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Red Line (MBTA)

The Red Line is a rapid transit line operated by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) as part of the MBTA subway system. The line runs south and east underground from Alewife station in North Cambridge through Somerville and Cambridge, surfacing to cross the Longfellow Bridge then returning to tunnels under Downtown Boston. It continues underground through South Boston, splitting into two branches on the surface at JFK/UMass station. The Ashmont branch runs southwest through Dorchester to Ashmont station, where the connecting light rail Ashmont–Mattapan High Speed Line (shown as part of the Red Line on maps, but operated separately) continues to Mattapan station. The Braintree branch runs southwest through Quincy and Braintree to Braintree station.

Red Line
A southbound Red Line train entering Charles/MGH station from the Longfellow Bridge in 2019
Overview
OwnerMassachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
LocaleBoston, Cambridge, Somerville, Braintree and Quincy, Massachusetts
Termini
Stations22
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemMBTA subway
Services2
Rolling stock1500, 1600, 1700, 1800, 1900-series
Daily ridership240,000 (2019)[1]
History
OpenedMarch 23, 1912
Technical
Line length11.5 mi (18.5 km) Alewife–Ashmont
17.5 mi (28.2 km) Alewife–Braintree
22.5 mi (36.2 km) total
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrificationThird rail600 V DC
Route map

The Red Line operates during normal MBTA service hours (all times except late nights) with six-car trains. The 218-car active fleet consists of three orders of cars built in 1969–70, 1987–89, and 1993–94. A 252-car order from CRRC is being built from 2019 to 2024. The Red Line is fully grade-separated; trains are driven by operators with automatic train control for safety. Cabot Yard in South Boston is used for heavy maintenance and storage; yards at Alewife, Ashmont, and Braintree are also used for storage. All 22 Red Line stations are fully accessible. Averaging 240,000 weekday passengers in 2019, the Red Line has the highest ridership of the MBTA subway lines.

The Boston Elevated Railway opened its Cambridge tunnel between Harvard and Park Street in 1912. It was extended south as the Dorchester Tunnel to Washington (now Downtown Crossing) in 1915, South Station in 1916, Broadway in 1917, and Andrew in 1918. The Dorchester extension added three stops to Fields Corner in 1927 and two more stops to Ashmont in 1928. Charles (now Charles/MGH) was added as an infill station in 1932. The newly formed MBTA assigned colors to its subway lines in 1965, with the Cambridge–Dorchester line becoming the Red Line. The MBTA added the three-station South Shore Line to Quincy Center in 1971; it was extended to Braintree in 1980, with Quincy Adams added as an infill in 1983. The Red Line Northwest Extension, originally planned to run to Arlington Heights or Route 128, opened to Davis in 1984 and Alewife in 1985.

History Edit

 
The new Cambridge (now Longfellow) Bridge pre-1912, viewed from the Boston end, with an unfinished heavy rail right-of-way down its center. Tracks visible at the sides are for streetcars.

Cambridge tunnel Edit

The Red Line was the last of the four original Boston subway lines (the others being the Green, Orange, and Blue Lines, opened in 1897, 1901, and 1904, respectively) to come into being.

Construction of the Cambridge tunnel, connecting Harvard Square to Boston, was delayed by a dispute over the number of intermediate stations to be built along the new line. Cambridge residents, led by Mayor Wardwell, wanted at least five stations built along the line, while suburbanites interested in faster through travel argued for only a single intermediate station, at Central Square. The contending groups finally compromised on two intermediate stations, at Central and Kendall Squares, allowing construction to start in 1909.[further explanation needed][2]: 41 

The section from Harvard (and new maintenance facilities at Eliot Yard) to Park Street was opened by the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) on March 23, 1912. At Harvard, a prepayment station provided easy transfer to streetcars routed through what is now the Harvard bus tunnel. From Harvard, the Cambridge tunnel traveled beneath Massachusetts Avenue to Central Square station. It then continued under Mass. Ave until Main Street, which it followed to reach Kendall station. The underground line then rose onto the Longfellow Bridge, using a central right-of-way which had been reserved during the bridge's 1900–1906 construction. On the Boston side, the line briefly became an elevated railway, as vehicle lanes descended beneath it to Charles Circle; the tracks then immediately entered a tunnel beneath Beacon Hill, leading to new lower-level platforms at Park Street Under. Charles Station (now Charles/MGH) was added above the traffic circle in 1932.

Dorchester Tunnel and extension Edit

 
Columbia station (later JFK/UMass) on the Dorchester extension under construction in 1927

The Dorchester Tunnel to Washington Street and South Station Under opened on April 4, 1915 and December 3, 1916, with transfers to the Washington Street Tunnel and Atlantic Avenue Elevated, respectively. Further extensions opened to Broadway on December 15, 1917 and Andrew on June 29, 1918, both prepayment stations for streetcar transfer. The Broadway station included an upper level with its own tunnel for streetcars, which was soon abandoned in 1919 due to most lines being truncated to Andrew. The upper level at Broadway was later incorporated into the mezzanine.

Next came the Dorchester extension (now the Ashmont branch), following a rail right-of-way created in 1870 by the Shawmut Branch Railroad. In 1872, the right-of-way was acquired by the Old Colony Railroad to connect their main line at Harrison Square with the Dorchester and Milton Branch Railroad, running from the Old Colony at Neponset, west to what is now Mattapan station. The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad succeeded the Old Colony in operating the branch, but passenger service ceased on September 4, 1926, in anticipation of the construction of the BERy's Dorchester extension.[3]

The BERy opened the first phase of the Dorchester extension, to Fields Corner station, on November 5, 1927, south from Andrew, then southeast to the surface and along the west side of the Old Colony mainline in a depressed right-of-way. Columbia and Savin Hill stations were built on the surface at the sites of former Old Colony stations. The remainder of the extension opened to Ashmont and Codman Yard on September 1, 1928, and included Shawmut station, where there had been a surface Old Colony station, but where the new rapid transit station was placed underground. The first phase of the Ashmont–Mattapan High Speed Line opened on August 26, 1929, using the rest of the Shawmut Branch right-of-way, including Cedar Grove station, and part of the old Dorchester and Milton Branch.

Charles was renamed Charles/MGH in December 1973, and Kendall was renamed Kendall/MIT on August 7, 1978.[4] In January 1981, the MBTA proposed to close the Ashmont branch on Sundays – and the Mattapan Line at all times – beginning that March due to severe budget issues.[5] The closure was cancelled, though the lines were closed from June 20, 1981, to January 16, 1982, for track replacement and tunnel repairs.[4]

MBTA era and branding Edit

 
The station entrance in Harvard Square

The line was sometimes referred to as the Cambridge–Dorchester line[6] and the Cambridge–Dorchester subway.[7] It was marked on maps as "Route 1". After taking over operations in August 1964, the MBTA began rebranding many elements of Boston's public transportation network. Colors were assigned to the rail lines on August 26, 1965 as part of a wider modernization developed by Cambridge Seven Associates, with the Cambridge–Dorchester line becoming the Red Line.[8] Peter Chermayeff claims to have assigned red to the line because of Harvard's association with crimson.[9]

In 1968, letters were assigned to the south branches, "A" for Quincy (planned to extend to South Braintree) and "C" for Ashmont. "B" was probably reserved for a planned branch from Braintree to Brockton. As new rollsigns were made, this lettering was phased out. In 1994, new electronic signs included a different labeling, "A" for Ashmont, "B" for Braintree, and "C" for Alewife.[10]

South Shore line Edit

On July 28, 1965, the MBTA signed an agreement with the New Haven Railroad to purchase 11 miles (18 km) of the former Old Colony mainline from Fort Point Channel to South Braintree in order to construct a new rapid transit line along the corridor. The line was expected to be completed within two years. The agreement also provided for the MBTA to subsidize commuter service on the railroad's remaining commuter rail lines for $1.2 million annually.[4][11] Original plans called for the South Shore line to be largely independent of the existing Red Line, with either a northern terminus at the surface level at South Station or a tunnel leading to a stub-end terminal between Post Office Square and State Street.[12] However, it was later decided to have the line be a new southern branch of the Red Line.

The first section of the South Shore line, under construction since 1966, opened on September 1, 1971, branching from the original Red Line at a flying junction north of Columbia (now JFK/UMass). It ran along the west side of the Old Colony rail right-of-way (which has since been reduced to one track), crossing to the east side north of Savin Hill. The northernmost station was North Quincy, with others at Wollaston and Quincy Center. Service began alternating between Ashmont and Quincy. Ashmont service operated with 1400-series cars, while the Quincy branch only had 1500- and 1600-series cars because they had cab signaling.[4]

In December 1969, the MBTA purchased Penn Central's Dover Street Yards for $7 million.[13][14] The site was used for the South Bay Maintenance Center (later Cabot Yard), which included Red Line shops (to replace Eliot Yard) and an adjacent bus garage. A $7.8 million construction contract was awarded in 1972, with groundbreaking on September 16.[13][14] The facility was dedicated on June 24, 1974; on December 28, Bartlett Street garage in Roxbury was closed.[13]

Three southbound trains collided inside the Beacon Hill tunnel on August 1, 1975, injuring 132 passengers.[15][16]

Braintree extension Edit

 
Quincy Adams (pictured) and Braintree stations include massive parking garages to accommodate suburban commuters.

Beyond Quincy Center, the Braintree extension runs southward to Braintree, opened on March 22, 1980, via an intermediate stop at Quincy Adams which opened on September 10, 1983 due to delays.[4] The extension was part of the massive 1965 extension plan, although it was delayed due to questions over station siting in Braintree.[17] The Boston Transportation Planning Review, published in 1969, proposed North Braintree and South Braintree stations following the Quincy Center station.

Several outlying sections of the MBTA subway system, including Quincy Adams and Braintree, originally charged a double fare to account for the additional costs of running service far from downtown. Passengers paid two fares to enter at the stations, and an exit fare when leaving the station. Double fares on the Braintree extension, the last on the system, were discontinued in 2007 as part of a wider fare restructuring.[18]

Northwest extension Edit

 
Subway exit hatches at the northern end of the line, where a future extension to Lexington may someday be added

By 1922, the BERy believed that Harvard would be the permanent terminus; the heavy ridership from the north was expected to be handled by extending rapid transit from Lechmere Square.[19] The 1926 Report on Improved Transportation Facilities in the Boston Metropolitan District proposed an extension from Lechmere to North Cambridge via the Southern Division and the Fitchburg Cutoff, with a possible further extension along the Lexington Branch. An extension of the Cambridge–Dorchester Line under Mount Auburn Street to Watertown, and thence along the Watertown Branch to Waltham, was also raised as a possibility.[20] A northwards extension from Harvard to the North Cambridge/Arlington border was proposed by Cambridge mayor John D. Lynch in 1933 and by then-freshmen state representative Tip O'Neill in 1936, but was not pursued.[21]

The 1945 Coolidge Commission report – the first major transit planning initiative in the region since 1926 – recommended an extension from Harvard to Arlington Heights via East Watertown.[22][23] The 1947 revision recommended an extension north to Porter Square instead, with branches along the Fitchburg Division to Waltham and the Lexington Branch to Lexington.[23][24] The 1966 Program for Mass Transportation by the 1964-created MBTA called for an immediate extension to Alewife Brook Parkway via Porter Square, with possible future extensions to Arlington or Waltham.[25] Original plans called for a subway under Massachusetts Avenue to Porter Square, then a surface route along the Fitchburg Route to Alewife.[26]: I-3  In the late 1960s, the project was expanded to follow the Lexington Branch to a terminal at Route 128.[26]: I-5 

In 1970, Cambridge began advocating for the project, and for the consideration of an all-subway route under Garden Street.[26]: I-4  That October, then-governor Francis Sargent suspended most highway construction inside Route 128 and created the Boston Transportation Planning Review, which focused on the implementation of new transit routes.[26]: I-4  In 1972, a new all-subway route via Porter Square and Davis Square was considered (and ultimately chosen).[27] By the mid-1970s, the project was split into two phases: an all-subway extension to Arlington Heights via Alewife, with a later extension to Route 128.[26]: I-5 

Arlington did not wish for Arlington Heights to be even a temporary terminal.[26]: I-5  In March 1977, Arlington voters rejected the project in a nonbinding referendum, citing fears of increased taxes and congestion.[28] A May 1977 state bill prohibiting extension into Arlington was vetoed by then-governor Michael Dukakis.[29] The Environmental Impact Statement, released in August 1977, primarily evaluated the Arlington Heights terminus but also provided for a shorter Alewife extension.[26][30] By the time the northwest extension began construction in 1978, opposition in Arlington and reductions in federal funding had caused the MBTA to choose the shorter Alewife alternative.[30]

The Red Line was extended temporarily to Harvard–Brattle over former yard and storage tracks on March 24, 1979. This allowed for bus transfers to be provided. The Harvard bus tunnel was closed temporarily at the time. On January 31, 1981, the original Harvard station was permanently closed, as its demolition was required. To replace it, a temporary station at Harvard–Holyoke was built across the tracks. The two temporary stations were closed on September 2, 1983 in preparation for the opening of the new Harvard station. On September 6, 1983, the new station at Harvard opened, with trains changing direction at Davis Square without carrying passengers.[4] Eliot Yard was demolished; Harvard Kennedy School now sits inside its retaining walls.

The line was extended to Davis with a station at Porter on December 8, 1984. The line was extended to its current terminus at Alewife on March 30, 1985. At the time, all off-peak trains terminated there, but due to the incomplete construction of a yard at Alewife, only Ashmont trains ran to Alewife during rush hours. Davis was the terminal for rush hour Braintree trains. These trains were finally extended to Alewife during rush hours on December 26, 1985, with the completion of the yard at Alewife.[4] During the expansion, the MBTA pioneered an investment in the "Arts on the Line" public art program. Fill from the tunnel excavation was used to create Danehy Park on the former site of the Cambridge City Dump, and to restore Russell Field in Cambridge and Magnolia Park in Arlington.[31][32]

Station renovations Edit

 
Reconstruction of Wollaston in 2018

A 1979 renovation of Park Street added two elevators, making it the first accessible station on the Red Line.[33] In the early 1980s, the MBTA began extending platforms for six-car trains: Ashmont and Shawmut in 1981, Charles/MGH in 1982, and Fields Corner and Savin Hill in the mid-1980s.[4][34] (The Northwest and South Shore extensions had been built for longer trains, while JFK/UMass had been modified in 1970.)[4] In the mid-1980s, the MBTA spent $80 million to extend the platforms of seven underground Red Line stations (Central, Kendall/MIT, Park Street, Washington, South Station, Broadway, and Andrew) and three Orange Line stations.[35] Six-car trains entered service on January 21, 1988.[4]

Central, Kendall/MIT, Park Street, and Downtown Crossing (renamed from Washington in 1987) were completed in 1988.[36] A major reconstruction of JFK/UMass added a platform for the Braintree branch, which opened on December 14, 1988.[13][4] Renovations to Broadway were completed in October 1989.[13] Quincy Adams and Braintree were accessible by 1989, if not from their original construction.[37][38][4] South Station was completed around 1992, followed by Andrew in 1994.[39][37][4]

The 1990 passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act spurred the renovation of additional stations. Quincy Center was modified in 1991, followed by North Quincy in 1998.[37][13] Charles/MGH was rebuilt from 2003 to 2007.[40][41] The agency began design for the four Ashmont branch stations in 2001.[42]: 33  Savin Hill was closed from May 2004 to July 31, 2005 for reconstruction.[4] It was followed by the completion of the rebuilt Fields Corner station in 2008, the modified Shawmut in 2009, and the rebuilt Ashmont in 2011.[43][44] The final Red Line station to be modified for accessibility was Wollaston, which was closed from January 2018 to August 2019 for a complete reconstruction.[4]

2010s Edit

A $255 million project, which started in Spring 2013, replaced structural elements of the Longfellow Bridge, which carries the line across the Charles River between the Charles/MGH and Kendall/MIT stations. The project required at least 25 weekend shutdowns, including temporary relocation of the tracks and a substitute bus shuttle service. All outbound roadway traffic was detoured from the bridge for the three years of construction. The bridge finished construction in May 2018.[45][46][47]

On December 10, 2015, a Red Line train in revenue service traveled from Braintree to North Quincy without an operator in the cab before it was stopped by cutting power to the third rail. The MBTA initially said that the train appeared to have been tampered with and the incident was not an accident, but later determined operator error to have been the cause.[48]

On February 21, 2018, a Red Line train motor failed on approach to Andrew station causing the train to derail.[49] On June 11, 2019, a Red Line train derailed just north of JFK/UMass station, damaging three sheds of signal equipment that control the complex interlockings around the station. The Red Line was limited to 10 trains per hour (instead of the usual 13-14) for several months while repairs were made.[50][51] The derailment was caused by a broken axle, which had been made brittle by sparks from a faulty grounding component on a motor.[52][53] Full service resumed on September 25, 2019.[53]

Winter issues and resiliency work Edit

 
Buses forming a "bus bridge" linking JFK/UMass and North Quincy in August 2015, during winter resiliency work

During the unusually brutal winter of 2014–15, almost the entire MBTA rail system was shut down on several occasions by heavy snowfalls. The aboveground sections of the Orange and Red lines were particularly vulnerable due to their exposed third rail power feed, which iced over during storms. If a single train were stopped due to power loss, other trains behind it soon had to stop as well; without continually running trains pushing snow off the rails, the lines would become quickly blocked by heavy snowfalls. (Because the Blue Line was built with overhead catenary on its surface section due to its exposure to corrosive salt air, it was not as easily disabled by the icing conditions.)

During 2015, the MBTA implemented its $83.7 million Winter Resiliency Program, much of which focused on preventing similar vulnerabilities with the Orange and Red lines. The section of the Braintree branch between JFK/UMass and Wollaston had old infrastructure and was largely built on an embankment, rendering it more vulnerable. New third rail with heaters and a different metal composition to reduce wear was installed, along with snow fences and switch heaters.[54][55] The work required bustitution of the line from JFK/UMass to North Quincy on many weeknights.[56] This program did not include work south of Wollaston.[54]

In July 2016, the MBTA Fiscal and Management Control Board approved a $18.5 million contract to complete work along the remainder of the southern branches. The project included all remaining third rail replacement, track work between Fields Corner and Savin Hill, signal system work between North Quincy and Braintree, and track replacement at Quincy Center, Quincy Adams, and Braintree. The work was completed in the second half of 2016.[57]

Operations and signaling Edit

 
Reverse curve in the Boston Red Line tunnel between South Station and Downtown Crossing, looking northwards from South Station, showing the emergency crossover.

As of February 2023, both branches were scheduled to operate on 12–13-minute headways during weekday peak hours (with a combined 6-minute headway between Alewife and JFK/UMass) and 12 to 16 minute headways at other times. Fleet utilization ranged from 16 trains (96 cars) on weekends to 20 trains (120 cars) at peak hours.[58] However, rolling stock availability and longer trip times due to slow zones reduced service. By July 2023, headways were 18 minutes on each branch on weekdays and every 22 minutes on weekends.[59] This was improved to 14–16 minute weekday headways and 20–22 minute weekend headways on August 27, 2023.[60]

The Ashmont and Harvard branches were both built with automatic block signaling and trip-stop train protection, while the Braintree and Alewife extensions of the 1980s were constructed with Automatic Train Control (ATC) using audio frequency cab signaling. In 1985 the entire Red Line was converted to the new cab signal standard with any remaining interlocking towers being closed with a relay based centralized traffic control machine being installed in a dispatch office at 45 High Street. This in turn was replaced in the late 1990s with a software-controlled Automatic Train Supervision product by Union Switch & Signal, subcontracted to Syseca Inc. (now ARINC), in a new control room. Subsequent revisions to the system were made internally at the MBTA.[citation needed]

Scheduled headways were as low as 2 minutes after the 1928 extension to Ashmont.[61] When Stadium station was in use for Harvard football games, headways as low as 134 minutes were used.[62] Ridership peaked around 1947, when passenger counters logged over 850 people per four-car train during peak periods. After the conversion to ATC, throughput in the downtown corridor was 13 trains per hour or a little less than 5 minute headway which gives a maximum capacity of 20,280 passengers per hour.[63]

In October 2018, the MBTA awarded a $218 million improved signal contract for the Red and Orange Lines, which will allow 3-minute headways between JFK/UMass and Alewife beginning in 2022.[64] The decreased headway will be achieved through increased vehicle performance, an upgrade of the existing ATC system to use higher performance digital components and a reduction in the length of signaling blocks to 500 feet.[63]

During snowstorms, the MBTA runs an empty train during non-service hours to keep the tracks and third rail clear.[65] The Red Line experienced major service disruptions in the winter of 2014–15 due to frozen-over third rails, leaving unpowered trains stranded between stations with passengers on board.[citation needed]

Rolling stock Edit

Series # Year Built Manufacturer Car
Length
Car
Width
Photo Fleet numbers
(Total ordered)
Number in service (as of July 2023) [66]
#1 1969–1970 Pullman-Standard 69 feet 6 inches (21.18 m) 10 feet 2 inches (3.10 m)  
  • 1500-1523
    (24 total)
22
 
  • 1600-1651
    (52 total)
40
#2 1987–1989 UTDC 10 feet (3.05 m)  
  • 1700–1757
    (58 total)
52
#3 1993–1994 Bombardier  
  • 1800–1885
    (86 total)
82
#4 2021–2023 CRRC 69 feet 9.75 inches (21.28 m)[67]  
  • 1900–2151
    (252 in total)
12

The Red Line is standard gauge heavy rail. Trains consist of mated pairs of electric multiple unit cars powered from a 600 V DC third rail. All trains run in six-car sets. All cars are roughly 69–70 feet (21.0–21.3 m) long, 10 feet (3.0 m) wide, and have a platform height of 49 inches (120 cm) above the top of rail.

Rolling stock is maintained at the Cabot Yard in South Boston. Yard leads connect to the mainline at Columbia Junction, just north of JFK/UMass station. Trains are also stored at Braintree (Caddigan Yard), Ashmont (Codman Yard), and Alewife.[68] Eliot Yard, on the surface near Harvard Square, served East Boston Tunnel cars for a short time and Red Line cars until it was demolished in the 1970s. (East Boston Tunnel cars accessed the yard through the now-closed Joy Street portal near Bowdoin station and a track connection on the Longfellow Bridge).

1912 Cambridge subway and 1928 Dorchester cars Edit

 
1912 cars at the original Harvard station

The Cambridge subway began service in 1912 with 40 all-steel motor cars built by the Standard Steel Car Company, and 20 cars from the Laconia Car Company. They had a novel design as a result of studies about Boston's existing lines, with a then-extraordinary length of 69 feet 6 inches (21.18 m) over buffers, and a large standee capacity, while weighing only 85,900 pounds (38,964 kg). They had an all-new door arrangement: three single sliding doors per side evenly distributed along the car's length so that the maximum distance to a door was around 9 feet (270 cm). Upon their debut, the new subway cars were the largest in the world; they remained so until the Toronto M1 cars were built in 1962.[69]: 127 [70] A similar configuration was later adopted by the BMT's Standard cars in New York and the Broad Street Subway cars in Philadelphia.

About 20 feet (6.1 m) of the Boston car was separated by a bulkhead for a smoking compartment. In contrast to the elevated lines, passenger flowthrough was not intended, and every door was used as both entrance and exit.[71] Thirty-five cars of similar design were added in 1919 from the Pressed Steel Car Company, followed by 60 more in 1928 from the Bradley Car Company for the Cambridge–Dorchester subway.[72]

1963 Pullman cars Edit

 
1400 series work cars (at right) at Cabot Yard

The 1912–1928 Cambridge–Dorchester fleet remained in service until 1963, when it was replaced all at once by 92 married-pair cars from Pullman-Standard numbered 01400–01491.[73] These carbon-steel cars were originally delivered in a blue, white and gold paint scheme (the state colors of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, which funded their purchase),[74] and retained that color scheme into the early 1980s when most were finally repainted into Red Line colors for the opening of the Alewife Extension. The 01400s (or 1400s) were the last pre-MBTA transit cars and also the last ones built without air conditioning. All were retired from passenger service by 1994 due to mechanical and electrical equipment not being able to operate with six-car trains. With delivery of the 1800-series, four cars (01470/01471 and 01480/01481) remain as Red Line work equipment, and 01450 and 01455 are preserved at the Seashore Trolley Museum in Kennebunkport, Maine.[72]

Aluminum-bodied cars Edit

 
A train of 1600 series cars on the Longfellow Bridge

Three series of older aluminum-bodied cars were built: the 1500 and 1600 series by Pullman-Standard 1969–1970 (known as the "No. 1" fleet), and 1700–57 by UTDC in 1988 ("No. 2" fleet). These cars seat 62 to 64 each and approximately 132 cars are in active service as of 2015, including some of the oldest cars still in regular revenue service on the MBTA system. All cars are painted white with red trim, with manually operated exterior roll signs. Before their overhauls, the 1500 and 1600 series had a brushed aluminum livery with a thin red stripe and were usually called "Silverbird" cars from their natural metal finish.

All these cars use traditional DC traction motors with electromechanical controls manufactured by Westinghouse and can interoperate. The 1500 and 1700 series cars could operate as singles, but in practice are always operated as married pairs. The 1600 series could only operate as married pairs. Originally, the 1500s were double-ended and had two cabs, but were converted to single ended during their midlife overhaul.[75] Headlights are still present on the non-cab ends on the 1500s. The 1700s also have headlights on their non-cab end, but they were built with only one cab.

Stainless steel–bodied cars Edit

 
A train of 1800 series cars

The 1800–85 series of stainless steel–bodied cars was built in 1993–94 by Bombardier from components manufactured in Canada and assembled in Barre, Vermont. (This is known as the "No. 3" fleet.) These cars seat 50, and all 86 cars are in active service. An automated stop announcement system provides station announcements synchronized with visual announcements in red LED signs ceiling-mounted in each car. These cars are stainless steel with red trim, and use yellow LCD exterior signs. These cars originally had red cloth seats (in contrast to the black leather seats of other cars), but in the early 21st century the cloth seats were replaced with black leather seats. More recently the black leather seats were replaced with vandalism-proof reinforced carpet type seats containing multi-colored patterns, as with the other Red Line stock.

They have modern AC traction motors with solid state controls manufactured by General Electric, very similar to the Breda A650 for the Los Angeles Metro Rail, the Bombardier R110B prototype for the New York City Subway, and the Washington Metro 1000 series. They can operate only as mated pairs and can partially interoperate with older cars in emergencies or non-revenue equipment moves, but not in revenue service.

In December 2008, the MBTA began running a pair of modified 1800 series cars without seats, in order to increase train capacity. The MBTA became the first transit operator in the United States with heavy rail operations to run cars modified for this purpose. These cars, set 1802–1803, have been designated as "Big Red" cars, denoted by large stickers adjacent to the doors. Automated service announcements at stations alert passengers to the arrival of these high-capacity trains.[76] As of 2018, both Big Red cars have been retrofitted with seats, about half as many as the standard 01800 series cars.

Cars 01816 and 01817, out of service since 2004, were donated to the US Coast Guard in November 2021. They were relocated to Otis Air Force Base for training use.[77]

CRRC cars and upgraded signal system Edit

 
The first set of CRRC cars in service in February 2022
 
Interior of a #4 CRRC car

In October 2013, MassDOT announced plans for a $1.3 billion subway car order for the Orange and Red Lines, which would provide 74 new cars to replace the 1500/1600-series cars, with an option to increase the number to 132 to replace the 1700-series cars.[78]

On October 22, 2014, the MassDOT Board awarded a $567 million contract to build 132 replacement railcars for the Red Line, as well as additional cars for the Orange Line to a China based manufacturer CNR (which became part of CRRC the following year). CRRC will build the new cars at a new manufacturing plant in Springfield at the site of the former New England Westinghouse Company, with initial deliveries of Red Line cars expected in 2020 (Orange Line deliveries began a year earlier) and all cars required to be in service by 2023. The Board forwent federal funding to allow the contract to specify the cars be built in Massachusetts, to create a local railcar manufacturing industry.[79] In conjunction with the new rolling stock, the remainder of the $1.3 billion allocated for the project will pay for testing, signal improvements and expanded maintenance facilities, as well as other related expenses.[80] Sixty percent of the car's components are sourced from the United States.[81] The new cars will hold 15 additional passengers, will have four wheelchair parking areas per car, and will be equipped with on-board video surveillance. The cars will have wider doors to allow faster boarding at busy stations, and can allow wheelchair access even if one of a pair of door panels fails to open.[82] The MBTA rebuilt Track 61 to serve as a test track for the new Red Line cars.[83]

In December 2016, the MBTA opted to purchase additional identical cars from CRRC, allowing replacement rather than costly refurbishment of the 01800 series cars. The second order is for 120 cars costing $277 million, with an option for 14 additional cars. Combined, the 2014 and 2016 orders will provide a single common fleet for the entire Red Line, with enough cars to eventually run 3-minute headways at peak.[84] Replacement of the signal system is expected to be complete by 2021 on the Red Line; the total cost is $218 million for both the Red and Orange Lines.[85] The first trainset of new cars entered revenue service on December 30, 2020.[86] The cars were taken out of service on March 16, 2021 after a CRRC car on the Orange Line derailed.[87] After investigations were completed, they returned to service in January 2022,[88][89] at which point an increased number of deliveries was expected during 2022.[90] The cars were pulled from service again in June 2022 after a battery failure;[91] they returned in July 2022.

Production delays became apparent in 2019, and then factory shutdowns and staffing limitations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic delayed projected final delivery to 2024,[92] with subsequent issues with staffing, supply chain, and delaying expected completion to summer 2025.[93] The CRRC contract specifies a penalty of $500 per car per day of delay after September 2023; as of September 2022, 12 cars had been delivered.[93]

Art and architecture Edit

The MBTA pioneered a "percentage for art" public art program called Arts on the Line during its Northwest Extension of the Red Line in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Arts on the Line was the first program of its kind in the United States and became the model for similar programs for art across the country.

The Kendall/MIT station features an interactive public art installation by Paul Matisse called the Kendall Band, which allows the public to activate three sound-producing machines utilizing levers on the wall of the station. Above the tracks at Alewife hangs a series of red neon tubes called The End of the Red Line, by the Boston artists Alejandro and Moira Sina. Many stations built or renovated in the past three decades now feature public art.[94]

The MBTA maintains an online catalog of the over 90 artworks installed along its six major transit lines. Each downloadable guide is illustrated with full-color photographs, titles, artists, locations, and descriptions of individual artworks.[95]

Newer aboveground stations (particularly Alewife, Braintree, and Quincy Adams, which all have large parking garages) are excellent examples of brutalist architecture.

Station listing Edit

 
The platform at Alewife station
 
Red Line platforms at Park Street station
 
Braintree branch train at JFK/UMass station
 
Two trains at Braintree station
Location Station Opened[4] Notes and connections
Cambridge   Alewife March 30, 1985   MBTA bus: 62, 62/76, 67, 76, 79, 83, 350
Somerville   Davis December 8, 1984   MBTA bus: 87, 88, 89, 90, 94, 96
Cambridge   Porter   MBTA Commuter Rail: Fitchburg
  MBTA bus: 77, 83, 96
Stadium October 26, 1912 Closed November 18, 1967; used only for games at Harvard Stadium.
Harvard/Brattle March 24, 1979 Closed September 1, 1983; temporary station during Harvard reconstruction.
  Harvard September 6, 1983 Original station slightly to the southeast was open from March 23, 1912 to January 30, 1981.
  MBTA bus: 1, 66, 68, 69, 71, 73, 74, 75, 77, 78, 86, 96
Harvard/Holyoke January 31, 1981 Closed September 1, 1983; temporary station during Harvard reconstruction.
  Central March 23, 1912   MBTA bus: 1, 47, 64, 70, 83, 91
  Kendall/MIT   MBTA bus: 64, 68, 85, CT2
  EZRide
West End, Boston   Charles/MGH February 27, 1932
Downtown Boston   Park Street March 23, 1912   MBTA subway:  Green 
  MBTA bus: 43
  Downtown Crossing April 4, 1915   MBTA subway:  Orange   Silver  (SL5)
  MBTA bus: 7, 11, 501, 504, 505
  South Station December 3, 1916   MBTA subway:  Silver  (SL1, SL2, SL3, SL4, SLW)
  MBTA Commuter Rail: Fairmount, Framingham/Worcester, Franklin/Foxboro, Greenbush, Needham, Old Colony, Providence/Stoughton, CapeFLYER (seasonal)
  MBTA bus: 4, 7, 11
  Amtrak: Acela, Lake Shore Limited, Northeast Regional
  Intercity buses at South Station Bus Terminal
South Boston   Broadway December 15, 1917   MBTA bus: 9, 11, 47
  Andrew June 29, 1918   MBTA bus: CT3, 10, 16, 17, 18, 171
Dorchester, Boston   JFK/UMass November 5, 1927   MBTA Commuter Rail: Greenbush, Old Colony
  MBTA bus: 8, 16, 41
  UMass Boston shuttle
Ashmont branch
Dorchester, Boston   Savin Hill November 5, 1927
  Fields Corner   MBTA bus: 15, 17, 18, 19, 201, 202, 210
  Shawmut September 1, 1928
  Ashmont   MBTA subway: Ashmont–Mattapan High-Speed Line
  MBTA bus: 18, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 215, 217, 240
  BAT: 12
Braintree branch
Quincy   North Quincy September 1, 1971   MBTA bus: 210, 211, 217
  Wollaston   MBTA bus: 211
  Quincy Center   MBTA Commuter Rail: Greenbush, Old Colony
  MBTA bus: 210, 211, 215, 216, 217, 220, 222, 225, 230, 236, 238, 245
  Quincy Adams September 10, 1983   MBTA bus: 230, 238
Braintree   Braintree March 22, 1980   MBTA Commuter Rail: Greenbush, Old Colony
  MBTA bus: 226, 230, 236
  Closed station

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Quarterly Ridership Update: Third Quarter FY19" (PDF). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. May 20, 2019. p. 6.
  2. ^ Cudahy, Brian J. (1972). Change at Park Street Under: The Story of Boston's Subways. Brattleboro, Vermont, US: Stephen Greene Press. ISBN 0-8289-0173-2.
  3. ^ End of service on Old Colony's Shawmut Branch
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Belcher, Jonathan. "Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district" (PDF). Boston Street Railway Association.
  5. ^ Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (January 28, 1981). "Public Hearing Notice". Boston Globe. p. 65 – via Newspapers.com. 
  6. ^ "Developed at Boston". Transit Journal. 76 (12): 512. December 1932.
  7. ^ Horace Nathaniel Gilbert; Charles Insco Gragg (1929). An Introduction to Business: A Case Book. McGraw-Hill. p. 313.
  8. ^ Hanron, Robert B. (August 26, 1965). "...Meanwhile, Back on the Circle-T". Boston Globe. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com.  
  9. ^ Byrnes, Mark (September 17, 2018). "How Boston Got Its 'T'". CityLab. I remember sitting in my Cambridge office preparing for a meeting with the MBTA in which I would be proposing colored lines. I had markers in front of me and I chose red for the line that went to Harvard since it's a well-known institution whose main color is crimson.
  10. ^ "misc.transport.urban-transit | Google Groups". Groups-beta.google.com. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  11. ^ Carr, Robert (July 29, 1965). "MBTA Buys Old Colony Line For a South Shore Express". Boston Globe – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "MBTA Plans Downtown Tunnel". Boston Globe. November 20, 1965. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com. 
  13. ^ a b c d e f Sanborn, George M. (1992). . Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. Archived from the original on 2019-04-16. Retrieved 2016-01-19 – via MIT.
  14. ^ a b "MBTA South Bay Maintenance Center Contract". Rollsign. Vol. 9, no. 8/9. Boston Street Railway Association. August–September 1972. Via Tremont Street Subway NHL documentation.
  15. ^ Clarke, Bradley H. (1981). The Boston Rapid Transit Album. Cambridge, Mass.: Boston Street Railway Association. p. 16.
  16. ^ Claffey, Charles E.; Richwine, David (August 2, 1975). "132 hurt in rush-hour crash of 3 MBTA trains". Boston Globe. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.  
  17. ^ Hanron, Robert (November 7, 1965). "MBTA to Unveil Master Plan Soon For 75-mph Service to Far Points". Boston Globe. p. 48 – via Newspapers.com. 
  18. ^ . Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007.
  19. ^ "Three New Subways Planned". Boston Globe. June 25, 1922. p. 71 – via Newspapers.com.  
  20. ^ Report on Improved Transportation Facilities in Boston. Division of Metropolitan Planning. December 1926. hdl:2027/mdp.39015049422689.
  21. ^ "T puts last link in Red Line extension". Boston Globe. March 31, 1985. p. 34 – via Newspapers.com.  
  22. ^ Boston Elevated Railway; Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities (April 1945), Air View: Present Rapid Transit System – Boston Elevated Railway and Proposed Extensions of Rapid Transit into Suburban Boston – via Wikimedia Commons
  23. ^ a b Central Transportation Planning Staff (November 15, 1993). . National Transportation Library. Archived from the original on July 3, 2015.
  24. ^ Casey, Gene R. (April 6, 1947). "10 Electric-Train Lines Proposed by Board in Report to Legislature". Boston Globe. pp. 1, 28 – via Newspapers.com. (second section, third page)  
  25. ^ A Comprehensive Development Program for Public Transportation in the Massachusetts Bay Area. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. 1966. pp. V-16 to V-19 – via Internet Archive.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Final Environmental Impact Statement: Red Line Extension – Harvard Square to Arlington Heights. Vol. 1. Urban Mass Transportation Administration. 1977 – via Internet Archive.
  27. ^ "Harvard-Alewife Extension". Rollsign. Vol. 9, no. 8/9. Boston Street Railway Association. August–September 1972. Via Tremont Street Subway NHL documentation.
  28. ^ Taylor, Jerry (March 7, 1977). "MBTA weighs Arlington Red Line 'no' vote". Boston Globe. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.  
  29. ^ Turner, Robert L. (May 5, 1977). "Arlington MBTA ban loses". Boston Globe. p. 24 – via Newspapers.com.  
  30. ^ a b David McKay Wilson (June 16, 1979). "Don't halt MBTA job, judge advised". Boston Globe. p. 15 – via Newspapers.com.  
  31. ^ Crocket, Douglas S.; Hirshon, Paul (March 3, 1985). "T dedicates new Harvard station". Boston Globe – via Newspapers.com.  
  32. ^ Lanson, Terry H. (October 13, 1993). "Dump Succeeds As Park". Harvard Crimson.
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  42. ^ Official Audit Report – Issued June 16, 2014: Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, For the period January 1, 2005 through December 31, 2012 (PDF) (Report). Auditor of the Commonwealth. June 16, 2014.
  43. ^ "Governor Patrick Celebrates Ashmont Station Completion". Massachusetts Department of Transportation. October 21, 2011. Retrieved October 19, 2015.
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  45. ^ "Longfellow Bridge construction extended until late 2018 - the Boston Globe". The Boston Globe.
  46. ^ Powers, Martine (February 28, 2013). "Longfellow Bridge repairs, disruption to start in summer". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  47. ^ MassDOT. . Accelerated Bridge Program. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Archived from the original on 28 March 2013. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  48. ^ Rosen, Andy; Dungca, Nicole (10 December 2015). "Red Line train leaves station without operator". Boston Globe. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  49. ^ McDonald, Danny; Levene, Alana. "Red Line service resumes between Broadway and JFK stations – The Boston Globe". BostonGlobe.com. Boston Globe. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  50. ^ "Plans to Accelerate Red Line Signal Repairs". Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. June 21, 2019.
  51. ^ Stout, Matt; Siu, Diamond Naga (June 21, 2019). "T says Red Line reduced schedule to last through summer". Boston Globe.
  52. ^ Levenson, Michael (September 16, 2019). "T attributes Red Line derailment to broken subway axle". Boston Globe.
  53. ^ a b "Completion of Red Line Signal Repairs" (Press release). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. September 25, 2019.
  54. ^ a b Vaccaro, Adam (23 September 2015). "Winter is coming, and the MBTA is getting ready". Boston Globe. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  55. ^ "Gov. Baker Announces $83.7 Million MBTA Winter Resiliency Plan" (Press release). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. 4 June 2015.
  56. ^ "Winter Resiliency Work Continues on the Red Line: WEEKEND TRAIN SERVICE BETWEEN JFK/UMASS AND QUINCY CENTER SUSPENDED" (Press release). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. 9 September 2015.
  57. ^ . MassDOT Blog (Press release). Massachusetts Department of Transportation. 25 July 2016. Archived from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  58. ^ Belcher, Jonathan (January–February 2023). "MBTA Vehicle Inventory as of February 28, 2023". Rollsign. Vol. 60, no. 1–2. Boston Street Railway Association. p. 7.
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  65. ^ Ba Tran, Andrew (23 March 2012). "MBTA Red Line's 100th anniversary". Boston Globe. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
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  67. ^ "Red Line transit vehicle for Boston's MBTA". CRRC. Retrieved 2021-08-22.
  68. ^ O'Regan, Gerry. "MBTA Red Line". nycsubway.org. Retrieved 29 September 2011.
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  71. ^ Steel Cars for the Cambridge Subway In: Electric Railway Journal, Vol XXXIX, No. 2, p. 58.
  72. ^ a b "The MBTA Vehicle Inventory Page". NETransit. October 3, 2019. Retrieved October 3, 2019.
  73. ^ New Cars Cut Costs for Boston Transit Railway Age March 4, 1963 pages 16/17
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  75. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-19. Retrieved 2012-02-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  76. ^ MBTA strips out the seats from some Red Line trains 2012-11-08 at the Wayback Machine
  77. ^ Belcher, Jonathan (January–February 2022). "MBTA Vehicle Inventory as of February 28, 2022". Rollsign. Vol. 59, no. 1–2. Boston Street Railway Association. p. 6.
  78. ^ "Governor Patrick Announces Major Transportation Funding Investments" (Press release). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. October 22, 2013.
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  81. ^ Vantuono, William C. (October 1, 2019). "MBTA Orange Line Cars Pulled From Service: Report". Railway Age.
  82. ^ "GOVERNOR PATRICK ANNOUNCES MBTA'S RECOMMENDED COMPANY TO BUILD NEW SUBWAY CARS IN MASSACHUSETTS" (PDF) (Press release). Office of Governor Deval L. Patrick. October 21, 2014 – via State Library of Massachusetts.
  83. ^ "Red Line Transformation Program | Projects | MBTA".
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  86. ^ DeCosta-Klipa, Nik (December 30, 2020). "The first new Red Line train hit the tracks Wednesday. Here's what it looked like". Boston Globe. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
  87. ^ "All new MBTA trains pulled from service after new Orange Line train derails". WCVB. 2021-03-17. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  88. ^ "The MBTA's new Red Line train is slowly returning to passenger service".
  89. ^ "New MBTA Red Line cars to return to tracks by the end of the month". 11 December 2021.
  90. ^ "Test Track and Vehicle Testing Facility to Be Used for New Red Line Cars" (Press release). Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. January 5, 2022.
  91. ^ "New Orange, Red line trains taken back out of service by MBTA". 21 June 2022.
  92. ^ The new Orange and Red Line cars are going to arrive at least a year late
  93. ^ a b More new T cars? Not so fast. New Red, Orange Line trains face more delays.
  94. ^ (PDF). Boston Public Library. 2003. pp. 5, 6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-10-03. Retrieved 2008-09-01. the MBTA collaborated with the... Cambridge Arts Council... to acquire art for the Red Line Northwest Extension Project. The result was the beginning of a world-class public art program and collection that has grown to include over seventy pieces on six transit lines.
  95. ^ . mbta.com. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. Archived from the original on 2014-06-25. Retrieved 2014-06-23.

Further reading Edit

  • Cheney, Frank. (2002) Boston's Red Line: Bridging the Charles from Alewife to Braintree, Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738510477

External links Edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • MBTA – Red Line
  • nycsubway.org – MBTA Red Line

line, mbta, line, rapid, transit, line, operated, massachusetts, transportation, authority, mbta, part, mbta, subway, system, line, runs, south, east, underground, from, alewife, station, north, cambridge, through, somerville, cambridge, surfacing, cross, long. The Red Line is a rapid transit line operated by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority MBTA as part of the MBTA subway system The line runs south and east underground from Alewife station in North Cambridge through Somerville and Cambridge surfacing to cross the Longfellow Bridge then returning to tunnels under Downtown Boston It continues underground through South Boston splitting into two branches on the surface at JFK UMass station The Ashmont branch runs southwest through Dorchester to Ashmont station where the connecting light rail Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line shown as part of the Red Line on maps but operated separately continues to Mattapan station The Braintree branch runs southwest through Quincy and Braintree to Braintree station Red LineA southbound Red Line train entering Charles MGH station from the Longfellow Bridge in 2019OverviewOwnerMassachusetts Bay Transportation AuthorityLocaleBoston Cambridge Somerville Braintree and Quincy MassachusettsTerminiAlewife north Ashmont and Braintree south Stations22ServiceTypeRapid transitSystemMBTA subwayServices2Rolling stock1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 seriesDaily ridership240 000 2019 1 HistoryOpenedMarch 23 1912TechnicalLine length11 5 mi 18 5 km Alewife Ashmont17 5 mi 28 2 km Alewife Braintree22 5 mi 36 2 km totalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeElectrificationThird rail 600 V DCRoute mapAlewife YardAlewifeDavisPorterStadiumclosed 1967Eliot Street YardHarvard Brattle1979 1983Bennett Street PortalHarvardHarvardpre 1981Harvard Holyoke1981 1983CentralKendall MITLongfellow Bridge inclineCharles RiverCharles MGHPark StreetWinter Street ConcourseDowntown CrossingSouth StationI 90Cabot YardBroadwayAndrewJFK UMassI 93 US 1 Route 3Savin HillFields CornerShawmutAshmontCodman YardAshmont MattapanHigh Speed LineAshmont MattapanHigh Speed LineCedar GroveButlerMiltonCentral AvenueValley RoadCapen StreetMattapanMattapan YardNeponset RiverNorth QuincyWollastonQuincy CenterQuincy AdamsGreenbush LineBraintreeCaddigan YardOld Colony LinesThis diagram viewtalkeditThe Red Line operates during normal MBTA service hours all times except late nights with six car trains The 218 car active fleet consists of three orders of cars built in 1969 70 1987 89 and 1993 94 A 252 car order from CRRC is being built from 2019 to 2024 The Red Line is fully grade separated trains are driven by operators with automatic train control for safety Cabot Yard in South Boston is used for heavy maintenance and storage yards at Alewife Ashmont and Braintree are also used for storage All 22 Red Line stations are fully accessible Averaging 240 000 weekday passengers in 2019 the Red Line has the highest ridership of the MBTA subway lines The Boston Elevated Railway opened its Cambridge tunnel between Harvard and Park Street in 1912 It was extended south as the Dorchester Tunnel to Washington now Downtown Crossing in 1915 South Station in 1916 Broadway in 1917 and Andrew in 1918 The Dorchester extension added three stops to Fields Corner in 1927 and two more stops to Ashmont in 1928 Charles now Charles MGH was added as an infill station in 1932 The newly formed MBTA assigned colors to its subway lines in 1965 with the Cambridge Dorchester line becoming the Red Line The MBTA added the three station South Shore Line to Quincy Center in 1971 it was extended to Braintree in 1980 with Quincy Adams added as an infill in 1983 The Red Line Northwest Extension originally planned to run to Arlington Heights or Route 128 opened to Davis in 1984 and Alewife in 1985 Contents 1 History 1 1 Cambridge tunnel 1 2 Dorchester Tunnel and extension 1 3 MBTA era and branding 1 4 South Shore line 1 4 1 Braintree extension 1 5 Northwest extension 1 6 Station renovations 1 7 2010s 1 7 1 Winter issues and resiliency work 2 Operations and signaling 3 Rolling stock 3 1 1912 Cambridge subway and 1928 Dorchester cars 3 2 1963 Pullman cars 3 3 Aluminum bodied cars 3 4 Stainless steel bodied cars 3 5 CRRC cars and upgraded signal system 4 Art and architecture 5 Station listing 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditSee also History of the MBTA nbsp The new Cambridge now Longfellow Bridge pre 1912 viewed from the Boston end with an unfinished heavy rail right of way down its center Tracks visible at the sides are for streetcars Cambridge tunnel Edit The Red Line was the last of the four original Boston subway lines the others being the Green Orange and Blue Lines opened in 1897 1901 and 1904 respectively to come into being Construction of the Cambridge tunnel connecting Harvard Square to Boston was delayed by a dispute over the number of intermediate stations to be built along the new line Cambridge residents led by Mayor Wardwell wanted at least five stations built along the line while suburbanites interested in faster through travel argued for only a single intermediate station at Central Square The contending groups finally compromised on two intermediate stations at Central and Kendall Squares allowing construction to start in 1909 further explanation needed 2 41 The section from Harvard and new maintenance facilities at Eliot Yard to Park Street was opened by the Boston Elevated Railway BERy on March 23 1912 At Harvard a prepayment station provided easy transfer to streetcars routed through what is now the Harvard bus tunnel From Harvard the Cambridge tunnel traveled beneath Massachusetts Avenue to Central Square station It then continued under Mass Ave until Main Street which it followed to reach Kendall station The underground line then rose onto the Longfellow Bridge using a central right of way which had been reserved during the bridge s 1900 1906 construction On the Boston side the line briefly became an elevated railway as vehicle lanes descended beneath it to Charles Circle the tracks then immediately entered a tunnel beneath Beacon Hill leading to new lower level platforms at Park Street Under Charles Station now Charles MGH was added above the traffic circle in 1932 Dorchester Tunnel and extension Edit nbsp Columbia station later JFK UMass on the Dorchester extension under construction in 1927The Dorchester Tunnel to Washington Street and South Station Under opened on April 4 1915 and December 3 1916 with transfers to the Washington Street Tunnel and Atlantic Avenue Elevated respectively Further extensions opened to Broadway on December 15 1917 and Andrew on June 29 1918 both prepayment stations for streetcar transfer The Broadway station included an upper level with its own tunnel for streetcars which was soon abandoned in 1919 due to most lines being truncated to Andrew The upper level at Broadway was later incorporated into the mezzanine Next came the Dorchester extension now the Ashmont branch following a rail right of way created in 1870 by the Shawmut Branch Railroad In 1872 the right of way was acquired by the Old Colony Railroad to connect their main line at Harrison Square with the Dorchester and Milton Branch Railroad running from the Old Colony at Neponset west to what is now Mattapan station The New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad succeeded the Old Colony in operating the branch but passenger service ceased on September 4 1926 in anticipation of the construction of the BERy s Dorchester extension 3 The BERy opened the first phase of the Dorchester extension to Fields Corner station on November 5 1927 south from Andrew then southeast to the surface and along the west side of the Old Colony mainline in a depressed right of way Columbia and Savin Hill stations were built on the surface at the sites of former Old Colony stations The remainder of the extension opened to Ashmont and Codman Yard on September 1 1928 and included Shawmut station where there had been a surface Old Colony station but where the new rapid transit station was placed underground The first phase of the Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line opened on August 26 1929 using the rest of the Shawmut Branch right of way including Cedar Grove station and part of the old Dorchester and Milton Branch Charles was renamed Charles MGH in December 1973 and Kendall was renamed Kendall MIT on August 7 1978 4 In January 1981 the MBTA proposed to close the Ashmont branch on Sundays and the Mattapan Line at all times beginning that March due to severe budget issues 5 The closure was cancelled though the lines were closed from June 20 1981 to January 16 1982 for track replacement and tunnel repairs 4 MBTA era and branding Edit nbsp The station entrance in Harvard SquareThe line was sometimes referred to as the Cambridge Dorchester line 6 and the Cambridge Dorchester subway 7 It was marked on maps as Route 1 After taking over operations in August 1964 the MBTA began rebranding many elements of Boston s public transportation network Colors were assigned to the rail lines on August 26 1965 as part of a wider modernization developed by Cambridge Seven Associates with the Cambridge Dorchester line becoming the Red Line 8 Peter Chermayeff claims to have assigned red to the line because of Harvard s association with crimson 9 In 1968 letters were assigned to the south branches A for Quincy planned to extend to South Braintree and C for Ashmont B was probably reserved for a planned branch from Braintree to Brockton As new rollsigns were made this lettering was phased out In 1994 new electronic signs included a different labeling A for Ashmont B for Braintree and C for Alewife 10 South Shore line Edit On July 28 1965 the MBTA signed an agreement with the New Haven Railroad to purchase 11 miles 18 km of the former Old Colony mainline from Fort Point Channel to South Braintree in order to construct a new rapid transit line along the corridor The line was expected to be completed within two years The agreement also provided for the MBTA to subsidize commuter service on the railroad s remaining commuter rail lines for 1 2 million annually 4 11 Original plans called for the South Shore line to be largely independent of the existing Red Line with either a northern terminus at the surface level at South Station or a tunnel leading to a stub end terminal between Post Office Square and State Street 12 However it was later decided to have the line be a new southern branch of the Red Line The first section of the South Shore line under construction since 1966 opened on September 1 1971 branching from the original Red Line at a flying junction north of Columbia now JFK UMass It ran along the west side of the Old Colony rail right of way which has since been reduced to one track crossing to the east side north of Savin Hill The northernmost station was North Quincy with others at Wollaston and Quincy Center Service began alternating between Ashmont and Quincy Ashmont service operated with 1400 series cars while the Quincy branch only had 1500 and 1600 series cars because they had cab signaling 4 In December 1969 the MBTA purchased Penn Central s Dover Street Yards for 7 million 13 14 The site was used for the South Bay Maintenance Center later Cabot Yard which included Red Line shops to replace Eliot Yard and an adjacent bus garage A 7 8 million construction contract was awarded in 1972 with groundbreaking on September 16 13 14 The facility was dedicated on June 24 1974 on December 28 Bartlett Street garage in Roxbury was closed 13 Three southbound trains collided inside the Beacon Hill tunnel on August 1 1975 injuring 132 passengers 15 16 Braintree extension Edit nbsp Quincy Adams pictured and Braintree stations include massive parking garages to accommodate suburban commuters Beyond Quincy Center the Braintree extension runs southward to Braintree opened on March 22 1980 via an intermediate stop at Quincy Adams which opened on September 10 1983 due to delays 4 The extension was part of the massive 1965 extension plan although it was delayed due to questions over station siting in Braintree 17 The Boston Transportation Planning Review published in 1969 proposed North Braintree and South Braintree stations following the Quincy Center station Several outlying sections of the MBTA subway system including Quincy Adams and Braintree originally charged a double fare to account for the additional costs of running service far from downtown Passengers paid two fares to enter at the stations and an exit fare when leaving the station Double fares on the Braintree extension the last on the system were discontinued in 2007 as part of a wider fare restructuring 18 Northwest extension Edit nbsp Subway exit hatches at the northern end of the line where a future extension to Lexington may someday be addedBy 1922 the BERy believed that Harvard would be the permanent terminus the heavy ridership from the north was expected to be handled by extending rapid transit from Lechmere Square 19 The 1926 Report on Improved Transportation Facilities in the Boston Metropolitan District proposed an extension from Lechmere to North Cambridge via the Southern Division and the Fitchburg Cutoff with a possible further extension along the Lexington Branch An extension of the Cambridge Dorchester Line under Mount Auburn Street to Watertown and thence along the Watertown Branch to Waltham was also raised as a possibility 20 A northwards extension from Harvard to the North Cambridge Arlington border was proposed by Cambridge mayor John D Lynch in 1933 and by then freshmen state representative Tip O Neill in 1936 but was not pursued 21 The 1945 Coolidge Commission report the first major transit planning initiative in the region since 1926 recommended an extension from Harvard to Arlington Heights via East Watertown 22 23 The 1947 revision recommended an extension north to Porter Square instead with branches along the Fitchburg Division to Waltham and the Lexington Branch to Lexington 23 24 The 1966 Program for Mass Transportation by the 1964 created MBTA called for an immediate extension to Alewife Brook Parkway via Porter Square with possible future extensions to Arlington or Waltham 25 Original plans called for a subway under Massachusetts Avenue to Porter Square then a surface route along the Fitchburg Route to Alewife 26 I 3 In the late 1960s the project was expanded to follow the Lexington Branch to a terminal at Route 128 26 I 5 In 1970 Cambridge began advocating for the project and for the consideration of an all subway route under Garden Street 26 I 4 That October then governor Francis Sargent suspended most highway construction inside Route 128 and created the Boston Transportation Planning Review which focused on the implementation of new transit routes 26 I 4 In 1972 a new all subway route via Porter Square and Davis Square was considered and ultimately chosen 27 By the mid 1970s the project was split into two phases an all subway extension to Arlington Heights via Alewife with a later extension to Route 128 26 I 5 Arlington did not wish for Arlington Heights to be even a temporary terminal 26 I 5 In March 1977 Arlington voters rejected the project in a nonbinding referendum citing fears of increased taxes and congestion 28 A May 1977 state bill prohibiting extension into Arlington was vetoed by then governor Michael Dukakis 29 The Environmental Impact Statement released in August 1977 primarily evaluated the Arlington Heights terminus but also provided for a shorter Alewife extension 26 30 By the time the northwest extension began construction in 1978 opposition in Arlington and reductions in federal funding had caused the MBTA to choose the shorter Alewife alternative 30 The Red Line was extended temporarily to Harvard Brattle over former yard and storage tracks on March 24 1979 This allowed for bus transfers to be provided The Harvard bus tunnel was closed temporarily at the time On January 31 1981 the original Harvard station was permanently closed as its demolition was required To replace it a temporary station at Harvard Holyoke was built across the tracks The two temporary stations were closed on September 2 1983 in preparation for the opening of the new Harvard station On September 6 1983 the new station at Harvard opened with trains changing direction at Davis Square without carrying passengers 4 Eliot Yard was demolished Harvard Kennedy School now sits inside its retaining walls The line was extended to Davis with a station at Porter on December 8 1984 The line was extended to its current terminus at Alewife on March 30 1985 At the time all off peak trains terminated there but due to the incomplete construction of a yard at Alewife only Ashmont trains ran to Alewife during rush hours Davis was the terminal for rush hour Braintree trains These trains were finally extended to Alewife during rush hours on December 26 1985 with the completion of the yard at Alewife 4 During the expansion the MBTA pioneered an investment in the Arts on the Line public art program Fill from the tunnel excavation was used to create Danehy Park on the former site of the Cambridge City Dump and to restore Russell Field in Cambridge and Magnolia Park in Arlington 31 32 Station renovations Edit nbsp Reconstruction of Wollaston in 2018A 1979 renovation of Park Street added two elevators making it the first accessible station on the Red Line 33 In the early 1980s the MBTA began extending platforms for six car trains Ashmont and Shawmut in 1981 Charles MGH in 1982 and Fields Corner and Savin Hill in the mid 1980s 4 34 The Northwest and South Shore extensions had been built for longer trains while JFK UMass had been modified in 1970 4 In the mid 1980s the MBTA spent 80 million to extend the platforms of seven underground Red Line stations Central Kendall MIT Park Street Washington South Station Broadway and Andrew and three Orange Line stations 35 Six car trains entered service on January 21 1988 4 Central Kendall MIT Park Street and Downtown Crossing renamed from Washington in 1987 were completed in 1988 36 A major reconstruction of JFK UMass added a platform for the Braintree branch which opened on December 14 1988 13 4 Renovations to Broadway were completed in October 1989 13 Quincy Adams and Braintree were accessible by 1989 if not from their original construction 37 38 4 South Station was completed around 1992 followed by Andrew in 1994 39 37 4 The 1990 passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act spurred the renovation of additional stations Quincy Center was modified in 1991 followed by North Quincy in 1998 37 13 Charles MGH was rebuilt from 2003 to 2007 40 41 The agency began design for the four Ashmont branch stations in 2001 42 33 Savin Hill was closed from May 2004 to July 31 2005 for reconstruction 4 It was followed by the completion of the rebuilt Fields Corner station in 2008 the modified Shawmut in 2009 and the rebuilt Ashmont in 2011 43 44 The final Red Line station to be modified for accessibility was Wollaston which was closed from January 2018 to August 2019 for a complete reconstruction 4 2010s Edit A 255 million project which started in Spring 2013 replaced structural elements of the Longfellow Bridge which carries the line across the Charles River between the Charles MGH and Kendall MIT stations The project required at least 25 weekend shutdowns including temporary relocation of the tracks and a substitute bus shuttle service All outbound roadway traffic was detoured from the bridge for the three years of construction The bridge finished construction in May 2018 45 46 47 On December 10 2015 a Red Line train in revenue service traveled from Braintree to North Quincy without an operator in the cab before it was stopped by cutting power to the third rail The MBTA initially said that the train appeared to have been tampered with and the incident was not an accident but later determined operator error to have been the cause 48 On February 21 2018 a Red Line train motor failed on approach to Andrew station causing the train to derail 49 On June 11 2019 a Red Line train derailed just north of JFK UMass station damaging three sheds of signal equipment that control the complex interlockings around the station The Red Line was limited to 10 trains per hour instead of the usual 13 14 for several months while repairs were made 50 51 The derailment was caused by a broken axle which had been made brittle by sparks from a faulty grounding component on a motor 52 53 Full service resumed on September 25 2019 53 Winter issues and resiliency work Edit nbsp Buses forming a bus bridge linking JFK UMass and North Quincy in August 2015 during winter resiliency workDuring the unusually brutal winter of 2014 15 almost the entire MBTA rail system was shut down on several occasions by heavy snowfalls The aboveground sections of the Orange and Red lines were particularly vulnerable due to their exposed third rail power feed which iced over during storms If a single train were stopped due to power loss other trains behind it soon had to stop as well without continually running trains pushing snow off the rails the lines would become quickly blocked by heavy snowfalls Because the Blue Line was built with overhead catenary on its surface section due to its exposure to corrosive salt air it was not as easily disabled by the icing conditions During 2015 the MBTA implemented its 83 7 million Winter Resiliency Program much of which focused on preventing similar vulnerabilities with the Orange and Red lines The section of the Braintree branch between JFK UMass and Wollaston had old infrastructure and was largely built on an embankment rendering it more vulnerable New third rail with heaters and a different metal composition to reduce wear was installed along with snow fences and switch heaters 54 55 The work required bustitution of the line from JFK UMass to North Quincy on many weeknights 56 This program did not include work south of Wollaston 54 In July 2016 the MBTA Fiscal and Management Control Board approved a 18 5 million contract to complete work along the remainder of the southern branches The project included all remaining third rail replacement track work between Fields Corner and Savin Hill signal system work between North Quincy and Braintree and track replacement at Quincy Center Quincy Adams and Braintree The work was completed in the second half of 2016 57 Operations and signaling Edit nbsp Reverse curve in the Boston Red Line tunnel between South Station and Downtown Crossing looking northwards from South Station showing the emergency crossover As of February 2023 update both branches were scheduled to operate on 12 13 minute headways during weekday peak hours with a combined 6 minute headway between Alewife and JFK UMass and 12 to 16 minute headways at other times Fleet utilization ranged from 16 trains 96 cars on weekends to 20 trains 120 cars at peak hours 58 However rolling stock availability and longer trip times due to slow zones reduced service By July 2023 headways were 18 minutes on each branch on weekdays and every 22 minutes on weekends 59 This was improved to 14 16 minute weekday headways and 20 22 minute weekend headways on August 27 2023 60 The Ashmont and Harvard branches were both built with automatic block signaling and trip stop train protection while the Braintree and Alewife extensions of the 1980s were constructed with Automatic Train Control ATC using audio frequency cab signaling In 1985 the entire Red Line was converted to the new cab signal standard with any remaining interlocking towers being closed with a relay based centralized traffic control machine being installed in a dispatch office at 45 High Street This in turn was replaced in the late 1990s with a software controlled Automatic Train Supervision product by Union Switch amp Signal subcontracted to Syseca Inc now ARINC in a new control room Subsequent revisions to the system were made internally at the MBTA citation needed Scheduled headways were as low as 2 minutes after the 1928 extension to Ashmont 61 When Stadium station was in use for Harvard football games headways as low as 13 4 minutes were used 62 Ridership peaked around 1947 when passenger counters logged over 850 people per four car train during peak periods After the conversion to ATC throughput in the downtown corridor was 13 trains per hour or a little less than 5 minute headway which gives a maximum capacity of 20 280 passengers per hour 63 In October 2018 the MBTA awarded a 218 million improved signal contract for the Red and Orange Lines which will allow 3 minute headways between JFK UMass and Alewife beginning in 2022 64 The decreased headway will be achieved through increased vehicle performance an upgrade of the existing ATC system to use higher performance digital components and a reduction in the length of signaling blocks to 500 feet 63 During snowstorms the MBTA runs an empty train during non service hours to keep the tracks and third rail clear 65 The Red Line experienced major service disruptions in the winter of 2014 15 due to frozen over third rails leaving unpowered trains stranded between stations with passengers on board citation needed Rolling stock EditSeries Year Built Manufacturer CarLength CarWidth Photo Fleet numbers Total ordered Number in service as of July 2023 66 1 1969 1970 Pullman Standard 69 feet 6 inches 21 18 m 10 feet 2 inches 3 10 m nbsp 1500 1523 24 total 22 nbsp 1600 1651 52 total 40 2 1987 1989 UTDC 10 feet 3 05 m nbsp 1700 1757 58 total 52 3 1993 1994 Bombardier nbsp 1800 1885 86 total 82 4 2021 2023 CRRC 69 feet 9 75 inches 21 28 m 67 nbsp 1900 2151 252 in total 12The Red Line is standard gauge heavy rail Trains consist of mated pairs of electric multiple unit cars powered from a 600 V DC third rail All trains run in six car sets All cars are roughly 69 70 feet 21 0 21 3 m long 10 feet 3 0 m wide and have a platform height of 49 inches 120 cm above the top of rail Rolling stock is maintained at the Cabot Yard in South Boston Yard leads connect to the mainline at Columbia Junction just north of JFK UMass station Trains are also stored at Braintree Caddigan Yard Ashmont Codman Yard and Alewife 68 Eliot Yard on the surface near Harvard Square served East Boston Tunnel cars for a short time and Red Line cars until it was demolished in the 1970s East Boston Tunnel cars accessed the yard through the now closed Joy Street portal near Bowdoin station and a track connection on the Longfellow Bridge 1912 Cambridge subway and 1928 Dorchester cars Edit nbsp 1912 cars at the original Harvard stationThe Cambridge subway began service in 1912 with 40 all steel motor cars built by the Standard Steel Car Company and 20 cars from the Laconia Car Company They had a novel design as a result of studies about Boston s existing lines with a then extraordinary length of 69 feet 6 inches 21 18 m over buffers and a large standee capacity while weighing only 85 900 pounds 38 964 kg They had an all new door arrangement three single sliding doors per side evenly distributed along the car s length so that the maximum distance to a door was around 9 feet 270 cm Upon their debut the new subway cars were the largest in the world they remained so until the Toronto M1 cars were built in 1962 69 127 70 A similar configuration was later adopted by the BMT s Standard cars in New York and the Broad Street Subway cars in Philadelphia About 20 feet 6 1 m of the Boston car was separated by a bulkhead for a smoking compartment In contrast to the elevated lines passenger flowthrough was not intended and every door was used as both entrance and exit 71 Thirty five cars of similar design were added in 1919 from the Pressed Steel Car Company followed by 60 more in 1928 from the Bradley Car Company for the Cambridge Dorchester subway 72 1963 Pullman cars Edit nbsp 1400 series work cars at right at Cabot YardThe 1912 1928 Cambridge Dorchester fleet remained in service until 1963 when it was replaced all at once by 92 married pair cars from Pullman Standard numbered 01400 01491 73 These carbon steel cars were originally delivered in a blue white and gold paint scheme the state colors of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts which funded their purchase 74 and retained that color scheme into the early 1980s when most were finally repainted into Red Line colors for the opening of the Alewife Extension The 01400s or 1400s were the last pre MBTA transit cars and also the last ones built without air conditioning All were retired from passenger service by 1994 due to mechanical and electrical equipment not being able to operate with six car trains With delivery of the 1800 series four cars 01470 01471 and 01480 01481 remain as Red Line work equipment and 01450 and 01455 are preserved at the Seashore Trolley Museum in Kennebunkport Maine 72 Aluminum bodied cars Edit nbsp A train of 1600 series cars on the Longfellow BridgeThree series of older aluminum bodied cars were built the 1500 and 1600 series by Pullman Standard 1969 1970 known as the No 1 fleet and 1700 57 by UTDC in 1988 No 2 fleet These cars seat 62 to 64 each and approximately 132 cars are in active service as of 2015 update including some of the oldest cars still in regular revenue service on the MBTA system All cars are painted white with red trim with manually operated exterior roll signs Before their overhauls the 1500 and 1600 series had a brushed aluminum livery with a thin red stripe and were usually called Silverbird cars from their natural metal finish All these cars use traditional DC traction motors with electromechanical controls manufactured by Westinghouse and can interoperate The 1500 and 1700 series cars could operate as singles but in practice are always operated as married pairs The 1600 series could only operate as married pairs Originally the 1500s were double ended and had two cabs but were converted to single ended during their midlife overhaul 75 Headlights are still present on the non cab ends on the 1500s The 1700s also have headlights on their non cab end but they were built with only one cab Stainless steel bodied cars Edit nbsp A train of 1800 series carsThe 1800 85 series of stainless steel bodied cars was built in 1993 94 by Bombardier from components manufactured in Canada and assembled in Barre Vermont This is known as the No 3 fleet These cars seat 50 and all 86 cars are in active service An automated stop announcement system provides station announcements synchronized with visual announcements in red LED signs ceiling mounted in each car These cars are stainless steel with red trim and use yellow LCD exterior signs These cars originally had red cloth seats in contrast to the black leather seats of other cars but in the early 21st century the cloth seats were replaced with black leather seats More recently the black leather seats were replaced with vandalism proof reinforced carpet type seats containing multi colored patterns as with the other Red Line stock They have modern AC traction motors with solid state controls manufactured by General Electric very similar to the Breda A650 for the Los Angeles Metro Rail the Bombardier R110B prototype for the New York City Subway and the Washington Metro 1000 series They can operate only as mated pairs and can partially interoperate with older cars in emergencies or non revenue equipment moves but not in revenue service In December 2008 the MBTA began running a pair of modified 1800 series cars without seats in order to increase train capacity The MBTA became the first transit operator in the United States with heavy rail operations to run cars modified for this purpose These cars set 1802 1803 have been designated as Big Red cars denoted by large stickers adjacent to the doors Automated service announcements at stations alert passengers to the arrival of these high capacity trains 76 As of 2018 both Big Red cars have been retrofitted with seats about half as many as the standard 01800 series cars Cars 01816 and 01817 out of service since 2004 were donated to the US Coast Guard in November 2021 They were relocated to Otis Air Force Base for training use 77 CRRC cars and upgraded signal system Edit nbsp The first set of CRRC cars in service in February 2022 nbsp Interior of a 4 CRRC carIn October 2013 MassDOT announced plans for a 1 3 billion subway car order for the Orange and Red Lines which would provide 74 new cars to replace the 1500 1600 series cars with an option to increase the number to 132 to replace the 1700 series cars 78 On October 22 2014 the MassDOT Board awarded a 567 million contract to build 132 replacement railcars for the Red Line as well as additional cars for the Orange Line to a China based manufacturer CNR which became part of CRRC the following year CRRC will build the new cars at a new manufacturing plant in Springfield at the site of the former New England Westinghouse Company with initial deliveries of Red Line cars expected in 2020 Orange Line deliveries began a year earlier and all cars required to be in service by 2023 The Board forwent federal funding to allow the contract to specify the cars be built in Massachusetts to create a local railcar manufacturing industry 79 In conjunction with the new rolling stock the remainder of the 1 3 billion allocated for the project will pay for testing signal improvements and expanded maintenance facilities as well as other related expenses 80 Sixty percent of the car s components are sourced from the United States 81 The new cars will hold 15 additional passengers will have four wheelchair parking areas per car and will be equipped with on board video surveillance The cars will have wider doors to allow faster boarding at busy stations and can allow wheelchair access even if one of a pair of door panels fails to open 82 The MBTA rebuilt Track 61 to serve as a test track for the new Red Line cars 83 In December 2016 the MBTA opted to purchase additional identical cars from CRRC allowing replacement rather than costly refurbishment of the 01800 series cars The second order is for 120 cars costing 277 million with an option for 14 additional cars Combined the 2014 and 2016 orders will provide a single common fleet for the entire Red Line with enough cars to eventually run 3 minute headways at peak 84 Replacement of the signal system is expected to be complete by 2021 on the Red Line the total cost is 218 million for both the Red and Orange Lines 85 The first trainset of new cars entered revenue service on December 30 2020 86 The cars were taken out of service on March 16 2021 after a CRRC car on the Orange Line derailed 87 After investigations were completed they returned to service in January 2022 88 89 at which point an increased number of deliveries was expected during 2022 90 The cars were pulled from service again in June 2022 after a battery failure 91 they returned in July 2022 Production delays became apparent in 2019 and then factory shutdowns and staffing limitations caused by the COVID 19 pandemic delayed projected final delivery to 2024 92 with subsequent issues with staffing supply chain and delaying expected completion to summer 2025 93 The CRRC contract specifies a penalty of 500 per car per day of delay after September 2023 as of September 2022 12 cars had been delivered 93 Art and architecture EditSee also Arts on the Line The MBTA pioneered a percentage for art public art program called Arts on the Line during its Northwest Extension of the Red Line in the late 1970s and early 1980s Arts on the Line was the first program of its kind in the United States and became the model for similar programs for art across the country The Kendall MIT station features an interactive public art installation by Paul Matisse called the Kendall Band which allows the public to activate three sound producing machines utilizing levers on the wall of the station Above the tracks at Alewife hangs a series of red neon tubes called The End of the Red Line by the Boston artists Alejandro and Moira Sina Many stations built or renovated in the past three decades now feature public art 94 The MBTA maintains an online catalog of the over 90 artworks installed along its six major transit lines Each downloadable guide is illustrated with full color photographs titles artists locations and descriptions of individual artworks 95 Newer aboveground stations particularly Alewife Braintree and Quincy Adams which all have large parking garages are excellent examples of brutalist architecture Station listing Edit nbsp The platform at Alewife station nbsp Red Line platforms at Park Street station nbsp Braintree branch train at JFK UMass station nbsp Two trains at Braintree stationLocation Station Opened 4 Notes and connectionsCambridge nbsp Alewife March 30 1985 nbsp MBTA bus 62 62 76 67 76 79 83 350Somerville nbsp Davis December 8 1984 nbsp MBTA bus 87 88 89 90 94 96Cambridge nbsp Porter nbsp MBTA Commuter Rail Fitchburg nbsp MBTA bus 77 83 96Stadium October 26 1912 Closed November 18 1967 used only for games at Harvard Stadium Harvard Brattle March 24 1979 Closed September 1 1983 temporary station during Harvard reconstruction nbsp Harvard September 6 1983 Original station slightly to the southeast was open from March 23 1912 to January 30 1981 nbsp MBTA bus 1 66 68 69 71 73 74 75 77 78 86 96Harvard Holyoke January 31 1981 Closed September 1 1983 temporary station during Harvard reconstruction nbsp Central March 23 1912 nbsp MBTA bus 1 47 64 70 83 91 nbsp Kendall MIT nbsp MBTA bus 64 68 85 CT2 nbsp EZRideWest End Boston nbsp Charles MGH February 27 1932Downtown Boston nbsp Park Street March 23 1912 nbsp MBTA subway Green nbsp MBTA bus 43 nbsp Downtown Crossing April 4 1915 nbsp MBTA subway Orange Silver SL5 nbsp MBTA bus 7 11 501 504 505 nbsp South Station December 3 1916 nbsp MBTA subway Silver SL1 SL2 SL3 SL4 SLW nbsp MBTA Commuter Rail Fairmount Framingham Worcester Franklin Foxboro Greenbush Needham Old Colony Providence Stoughton CapeFLYER seasonal nbsp MBTA bus 4 7 11 nbsp Amtrak Acela Lake Shore Limited Northeast Regional nbsp Intercity buses at South Station Bus TerminalSouth Boston nbsp Broadway December 15 1917 nbsp MBTA bus 9 11 47 nbsp Andrew June 29 1918 nbsp MBTA bus CT3 10 16 17 18 171Dorchester Boston nbsp JFK UMass November 5 1927 nbsp MBTA Commuter Rail Greenbush Old Colony nbsp MBTA bus 8 16 41 nbsp UMass Boston shuttleAshmont branchDorchester Boston nbsp Savin Hill November 5 1927 nbsp Fields Corner nbsp MBTA bus 15 17 18 19 201 202 210 nbsp Shawmut September 1 1928 nbsp Ashmont nbsp MBTA subway Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line nbsp MBTA bus 18 21 22 23 24 26 215 217 240 nbsp BAT 12Braintree branchQuincy nbsp North Quincy September 1 1971 nbsp MBTA bus 210 211 217 nbsp Wollaston nbsp MBTA bus 211 nbsp Quincy Center nbsp MBTA Commuter Rail Greenbush Old Colony nbsp MBTA bus 210 211 215 216 217 220 222 225 230 236 238 245 nbsp Quincy Adams September 10 1983 nbsp MBTA bus 230 238Braintree nbsp Braintree March 22 1980 nbsp MBTA Commuter Rail Greenbush Old Colony nbsp MBTA bus 226 230 236 Closed stationSee also EditCharles Ufford father of the Dorchester Tunnel planReferences Edit Quarterly Ridership Update Third Quarter FY19 PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority May 20 2019 p 6 Cudahy Brian J 1972 Change at Park Street Under The Story of Boston s Subways Brattleboro Vermont US Stephen Greene Press ISBN 0 8289 0173 2 End of service on Old Colony s Shawmut Branch a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Belcher Jonathan Changes to Transit Service in the MBTA district PDF Boston Street Railway Association Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority January 28 1981 Public Hearing Notice Boston Globe p 65 via Newspapers com nbsp Developed at Boston Transit Journal 76 12 512 December 1932 Horace Nathaniel Gilbert Charles Insco Gragg 1929 An Introduction to Business A Case Book McGraw Hill p 313 Hanron Robert B August 26 1965 Meanwhile Back on the Circle T Boston Globe p 10 via Newspapers com nbsp Byrnes Mark September 17 2018 How Boston Got Its T CityLab I remember sitting in my Cambridge office preparing for a meeting with the MBTA in which I would be proposing colored lines I had markers in front of me and I chose red for the line that went to Harvard since it s a well known institution whose main color is crimson misc transport urban transit Google Groups Groups beta google com Retrieved 2012 06 10 Carr Robert July 29 1965 MBTA Buys Old Colony Line For a South Shore Express Boston Globe via Newspapers com MBTA Plans Downtown Tunnel Boston Globe November 20 1965 p 4 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c d e f Sanborn George M 1992 A Chronicle of the Boston Transit System Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Archived from the original on 2019 04 16 Retrieved 2016 01 19 via MIT a b MBTA South Bay Maintenance Center Contract Rollsign Vol 9 no 8 9 Boston Street Railway Association August September 1972 Via Tremont Street Subway NHL documentation Clarke Bradley H 1981 The Boston Rapid Transit Album Cambridge Mass Boston Street Railway Association p 16 Claffey Charles E Richwine David August 2 1975 132 hurt in rush hour crash of 3 MBTA trains Boston Globe p 1 via Newspapers com nbsp Hanron Robert November 7 1965 MBTA to Unveil Master Plan Soon For 75 mph Service to Far Points Boston Globe p 48 via Newspapers com nbsp Frequently Asked Questions on the Fare Restructuring and Increase Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Three New Subways Planned Boston Globe June 25 1922 p 71 via Newspapers com nbsp Report on Improved Transportation Facilities in Boston Division of Metropolitan Planning December 1926 hdl 2027 mdp 39015049422689 T puts last link in Red Line extension Boston Globe March 31 1985 p 34 via Newspapers com nbsp Boston Elevated Railway Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities April 1945 Air View Present Rapid Transit System Boston Elevated Railway and Proposed Extensions of Rapid Transit into Suburban Boston via Wikimedia Commons a b Central Transportation Planning Staff November 15 1993 The Transportation Plan for the Boston Region Volume 2 National Transportation Library Archived from the original on July 3 2015 Casey Gene R April 6 1947 10 Electric Train Lines Proposed by Board in Report to Legislature Boston Globe pp 1 28 via Newspapers com second section third page nbsp A Comprehensive Development Program for Public Transportation in the Massachusetts Bay Area Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 1966 pp V 16 to V 19 via Internet Archive a b c d e f g Final Environmental Impact Statement Red Line Extension Harvard Square to Arlington Heights Vol 1 Urban Mass Transportation Administration 1977 via Internet Archive Harvard Alewife Extension Rollsign Vol 9 no 8 9 Boston Street Railway Association August September 1972 Via Tremont Street Subway NHL documentation Taylor Jerry March 7 1977 MBTA weighs Arlington Red Line no vote Boston Globe p 3 via Newspapers com nbsp Turner Robert L May 5 1977 Arlington MBTA ban loses Boston Globe p 24 via Newspapers com nbsp a b David McKay Wilson June 16 1979 Don t halt MBTA job judge advised Boston Globe p 15 via Newspapers com nbsp Crocket Douglas S Hirshon Paul March 3 1985 T dedicates new Harvard station Boston Globe via Newspapers com nbsp Lanson Terry H October 13 1993 Dump Succeeds As Park Harvard Crimson 1979 Annual Report Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 1979 p 27 via Internet Archive MBTA Contract No B43PS02 Longfellow Approach Architecture and Engineering Services PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority April 29 2019 1985 Annual Report Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 1985 p 13 via Internet Archive 1985 Annual Report Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 1987 p 19 via Internet Archive a b c Tran Systems and Planners Collaborative August 24 2007 Evaluation of MBTA Paratransit and Accessible Fixed Route Transit Services Final Report PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Operations Directorate Planning Division November 1990 Ridership and Service Statistics 3 ed Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority pp 1 4 via Internet Archive MBTA ACCESS The Guide to Accessible Services and Facilities Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority June 1992 p 15 via Internet Archive Charles MGH Renovation Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Archived from the original on April 6 2008 New Charles MGH Station Opens Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority March 27 2007 Official Audit Report Issued June 16 2014 Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority For the period January 1 2005 through December 31 2012 PDF Report Auditor of the Commonwealth June 16 2014 Governor Patrick Celebrates Ashmont Station Completion Massachusetts Department of Transportation October 21 2011 Retrieved October 19 2015 Governor Patrick Mayor Menino Celebrate Completion of Fields Corner Station Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority September 23 2008 Longfellow Bridge construction extended until late 2018 the Boston Globe The Boston Globe Powers Martine February 28 2013 Longfellow Bridge repairs disruption to start in summer Boston Globe Retrieved 2 March 2013 MassDOT Longfellow Bridge Accelerated Bridge Program Commonwealth of Massachusetts Archived from the original on 28 March 2013 Retrieved 2 March 2013 Rosen Andy Dungca Nicole 10 December 2015 Red Line train leaves station without operator Boston Globe Retrieved 11 December 2015 McDonald Danny Levene Alana Red Line service resumes between Broadway and JFK stations The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com Boston Globe Retrieved 23 February 2018 Plans to Accelerate Red Line Signal Repairs Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority June 21 2019 Stout Matt Siu Diamond Naga June 21 2019 T says Red Line reduced schedule to last through summer Boston Globe Levenson Michael September 16 2019 T attributes Red Line derailment to broken subway axle Boston Globe a b Completion of Red Line Signal Repairs Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority September 25 2019 a b Vaccaro Adam 23 September 2015 Winter is coming and the MBTA is getting ready Boston Globe Retrieved 4 October 2015 Gov Baker Announces 83 7 Million MBTA Winter Resiliency Plan Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 4 June 2015 Winter Resiliency Work Continues on the Red Line WEEKEND TRAIN SERVICE BETWEEN JFK UMASS AND QUINCY CENTER SUSPENDED Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority 9 September 2015 MBTA Next Phase of Red Line Winter Resiliency Improvements Approved MassDOT Blog Press release Massachusetts Department of Transportation 25 July 2016 Archived from the original on 26 January 2021 Retrieved 26 July 2016 Belcher Jonathan January February 2023 MBTA Vehicle Inventory as of February 28 2023 Rollsign Vol 60 no 1 2 Boston Street Railway Association p 7 Rapid Transit PDF Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority July 2 2023 Fall 2023 Service Changes Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority August 2023 Boston Transit Department 1929 Report of the Transit Department for the Year ending December 31 1928 City of Boston p 40 via Internet Archive Recent Improvements of the Boston Elevated System Electric Railway Journal Mcgraw Publishing 41 10 411 413 March 8 1913 via Internet Archive a b Red Line Customer Capacity Update PDF Retrieved 2019 11 12 Jessen Klark October 2 2018 MBTA Awards Signal Upgrade Contract for Red and Orange Lines Press release Massachusetts Department of Transportation Ba Tran Andrew 23 March 2012 MBTA Red Line s 100th anniversary Boston Globe Retrieved 29 March 2012 Home roster transithistory org Red Line transit vehicle for Boston s MBTA CRRC Retrieved 2021 08 22 O Regan Gerry MBTA Red Line nycsubway org Retrieved 29 September 2011 Fischler Stanley I 1979 Moving millions an inside look at mass transit 1st ed New York Harper amp Row ISBN 0 06 011272 7 Carlson Stephen P Harding Thomas W 1990 From Boston to the Berkshires a pictorial review of electric transportation in Massachusetts Boston Street Railway Association p 40 ISBN 093831503X Steel Cars for the Cambridge Subway In Electric Railway Journal Vol XXXIX No 2 p 58 a b The MBTA Vehicle Inventory Page NETransit October 3 2019 Retrieved October 3 2019 New Cars Cut Costs for Boston Transit Railway Age March 4 1963 pages 16 17 Clarke Bradley H 1981 The Boston Rapid Transit Album Cambridge Massachusetts Boston Street Railway Association p 11 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 19 Retrieved 2012 02 14 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link MBTA strips out the seats from some Red Line trains Archived 2012 11 08 at the Wayback Machine Belcher Jonathan January February 2022 MBTA Vehicle Inventory as of February 28 2022 Rollsign Vol 59 no 1 2 Boston Street Railway Association p 6 Governor Patrick Announces Major Transportation Funding Investments Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority October 22 2013 MBTA Orange Line problems not linked to Springfield built cars Chinese Company Hopes MBTA Contract Will Be U S Launching Pad WBUR October 22 2014 Archived from the original on August 26 2016 Retrieved December 13 2016 Vantuono William C October 1 2019 MBTA Orange Line Cars Pulled From Service Report Railway Age GOVERNOR PATRICK ANNOUNCES MBTA S RECOMMENDED COMPANY TO BUILD NEW SUBWAY CARS IN MASSACHUSETTS PDF Press release Office of Governor Deval L Patrick October 21 2014 via State Library of Massachusetts Red Line Transformation Program Projects MBTA MBTA purchases an additional 120 new Red Line cars Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority December 12 2016 Vaccaro Adam October 1 2018 Signal problem MBTA takes aim at prime cause of delays with new signal system Boston Globe DeCosta Klipa Nik December 30 2020 The first new Red Line train hit the tracks Wednesday Here s what it looked like Boston Globe Retrieved December 31 2020 All new MBTA trains pulled from service after new Orange Line train derails WCVB 2021 03 17 Retrieved 2021 03 18 The MBTA s new Red Line train is slowly returning to passenger service New MBTA Red Line cars to return to tracks by the end of the month 11 December 2021 Test Track and Vehicle Testing Facility to Be Used for New Red Line Cars Press release Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority January 5 2022 New Orange Red line trains taken back out of service by MBTA 21 June 2022 The new Orange and Red Line cars are going to arrive at least a year late a b More new T cars Not so fast New Red Orange Line trains face more delays Boston Inspires Public Art PDF Boston Public Library 2003 pp 5 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 10 03 Retrieved 2008 09 01 the MBTA collaborated with the Cambridge Arts Council to acquire art for the Red Line Northwest Extension Project The result was the beginning of a world class public art program and collection that has grown to include over seventy pieces on six transit lines Public Art in Transit Over the Years mbta com Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Archived from the original on 2014 06 25 Retrieved 2014 06 23 Further reading EditCheney Frank 2002 Boston s Red Line Bridging the Charles from Alewife to Braintree Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738510477External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to MBTA Red Line KML file edit help Template Attached KML Red Line MBTA KML is from Wikidata MBTA Red Line nycsubway org MBTA Red Line Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red Line MBTA amp oldid 1178946810 Northwest extension, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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