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Tel Aviv Light Rail

The Tel Aviv Light Rail (Hebrew: הרכבת הקלה בתל אביב, Romanized: Ha'rakēvet Ha'kalā Be'Tel Avīv), Arabic: قطار تل أبيب الخفيف, Romanized: Qītar Tall ʾAbīb Al-khāfifa also known as Dankal (Hebrew: דנקל, Arabic: دانكال) is a mass transit system for Gush Dan, the Tel Aviv metropolitan area in central Israel. The system will include different modes of mass transit, including rapid transit (metro), light rail transit (LRT), and bus rapid transit (BRT). Overseen by NTA Metropolitan Mass Transit System Ltd., a government agency, the project will complement the intercity and suburban rail network operated by Israel Railways.

Dankal Tel Aviv Light Rail
רכבת קלה של דנקל תל אביב
قطار تل أبيب الخفيف
Tel Aviv Light Rail-branded Mock-up trainset of the red line standing outside the light rail depot
Overview
OwnerNTA
Area servedTel Aviv metropolitan area
Transit type Light rail
Number of lines3 (Red Line, Green Line, Purple Line)
Number of stations34 (Red Line), 58 (Green Line), 43 (Purple Line)
Daily ridershipRed Line - 100,000[1]
HeadquartersTel Aviv
Websitehttps://www.dankal.co.il/
Operation
Began operationAugust 18, 2023
Operator(s)tevel metro
Rolling stockCRRC (Red Line), Alstom Citadis XO5 (Green Line), CAF Urbos 3 (Purple Line)
Technical
Top speed80 km/h (50 mph) in underground sections
Map of the planned network as of 2020. The Red Line is in service; the Green and Purple lines are under construction; the rest is subject to change.

As of 2023, two LRT lines are under construction and one available to the public. Work on the Red Line, the first in the project, started on September 21, 2011, following years of preparatory works,[2] and was opened on August 18, 2023 after numerous delays.[3][4] Construction of the Purple Line started in December 2018; work on the Green Line began in January 2019.[5]

The network was originally planned to be called "MetroTLV" but was changed to "Dankal".[6]

History edit

 
Tel Aviv Light rail, construction site on Yehuda Halevi Street

The first proposals for a tramway in the area were made by the Lebanese engineer George Franjieh in November 1892, about nine weeks after the inauguration of the Jaffa–Jerusalem railway. The plan called for a main line between southern and northeastern Jaffa, with spurs to the harbor and the eastern orchards. The plan was considered uneconomical and was shelved. A later plan called for a light railway from Jaffa to the nearby towns of Rishon LeZion, Petah Tikva and Wilhelma.[7]

A Decauville light railway was built in Jaffa and Tel Aviv in World War I, connecting the port with the Yarkon River. It was used for about a decade after the war, and dismantled at a later date.

A light rail line, with a route similar to the current Red Line, was planned in 1921 by Pinhas Rutenberg. An attempt to build the line in 1924-5 was unsuccessful.[8]

A subway system was first planned in the mid-1960s but a station at the Shalom Meir Tower was all that was completed of the project, with no rails laid.[9]

Revised plan: Light Rail edit

In 2000, the plan for a subway was changed to one for light rail, and more plausible plans for a mass transit system in Tel Aviv were unveiled. After the first Red Line spanning 22 kilometres (14 mi) was approved, excavation began in late 2009, with construction of the underground stations starting in August 2015. The Red Line became operational on August 18, 2023.

In December 2006, the MTS group was awarded a BOT contract for the Red Line of the light rail, by which they are to build and operate the line for its first 32 years. MTS consisted of Africa Israel, Siemens (Germany), Egged, China Civil Engineering Construction (China), Soares da Costa (Portugal), and HTM (Netherlands).[10] After many years of delays due to MTS financing issues, in December 2010 the government revoked MTS's concession and nationalized the project, putting it under the authority of NTA, the government agency which was in charge of overseeing the overall development of the rapid transit system in Gush Dan.[11]

Current status edit

Construction on the Red Line began in August 2015.[12][13] It opened on August 18, 2023.[14] The preparations for the construction of the Green Line started on February 5, 2017, on Ibn Gabirol Street in Tel Aviv. Infrastructure works for the Purple Line began in December 2018.[5]

Lines edit

Primary line Color Service bullets
Red Line Red      
Green Line Green
Purple Line Purple

Red Line is in service; Green and Purple lines are under construction. When complete, they will cover a network of 85 kilometres (53 mi).

Line Length No. of stations Status Opening Passenger
forecast
Primary
municipalities
Terminals Rolling Stock
Red Line[15] 24 km (15 mi)
(12 km (7.5 mi) underground)
34 (10 underground) In service August 18, 2023[16] 240,000 daily
70,000,000 annually
Tel Aviv, Petah Tikva, Bnei Brak, Ramat Gan, Bat Yam CRRC Changchun LRV
Green Line[17] 39 km (24 mi)
(4.5 km (2.8 mi) underground)
62 (4 underground)[18] Under construction[19] 2028 est.[20] 180,000 daily
65,000,000 annually
Tel Aviv, Herzliya, Holon, Rishon LeZion Alstom Citadis
Purple Line[21] 27 km (17 mi)[21] 43[21] Under construction[5] 2026 est. 180,000 daily
60,000,000 annually
Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan, Kiryat Ono, Giv'at Shmuel, Or Yehuda, Yehud CAF Urbos

Red Line edit

12 km (7.5 mi)[22] of the 24 kilometres (15 mi) Red Line was built underground, with the remaining overground segment constructed as a light rail/tram. It has 34 stops, 10 of which are underground, with an average distance of about 1000 meters between underground stops and of about 500 metres between overground stops. The line runs from Bat Yam in the southwest, through Jaffa and central Tel Aviv, including at Tel Aviv Savidor Central railway station, and carries on to Petah Tikva, through Ramat Gan and Bnei Brak. An extension to Rishon LeZion is planned. It has been forecast that by 70 million passengers would be using this line annually.[6]

Stations (underground in italics): HaKomemiyut, He'Amal, Kaf Tet BeNovember, Yoseftal, Binyamin, Balfour, Jabotinsky, Rothschild, Ha'Atsma'ut, Mahrozet, HaBesht, Isakov, Ehrlich, Bloomfield Stadium, Shalma (Salame), Elifelet, Allenby, Carlebach, Yehudit, Sha'ul HaMelekh, Arlosoroff, Abba Hillel, Bialik, Ben-Gurion, Aharonovich. From Aharonovich, one branch continues to Shenkar, Shaham, Beilinson, Dankner, Krol, Pinsker, Petah Tikva Central Bus Station (Terminal); another continues to Em HaMoshavot Bridge and Kiryat Arye.

The work on Allenby station began on February 8, 2015.

In May 2021, a test run of the red line began in Petah Tikva.

Green Line edit

The second or Green Line, in the tender phase, is a 39 kilometres (24 mi) with 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi) of them underground. It will have 62 stops that would run from the west of Rishon LeZion northwards through Holon through central Tel Aviv splitting into two branches: one to Herzliya in the north and the other one to Ramat HaHayal neighborhood in Tel Aviv in the northeast. Only its central Tel Aviv segment, four of the 62 stations, will be underground, from Levinski Street through Ibn Gabirol Street until the Yarkon River.[23] The expected annual passenger forecast is 65 million. NTA is including the design and boring of the Green Line's tunnels as part of Red Line's tunnels overall contract so that work on the Green Line's underground portion can commence immediately following the completion of the Red Line tunnels. The preparations for the construction of this line begun in February 2017 in Ibn Gabirol street in Tel Aviv.[citation needed]

Purple Line edit

The third, or Purple Line, is envisaged as a 27 kilometres (17 mi) line with 43 stops and will connect Sheba Hospital through Giv'at Shmuel and Kiryat Ono, and will connect Arlozorov in Tel Aviv to Yehud and Or Yehuda through Ramat Gan. This line will be over-ground for its entire route.

Cancelled lines edit

Yellow Line edit

This line would have begun in Kfar Saba then continued on to Hod Hasharon, Herzliya, Ramat Hasharon on Sokolov Street, before joining Ben-Gurion Street in Ramat Gan, then Yitzhak Rabin Street in Givataim, then Moshe Dayan Street in Tel Aviv, Mikveh Israel, it would end in Holon after crossing Ariel Sharon Park. Parts of it were superseded by the M1 metro line.

Other mass transit systems edit

Metro edit

The rapid transit plan for Gush Dan, conceived and approved in 2016, called for three underground metro lines, centered on Tel Aviv: a north–south line (M1), an east–west line (M2), and a circular line (M3).[24] The lines are currently undergoing an individual approval process.

Line Length No. of stations Status Opening Primary
municipalities
Terminals
M1[25] 85 km (53 mi) 62 M1S - Approved, M1C - Approved , M1N - Planned NET 2032 Tel Aviv, Lod, Ramle, Be'er Ya'akov, Rehovot, Nes Ziona, Rishon LeZion, Holon, Ramat HaSharon, Herzliya, Ra'anana, Hod HaSharon, Kfar Sava
M2[25] 26 km (16 mi) 22 Approved[26] NET 2032 Tel Aviv, Bat Yam, Giv'atayim, Ramat Gan, Bnei Brak, Petah Tikva Holon Wolfson Railway Station
Petah Tikva
M3[25] 39 km (24 mi) 25 Approved[27] NET 2032 Tel Aviv, Herzliya, Petah Tikva, Kiryat Ono, Or Yehuda, Azor, Holon, Bat Yam Herzliya Pituah
Bat Yam

Bus rapid transit edit

Most BRT lines planned for Gush Dan were cancelled in 2016 and replaced with metro lines. Only plans for the Brown Line were retained, however, no date for start of construction has been announced.

Line Length No. of stations Status Opening Primary
municipalities
Terminals
Brown Line[28] 30 km (19 mi) 46 Planned 2028 Rishon LeZion, Be'er Ya'akov, Ramle, Lod Rishon LeZion Moshe Dayan Railway Station
Lod Ganei Aviv Railway Station
Blue Line 23 km (14 mi) 44 Planned 2028 Rehovot, Ness Ziona, Rishon LeZion, Azor, Holon Bilu Junction
Holon Junction

Brown Line edit

The Brown Line is a planned BRT line that will serve the southern metropolitan area. Starting at Moshe Dayan Railway Station in western Rishon LeZion, it will continue east via central Rishon LeZion, bypassing Assaf HaRofeh Medical Center, until Ramle, where it splits into two branches: one continues to Lod in the northeast and the second continues to eastern Ramle in the east. There is a possibility of making it a light rail line eventually.

Blue Line edit

The Blue Line is the first BRT line not to pass via Tel Aviv. The line will begin in Bilu Junction near Rehovot and continues to HaRishonim Railway Station in Rishon LeZion via Ness Ziona and will end at the Holon junction. This line is expected to open in 2027 or 2028.[29]

Cancelled lines edit

Pink Line edit

The Pink Line was planned to serve the northern metropolitan area, beginning in northeastern Kfar Saba and continuing through its main streets until crossing Highway 4 to Ra'anana, continuing through Ahuza Street until western Ra'anana, and continuing to Herzliya and crossing it until the Marina area, where it would have terminated. This line was superseded by the M1 and M3 metro lines.

Orange Line edit

The Orange Line would have been the only line isolated from the system. It would serve only the city of Netanya in the northern metropolitan area. It would be a circular line that connects both sides of the city, crossing Highway 2.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Zagrizak, Asaf (September 20, 2023). "Tel Aviv light rail completes first month of operations". Globes. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  2. ^ Barkat, Amiram (September 20, 2011). "Work begins on Tel Aviv light rail". Globes. Retrieved April 15, 2012.
  3. ^ Cohen, Moshe (4 October 2020). "עבודות הרכבת הקלה בתל אביב נכנסות לשלב הסופי" [Red Line Works in Tel Aviv Entering Final Stage]. Maariv (in Hebrew). Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  4. ^ Hoffman, Carl (2016-09-01). "The project that could help determine Israel's future". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  5. ^ a b c Gorodeisky, Sonia (December 25, 2018). "Work begins on second Tel Aviv light rail line". Globes. Retrieved January 3, 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Can Israel pivot from cars to public transport?". Globes. 2021-10-13. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  7. ^ Cotterell, Paul. "A Tramway Project in Jaffa". HaRakevet (6): 11–12.
  8. ^ שרטוט נדיר חשף: תוואי הרכבת הקלה בגוש דן תוכנן לפני כמאה שנה
  9. ^ "Tel Aviv's LRT dream". The International Light Rail Magazine. 2019-08-09. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  10. ^ "6: Light Rapid Transit". HaRakevet (80): 4. March 2008. ISSN 0964-8763.
  11. ^ http://www.nrg.co.il/online/16/ART2/188/317.html The government officially nationalizes the construction of the Tel Aviv red line (Hebrew)
  12. ^ Morag, Gilad; Posek, Hillel (2015-04-18). "Tel Aviv light rail works expected to begin in the summer". Ynetnews. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  13. ^ Lior, Ilan (2012-09-02). "Construction begins for Tel Aviv light rail, six years of traffic jams expected". Haaretz.com. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  14. ^ "'We waited a long time for this': Tel Aviv light rail sets off after years of delays". The Times of Israel. 2023-08-18. Retrieved 2023-08-18.
  15. ^ The Red Line (in Hebrew)
  16. ^ "Tel Aviv light rail launch delayed until 2023". Globes. 21 March 2022.
  17. ^ The Green Line (in Hebrew)
  18. ^ Maor, Tami (December 24, 2012). "Test Drilling for Green Line of Tel Aviv Light Rail". Tel Aviv Local (in Hebrew). Retrieved December 25, 2012.
  19. ^ The project that could help determine Israel's future, The Jerusalem Post, Carl Hoffman, January 9, 2016
  20. ^ "Tel Aviv light rail Green Line completion delayed until 2028". Globes. 7 October 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  21. ^ a b c "Purple Line". www.nta.co.il. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  22. ^ "Tel Aviv Red Line tunnelling begins". Railway Gazette International. 20 February 2017. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  23. ^ "Green Line". www.nta.co.il. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  24. ^ רובינשטיין, רועי (15 April 2019). "המטרו בגוש דן - צעד נוסף לקראת תחילת עבודות". Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  25. ^ a b c "Metro". www.nta.co.il. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  26. ^ "Israel's Metro M2 line approved, budget released". Globes. 18 September 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
  27. ^ "First Tel Aviv Metro line sent for cabinet approval". Globes. 26 April 2021. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  28. ^ The Brown Line (in Hebrew)
  29. ^ Zagrizak, Asaf (April 14, 2022). "26 דקות ממכון ויצמן לראשון: תוכנית הקו הכחול בגוש דן נחשפת". Globes (in Hebrew).

External links edit

  • NTA (in English) – Tel Aviv Subway developer, builder and operator.
  • NTA (in Hebrew)
  • Map of all lines on Govmap.gov.il
  • Tel Aviv Light Rail on Urbanrail.net

aviv, light, rail, confused, with, aviv, metro, hebrew, הרכבת, הקלה, בתל, אביב, romanized, rakēvet, kalā, avīv, arabic, قطار, تل, أبيب, الخفيف, romanized, qītar, tall, ʾabīb, khāfifa, also, known, dankal, hebrew, דנקל, arabic, دانكال, mass, transit, system, gu. Not to be confused with Tel Aviv Metro The Tel Aviv Light Rail Hebrew הרכבת הקלה בתל אביב Romanized Ha rakevet Ha kala Be Tel Aviv Arabic قطار تل أبيب الخفيف Romanized Qitar Tall ʾAbib Al khafifa also known as Dankal Hebrew דנקל Arabic دانكال is a mass transit system for Gush Dan the Tel Aviv metropolitan area in central Israel The system will include different modes of mass transit including rapid transit metro light rail transit LRT and bus rapid transit BRT Overseen by NTA Metropolitan Mass Transit System Ltd a government agency the project will complement the intercity and suburban rail network operated by Israel Railways Dankal Tel Aviv Light Railרכבת קלה של דנקל תל אביב قطار تل أبيب الخفيف Tel Aviv Light Rail branded Mock up trainset of the red line standing outside the light rail depotOverviewOwnerNTAArea servedTel Aviv metropolitan areaTransit typeLight railNumber of lines3 Red Line Green Line Purple Line Number of stations34 Red Line 58 Green Line 43 Purple Line Daily ridershipRed Line 100 000 1 HeadquartersTel AvivWebsitehttps www dankal co il OperationBegan operationAugust 18 2023Operator s tevel metroRolling stockCRRC Red Line Alstom Citadis XO5 Green Line CAF Urbos 3 Purple Line TechnicalTop speed80 km h 50 mph in underground sections Map of the planned network as of 2020 The Red Line is in service the Green and Purple lines are under construction the rest is subject to change As of 2023 two LRT lines are under construction and one available to the public Work on the Red Line the first in the project started on September 21 2011 following years of preparatory works 2 and was opened on August 18 2023 after numerous delays 3 4 Construction of the Purple Line started in December 2018 work on the Green Line began in January 2019 5 The network was originally planned to be called MetroTLV but was changed to Dankal 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Revised plan Light Rail 1 2 Current status 2 Lines 2 1 Red Line 2 2 Green Line 2 3 Purple Line 2 4 Cancelled lines 2 4 1 Yellow Line 3 Other mass transit systems 3 1 Metro 3 2 Bus rapid transit 3 2 1 Brown Line 3 2 2 Blue Line 3 3 Cancelled lines 3 3 1 Pink Line 3 3 2 Orange Line 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Tel Aviv Light rail construction site on Yehuda Halevi Street The first proposals for a tramway in the area were made by the Lebanese engineer George Franjieh in November 1892 about nine weeks after the inauguration of the Jaffa Jerusalem railway The plan called for a main line between southern and northeastern Jaffa with spurs to the harbor and the eastern orchards The plan was considered uneconomical and was shelved A later plan called for a light railway from Jaffa to the nearby towns of Rishon LeZion Petah Tikva and Wilhelma 7 A Decauville light railway was built in Jaffa and Tel Aviv in World War I connecting the port with the Yarkon River It was used for about a decade after the war and dismantled at a later date A light rail line with a route similar to the current Red Line was planned in 1921 by Pinhas Rutenberg An attempt to build the line in 1924 5 was unsuccessful 8 A subway system was first planned in the mid 1960s but a station at the Shalom Meir Tower was all that was completed of the project with no rails laid 9 Revised plan Light Rail edit In 2000 the plan for a subway was changed to one for light rail and more plausible plans for a mass transit system in Tel Aviv were unveiled After the first Red Line spanning 22 kilometres 14 mi was approved excavation began in late 2009 with construction of the underground stations starting in August 2015 The Red Line became operational on August 18 2023 In December 2006 the MTS group was awarded a BOT contract for the Red Line of the light rail by which they are to build and operate the line for its first 32 years MTS consisted of Africa Israel Siemens Germany Egged China Civil Engineering Construction China Soares da Costa Portugal and HTM Netherlands 10 After many years of delays due to MTS financing issues in December 2010 the government revoked MTS s concession and nationalized the project putting it under the authority of NTA the government agency which was in charge of overseeing the overall development of the rapid transit system in Gush Dan 11 Current status edit Construction on the Red Line began in August 2015 12 13 It opened on August 18 2023 14 The preparations for the construction of the Green Line started on February 5 2017 on Ibn Gabirol Street in Tel Aviv Infrastructure works for the Purple Line began in December 2018 5 Lines editPrimary line Color Service bullets Red Line Red nbsp nbsp nbsp Green Line Green Purple Line Purple Red Line is in service Green and Purple lines are under construction When complete they will cover a network of 85 kilometres 53 mi Line Length No of stations Status Opening Passengerforecast Primarymunicipalities Terminals Rolling Stock Red Line 15 24 km 15 mi 12 km 7 5 mi underground 34 10 underground In service August 18 2023 16 240 000 daily70 000 000 annually Tel Aviv Petah Tikva Bnei Brak Ramat Gan Bat Yam Petah Tikva Kiryat Aryeh station depot western branch Petah Tikva Central Bus Station eastern branch HaKomemiyut Bat Yam CRRC Changchun LRV Green Line 17 39 km 24 mi 4 5 km 2 8 mi underground 62 4 underground 18 Under construction 19 2028 est 20 180 000 daily65 000 000 annually Tel Aviv Herzliya Holon Rishon LeZion Herzliya Pituah northwestern branch Neve Sharett Tel Aviv northeastern branch Rishon LeZion Moshe Dayan station southwestern branch Volkani Institute Rishon LeZion southeastern branch Alstom Citadis Purple Line 21 27 km 17 mi 21 43 21 Under construction 5 2026 est 180 000 daily60 000 000 annually Tel Aviv Ramat Gan Kiryat Ono Giv at Shmuel Or Yehuda Yehud Tel Aviv Savidor Central station Bar Ilan University Giv at Shmuel northern branch Tayasim Junction Yehud southern branch CAF Urbos Red Line edit Main article Red Line Tel Aviv Light Rail 12 km 7 5 mi 22 of the 24 kilometres 15 mi Red Line was built underground with the remaining overground segment constructed as a light rail tram It has 34 stops 10 of which are underground with an average distance of about 1000 meters between underground stops and of about 500 metres between overground stops The line runs from Bat Yam in the southwest through Jaffa and central Tel Aviv including at Tel Aviv Savidor Central railway station and carries on to Petah Tikva through Ramat Gan and Bnei Brak An extension to Rishon LeZion is planned It has been forecast that by 70 million passengers would be using this line annually 6 Stations underground in italics HaKomemiyut He Amal Kaf Tet BeNovember Yoseftal Binyamin Balfour Jabotinsky Rothschild Ha Atsma ut Mahrozet HaBesht Isakov Ehrlich Bloomfield Stadium Shalma Salame Elifelet Allenby Carlebach Yehudit Sha ul HaMelekh Arlosoroff Abba Hillel Bialik Ben Gurion Aharonovich From Aharonovich one branch continues to Shenkar Shaham Beilinson Dankner Krol Pinsker Petah Tikva Central Bus Station Terminal another continues to Em HaMoshavot Bridge and Kiryat Arye The work on Allenby station began on February 8 2015 In May 2021 a test run of the red line began in Petah Tikva Test drive of the red light rail line in Tel Aviv November 2021 nbsp nbsp Green Line edit Main article Green Line Tel Aviv Light Rail The second or Green Line in the tender phase is a 39 kilometres 24 mi with 4 5 kilometres 2 8 mi of them underground It will have 62 stops that would run from the west of Rishon LeZion northwards through Holon through central Tel Aviv splitting into two branches one to Herzliya in the north and the other one to Ramat HaHayal neighborhood in Tel Aviv in the northeast Only its central Tel Aviv segment four of the 62 stations will be underground from Levinski Street through Ibn Gabirol Street until the Yarkon River 23 The expected annual passenger forecast is 65 million NTA is including the design and boring of the Green Line s tunnels as part of Red Line s tunnels overall contract so that work on the Green Line s underground portion can commence immediately following the completion of the Red Line tunnels The preparations for the construction of this line begun in February 2017 in Ibn Gabirol street in Tel Aviv citation needed Purple Line edit Main article Purple Line Tel Aviv Light Rail The third or Purple Line is envisaged as a 27 kilometres 17 mi line with 43 stops and will connect Sheba Hospital through Giv at Shmuel and Kiryat Ono and will connect Arlozorov in Tel Aviv to Yehud and Or Yehuda through Ramat Gan This line will be over ground for its entire route Cancelled lines edit Yellow Line edit This line would have begun in Kfar Saba then continued on to Hod Hasharon Herzliya Ramat Hasharon on Sokolov Street before joining Ben Gurion Street in Ramat Gan then Yitzhak Rabin Street in Givataim then Moshe Dayan Street in Tel Aviv Mikveh Israel it would end in Holon after crossing Ariel Sharon Park Parts of it were superseded by the M1 metro line Other mass transit systems editMetro edit Main article Tel Aviv Metro The rapid transit plan for Gush Dan conceived and approved in 2016 called for three underground metro lines centered on Tel Aviv a north south line M1 an east west line M2 and a circular line M3 24 The lines are currently undergoing an individual approval process Line Length No of stations Status Opening Primarymunicipalities Terminals M1 25 85 km 53 mi 62 M1S Approved M1C Approved M1N Planned NET 2032 Tel Aviv Lod Ramle Be er Ya akov Rehovot Nes Ziona Rishon LeZion Holon Ramat HaSharon Herzliya Ra anana Hod HaSharon Kfar Sava Ra anana northwestern branch Kfar Sava northeastern branch Rehovot southwestern branch Lod Ganei Aviv railway station southeastern branch M2 25 26 km 16 mi 22 Approved 26 NET 2032 Tel Aviv Bat Yam Giv atayim Ramat Gan Bnei Brak Petah Tikva Holon Wolfson Railway StationPetah Tikva M3 25 39 km 24 mi 25 Approved 27 NET 2032 Tel Aviv Herzliya Petah Tikva Kiryat Ono Or Yehuda Azor Holon Bat Yam Herzliya PituahBat Yam Ben Gurion Airport branch Bus rapid transit edit Most BRT lines planned for Gush Dan were cancelled in 2016 and replaced with metro lines Only plans for the Brown Line were retained however no date for start of construction has been announced Line Length No of stations Status Opening Primarymunicipalities Terminals Brown Line 28 30 km 19 mi 46 Planned 2028 Rishon LeZion Be er Ya akov Ramle Lod Rishon LeZion Moshe Dayan Railway StationLod Ganei Aviv Railway Station Blue Line 23 km 14 mi 44 Planned 2028 Rehovot Ness Ziona Rishon LeZion Azor Holon Bilu JunctionHolon Junction Brown Line edit The Brown Line is a planned BRT line that will serve the southern metropolitan area Starting at Moshe Dayan Railway Station in western Rishon LeZion it will continue east via central Rishon LeZion bypassing Assaf HaRofeh Medical Center until Ramle where it splits into two branches one continues to Lod in the northeast and the second continues to eastern Ramle in the east There is a possibility of making it a light rail line eventually Blue Line edit The Blue Line is the first BRT line not to pass via Tel Aviv The line will begin in Bilu Junction near Rehovot and continues to HaRishonim Railway Station in Rishon LeZion via Ness Ziona and will end at the Holon junction This line is expected to open in 2027 or 2028 29 Cancelled lines edit Pink Line edit The Pink Line was planned to serve the northern metropolitan area beginning in northeastern Kfar Saba and continuing through its main streets until crossing Highway 4 to Ra anana continuing through Ahuza Street until western Ra anana and continuing to Herzliya and crossing it until the Marina area where it would have terminated This line was superseded by the M1 and M3 metro lines Orange Line edit The Orange Line would have been the only line isolated from the system It would serve only the city of Netanya in the northern metropolitan area It would be a circular line that connects both sides of the city crossing Highway 2 See also editCarmelit Jerusalem Light Rail List of tram and light rail transit systemsReferences edit Zagrizak Asaf September 20 2023 Tel Aviv light rail completes first month of operations Globes Retrieved September 20 2023 Barkat Amiram September 20 2011 Work begins on Tel Aviv light rail Globes Retrieved April 15 2012 Cohen Moshe 4 October 2020 עבודות הרכבת הקלה בתל אביב נכנסות לשלב הסופי Red Line Works in Tel Aviv Entering Final Stage Maariv in Hebrew Retrieved 6 September 2020 Hoffman Carl 2016 09 01 The project that could help determine Israel s future The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 2021 04 29 a b c Gorodeisky Sonia December 25 2018 Work begins on second Tel Aviv light rail line Globes Retrieved January 3 2019 a b Can Israel pivot from cars to public transport Globes 2021 10 13 Retrieved 2021 11 19 Cotterell Paul A Tramway Project in Jaffa HaRakevet 6 11 12 שרטוט נדיר חשף תוואי הרכבת הקלה בגוש דן תוכנן לפני כמאה שנה Tel Aviv s LRT dream The International Light Rail Magazine 2019 08 09 Retrieved 2021 11 19 6 Light Rapid Transit HaRakevet 80 4 March 2008 ISSN 0964 8763 http www nrg co il online 16 ART2 188 317 html The government officially nationalizes the construction of the Tel Aviv red line Hebrew Morag Gilad Posek Hillel 2015 04 18 Tel Aviv light rail works expected to begin in the summer Ynetnews Retrieved 2021 04 29 Lior Ilan 2012 09 02 Construction begins for Tel Aviv light rail six years of traffic jams expected Haaretz com Retrieved 2021 04 29 We waited a long time for this Tel Aviv light rail sets off after years of delays The Times of Israel 2023 08 18 Retrieved 2023 08 18 The Red Line in Hebrew Tel Aviv light rail launch delayed until 2023 Globes 21 March 2022 The Green Line in Hebrew Maor Tami December 24 2012 Test Drilling for Green Line of Tel Aviv Light Rail Tel Aviv Local in Hebrew Retrieved December 25 2012 The project that could help determine Israel s future The Jerusalem Post Carl Hoffman January 9 2016 Tel Aviv light rail Green Line completion delayed until 2028 Globes 7 October 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2022 a b c Purple Line www nta co il Retrieved 2 June 2021 Tel Aviv Red Line tunnelling begins Railway Gazette International 20 February 2017 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Green Line www nta co il Retrieved 2021 04 29 רובינשטיין רועי 15 April 2019 המטרו בגוש דן צעד נוסף לקראת תחילת עבודות Ynet in Hebrew Retrieved 3 June 2021 a b c Metro www nta co il Retrieved 3 June 2021 Israel s Metro M2 line approved budget released Globes 18 September 2023 Retrieved 25 September 2023 First Tel Aviv Metro line sent for cabinet approval Globes 26 April 2021 Retrieved 3 June 2021 The Brown Line in Hebrew Zagrizak Asaf April 14 2022 26 דקות ממכון ויצמן לראשון תוכנית הקו הכחול בגוש דן נחשפת Globes in Hebrew External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tel Aviv Light Rail NTA in English Tel Aviv Subway developer builder and operator NTA in Hebrew Map of all lines on Govmap gov il Tel Aviv Light Rail on Urbanrail net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tel Aviv Light Rail amp oldid 1219166700, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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