] The scheduled time for an end-to-end trip through the entire 12.8-mile (20.6 km) Red Line[82] is on average 55 minutes.[1]

Tracks on all three lines are usually in dedicated right-of-way in the center of the street; however, the southbound tracks between the Wheeler and Museum-District stations run along the left side.[111] The downtown Houston tracks along Capitol and Rusk streets run along the south side of the streets. Furthermore, these light rail trains run in mixed traffic, sharing a lane with buses and other vehicles — often being their turn lane.

METRORail operations are controlled from Houston TranStar, a traffic and emergency management center for the city and surrounding region.[112] Trains have priority signalling at intersections except for six stations near the medical center and downtown.[112][113] At prioritized intersections, traffic lights for road traffic in all directions turn red when a train approaches.[113]

Route and infrastructure edit

Line Name Distance Route Status
     Red Line 12.6 mi (20.3 km)[4] Fannin South to Northline Transit Center Opened January 1, 2004
     Purple Line 6.7 mi (10.8 km)[4] Smith Street in Downtown Houston to Palm Center Opened May 23, 2015
     Green Line 3.2 mi (5.1 km)[4] Smith Street in Downtown Houston to Magnolia Park Transit Center Opened May 23, 2015
     University Line (Bus Rapid Transit) 11.3 mi (18.2 km)[114] Hillcroft Transit Center to Tidwell Transit Center Planning in progress
     Uptown Line (Bus Rapid Transit) 4.7 mi (7.6 km)[115] Westpark/Lower Uptown Transit Center to Northwest Transit Center Bus rapid transit opened August 23, 2020

Red (Main Street) Line edit

The Red Line is a 12.6-mile (20.3 km)[4] double-tracked, 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge line with 24 stations[1] approximately 12 mile (0.8 km) apart, running from Fannin South to the Northline Transit Center Station. Almost the entire route is at grade and on city streets. The original 2004 portion from Fannin South to UH-Downtown is entirely at ground-level and at-grade with street traffic. However, on the North/Red Line Extension (from UH-Downtown to Northline Transit Center two small portions are elevated: the Burnett Transit Center station[116] and a small section of track between Melbourne/North Lindale and Northline Transit Center on Fulton Street.[117] Power is supplied at 600–750 volts DC from overhead wires, with nine substations (for the original 2004 portion).[112] The line follows Main Street for eight stations from UH–Downtown to Wheeler station, then follows Fannin Street for the remainder of the original route until Fannin South. Northbound trains run on San Jacinto Street (rather than Fannin) for a small section of the route between the Wheeler and Museum District stations. The North/Red Extension runs along North Main Street until just after Quitman Near Northside, then turns onto Boundary Street until just before Fulton/North Central, and then runs along Fulton Street until Northline Transit Center.[118]

Significant businesses and institutions along the Red Line route include the University of Houston–Downtown, Houston's restaurant district near Preston Station, the Downtown Transit Center, Houston's museum district, Rice University, Memorial Hermann Hospital, the Texas Medical Center and NRG Stadium.

A park & ride parking lot is available at one station: Fannin South.[119][120] It has approximately 1,200 parking spaces.[112] Parking fees included a daily rate of $3 and a monthly hangtag contract of $40. The Burnett Transit Center was designed to have a park and ride facility next to the Casa de Amigos Health Center; it was scheduled to open in late 2014,[116] but the project was canceled in 2011 and scaled back to a multimodal stop.[79]

For the original 2004 portion of the Red Line, the architectural firm Pierce Goodwin Alexander & Linville, of Houston, was in charge of the final architectural/engineering design and design support, with a $2.3 million contract.[112] However, all stations south of Burnett Transit Center were designed by the Houston office of St. Louis-based architectural firm Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum.[121][122]: 54–55  All stations are of similar design—250 feet (76 m) long and partially covered by glass roofs. Station length was constrained by the distance between crosswalks in downtown city blocks; station platforms are low-floor and 350 millimetres (14 in) high.[112] The line includes a 760 m long (2,490 ft) bridge along Main Street which separates the double-track main line and a third pocket track from UP's line and three streets.[123] A yard and a maintenance facility for the Red Line is connected by loop track to the south of the Fannin South station.[111]

 
Houston MetroRail Cars at Northline Transit Center on Fulton near Crosstimbers (January 2015)

The right-of-way and the stations for the original 2004 line were built by three contractors for approximately $115 million: Texas Sterling Construction Co. of Houston, Bencon Management of Houston and Beers Construction Co. of Atlanta.[37] The line construction was divided into five sections, with a resident engineer for each section, to speed up construction.[112]

Purple (Southeast) and Green (East End) Lines edit

The 6.7-mile (10.8 km), 10-station Purple Line, and seven stations of the 3.2-mile (5.1 km), 9-station Green Line opened on May 23, 2015.[124] The final two stations of the Green Line opened on January 11, 2017.[125] A storage yard/inspection facility is located off of Harrisburg and Clifton.

Fares edit

The standard fare for the rail lines is $1.25 for both cash and METRO Q Card riders; $3 for a Day Pass. A discount fare is available for qualified MetroQ Fare Card riders [those who are seniors 65-69, disabled, Medicare cardholders or full-time students (elementary, high school and university)]; the discounted fare is $0.60 for cash or $1.50 for a Day Pass. All discount riders must show ID (except for elementary and high school students).[126] Free rides to METRO buses are available with the MetroQ Fare Card only, for 3 hours in any direction.[127] Paper transfers from buses were accepted from July 2015 to March 2016 on a trial basis boarded for free: before noon good until 15:00, after it to end of service day. The MetroQ Fare Card holders can earn "Rider Rewards" of 5 free trips for every 50 paid trips.[126] Tickets and cards are purchased from machines at the stations. No charge applies to Texans/Dash/Dynamo home game days with game ticket, nor to seniors over 70 or to children under 5 who ride with an adult (limit 3).

Fare collection, like most light rail systems in the United States, is based on a proof-of-payment system: METRO's fare inspectors randomly check tickets and cards aboard trains. Failure to pay the fare is a Class C Misdemeanor and is subject to a fine of up to $500. Consumption of alcoholic beverages is prohibited on the train platform and subject to the same fine as a Class C Misdemeanor.[128]

Ridership edit

In the first year of METRORail, daily ridership, though increasing from 12,102 in January to 32,941 in October, tapered off slightly in the last two months of the year, and "fell short of the 35,000 goal transit officials had set" in early 2004, according to the Houston Chronicle.[129] The line reached 75 million boardings in December 2011, four years ahead of schedule,[130] but throughout that year, ridership numbers remained flat or showed small decreases.[131] By 2012, average weekday ridership was 36,250.[132]

The North/Red Line Extension exceeded ridership projections by 62% in the first month of operation, averaging 4,200 weekday boardings in January 2014; this was 1,600 more boardings than projected for the extension through September 30, 2014 (the end of the METRORail's fiscal year).[133]

Notable records in ridership have occurred on the following dates:[134]

  • February 1, 2004: 64,005 passengers rode the METRORail to Super Bowl XXXVIII
  • February 23, 2004: 54,193 passenger boardings were recorded, the highest weekday at the time
  • February 27, 2007: 56,388 passengers were recorded the day of the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo
  • March 15, 2012: 70,611 passengers were recorded; many of whom attended the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo and a performance by The Band Perry after the rodeo at the Reliant Park sports complex.[135]
  • March 19, 2014: 76,925 passengers were recorded due in part to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.[136]
  • February 4, 2017: 109,500 passenger boardings were recorded during Super Bowl LI
  • November 4, 2017: 125,000 passenger boardings were recorded the day of the Houston Astros World Series victory parade and rally held in Downtown.[137]

Rolling stock edit

METRO currently operates three generations of light rail vehicles. All of them are double-articulated, 70% low-floor vehicles with four low-platform doors per side to provide level boarding.

Series Builder Model In service Fleet numbers Years of service Lines used Image
H1 Siemens S70 18 101–118 2004–present    
H2 19 201–219 2012–present  
H3 CAF USA Urbos LRV 39 301–339 2015–present        
H4 Siemens S700[a] 14 (401–414) 2022–present  

H1 series edit

The original fleet of 18 vehicles was built by Siemens Transportation Systems in Sacramento, California; the $117.9 million contract for Siemens included the light rail infrastructure (traction power, signals, and communication systems) and an initial order of 15 light rail vehicles.[139][37] Three additional vehicles were ordered in 2002.[140] 101 to 115 were delivered in 2003 and 116 to 118 in 2004, for the opening of the first stage of the Red Line.[141] Designated by the manufacturer as S70 and based roughly on earlier vehicles built for Portland's MAX Light Rail system, each vehicle is 96 feet (29 m) long and has a top speed of 66 mph (106 km/h).[142] They have a capacity of 72 seated and approximately 169 standing passengers, or a total capacity of around 241 per car.[112][143] This approximately 250-person capacity has been reached on certain Super Bowl weekends.[144]

The H1 series cars are distinguishable by their streamlined cab ends and rectangular headlamps, with the electronic destination sign (which have been modified to indicate the line with a colored square) mounted directly in front of the cab rather than above it. They are normally used only on the Red Line and can be operated as single cars or in trains of two cars coupled together, though two-car trains have become the norm due to increasing ridership and the arrival of the H2 series.

H2 series edit

For expansion of the METRORail system, METRO turned to CAF USA, with a total order of 105 cars placed in May 2010.[145] A subsequent investigation by the Federal Transit Administration determined the procurement violated the Buy America Act,[78] and the US$42 million order was cancelled in February 2011.[79] CAF gave a partial refund of US$14 million, which METRO applied to the purchase of what would become the H2 series cars.[146]

In the spring of 2011, METRO purchased a further 19 Siemens S70 vehicles (the same model as its original 18), citing the need to accommodate ridership that was 4 years ahead of expectations and to get cars more quickly.[130] These cars were options under a contract for Utah Transit Authority's TRAX system, which METRO purchased for $83 million after UTA decided not to exercise its options.[142][147] As with the previous H1 generation, these new cars were built in Florin, California,[142] but they differ slightly from the cars Utah received in detail, including having more air-conditioning units.[130] They were delivered in October 2012 and entered service that December.[148]

The H2 series cars are shorter than the H1 series, at 85.3 feet (26.0 m) in length, accommodate slightly fewer passengers (60 seated, 225 maximum), and have a lower maximum speed of 55 mph (89 km/h).[149]: 12–13  Externally, the H2 series are distinguishable by their flatter cab ends and circular headlamps, with the electronic destination sign (which use colored dots to indicate the line) conventionally mounted above the cab. Like the H1 series, they are normally used only on the Red Line and can be operated as single cars or in two-car trains. The H1 and H2 series are electrically compatible and can operate together in the same train.

H3 series edit

In September 2011, METRO approved the purchase of 39 vehicles from CAF upon receipt of a new proposal compliant with Federal Transit Administration (FTA) and "Buy America" guidelines.[150][151] The first six of these cars were delivered in January 2015[152] and entered service shortly afterwards.[153]

The H3 series cars, built in Elmira, New York[154] and based on the CAF Urbos platform used in cities across Europe and Asia, are similar in size and capacity to the H1 series with a length of 97 ft (29.6 m) and accommodating a maximum of 242 passengers (64 seated),[155][156] but are distinguishable by their boxier design and framed window panes. They are in operation on all three METRORail lines and can couple to form two-car trains; however, the H3 series is electrically incompatible with the older types and cannot operate with them in the same train.

H4 series edit

In February 2019, METRO ordered 14 additional Siemens S700 vehicles (H4), with interior modifications designed to improve passenger flow compared to the agency's prior H1 and H2 series S70s.[157][158] These vehicles result from the reassignment of options from Minneapolis–Saint Paul Metro Transit in May 2018. Metro Transit previously had signed a contract with Siemens to deliver 27 low floor S70 LRVs with options for up to 50 additional vehicles in 2016.[159] These new vehicles would be used for the Southwest LRT (Green Line) and Bottineau LRT (Blue Line) extension projects; subsequently, Metro Transit determined they would only need 27 vehicles for Southwest and 28 vehicles for Bottineau, leaving 22 options unexercised, and METRO requested the transfer of 14 of those options in 2018.[160] Siemens re-designated the S70, as originally ordered with modifications in the center section per Metro Transit's needs for passenger flow, to the S700 in 2020.[138] They entered into service on 15 December 2022.[161]

Incidents and crashes edit

For a full year before the Metrorail system's opening, a program to prepare drivers to share Houston streets with the Metrorail trains was conducted, consisting of driver safety classes, community forums and public service announcements.[162] By August, the system averaged six crashes per month, 20 times worse than the national average for light rail systems. The high rate of incidents gave rise to local derogatory nicknames among detractors such as the "Wham Bam tram" and "Danger Train."[163] METRO has consistently blamed driver error as the cause of the high collision rate and the transit agency's police department regularly tickets motorists who cross paths with the train. An independent panel of transportation experts at Texas A&M University issued a report in 2004 finding no fundamental flaws with the Metrorail system, although this report did recommend minor adjustments to signal timing and signage.[164]

The 100th accident, as defined by METRO, occurred on August 10, 2005. In the judgement of METRO police, only two of these were the fault of the train operator. Most crashes resulted from drivers turning into the trains or running red lights. Following the Texas A&M report, METRO implemented four-way red lights at some crossings and other safety measures which led to a 75% reduction in incidents per train mile even as service ramped up.[165] Critics have also noted the fact that the system is at-grade, while supporters contend that lack of federal funding due to political opposition made construction of a grade separated rail line unfeasible.[163] Sociology and urban studies professor Stephen Klineberg argues that the high rate of crashes in Houston is attributable to the high rate of automobile driving and low rate of walking in Houston.[162]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The cars in this order were considered to be model S70 at the time the order was placed, but in 2019/20 were retroactively rebranded as model S700 by Siemens.[138]

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External links edit

metrorail, this, article, about, transit, system, houston, other, uses, metrorail, mile, light, rail, system, houston, texas, united, states, 2022, system, ridership, about, weekday, third, quarter, 2023, ranks, second, most, traveled, light, rail, system, sou. This article is about the transit system in Houston For other uses see Metrorail METRORail is the 22 7 mile 36 5 km 6 light rail system in Houston Texas United States In 2022 the system had a ridership of 12 176 700 or about 44 300 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2023 METRORail ranks as the second most traveled light rail system in the Southern United States and the 12th most traveled light rail system in the United States and has the highest ridership per mile for light rail systems in the Southern US 7 METRORail is operated by the Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County METRO METRORailSouthbound two car Siemens S70 H1 METRORail train on Red Line departing downtown Houston 2007 OverviewOwnerMetropolitan Transit Authority of Harris CountyLocaleHouston TexasTransit typeLight rail TramNumber of lines3 2 planned Number of stations39 1 Daily ridership44 300 weekdays Q3 2023 2 Annual ridership12 176 700 2022 3 Chief executiveTom LambertHeadquartersLee P Brown METRO Administration Building1900 Main Street 4 OperationBegan operationJanuary 1 2004 20 years ago 2004 01 01 CharacterAt grade with street running sectionsNumber of vehicles51 Siemens S7039 CAF Urbos LRV14 Siemens S700 a Train lengthTwo cars 5 Headway6 20 minutes 1 TechnicalSystem length22 7 mi 36 5 km 2012 6 planned 24 4 mi 39 3 km failed verification No of tracks2Track gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeMinimum radius of curvature350 ft 107 m ElectrificationOverhead line 600 750 V DCSystem mapShow static mapLegendNorthline Transit Center HCC Red LineMelbourne North LindaleLindale ParkCavalcadeMoody ParkFulton North CentralQuitman Near NorthsideBurnett Transit CenterUH Downtown Theater District PrestonCentral Station Main Street Square Convention DistrictBell EaDo StadiumDowntown Transit CenterMcGowen Coffee Plant Second WardEnsemble HCC Lockwood EastwoodWheeler Altic Howard HughesMuseum District Cesar Chavez 67th StreetHermann Park Rice University Magnolia Park Transit Center Green LineMemorial Hermann Hospital Houston Zoo Leeland Third WardDryden TMC Elgin Third WardTexas Medical CenterTransit Center TSU UH Athletics DistrictSmith Lands UH South University OaksStadium Park Astrodome MacGregor Park Martin Luther King Jr Red Line Fannin South Palm Center Transit Center Purple LineKeyRed Line Transit centerGreen Line StationPurple Line Transfer stationGreen and Purple linesAll stations are accessible Show route diagram map Contents 1 History 1 1 Predecessors 1 2 False starts 1 3 Main Street Line 1 4 Phase II 1 5 Cancellations and BRT conversions 1 6 Future plans 2 Operations 2 1 Route and infrastructure 2 1 1 Red Main Street Line 2 1 2 Purple Southeast and Green East End Lines 2 2 Fares 2 3 Ridership 3 Rolling stock 3 1 H1 series 3 2 H2 series 3 3 H3 series 3 4 H4 series 4 Incidents and crashes 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editPredecessors edit Main article HouTran Streetcars operated in Houston from 1868 to 1940 8 33 The first streetcar service was a horse drawn railcar operated by the Houston City Railroad Company along McKinney Street 8 35 36 Because of its slow speed and light passenger traffic the nascent line foundered in 1869 8 36 9 68 it was succeeded by the Houston City Street Railway HCSR which was founded in 1870 and began revenue operation in 1874 with routes following busy merchant districts along Congress Avenue and Main Street the latter of which ran to one of the first sites of the Texas State Fair 8 36 9 68 the area was subsequently developed and is now Midtown Houston 10 A competing service the Bayou City Street Railway was started in 1883 with a single route along Texas Avenue but it was purchased and folded into HCSR later that year 9 69 A new competitor also named Bayou City Street Railway was founded in 1889 the new Bayou City was purchased and consolidated into HCSR in 1890 by Oscar Carter who also announced plans to electrify the system 8 37 9 70 By 1892 electrification of the existing streetcar lines was complete and extensions began past the immediate downtown central Houston area within a 1 1 2 mi 2 4 km radius of the Harris County Courthouse including the Houston Heights suburb which was developed by Carter and required streetcar service due to its distance from central Houston 8 37 9 70 71 HCSR was acquired by the Houston Electric Company in 1901 which was managed by Stone amp Webster and continued to expand the service 8 37 38 9 76 including the start of interurban service to Galveston provided by the affiliated Galveston Houston Electric Railway 11 7 in 1911 8 38 9 88 However the popularity of privately owned automobiles began to displace demand for streetcar service and the system stopped expanding after 1927 8 42 9 86 88 Several streetcar lines were converted to conventional bus lines in 1936 and the right of way for the Interurban was sold in 1940 later being reused for the Gulf Freeway 8 42 9 87 89 The last streetcar completed its run early in the morning of June 9 1940 and the rails were later removed and scrapped during World War II 8 42 A sample monorail line was built in Houston in 1955 12 the Trailblazer operated over a 1 600 ft 490 m line at Arrowhead Park with a peak speed of 10 mph 16 km h starting on February 18 1956 The monorail ceased operation in September of that year 13 and subsequently was moved to Fair Park in Dallas for the Texas State Fair where it continued to run until 1964 14 False starts edit Rapid Transit Lines the successor to HCSR and Houston Electric proposed a rapid transit system as a long range project under the 1971 Transit Action Program TAP developed by Alan M Voorhees and Associates largely laid out along the radial spokes centered in the Inner Loop tracing the city s major freeways 15 16 17 TAP would be implemented in two stages In Stage 1 40 mi 64 km of rapid transit routes would be built including fixed rail lines serving the southwest west and northeast parts of Houston with a downtown subway and three bus exclusive lanes along the North Gulf and South freeways 18 II 1 Stage 1 was planned to complete in the 1970s at an estimated cost of 800 million 19 48 49 Under Stage 2 scheduled for completion before 1990 the Stage 1 rail lines would be extended and two more would be added bringing the total system to 80 mi 130 km 18 II 1 TAP would have been the technical basis for the proposed Houston Area Rapid Transit Authority HARTA but a referendum to form HARTA was soundly defeated in 1973 18 II 2 20 The city of Houston purchased Rapid Transit Lines in April 1974 for 5 3 million and renamed it the Houston Transit System HouTran 18 II 2 nbsp Proposed alignment of the Southwest Westpark corridor Heavy Rail alternative including subway under FanninHouston formed the Office of Public Transportation in January 1975 to plan the region s public transportation system and began working on an update of TAP 18 II 3 II 4 After METRO was formed in 1978 79 an initial Phase I alternatives analysis identified multiple potential transit corridors and under Phase II proposed in 1980 the Southwest Westpark corridor along what is now the Westpark Tollway was prioritized for further study 18 II 7 11 The proposed Southwest Westpark corridor would have run 13 1 mi 21 1 km generally parallel to the Southwest Freeway with equal lengths west and east of the West Inner Loop The planned route would run from downtown Houston along Main Street to approximately Elgin and west from Elgin to West Belt along existing public and rail rights of way 18 s 2 Service options that could be operated along the corridor included a dedicated busway on an elevated structure carrying 203 500 daily riders at an estimated capital construction cost of 878 million 18 s 6 an elevated light rail system 213 400 daily passengers 1 297 billion 18 s 7 a light rail subway 226 800 daily 1 572 billion 18 s 9 or a grade separated heavy rail system with subway through the central business district 223 700 daily 1 366 billion 18 s 10 At the time it was estimated that 9 5 million person trips were made per day in Harris County of those 98 7 were taken using private vehicles 21 I 4 METRO updated its 1980 Southwest Westpark corridor proposal and extended the eastern terminus north by 5 1 mi 8 2 km combining it with the proposed North corridor as the Houston Rail Rapid Transit Project the extended line now ran north past I 10 and the North Inner Loop to Crosstimbers 21 II 38 II 39 The design called for 11 5 mi 18 5 km of elevated tracks 1 9 mi 3 1 km of subway and 4 8 mi 7 7 km at grade 21 II 39 The system would have 17 passenger stations eight aerial six at grade and three subway and included a new railyard maintenance facility at Cavalcade 21 II 48 II 65 The 1983 proposal was rejected by Houston voters via referendum 22 23 24 Light voter turnout was blamed for the defeat of the 2 35 billion proposal which included the purchase of approximately 400 new buses and construction of a 18 5 mi 29 8 km heavy rail system 17 25 26 The capital cost of the rail system alone was estimated at 1 436 billion including 130 new rail vehicles 21 II 69 In the wake of the 1983 defeat METRO began work on a regional transit plan integrating inputs from city county and state governments and developing three options for implementation A bus routes only B light rail loop and radial bus routes or C light rail with supplemental bus routes after approximately 250 meetings were held in 1984 and 1985 citizens overwhelmingly supported Option C with planned light rail service to operate along Main Street within the inner loop I 610 27 Longtime Houston Mayor Kathryn Whitmire appointed Bob Lanier to chair METRO in 1988 28 160 Lanier shepherded a voter referendum that year which passed approving the Phase 2 Regional Mobility Plan which included 20 mile 32 km of fixed guideway transit 29 Under the 1988 referendum METRO would devote 1 4 of its sales tax revenue on roads 1 2 on improving bus service and the remaining 1 4 on developing the fixed guideway plans 30 but Lanier showed reluctance to follow through on developing plans for a fixed guideway questioning the projected ridership numbers and Whitmire fired him in late December 1989 28 160 31 Incensed Lanier released a memorandum attacking the mayor s rail transit plans and Whitmire responded by holding a press conference on Lanier s front lawn during his annual Christmas party 28 160 Houston was the largest city in the United States without a rail system after the 1990 opening of the Blue Line in Los Angeles After issuing an RFP in July 1990 METRO received five proposals for the design and development of the fixed guideway system 32 95 107 110 In March 1991 METRO approved a plan to develop a monorail system similar to the one operating at Walt Disney World in Orlando at an estimated cost of 1 27 billion operating along the extended Southwest Westpark corridor between the Houston Galleria and downtown Houston 33 The proposed monorail system would operate with an initial 14 mi 23 km segment servicing western residential regions west of downtown to Beltway 8 Sam Houston Tollway with construction planned to start in 1993 and revenue service to begin by 1998 Future planned expansions included one leg that would connect downtown with the Texas Medical Center and Astrodome to the south and another leg connecting downtown to Texas Southern University and the University of Houston 32 113 114 In 1991 U S Rep Tom DeLay removed 65 million in federal funding for the rail line and after Lanier was elected mayor of Houston in 1992 defeating Whitmire the plan was stopped 24 Lanier s election was seen as a second referendum on the monorail plan the funding was diverted to road projects and police patrols instead 30 Main Street Line edit After these setbacks Houston drew up a rail plan without federal subsidies 34 and published it in 1997 as the Houston METRO 2020 Regional Transit Plan 35 5 The Houston city council approved the light rail project in November 2000 and set a January 25 2001 date for a groundbreaking ceremony but councilmember Rob Todd filed a lawsuit opposing construction claiming the METRO organization was a private business and subject to Houston City Charter provisions requiring a public vote on business use of its streets 36 37 the ceremony was cancelled following a temporary restraining order issued by Judge Tony Lindsay on January 18 38 39 Todd was joined as co plaintiff by Allan Vogel one of 1 100 residents who signed a petition seeking a public vote on the light rail plan 40 Judge Lindsay later recused herself from the case due to her personal ties to Todd and her husband s public opposition to METRO She was succeeded by District Judge John P Devine 38 who issued an injunction on February 2 halting work on the light rail project and holding up contract awards 36 41 42 43 A second lawsuit was filed by four property owners 44 The injunction issued by Judge Devine in Todd s lawsuit was reversed on appeal on March 9 2001 37 45 Ground was broken on the original 7 5 mile long 12 1 km 16 station portion of the Main Street now Red Line on March 13 2001 46 The Texas Supreme Court upheld the appellate court ruling on June 28 47 That November voters approved Proposition 1 which allowed the light rail project to continue but required public referendums for future extensions and rejected Proposition 3 which would have initiated a public referendum on continuing the initial project 48 nbsp Initial Red Line segment as opened Jan 1 2004 The initial segment runs between UH Downtown northern terminus and Fannin South southern terminus 46 The opening of METRORail which took place on January 1 2004 came 64 years after the previous streetcar system had been shut down 49 At the time two extensions to the north and east were already in planning and a concept was advanced for a third extension west 50 The cost of the initial segment was 324 million 51 Tom DeLay strongly opposed construction of the METRORail line and twice blocked federal funding for the system in the United States House of Representatives 23 Thus the Metrorail was built without any federal funding until November 2011 when a 900 million grant was approved for expansions under an executive order issued by President Barack Obama 52 In spite of the opposition of some groups to the Metrorail surveys conducted by Stephen Klineberg and Rice University have shown consistent increases in support of rail transport and decreases in support for bigger and better roads highways in the Houston metropolitan area in recent years 53 54 55 Klineberg considers these changes a paradigm shift or sea change on attitudes towards mass transit 53 55 56 Phase II edit METRORail Phase II was included as part of the METRO Solutions Transit System Plan aka Metro Solutions Plan or 2025 Regional Transit Plan that was placed before voters on the November 4 2003 ballot Phase II included six proposed light rail segments to complement and extend the Main Street line then under construction 57 2003 METRORail Phase II expansion plan 57 Name Length Stations Termini StatusNorth Hardy 5 4 mi 8 7 km 4 UH Downtown Northline Opened Dec 21 2013 as Main Street Line extensionSoutheast 9 9 mi 15 9 km 13 Downtown Palm Center Truncated line opened May 23 2015 as Southeast LineHarrisburg 6 0 mi 9 7 km 4 Dowling Gulfgate Center Truncated line opened May 23 2015 as East End LineWestpark 6 6 mi 10 6 km 4 Hillcroft T C Wheeler T C Reconfigured as one segment of a planned METRORapid BRT line 58 Uptown West Loop 4 4 mi 7 1 km 7 Bellaire Northwest T C Reconfigured as BRT truncated line opened Aug 23 2020 as Silver Line 59 Inner Katy 7 4 mi 11 9 km 6 Northwest T C Downtown Proposed right of way removed during widening of Katy Freeway 60 Reconfigured as BRT 61 Voters approved the 1 23 billion Phase II expansion of the as yet unopened system including four new lines 62 Critics of the system opposed METRO for spending public funds for educational advertisements about the proposed system which critics claimed promote the referendum 63 Critics further claimed that the main political action committee PAC supporting the bond had a conflict of interest because it received over US 100 000 in contributions from contractors and equipment suppliers for METRORail who stood to gain financially from its expansion 63 By 2004 Rep DeLay was hailing the leadership team at METRO for both its vision for a mobile Houston region and the kind of open minds and flexible management style it will take to realize that vision adding that METRO are holding a forum to look at all forms of technology and how those technologies fit into the mobility in Houston at least one observer noted that DeLay was advocating for innovative rail solutions not light rail 64 In 2004 an alternatives analysis selected a shorter route for the Southeast Corridor 65 S 4 The North and Southeast corridors received their records of decision from the Federal Transit Administration FTA in July 2008 66 67 Construction began in July 2009 on the 5 3 mile long 8 5 km North Red Line Extension North Corridor including nine stations from UH Downtown to the Northline Transit Center Station The 6 6 mile 10 6 km Purple Line Southeast Corridor with ten stations and the 3 3 mile 5 3 km Green Line with nine stations also began construction in July 2009 68 According to the project schedules the Red Line Extension would enter revenue service by 2013 69 and the Green Line by 2014 70 However METRO announced on September 9 2010 that the opening dates for the Red Line Extension Purple and Green lines had been pushed back to 2014 71 and by September 2014 the start date had slipped back to April 4 2015 72 In November 2009 METRO applied for a 900 million grant from the Federal Transit Administration to fund future construction Allegations were made that METRO lied about the income from their sales tax revenue to allow them to gain 900 million in federal funds for all five planned rail expansions 73 However city officials found no such attempt by METRO to mislead them 74 but the Federal Transit Administration FTA continued to withhold its approval for the money until further figures can be examined 75 On December 8 2011 the FTA finally announced the award The award of 900 million was broken into two 450 million grants from the New Starts transit program to fund construction of the Red Line Extension and Purple lines 76 METRO offered the public a chance to name stations on its expansion lines 77 Part of the funding allocated by the FTA under its New Starts program for the North Southeast and University Corridor projects included up to US 205 million to expand the LRV fleet to 104 vehicles and replace the existing 19 LRVs on the Red Line 78 3 METRO selected a public private partnership model for the North and Southeast corridors where the contracted firm would be responsible for vehicle procurement and operation and maintenance of those lines and entered a contract with Washington Group International WGI METRO WGI issued a request for proposals for 103 firm new vehicles and an option of up to 75 additional vehicles on August 31 2007 78 3 4 Although the FTA reminded METRO about federal procurement rules on multiple occasions METRO told prospective bidders that Buy America rules did not apply presumably because the RFP was issued by the private contractor and awarded a contract to CAF on March 4 2009 78 4 5 12 Later that month METRO requested a Buy America waiver for two pilot vehicles which would be assembled by CAF in Spain the FTA denied the waiver request stating that CAF had signed a certificate of compliance with Buy America requirements 78 5 METRO proceeded to use local funds to pursue the pilot vehicle procurement and the FTA opened an investigation in April 2010 78 7 Ultimately the CAF contract was canceled and 1 3 of the US 42 million contract was refunded to METRO 79 nbsp Consolidated map of proposed expansions including Phase II lines as updated in 2010 and METRONext planned extensions Proposed METRONext extension of Red Line to Sugar Land truncated The North Red Line extension opened on December 21 2013 ahead of its projected early 2014 opening 80 increasing the line to its current total of 12 8 miles 20 6 km and 24 stations 81 80 82 Central Station was added to the Red Line to provide transfers to from the Purple and Green lines 83 After numerous delays all but two stations on the eastern end of the Green Line opened on May 23 2015 72 while Cesar Chavez 67th Street and Magnolia Park 84 entered service on January 11 2017 after the construction of an overpass 85 Both the Purple and Green lines together costing 1 3 billion share a track segment in downtown then run east and diverge 86 Cancellations and BRT conversions edit Plans for the Inner Katy rail line east of Loop 610 under the METRO Solutions Plan 2003 conflicted with existing plans to widen the Katy Freeway west of Loop 610 to Texas State Highway 6 A Major Investment Study for the Katy Freeway Expansion was started in 1994 and approved in October 1997 the draft and final environmental impact statements were completed by August 30 2002 87 2 28 In preparation TxDOT purchased a portion of the right of way for the old Katy Railroad from Union Pacific UP in 1992 for 78 million 88 and the UP was scheduled to begin track removal in the last half of 1997 In all 28 mi 45 km of track were removed from Katy Fort Bend Road in Brookshire to Canal Street in Houston 89 The adopted alternative for the expanded freeway called for an at grade roadway with a total right of way width of 475 ft 145 m in each direction there would be two managed lanes closest to the center flanked by four main lanes up to two auxiliary lanes and three frontage road lanes 90 2 28 That year a Memorandum of Understanding was signed between TxDOT METRO and Harris County which identified requirements for the managed lanes including prioritization of METRO buses and an option to convert those lanes to light rail transit in the future 91 24 The Gulf Coast Institute criticized the contradictions between TxDOT which selected the managed lanes over rail due to insufficient projected transit demand and METRO s Solutions Plan which noted that a Katy line could offer the potential for sizeable transit volume 92 11 By 2005 the Inner Katy corridor had been dropped from METRO Solutions 93 94 METRO began negotiations with Southern Pacific SP to acquire the tracks and right of way alongside the Eastex Freeway that were formerly owned by the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railroad and a conceptual agreement was reached in December 1992 METRO would re use the line for commuter rail service 95 However after METRO decided to purchase a subset of the original agreement at a fraction of the agreed upon price SP sued and the a settlement was reached in 1997 with METRO purchasing 58 mi 93 km for 72 million Shortly after the purchase was completed business interests pressured METRO into selling a portion of the right of way to the Harris County Toll Road Authority which was eventually developed into the Westpark Tollway 96 127 128 By 2006 a proposed revised corridor along Richmond was drawing opposition from local business owners and Texas Rep Martha Wong who advocated for a route along Westpark instead 97 In August 2010 a budget shortfall of 49 million was announced by METRO which halted progress on the University Line The line had received a final Federal Record of Decision letter from the FTA in July 98 but METRO had not announced a construction schedule or funding plan 99 Since then BRT service has been proposed along the corridor instead 100 METRO published the Uptown West Loop Planning Study in 2004 which was a proposed light rail line along Post Oak Boulevard and West Inner Loop connecting new stations at Bellaire at the junction with U S Route 59 and Northwest Transit Center at the junction with I 10 In the alternatives analysis bus rapid transit BRT service was considered and dismissed as an alternative to light rail due to the reduced capacity of BRT vehicles and the strong community preference for rail 101 S 24 Due to lack of funds it was announced in early 2013 that the Uptown Line will be constructed initially as a bus rapid transit BRT line The design will feature the ability to easily convert the line to light rail in the future This will allow the line to be functional as early as 2017 102 Following METRO s 2010 annual audit the agency decided to cancel the Burnett Plaza project US 41 million was spent on the initial design of the proposed intermodal terminal 79 This was part of a US 168 million asset liquidation The price of the land US 21 million is valued separately 103 US 61 million of the liquidation was listed as unrealized assets including charges for redundant design contractors and changes 79 Future plans edit METRO put the METRONext Moving Forward Plan before Houston area voters in November 2019 voters approved the 3 5 billion bond by a margin of nearly two to one 104 Bonds issued will be used to extend existing light rail service The Red Line will be expanded North to the North Shepherd park amp ride and both the Green and Purple lines will be expanded east and south to William P Hobby Airport and west to the Houston Municipal Courthouse 105 106 17 20 In addition new BRT lines would be set up along corridors that had previously been identified for light rail transit including Inner Katy and University another new BRT line would bridge the gap between the northern terminus of the Red Line and Bush Airport and a new north south BRT service would operate along the western leg of Beltway 8 107 A long extension or possible commuter rail line from Fannin South to Sugar Land and beyond has been studied since 2004 The route would parallel U S 90A in the existing right of way used by the Glidden subdivision owned by UP 108 Operations editThe light rail lines operate all 7 days of the week They begin operations at 3 30 a m weekdays and 4 30 a m weekends and end service at 12 30 a m Monday through Thursday nights 2 45 a m Friday and Saturday nights and 12 30 a m Sunday nights Scheduled train frequency varies from 6 minutes during the day to 20 minutes off peak The light rail lines can handle three minute headways during peak hours 109 and have a design capacity of 8 000 people hour in each direction while using two car trains with such a headway 110 The scheduled time for an end to end trip through the entire 12 8 mile 20 6 km Red Line 82 is on average 55 minutes 1 Tracks on all three lines are usually in dedicated right of way in the center of the street however the southbound tracks between the Wheeler and Museum District stations run along the left side 111 The downtown Houston tracks along Capitol and Rusk streets run along the south side of the streets Furthermore these light rail trains run in mixed traffic sharing a lane with buses and other vehicles often being their turn lane METRORail operations are controlled from Houston TranStar a traffic and emergency management center for the city and surrounding region 112 Trains have priority signalling at intersections except for six stations near the medical center and downtown 112 113 At prioritized intersections traffic lights for road traffic in all directions turn red when a train approaches 113 Route and infrastructure edit Line Name Distance Route Status Red Line 12 6 mi 20 3 km 4 Fannin South to Northline Transit Center Opened January 1 2004 Purple Line 6 7 mi 10 8 km 4 Smith Street in Downtown Houston to Palm Center Opened May 23 2015 Green Line 3 2 mi 5 1 km 4 Smith Street in Downtown Houston to Magnolia Park Transit Center Opened May 23 2015 University Line Bus Rapid Transit 11 3 mi 18 2 km 114 Hillcroft Transit Center to Tidwell Transit Center Planning in progress Uptown Line Bus Rapid Transit 4 7 mi 7 6 km 115 Westpark Lower Uptown Transit Center to Northwest Transit Center Bus rapid transit opened August 23 2020Red Main Street Line edit The Red Line is a 12 6 mile 20 3 km 4 double tracked 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge line with 24 stations 1 approximately 1 2 mile 0 8 km apart running from Fannin South to the Northline Transit Center Station Almost the entire route is at grade and on city streets The original 2004 portion from Fannin South to UH Downtown is entirely at ground level and at grade with street traffic However on the North Red Line Extension from UH Downtown to Northline Transit Center two small portions are elevated the Burnett Transit Center station 116 and a small section of track between Melbourne North Lindale and Northline Transit Center on Fulton Street 117 Power is supplied at 600 750 volts DC from overhead wires with nine substations for the original 2004 portion 112 The line follows Main Street for eight stations from UH Downtown to Wheeler station then follows Fannin Street for the remainder of the original route until Fannin South Northbound trains run on San Jacinto Street rather than Fannin for a small section of the route between the Wheeler and Museum District stations The North Red Extension runs along North Main Street until just after Quitman Near Northside then turns onto Boundary Street until just before Fulton North Central and then runs along Fulton Street until Northline Transit Center 118 Significant businesses and institutions along the Red Line route include the University of Houston Downtown Houston s restaurant district near Preston Station the Downtown Transit Center Houston s museum district Rice University Memorial Hermann Hospital the Texas Medical Center and NRG Stadium A park amp ride parking lot is available at one station Fannin South 119 120 It has approximately 1 200 parking spaces 112 Parking fees included a daily rate of 3 and a monthly hangtag contract of 40 The Burnett Transit Center was designed to have a park and ride facility next to the Casa de Amigos Health Center it was scheduled to open in late 2014 116 but the project was canceled in 2011 and scaled back to a multimodal stop 79 For the original 2004 portion of the Red Line the architectural firm Pierce Goodwin Alexander amp Linville of Houston was in charge of the final architectural engineering design and design support with a 2 3 million contract 112 However all stations south of Burnett Transit Center were designed by the Houston office of St Louis based architectural firm Hellmuth Obata amp Kassabaum 121 122 54 55 All stations are of similar design 250 feet 76 m long and partially covered by glass roofs Station length was constrained by the distance between crosswalks in downtown city blocks station platforms are low floor and 350 millimetres 14 in high 112 The line includes a 760 m long 2 490 ft bridge along Main Street which separates the double track main line and a third pocket track from UP s line and three streets 123 A yard and a maintenance facility for the Red Line is connected by loop track to the south of the Fannin South station 111 nbsp Houston MetroRail Cars at Northline Transit Center on Fulton near Crosstimbers January 2015 The right of way and the stations for the original 2004 line were built by three contractors for approximately 115 million Texas Sterling Construction Co of Houston Bencon Management of Houston and Beers Construction Co of Atlanta 37 The line construction was divided into five sections with a resident engineer for each section to speed up construction 112 Purple Southeast and Green East End Lines edit The 6 7 mile 10 8 km 10 station Purple Line and seven stations of the 3 2 mile 5 1 km 9 station Green Line opened on May 23 2015 124 The final two stations of the Green Line opened on January 11 2017 125 A storage yard inspection facility is located off of Harrisburg and Clifton Fares edit The standard fare for the rail lines is 1 25 for both cash and METRO Q Card riders 3 for a Day Pass A discount fare is available for qualified MetroQ Fare Card riders those who are seniors 65 69 disabled Medicare cardholders or full time students elementary high school and university the discounted fare is 0 60 for cash or 1 50 for a Day Pass All discount riders must show ID except for elementary and high school students 126 Free rides to METRO buses are available with the MetroQ Fare Card only for 3 hours in any direction 127 Paper transfers from buses were accepted from July 2015 to March 2016 on a trial basis boarded for free before noon good until 15 00 after it to end of service day The MetroQ Fare Card holders can earn Rider Rewards of 5 free trips for every 50 paid trips 126 Tickets and cards are purchased from machines at the stations No charge applies to Texans Dash Dynamo home game days with game ticket nor to seniors over 70 or to children under 5 who ride with an adult limit 3 Fare collection like most light rail systems in the United States is based on a proof of payment system METRO s fare inspectors randomly check tickets and cards aboard trains Failure to pay the fare is a Class C Misdemeanor and is subject to a fine of up to 500 Consumption of alcoholic beverages is prohibited on the train platform and subject to the same fine as a Class C Misdemeanor 128 Ridership edit In the first year of METRORail daily ridership though increasing from 12 102 in January to 32 941 in October tapered off slightly in the last two months of the year and fell short of the 35 000 goal transit officials had set in early 2004 according to the Houston Chronicle 129 The line reached 75 million boardings in December 2011 four years ahead of schedule 130 but throughout that year ridership numbers remained flat or showed small decreases 131 By 2012 average weekday ridership was 36 250 132 The North Red Line Extension exceeded ridership projections by 62 in the first month of operation averaging 4 200 weekday boardings in January 2014 this was 1 600 more boardings than projected for the extension through September 30 2014 the end of the METRORail s fiscal year 133 Notable records in ridership have occurred on the following dates 134 February 1 2004 64 005 passengers rode the METRORail to Super Bowl XXXVIII February 23 2004 54 193 passenger boardings were recorded the highest weekday at the time February 27 2007 56 388 passengers were recorded the day of the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo March 15 2012 70 611 passengers were recorded many of whom attended the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo and a performance by The Band Perry after the rodeo at the Reliant Park sports complex 135 March 19 2014 76 925 passengers were recorded due in part to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo 136 February 4 2017 109 500 passenger boardings were recorded during Super Bowl LI November 4 2017 125 000 passenger boardings were recorded the day of the Houston Astros World Series victory parade and rally held in Downtown 137 Rolling stock editMETRO currently operates three generations of light rail vehicles All of them are double articulated 70 low floor vehicles with four low platform doors per side to provide level boarding Series Builder Model In service Fleet numbers Years of service Lines used ImageH1 Siemens S70 18 101 118 2004 present nbsp nbsp H2 19 201 219 2012 present nbsp H3 CAF USA Urbos LRV 39 301 339 2015 present nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp H4 Siemens S700 a 14 401 414 2022 present nbsp H1 series edit The original fleet of 18 vehicles was built by Siemens Transportation Systems in Sacramento California the 117 9 million contract for Siemens included the light rail infrastructure traction power signals and communication systems and an initial order of 15 light rail vehicles 139 37 Three additional vehicles were ordered in 2002 140 101 to 115 were delivered in 2003 and 116 to 118 in 2004 for the opening of the first stage of the Red Line 141 Designated by the manufacturer as S70 and based roughly on earlier vehicles built for Portland s MAX Light Rail system each vehicle is 96 feet 29 m long and has a top speed of 66 mph 106 km h 142 They have a capacity of 72 seated and approximately 169 standing passengers or a total capacity of around 241 per car 112 143 This approximately 250 person capacity has been reached on certain Super Bowl weekends 144 The H1 series cars are distinguishable by their streamlined cab ends and rectangular headlamps with the electronic destination sign which have been modified to indicate the line with a colored square mounted directly in front of the cab rather than above it They are normally used only on the Red Line and can be operated as single cars or in trains of two cars coupled together though two car trains have become the norm due to increasing ridership and the arrival of the H2 series H2 series edit For expansion of the METRORail system METRO turned to CAF USA with a total order of 105 cars placed in May 2010 145 A subsequent investigation by the Federal Transit Administration determined the procurement violated the Buy America Act 78 and the US 42 million order was cancelled in February 2011 79 CAF gave a partial refund of US 14 million which METRO applied to the purchase of what would become the H2 series cars 146 In the spring of 2011 METRO purchased a further 19 Siemens S70 vehicles the same model as its original 18 citing the need to accommodate ridership that was 4 years ahead of expectations and to get cars more quickly 130 These cars were options under a contract for Utah Transit Authority s TRAX system which METRO purchased for 83 million after UTA decided not to exercise its options 142 147 As with the previous H1 generation these new cars were built in Florin California 142 but they differ slightly from the cars Utah received in detail including having more air conditioning units 130 They were delivered in October 2012 and entered service that December 148 The H2 series cars are shorter than the H1 series at 85 3 feet 26 0 m in length accommodate slightly fewer passengers 60 seated 225 maximum and have a lower maximum speed of 55 mph 89 km h 149 12 13 Externally the H2 series are distinguishable by their flatter cab ends and circular headlamps with the electronic destination sign which use colored dots to indicate the line conventionally mounted above the cab Like the H1 series they are normally used only on the Red Line and can be operated as single cars or in two car trains The H1 and H2 series are electrically compatible and can operate together in the same train H3 series edit In September 2011 METRO approved the purchase of 39 vehicles from CAF upon receipt of a new proposal compliant with Federal Transit Administration FTA and Buy America guidelines 150 151 The first six of these cars were delivered in January 2015 152 and entered service shortly afterwards 153 The H3 series cars built in Elmira New York 154 and based on the CAF Urbos platform used in cities across Europe and Asia are similar in size and capacity to the H1 series with a length of 97 ft 29 6 m and accommodating a maximum of 242 passengers 64 seated 155 156 but are distinguishable by their boxier design and framed window panes They are in operation on all three METRORail lines and can couple to form two car trains however the H3 series is electrically incompatible with the older types and cannot operate with them in the same train H4 series edit In February 2019 METRO ordered 14 additional Siemens S700 vehicles H4 with interior modifications designed to improve passenger flow compared to the agency s prior H1 and H2 series S70s 157 158 These vehicles result from the reassignment of options from Minneapolis Saint Paul Metro Transit in May 2018 Metro Transit previously had signed a contract with Siemens to deliver 27 low floor S70 LRVs with options for up to 50 additional vehicles in 2016 159 These new vehicles would be used for the Southwest LRT Green Line and Bottineau LRT Blue Line extension projects subsequently Metro Transit determined they would only need 27 vehicles for Southwest and 28 vehicles for Bottineau leaving 22 options unexercised and METRO requested the transfer of 14 of those options in 2018 160 Siemens re designated the S70 as originally ordered with modifications in the center section per Metro Transit s needs for passenger flow to the S700 in 2020 138 They entered into service on 15 December 2022 161 Incidents and crashes editFor a full year before the Metrorail system s opening a program to prepare drivers to share Houston streets with the Metrorail trains was conducted consisting of driver safety classes community forums and public service announcements 162 By August the system averaged six crashes per month 20 times worse than the national average for light rail systems The high rate of incidents gave rise to local derogatory nicknames among detractors such as the Wham Bam tram and Danger Train 163 METRO has consistently blamed driver error as the cause of the high collision rate and the transit agency s police department regularly tickets motorists who cross paths with the train An independent panel of transportation experts at Texas A amp M University issued a report in 2004 finding no fundamental flaws with the Metrorail system although this report did recommend minor adjustments to signal timing and signage 164 The 100th accident as defined by METRO occurred on August 10 2005 In the judgement of METRO police only two of these were the fault of the train operator Most crashes resulted from drivers turning into the trains or running red lights Following the Texas A amp M report METRO implemented four way red lights at some crossings and other safety measures which led to a 75 reduction in incidents per train mile even as service ramped up 165 Critics have also noted the fact that the system is at grade while supporters contend that lack of federal funding due to political opposition made construction of a grade separated rail line unfeasible 163 Sociology and urban studies professor Stephen Klineberg argues that the high rate of crashes in Houston is attributable to the high rate of automobile driving and low rate of walking in Houston 162 See also edit nbsp Texas portal nbsp Trains portalList of METRORail stations Light rail in the United States List of United States light rail systems by ridership Light rail in North America List of tram and light rail transit systemsNotes edit a b The cars in this order were considered to be model S70 at the time the order was placed but in 2019 20 were retroactively rebranded as model S700 by Siemens 138 References edit a b c d MetroRail Rider Guide PDF METRO May 23 2015 Retrieved August 11 2015 Transit Ridership Report Third Quarter 2023 PDF American Public Transportation Association November 30 2023 Retrieved December 6 2023 Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2022 PDF American Public Transportation Association March 1 2023 Retrieved March 29 2023 a b c d e METRO About Us Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Houston Texas Retrieved February 7 2022 Begley Dug November 20 2014 Rail line delay gives Metro time to acquire more cars Houston Chronicle Retrieved May 24 2015 a b METRORail Passes New Milestones on Way to 2014 Opening Press release Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County October 11 2012 Archived from the original on January 21 2013 Retrieved September 9 2015 APTA Q4 2015 Light Rail Transit Ridership Report PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 20 2017 Retrieved October 20 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k Fuglaar Stephanie Spring 2008 The Streetcar in Houston PDF Houston History 5 2 33 42 a b c d e f g h i Streetcars and the Growth of Houston PDF The Houston Review 16 2 67 100 1994 Retrieved September 29 2021 Meeks Flori March 28 2013 Few traces remain of state fair site Houston Chronicle Retrieved September 29 2021 Annual Report for the twelve months ending December 13 1913 Report Galveston Houston Electric Company 1913 Retrieved September 29 2021 This company owns the capital stock of Galveston Electric Company Houston Electric Company and Galveston Houston Electric Railway Company Ingraham Joseph C August 21 1955 Monorail Facing First Test In U S Houston Breaks ground for Sample Line Other Cities Interested in Project The New York Times Retrieved October 8 2021 Callahan Michael February 18 2016 Houston s short lived monorail Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Monzingo Tim June 1 2012 Living in a monorail car The Seattle Times Retrieved October 8 2021 Alan M Voorhees and Associates November 1971 Transit Action Program Houston Texas Report Alan M Voorhees and Associates October 1973 Transit Program for Houston Project TX 09 0008 Report Urban Mass Transportation Administration a b Shelton Kyle October 10 2014 What Old Transit Maps Can Teach Us About a City s Future CityLab Bloomberg Retrieved September 29 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k Draft Environmental Impact Statement Southwest Westpark Corridor Report Urban Mass Transportation Administration amp Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County September 1980 Retrieved October 4 2021 TRW Transportation and Environmental Operations December 1972 Transportation Control Strategy Development for the Greater Houston Area Report No APTD 1373 PDF Report Environmental Protection Agency Office of Air Quality PLanning and Standards Retrieved October 8 2021 Houston Vote Bars Transit Authority The New York Times October 8 1973 Retrieved October 4 2021 a b c d e Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement Houston Rail Rapid Transit Project Report Urban Mass Transportation Administration amp Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County March 1983 Retrieved October 4 2021 King Wayne May 16 1983 Houston s plan for rail system meets opposition The New York Times Retrieved September 29 2021 a b Trains finally roll in Houston rail system CNN Reuters January 1 2004 Retrieved August 11 2015 a b Dobson Georgianna November 21 2001 Houston Voters Approve First Metro Rail Line World Internet News Archived from the original on February 5 2012 Houston voters reject 2 35 billion rapid rail plan The Christian Science Monitor June 13 1983 Retrieved September 29 2021 Voters reject rail system in Houston Philadelphia Inquirer United Press International June 12 1983 Retrieved September 29 2021 Ochsner Jeffrey Karl Fall 1985 The METRO Regional Plan 1985 PDF Cite Retrieved September 29 2021 a b c Reinert Al November 1991 The Three Kingdoms of Kathy Whitmire Texas Monthly p 158 Retrieved October 8 2021 Hill Ben October 26 2005 Greater Houston Partnership and Metro A Little History World Internet News Archived from the original on February 5 2012 a b Why no monorail For city s transit riders two rails better than none EDITORIAL Houston Chronicle April 20 2004 Retrieved October 8 2021 Pendleton Scott September 30 1991 Houston Mayor Race Pits Popular Whitmire Against Two Challengers The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved October 8 2021 a b Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations House of Representatives One Hundred Second Congress First Session Part 7 Testimony of Members of Congress and other interested individuals and organizations Report Government Printing Office April 30 1991 Retrieved October 8 2021 Benjaminson Wendy March 29 1991 Houston Transit Board Opts for Monorail System AP News Retrieved October 8 2021 Rail without the FTA Houston METRORail Metro Jacksonville March 14 2008 Retrieved October 8 2021 Texas Transportation Institute March 11 2004 METRORail Traffic Safety Assessment PDF Report Metropolitan Transit Agency of Harris County Archived from the original PDF on January 13 2006 a b Kube Kathi February 7 2001 Houston light rail lingers in legal limbo Progressive Railroading Retrieved October 8 2021 a b c d Houston Breaks Ground for First Light Rail Line LightRailNow March 16 2001 Archived from the original on February 24 2013 a b Glenn Mike January 26 2001 Judge recuses herself from light rail lawsuit Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Glenn Mike January 19 2001 Metro light rail plans temporarily derailed Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Glenn Mike January 31 2001 Metro argues against rail injunction Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Glenn Mike February 2 2001 Judge issues injunction against Metro s light rail plan Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Glenn Mike February 3 2001 Judge s ruling derails light rail Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Asher Ed February 4 2001 Injunction leaves light rail in limbo Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Canon Kim April 11 2001 Dallas may hold key to rail success Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Sallee Rad March 14 2001 Effort to restrain Metro fails but light rail hurdles continue Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 a b Sallee Rad March 14 2001 Gold spikes mark start of light rail line Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 18 2015 Houston Metro wins another court battle for light rail Progressive Railroading July 3 2001 Retrieved October 8 2021 Sallee Rad November 7 2001 Voters keep light rail on track Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Wall Lucas January 1 2004 Houstonians flock downtown as Metro light rail rolls out today Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 18 2015 Street Lisa Passengers give thumbs up to Metro s rail line The Daily Cougar Vol 6 no 3 University of Houston Retrieved October 8 2021 Houston Metro s Light Rail Opens in the Citadel of Asphalt LightRailNow January 4 2004 Archived from the original on December 10 2011 Retrieved August 15 2013 Shay Miya November 28 2011 METRO to get 900 million in federal funds for light rail expansion projects KTRK TV Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 22 2012 a b Natt Wendy April 22 2009 Survey shows strong support for transit Houston Tomorrow Archived from the original on November 30 2014 Retrieved January 22 2012 Public Opinion on Transit Improves Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County 2009 Archived from the original on April 30 2009 Retrieved January 22 2012 a b Houstonians more positive about city despite economic woes annual survey finds e Science News April 20 2009 Archived from the original on December 17 2012 Retrieved January 22 2012 Houstonians say there s no place like home survey finds Houston Business Journal April 20 2009 Retrieved January 22 2012 a b Notice of Special Election Resolution No 2003 93 PDF Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Texas September 22 2003 Retrieved September 28 2021 METRORapid University Corridor Project Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Retrieved September 29 2021 Begley Dug August 23 2020 Metro s Silver Line starts first of many bus rapid transit planned in region in lieu of rail Houston Chronicle Retrieved September 30 2021 Begley Dug November 29 2017 Emmett laments lack of commuter rail along Katy Freeway Houston Chronicle Retrieved September 29 2021 METRORapid Inner Katy Project Interagency Coordination Meeting PDF METRONext January 13 2021 Retrieved September 29 2021 Begley Dug June 20 2014 Dallas Houston follow different paths on rail development Houston Chronicle Retrieved January 18 2015 a b Biundo John October 2003 The METRO Money Train Archived from the original on March 15 2004 Wall Lucas August 14 2004 DeLay changing his tune on future mass transit plans Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 8 2021 Final Environmental Impact Statement Southeast Corridor Fixed Guideway PDF Report Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County January 2007 Archived from the original PDF on January 21 2013 Patrick Robert C July 1 2008 Record of Decision North Corridor Fixed Guideway Transit Project in Houston Texas PDF Federal Transit Administration Archived from the original PDF on January 22 2013 Patrick Robert C July 15 2008 Record of Decision Southeast Corridor Fixed Guideway Transit Project in Houston Texas PDF Federal Transit Administration Archived from the original PDF on January 21 2013 Rhodes Elizabeth April 22 2015 Sneak peek at new METRO rail lines Easy access to UH and Dynamo stadium art filled stops along the way CultureMap Houston Retrieved May 24 2015 Sarnoff Nancy May 29 2010 Rail puts Fulton Corridor on the verge of a boom Houston Chronicle Retrieved April 9 2011 Metro announces 49M budget shortfall KHOU August 19 2010 Archived from the original on September 4 2012 Retrieved April 9 2011 Perera John April 26 2010 Rail Lines Will Not Meet Oct 2013 Deadline Myfoxhouston com Retrieved April 9 2011 permanent dead link a b Rail line delay gives Metro time to acquire more cars The Daily Cougar November 20 2014 Retrieved November 20 2014 Did Metro try to deceive feds to get 900M KHOU October 30 2013 Archived from the original on July 5 2015 Retrieved April 9 2011 Metro city officials deny effort to mislead FTA Houston Chronicle April 16 2010 Archived from the original on July 7 2012 Retrieved April 9 2011 Feds take action on Metro rail lines to protect taxpayers KHOU April 22 2010 Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 09 900m awarded to extend Houston s light rail system Rail co December 8 2011 Archived from the original on June 6 2012 Retrieved December 9 2011 Light rail stations closer to getting names Houston Chronicle July 7 2011 Retrieved on 2013 08 15 a b c d e f Miller Kerry L Blakesley Jayme L Pereira Stephen F Wong Richard L September 3 2010 Report of Investigation Houston METRO Buy America amp Procurement PDF Report U S Department of Transportation Federal Transit Administration Retrieved October 19 2021 a b c d e Moran Chris February 21 2011 Houston transit takes a 168M hit for useless projects Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 19 2021 a b Begley Dug December 21 2013 New northside light rail line opens with free rides Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on January 26 2014 Retrieved January 19 2015 Begley Dug May 23 2013 Metro says North rail line to open early Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 18 2015 a b Houston Facts 2014 PDF METRO 2014 Archived from the original PDF on September 24 2015 Retrieved August 11 2015 Southeast Line Downtown Segment Updates Metrosolutions org Archived from the original on February 17 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 09 UrbanRail Net gt USA gt Houston Light Rail www urbanrail net METRORail Green Line opens Wednesday morning January 11 2017 Begley Dug September 17 2014 More trouble for rail lines as opening pushed to next year Houston Chronicle Retrieved May 24 2015 Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade amp Douglas Inc April 18 2003 Preliminary Review of The Katy Corridor Coalition Concept PDF Report Houston District of TxDOT Archived from the original PDF on July 26 2004 Robinson J December 30 1992 State buys Katy rail right of way for 78 million Houston Chronicle Culver Denise March 30 1997 Removal of train tracks on Katy freeway won t have instant impact Houston Business Journal Retrieved October 11 2021 Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade amp Douglas Inc April 18 2003 Preliminary Review of The Katy Corridor Coalition Concept PDF Report Houston District of TxDOT Archived from the original PDF on July 26 2004 Turnbull Katherine F September 2003 Houston Managed Lanes Case Study The Evolution of the Houston HOV System DTFH61 01 C 00182 Report Operations Office of Traffic Management Federal Highway Administration Retrieved September 30 2021 Crossley David May 4 2004 Comments on 2025 Regional Transportation Plan PDF Report Gulf Coast Institute Archived from the original PDF on September 30 2021 Retrieved September 30 2021 METRO Solutions Phase 2 Implementation Plan PDF Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County July 8 2005 Archived from the original PDF on June 21 2010 METRO Solutions Phase 2 Transportation Policy Council presentation PDF Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County May 26 2006 Archived from the original PDF on February 17 2011 Begley Dug March 1 2014 Westpark expansion to proceed with Metro land sale Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 11 2021 Morgan Curtis Warner Jeffery Huang Jun Barkley Rebecca Loftus Otway Lisa Hutson Nathan Ross Alejandra Cruz Niven Rachel March 2011 Abandoned Rail Corridors in Texas A Policy and Infrastructure Evaluation Report 0 6268 1 PDF Report Texas Department of Transportation Retrieved October 11 2021 Sallee Rad February 17 2006 Richmond rail issue draws 350 to Metro Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 11 2021 Patrick Robert C July 26 2010 University Corridor Light Rail Transit Project Record of Decision PDF Federal Transit Administration Archived from the original PDF on January 22 2013 Perera John April 26 2010 Final Approval on University Light Rail Line Myfoxhouston com Retrieved April 9 2011 permanent dead link Begley Dug June 17 2021 Metro about to draw first hard lines along Richmond Westpark Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 11 2021 DMJM Harris February 2004 Uptown West Loop Planning Study Alternatives Analysis Findings Report PDF Report Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Archived from the original PDF on January 22 2013 Post Oak redesign drops rail for bus lane Houston Chronicle February 10 2013 Metro writing off 168 million in worthless assets Houston Community Newspapers News Yourhoustonnews com February 19 2011 Retrieved April 9 2011 UPDATED Unofficial results show METRO bond passing with strong support Community Impact Newspaper November 5 2019 Retrieved October 7 2021 Begley Dug November 5 2019 Voters OK Metro s 3 5B bond request for regional transit plan Houston Chronicle Retrieved October 7 2021 METRONext Business Now PDF Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County February 20 2020 Archived from the original PDF on October 7 2021 Retrieved October 7 2021 METRO on the move METRONext Moving Forward Plan PDF Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County August 13 2019 Archived from the original PDF on October 7 2021 Retrieved October 7 2021 Edwards and Kelcey April 2004 U S 90A Corridor Rail Feasibility Study Report Houston Galveston Area Council Retrieved October 11 2021 Appeals Court Gives Green Light to Houston Light Rail Project Lightrailnow org Retrieved August 15 2013 Spieler Christof December 2004 Houston Light Rail The Case for Building on What We Have Lightrailnow org Retrieved August 15 2013 a b Houston Texas world nycsubway org January 1 2004 Retrieved August 15 2013 a b c d e f g h Houston MetroRail System Railway Technology com June 15 2011 Retrieved August 15 2013 a b Vassilakos Greg August 15 2013 An Excursion on Houston Metro Rail Archived from the original on September 22 2013 University Line FTA brings Houstonians one step closer to a much needed east west transit line GoMETRORail org Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved March 19 2016 Begley Dug February 9 2013 Post Oak redesign drops rail for bus lane Houston Chronicle Retrieved February 20 2018 a b Luks Joel December 7 2013 Don t be disappointed New METRORail route is growing pain for H Town CultureMap Houston Retrieved September 9 2015 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Houston MetroRail northern elevated structure on Red Line YouTube June 24 2014 A Driver s Guide to the Lines PDF Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County 2013 Archived from the original PDF on August 19 2014 Park and Ride Locations Ridemetro org Archived from the original on May 25 2015 Retrieved August 15 2013 Fannin South Park and Ride Ridemetro org Archived from the original on May 24 2015 Retrieved August 15 2013 http www hok com cfm ProjectDetailArchive cfm Tag Planning amp projectID 63 amp TagList Mobility 5EPlanning 5EUnited 20States 5ETransportation dead link HOK Select Portfolio amp Qualifications Aviation Transportation Team HOK 2020 Retrieved October 19 2021 Metro LRT Houston Texas Consor Engineering Archived from the original on October 18 2021 Retrieved October 19 2021 METRORail Fest 2015 Kicks Off Historic Opening of Two New Light Rail Lines Press release Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County May 11 2015 Retrieved March 13 2017 Harrisburg Overpass Opening Completes Green Line Bridges Communities Press release Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County January 9 2017 Retrieved March 13 2017 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 30 2014 Retrieved January 8 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Fares METRO Q Fare Card Day Pass amp More METRORail Paid Fare Zones Ridemetro org Archived from the original on May 25 2015 Retrieved August 15 2013 Wall Lucas January 17 2005 Houston rail ridership breezes past other cities Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on June 17 2012 Retrieved August 15 2013 a b c Morris Mike February 25 2011 Thanks to Utah Metro will get rail cars in 2012 Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on June 17 2012 Retrieved August 15 2013 Morris Mike April 22 2011 Metro ridership lags despite pricy gas Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on June 17 2012 Retrieved August 15 2013 Monthly Ridership Report METROBus and METRORail January 2012 Fiscal Year 2012 PDF METRO March 7 2012 p 17 Archived from the original PDF on June 26 2014 Retrieved October 14 2012 Sit Mary February 12 2014 Ridership Exceeds Expectations on Red Line Write On Metro Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 18 2015 METRORail riding sets record Houston Business Journal February 28 2007 Retrieved January 4 2012 Thompson Dana March 15 2012 Rodeo helps Metro set rail record The Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on October 10 2013 Retrieved March 19 2012 Begley Dug March 21 2014 Metro rail record lasted less than a week before being shattered Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on October 25 2014 Retrieved March 20 2014 George Cindy November 6 2017 MetroRail notches record number of riders for Astros victory parade celebration Houston Chronicle Retrieved March 27 2019 a b Siemens rebadges North American low floor cars Tramways amp Urban Transit No 993 UK Mainspring Enterprises Ltd September 2020 p 336 ISSN 1460 8324 Pate Ruth M May 10 2001 300M Light Rail Project Builds Head of Steam in Houston Texas Construction Equipment Guide Retrieved October 14 2021 Siemens to supply LRVs to St Louis Houston and San Diego The Engineer May 27 2002 Archived from the original on November 28 2021 Retrieved October 14 2021 Vehicles Lines Siemens Archived from the original on September 23 2009 Retrieved 2009 11 08 a b c Nusca Andrew April 6 2011 Siemens lands 83 million contract for light rail in Houston SmartPlanet Retrieved on 2013 08 15 S70 Light Rail Vehicle Houston PDF Siemens May 2007 Archived from the original PDF on April 15 2012 Retrieved November 8 2009 Houston s MetroRail Alleviates Congestion as Riders Fill LRT Trains Lightrailnow org March 2004 Retrieved August 15 2013 Metro approves historic contract to build more light rail Construction brings jobs to Houston Houston Chronicle May 15 2010 Retrieved May 17 2010 METRO Receives Refund From Spanish Rail Car Vendor METRO News Release February 16 2011 Archived from the original on July 27 2011 Retrieved 2011 02 26 METRO has received a 14 million dollar refund from CAF the Spanish rail car vendor Houston places US 83 million order with Siemens for 19 LRT vehicles Press release Berlin Germany Siemens April 6 2011 Retrieved September 9 2015 Morris Mike February 24 2011 Thanks to Utah Metro will get rail cars in 2012 Houston Chronicle Retrieved February 26 2011 Metro will take delivery of 19 new rail cars for its Main Street line in late 2012 from an unlikely source Utah Houston Texas S70 Low Floor Light Rail Vehicle PDF Siemens Mobility Inc 2019 Archived PDF from the original on November 17 2020 Retrieved October 14 2021 Houston Metro CAF rail vehicle purchase moving ahead News Metro Magazine November 30 2011 Retrieved January 22 2012 News Release September 29 2011 METRO September 29 2011 Archived from the original on January 6 2012 Retrieved 2012 01 22 Houston light rail cars delivered after due date Trains January 12 2015 Retrieved January 14 2015 subscription required Houston METRO Launches New Light Rail Cars Passenger Transport American Public Transportation Association January 9 2015 Retrieved January 14 2015 Jamieson R March 24 2015 CAF USA keeps Elmira area s rail heritage rolling Star Gazette Elmira New York USA Today Retrieved May 15 2018 Barrow Keith January 8 2015 CAF LRVs enter service in Houston International Railway Journal Retrieved October 14 2021 Houston LRV CAF Retrieved October 14 2021 Houston METRO orders more Siemens light rail vehicles Progressive Railroading February 6 2019 Retrieved February 9 2019 Houston Texas orders 14 light rail vehicles to meet future ridership needs PDF Press release Siemens Mobility GmbH February 5 2019 Retrieved October 14 2021 Twin Cities Metropolitan Council Chooses Siemens to Provide New Light Rail Vehicles Mass Transit October 28 2016 Retrieved October 14 2021 Southwest LRT Project Assignment Agreement with Houston METRORail and Siemens Industry Inc for 14 LRV Contract Options Metropolitan Council May 23 2018 Retrieved October 14 2021 METRO Debuts New Generation of More Accessible Railcars METRO December 15 2022 Retrieved December 15 2022 a b Howlett Debbie March 7 2004 Houston s crash course in light rail USA Today Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved January 22 2012 a b Babineck Mark August 11 2004 Houston s light rail making a real dent in city s car traffic The Seattle Times Archived from the original on December 20 2013 Retrieved January 18 2015 Wall Lucas March 9 2004 Report Rail design not to blame for vehicle accidents Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved January 22 2012 Sallee Rad August 10 2005 Car lightrail collide in 100th accident involving train Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved January 22 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to METRORail GO METRORail METRORail Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County Houston Metro Rail Development interactive Facebook page unofficial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title METRORail amp oldid 1197780360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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