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SEPTA Route 23

SEPTA Trolley Route 23 is a former streetcar line now operated with buses. It is operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The line runs between the Chestnut Hill and Center City neighborhoods via Germantown Avenue, 11th, and 12th Streets.

Route 23
Center City to Chestnut Hill
A New Flyer D40LF Route 23 bus passing under the Pennsylvania Convention Center arcade in 2006
Overview
SystemMidvale District[1]
OperatorSEPTA City Transit Division
Began service1859 (1859) (horsecar)[2]
1894 (1894) (electric trolley)[2]
1992 (1992) (bus service)
Former operator(s)Philadelphia Transportation Company
Route
LocalePhiladelphia
Communities servedNorth Philadelphia, Northwest Philadelphia, Chinatown
Start11th and Market Streets
ViaGermantown Avenue
11th Street (northbound)
12th Street (southbound)
EndGermantown Avenue and Bethlehem Pike (Chestnut Hill Loop)
Length10.7 mi (17.2 km)[1]
Service
Frequency8-15 minutes (6am-9pm)[3]
Weekend frequency15-40 minutes[3]
Ridership13,117 (2019 weekday average)[1]
TimetableRoute 23 schedule
Route map

Trolley
Bethlehem Pike
Chestnut Hill West
Mermaid Lane
Gorgas Lane
Germantown
Carhouse
Musgrave
Street
 BSL  Broad Street
 53  56  Erie Avenue
Old York Road
to Luzerne Carhouse
 60  Allegheney Avenue
Huntingdon Street
Susquehanna Avenue
12th Street│11th Street
 MFL  Market Street
Bainbridge Street
Passyunk Avenue
Snyder Avenue
Oregon Avenue
Marvine Street│10th Street
Bigler Street

Diagrams are not to scale


Bus
Chestnut Hill Loop
CHW  L 
Windrim Avenue
Hunting Park Avenue
 R 
Erie  BSL 
Erie Avenue
 56 
Ontario Street
(late-night terminal)
Allegheny Avenue
 60 
Susquehanna Avenue
Cecil B. Moore Avenue
 3 
Girard Avenue
 15 
Spring Garden Street
Ridge Avenue
Noble Street
 45  terminal
Arch Street
 48 
Market Street
 17  33  48 
11th Street  MFL 
Chestnut Street
 21 
Walnut Street
 21 
 45 
Legend
Bus/trolley services
Subway/rail services
Diagram shows only major stops
and high-frequency routes
← 22  City Transit Division  24 →
Tracks for the former Route 23 trolley line on 11th Street.

Route 23 was once Philadelphia's longest streetcar route,[4] extending south to Broad Street and Oregon Avenue in South Philadelphia, and was one of three suspended by SEPTA in 1992. A restoration of trolley service has been proposed in recent years, with a feasibility study planned between 2021 and 2027.[5]

The route is consistently one of SEPTA's most heavily-traveled bus lines, coming in as the fourth-busiest for daily ridership in 2018, as well as an average weekday ridership of 14,322.[1]

Route description edit

Route 23 begins in Center City Philadelphia. The southern terminal is the intersection of 11th and Market streets, adjacent to the Market–Frankford Line's 11th Street station, although southbound buses continue as far south as Locust Street before turning northbound. From Center City, the line runs northbound on 11th Street and southbound on 12th Street.[3]

In North Philadelphia, northbound Route 23 turns east to Huntingdon Street and then north again to Germantown Avenue, while southbound Route 23 moves from 10th Street west to Susquehanna Avenue and south again to 12th Street. Route 23 then continues northwest on Germantown Avenue through North Philadelphia, which includes a six-way intersection with Erie Avenue and Broad Street, providing transfers to Routes 53 and 56 on Erie as well as the Broad Street Line at Erie station.[3] Routes 53 and 56 are actually also other former streetcar lines that were converted into bus routes. Another major connection along the route is the Wayne Junction station, which serves six SEPTA Regional Rail commuter lines.

As Route 23 enters Northwest Philadelphia, it runs through the Germantown and Mount Airy neighborhoods before entering Chestnut Hill. The route's northern terminus is the Chestnut Hill bus loop at the intersection of Germantown Avenue and Bethlehem Pike, located adjacent to the Chestnut Hill West regional rail station and a short distance from the Chestnut Hill East station.[3]

Overnight service short-turns at Ontario Street near Temple University Hospital, only serving the Germantown Avenue portion of the route.[3]

History edit

 
Surviving streetcar tracks at Germantown and Lehigh avenues

Streetcar service edit

Route 23 was established sometime prior to 1877 as the Germantown Avenue Line, and ran from Germantown Depot to 8th and Dauphin streets. In 1890 the line was extended to the 4th and 8th Street trolleys and renamed the Pelham Line. It was combined with the Mermaid and Chestnut Hill Line in 1913, and renamed the Germantown, 10th and 11th Streets Line. The northern terminus was extended to the Bethlehem Pike Loop in 1920, while the southern terminus was extended to 11th Street and Pattison Avenue in 1926, and to 10th Street and Bigler Avenue in 1957.[4]

On December 29, 1957, the Route 20 trolley on 12th and 13th Streets was abandoned and combined with the 23, which thereafter operated on 11th and 12th Streets just as it does today.[6] Route 20 service on 13th Street and to Olney Terminal was eliminated with this merge.

 
A Route 23 PCC Streetcar on Germantown Avenue at Venango Street in 1980.

PCC cars were introduced to the line in 1947 and 1948, replacing Nearside cars which had operated the route since the teens. The Philadelphia Transportation Company (PTC) attempted to introduce a fleet of 100 PCCs to the line in 1942, but an insufficient power supply for climbing Chestnut Hill caused these cars to be sent to Luzerne Depot to serve other routes instead. After World War II and its materials shortages and restrictions ended, a substation was built at Germantown Avenue and Mermaid Lane, and PTC assigned 85 new PCCs to the line; the difference in number of cars was due to postwar ridership declines.[7]

On September 5, 1976, the Route 23 trolleys were moved from Germantown Depot to Luzerne Depot, making Luzerne the operating depot for the six remaining North Philadelphia streetcar routes: 6, 23, 50, 53, 56, and 60. A pamphlet was issued by SEPTA informing the Route 23 operators of this change. After the move, the route's PCC all-electric cars were replaced with pre-war PCC "air cars", which incorporated the use of pressurized air to power certain aspects of the car (such as sanders for traction) in order to provide greater reliability on Germantown Avenue's hills.

By this time, only two trolley lines operated from Luzerne Depot: routes 23 and 56. Along these last two routes, diesels buses were often substituted for months at a time, whenever utility construction occurred along those routes. Gone were the days when contractors were instructed to work around the streetcars. It was simply easier to suspend trolley service.

In a 1974 pamphlet, SEPTA presented route 23 as the world's longest trolley car route known to them.[4] In 1992, the streetcar service along route 23 was suspended and replaced by bus

Bus service edit

Trolley service had been bused off and on due to street and trolley track construction, but buses permanently replaced trolleys on February 27, 1992.

However, weekend streetcar service was restored on the Chestnut Hill portion of the route under the Chestnut Hill Trolley name. Service ran on Germantown Avenue from Westview Avenue to Bethlehem Pike from September 13, 1992 until June 15, 1996.[8] In Center City, the Welcome Line trolley operated on 11th and 12th streets between Girard Avenue and Bainbridge Street in 1995, as well as the 1996 and 1997 holiday seasons. Since then, trolley service along the Route 23 has been non-existent.

In 2015, to make scheduling more manageable, the shorter and more densely-traveled southern segment of the route from Oregon Avenue to Market Street was separated and re-designated Route 45. Routes 23 and 45 make shared stops along 11th and 12th streets between Walnut and Callowhill streets, and SEPTA Key users can make a free transfer between the two routes for same-direction travel.[3]

Route 23 utilizes several short-turn loops or cross-street cutbacks to allow for operational flexibility. Historically, those have been Germantown & Mermaid, Germantown & Gorgas (a large universal loop serving Germantown Depot), Germantown & Venango (later moved to Germantown & Ontario; both were the cutback to get to Luzerne Depot), 10th & Susquehanna, 12th & Bainbridge, and 12th & Snyder. The only currently-scheduled short-turn is Germantown Avenue and Ontario Street, which is the southern terminal for all late-night service.[3]


In March 23, 2023, SEPTA bus revolution, which is SEPTA's bus redesign program, proposed to cut back Route 23 to Erie station. This is because the route south of Erie runs similar to other bus routes. SEPTA is proposing to build a loop for Route 23.

Future edit

All trackage on Germantown Avenue was replaced with new rail since 2008, and trackage on 11th and 12th streets remain with small portions paved over.

SEPTA announced plans in its 2010 Capital Budget to purchase new trolley cars and restore the rails between 2011 and 2018, allowing for the future return of streetcar service on the line.[9] However, in 2011 it was pushed back to 2015–2022 and the proposed 2012 budget pushed it back even further to 2016–2023.[10][11][12] The budgets do not include allocated funds to build a new trolley depot and maintenance facility.

In 2015, SEPTA proposed allocating $2 million on feasibility study to reinstate trolley service on Routes 23 and 56 in the latter part of its twelve-year capital program, between 2021 and 2027.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "SEPTA Route Statistics 2018" (PDF). SEPTA. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
  2. ^ a b Melamed, Samantha (November 27, 2015). "So long, 23 - the busiest and latest bus route". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Route 23" (PDF). SEPTA. September 1, 2019. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "The history of trolley cars and routes in Philadelphia". SEPTA. June 1, 1974. pp. 12–13. Retrieved 2014-08-16.
  5. ^ a b Fiscal Year 2016 Capital Budget (page 42)
  6. ^ PTC Streetcar Routes as of January 1953 (PhillyTrolley.org)
  7. ^ Schneider, Fred W. III (1983). PCC: From Coast to Coast. Glendale, CA: Interurban Press. p. 142. ISBN 0-916374-57-2.
  8. ^ Bruch, Laura J.; Fish, Larry (June 14, 1996). "A streetcar named expire: Tomorrow is the Chestnut Hill Trolley's last regular run". The Philadelphia Inquirer. pp. B1, B7.
  9. ^ SEPTA Capital Budget Program and Comprehensive Plan (Page 71)
  10. ^ 2010 SEPTA Capital Budget Program and Comprehensive Plan (Page 77)
  11. ^ 2011 SEPTA Capital Budget Program 2012-03-07 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ 2010 SEPTA Capital Budget Program

External links edit

  • Route 23 schedule
  • Former Route 23 Trolley (World-NYC Subway.org)
  • Route 23 Philadelphia Trolley Tour, Spring 1987 (PhillyTrolley.org)

septa, route, septa, trolley, route, former, streetcar, line, operated, with, buses, operated, southeastern, pennsylvania, transportation, authority, septa, philadelphia, pennsylvania, united, states, line, runs, between, chestnut, hill, center, city, neighbor. SEPTA Trolley Route 23 is a former streetcar line now operated with buses It is operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority SEPTA in Philadelphia Pennsylvania United States The line runs between the Chestnut Hill and Center City neighborhoods via Germantown Avenue 11th and 12th Streets Route 23Center City to Chestnut HillA New Flyer D40LF Route 23 bus passing under the Pennsylvania Convention Center arcade in 2006OverviewSystemMidvale District 1 OperatorSEPTA City Transit DivisionBegan service1859 1859 horsecar 2 1894 1894 electric trolley 2 1992 1992 bus service Former operator s Philadelphia Transportation CompanyRouteLocalePhiladelphiaCommunities servedNorth Philadelphia Northwest Philadelphia ChinatownStart11th and Market StreetsViaGermantown Avenue11th Street northbound 12th Street southbound EndGermantown Avenue and Bethlehem Pike Chestnut Hill Loop Length10 7 mi 17 2 km 1 ServiceFrequency8 15 minutes 6am 9pm 3 Weekend frequency15 40 minutes 3 Ridership13 117 2019 weekday average 1 TimetableRoute 23 scheduleRoute mapTrolley Bethlehem PikeChestnut Hill West Chestnut Hill West Line Mermaid Lane Germantown Avenue Gorgas Lane GermantownCarhouse MusgraveStreet Wayne JunctionGlenside Line US 1Lincoln Highway BSL Broad Street 53 56 Erie Avenue Old York Roadto Luzerne Carhouse 60 Allegheney Avenue Huntingdon Street Susquehanna Avenue SEPTA Main Line 15 Girard Avenue 12th Street 11th Street I 676Vine St Expwy US 30 MFL Market Street Bainbridge Street Passyunk Avenue Snyder Avenue Oregon Avenue Marvine Street 10th StreetBigler Street I 76Schuylkill Expwy Diagrams are not to scale Bus Chestnut Hill Loop CHW L Wayne Junction GLN Windrim Avenue US 1LincolnHighway Hunting Park Avenue R Erie BSL Erie Avenue 56 Ontario Street late night terminal Allegheny Avenue 60 Susquehanna Avenue SEPTA Main Line Cecil B Moore Avenue 3 Girard Avenue 15 Spring Garden Street Ridge Avenue Noble Street 45 terminal I 676Vine StreetExpressway US 30 Arch Street 48 Market Street 17 33 48 11th Street MFL Chestnut Street 21 Walnut Street 21 45 Legend Bus trolley services Subway rail services Diagram shows only major stopsand high frequency routes This diagram viewtalkedit 22 City Transit Division 24 Tracks for the former Route 23 trolley line on 11th Street Route 23 was once Philadelphia s longest streetcar route 4 extending south to Broad Street and Oregon Avenue in South Philadelphia and was one of three suspended by SEPTA in 1992 A restoration of trolley service has been proposed in recent years with a feasibility study planned between 2021 and 2027 5 The route is consistently one of SEPTA s most heavily traveled bus lines coming in as the fourth busiest for daily ridership in 2018 as well as an average weekday ridership of 14 322 1 Contents 1 Route description 2 History 2 1 Streetcar service 2 2 Bus service 3 Future 4 References 5 External linksRoute description editRoute 23 begins in Center City Philadelphia The southern terminal is the intersection of 11th and Market streets adjacent to the Market Frankford Line s 11th Street station although southbound buses continue as far south as Locust Street before turning northbound From Center City the line runs northbound on 11th Street and southbound on 12th Street 3 In North Philadelphia northbound Route 23 turns east to Huntingdon Street and then north again to Germantown Avenue while southbound Route 23 moves from 10th Street west to Susquehanna Avenue and south again to 12th Street Route 23 then continues northwest on Germantown Avenue through North Philadelphia which includes a six way intersection with Erie Avenue and Broad Street providing transfers to Routes 53 and 56 on Erie as well as the Broad Street Line at Erie station 3 Routes 53 and 56 are actually also other former streetcar lines that were converted into bus routes Another major connection along the route is the Wayne Junction station which serves six SEPTA Regional Rail commuter lines As Route 23 enters Northwest Philadelphia it runs through the Germantown and Mount Airy neighborhoods before entering Chestnut Hill The route s northern terminus is the Chestnut Hill bus loop at the intersection of Germantown Avenue and Bethlehem Pike located adjacent to the Chestnut Hill West regional rail station and a short distance from the Chestnut Hill East station 3 Overnight service short turns at Ontario Street near Temple University Hospital only serving the Germantown Avenue portion of the route 3 History edit nbsp Surviving streetcar tracks at Germantown and Lehigh avenues Streetcar service edit Route 23 was established sometime prior to 1877 as the Germantown Avenue Line and ran from Germantown Depot to 8th and Dauphin streets In 1890 the line was extended to the 4th and 8th Street trolleys and renamed the Pelham Line It was combined with the Mermaid and Chestnut Hill Line in 1913 and renamed the Germantown 10th and 11th Streets Line The northern terminus was extended to the Bethlehem Pike Loop in 1920 while the southern terminus was extended to 11th Street and Pattison Avenue in 1926 and to 10th Street and Bigler Avenue in 1957 4 On December 29 1957 the Route 20 trolley on 12th and 13th Streets was abandoned and combined with the 23 which thereafter operated on 11th and 12th Streets just as it does today 6 Route 20 service on 13th Street and to Olney Terminal was eliminated with this merge nbsp A Route 23 PCC Streetcar on Germantown Avenue at Venango Street in 1980 PCC cars were introduced to the line in 1947 and 1948 replacing Nearside cars which had operated the route since the teens The Philadelphia Transportation Company PTC attempted to introduce a fleet of 100 PCCs to the line in 1942 but an insufficient power supply for climbing Chestnut Hill caused these cars to be sent to Luzerne Depot to serve other routes instead After World War II and its materials shortages and restrictions ended a substation was built at Germantown Avenue and Mermaid Lane and PTC assigned 85 new PCCs to the line the difference in number of cars was due to postwar ridership declines 7 On September 5 1976 the Route 23 trolleys were moved from Germantown Depot to Luzerne Depot making Luzerne the operating depot for the six remaining North Philadelphia streetcar routes 6 23 50 53 56 and 60 A pamphlet was issued by SEPTA informing the Route 23 operators of this change After the move the route s PCC all electric cars were replaced with pre war PCC air cars which incorporated the use of pressurized air to power certain aspects of the car such as sanders for traction in order to provide greater reliability on Germantown Avenue s hills By this time only two trolley lines operated from Luzerne Depot routes 23 and 56 Along these last two routes diesels buses were often substituted for months at a time whenever utility construction occurred along those routes Gone were the days when contractors were instructed to work around the streetcars It was simply easier to suspend trolley service In a 1974 pamphlet SEPTA presented route 23 as the world s longest trolley car route known to them 4 In 1992 the streetcar service along route 23 was suspended and replaced by bus Bus service edit Trolley service had been bused off and on due to street and trolley track construction but buses permanently replaced trolleys on February 27 1992 However weekend streetcar service was restored on the Chestnut Hill portion of the route under the Chestnut Hill Trolley name Service ran on Germantown Avenue from Westview Avenue to Bethlehem Pike from September 13 1992 until June 15 1996 8 In Center City the Welcome Line trolley operated on 11th and 12th streets between Girard Avenue and Bainbridge Street in 1995 as well as the 1996 and 1997 holiday seasons Since then trolley service along the Route 23 has been non existent In 2015 to make scheduling more manageable the shorter and more densely traveled southern segment of the route from Oregon Avenue to Market Street was separated and re designated Route 45 Routes 23 and 45 make shared stops along 11th and 12th streets between Walnut and Callowhill streets and SEPTA Key users can make a free transfer between the two routes for same direction travel 3 Route 23 utilizes several short turn loops or cross street cutbacks to allow for operational flexibility Historically those have been Germantown amp Mermaid Germantown amp Gorgas a large universal loop serving Germantown Depot Germantown amp Venango later moved to Germantown amp Ontario both were the cutback to get to Luzerne Depot 10th amp Susquehanna 12th amp Bainbridge and 12th amp Snyder The only currently scheduled short turn is Germantown Avenue and Ontario Street which is the southern terminal for all late night service 3 In March 23 2023 SEPTA bus revolution which is SEPTA s bus redesign program proposed to cut back Route 23 to Erie station This is because the route south of Erie runs similar to other bus routes SEPTA is proposing to build a loop for Route 23 Future editAll trackage on Germantown Avenue was replaced with new rail since 2008 and trackage on 11th and 12th streets remain with small portions paved over SEPTA announced plans in its 2010 Capital Budget to purchase new trolley cars and restore the rails between 2011 and 2018 allowing for the future return of streetcar service on the line 9 However in 2011 it was pushed back to 2015 2022 and the proposed 2012 budget pushed it back even further to 2016 2023 10 11 12 The budgets do not include allocated funds to build a new trolley depot and maintenance facility In 2015 SEPTA proposed allocating 2 million on feasibility study to reinstate trolley service on Routes 23 and 56 in the latter part of its twelve year capital program between 2021 and 2027 5 References edit a b c d SEPTA Route Statistics 2018 PDF SEPTA Retrieved September 2 2019 a b Melamed Samantha November 27 2015 So long 23 the busiest and latest bus route The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved September 3 2019 a b c d e f g h Route 23 PDF SEPTA September 1 2019 Retrieved September 2 2019 a b c The history of trolley cars and routes in Philadelphia SEPTA June 1 1974 pp 12 13 Retrieved 2014 08 16 a b Fiscal Year 2016 Capital Budget page 42 PTC Streetcar Routes as of January 1953 PhillyTrolley org Schneider Fred W III 1983 PCC From Coast to Coast Glendale CA Interurban Press p 142 ISBN 0 916374 57 2 Bruch Laura J Fish Larry June 14 1996 A streetcar named expire Tomorrow is the Chestnut Hill Trolley s last regular run The Philadelphia Inquirer pp B1 B7 SEPTA Capital Budget Program and Comprehensive Plan Page 71 2010 SEPTA Capital Budget Program and Comprehensive Plan Page 77 2011 SEPTA Capital Budget Program Archived 2012 03 07 at the Wayback Machine 2010 SEPTA Capital Budget ProgramExternal links editRoute 23 schedule Former Route 23 Trolley World NYC Subway org Route 23 Philadelphia Trolley Tour Spring 1987 PhillyTrolley org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SEPTA Route 23 amp oldid 1187083055, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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