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Transport in Lagos

Transport in Lagos currently consists of four modes: road, water, rail and air.

Roads edit

Federal Highways are:

One road to the Republic of Benin:

F100 west from Apapa Rd in Lagos as the Lagos-Badagry Expressway (part of The Trans-African 7 (TAH 7) Lagos-Dakar Trans-West African Coastal Highway) for about 60 km along the coast to the border at Akraké.

Other major roads include

  • Itokin Rd east from Ikorodu as the Ikorodu-Epe Rd,
  • the Iken-Sekungba Rd north from Ketu to Ogun State,
  • the Epe-Ijebu-Ode Rd north from Epe to Ogun State.

Airports edit

Murtala Mohammed International in Ikeja (1978).

Railways edit

Lagos is connected with Abeokuta by 77 km of the Western Railway (1899) on the 1067 mm (3ˈ6") Cape Gauge, with a new 1435 mm (4ˈ8½") standard gauge line from Lagos to Ibadan opened 2021.

Lagos Rail Mass Transit
Overview
OwnerLagos State Managed by Eko Rail under a Concession Agreement
LocaleLagos, Nigeria
Transit typeRapid Transit
Operation
Began operationDecember 2022 (expected)
Operator(s)Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA)
Number of vehicles15 four-car BMU CNR Dalian for Blue Line
Technical
System length35 km (22 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge

 
Agbado
 
Iju
 
Agege
 
Ikeja
 
Shogunle
 
 
Airport
 
 
Mafoluku
 
 
Ajao Estate
 
 
 
 
Oshodi
 
Mushin
 
Jibowu
 
Yaba
 
Ebute Metta  
 
 
 
Depot
 
 
Okokomaiko
 
 
LASU
 
 
Volkswagen
 
 
Trade Fair
 
 
Alakija
 
 
Festac Town
 
 
 
 
Mile 2
 
 
Alaba
 
 
Iganmu
 
 
 
National Theatre
 
 
 
 
 
Iddo  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ebute Ero
 
 
Marina

Lagos Rail Mass Transit is a system being developed and under construction in Lagos, Nigeria. The system (the first modern rail-based public transport in Sub-Saharan Africa outside of South Africa) is being sponsored by the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA) and is envisioned to consist eventually of seven lines.[1] The railway equipment including electric power, signalling, rolling stock, and fare collection equipment will be provided by the private sector under a Concession Contract. LAMATA is responsible for policy direction, regulation, and infrastructure for the network.[2]

The concessionaire will generate its own dedicated electricity.[3] The first section of the network (Phase I of the Blue Line) was scheduled to enter revenue service by the first quarter of 2014,[1] but had not yet opened as of September 2014, amid delays.[4]

Timeline edit

  • 2008: A metro is proposed for Lagos, allegedly with a completion date of 2011.
  • 2009: Construction commences on the Blue Line.[1]
  • 2010: Lagos Rail Mass Transit to proceed.[citation needed]
  • 2016: Phase I (the Blue Line from Marina to Mile 2) planned to open in December 2016.
  • 2018: After an Alstom review of the project, Phase I (the Blue Line from Marina to Mile 2) is now set to open in 2021.
  • 2021: The Lagos State Government announced that the Blue and Red Lines will open in December 2022.[5]
  • 2022, January: LAMATA purchases two Talgo VIII trains.

History edit

The Lagos tramway ran from 1902 to 1933.[6] The passenger line was one of the earliest public transport system built within Lagos, carrying travelers, traders and workers from the train station at Iddo going to Lagos Island.[6]

The idea of developing rapid transit in Lagos dates from the 1980s with the Lagos Metroline network conceived by the Alhaji Lateef Jakande during the Second Nigerian Republic.[7] The initial Metroline project was scrapped in 1985 by Muhammadu Buhari at a loss of over $78 million to the Lagos tax payers.[8] The idea of developing a light rail network for Lagos was revived by Governor Bola Tinubu in the early 2000s with a formal announcement of its construction in December 2003.[9]

This initial $135 million proposal was part of the greater Lagos Urban Transportation Project to be implemented by the newly formed Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA).[9] LAMATA initially concentrated on developing a Bus Rapid Transit system, running from Mile 12 to Lagos Island. In 2008, LAMATA began also to make progress with the rail project, focusing initially on the Blue Line and the Red Line.

Rolling stock edit

In September 2011, LAMATA announced that it would acquire some H5-series subway trains formerly used by the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC). The cars are being refurbished in the United States and converted to standard gauge before being imported and put into service on the Blue and Red lines. The same contract also included an option for some H6-series subway cars from the TTC, however this has since been cancelled.[10][11][12][13] The trains were built as two-unit married pairs[14] with a driver's cab in the front right corner of each car.[15]

Routes edit

Okokomaiko-Marina Blue Line edit

In April 2008, the Lagos State Government approved 70 billion for construction of the Okokomaiko-Iddo-Marina Line, with an estimated completion date of 2011.[2] Advisory services are being provided by CPCS Transcom Limited, an Infrastructure Development consulting firm based in Ottawa, Canada. Construction actually commenced in January 2010, and completion is now expected in 2015.[16]

The Blue Line is now being built by China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation. The Blue Line will run 27.5 km from Marina to Okokomaiko, with 13 stations. End-to-end journey time will be approximately 35 minutes. It is being built as a high capacity, electrically powered rail mass transit system. Most of the route will be on the surface, running east-west, in the central reservation of the rebuilt Badagry Expressway between Igbo-Elerin Road (Okokomaiko) and Iganmu.

The line will run on elevated structure from Iganmu along the south side of the expressway passing the junction with Eric Moore Road, crossing just south of the National Theatre to Iddo, then south to Lagos Island with a terminal at Marina. Construction is underway between National Theatre and Mile 2. A Maintenance and Storage Facility (MSF) will be constructed at Okokomaiko, with a track connection from the Blue Line to the depot.

The entire Blue Line will operate over a secure and exclusive right-of-way, with no level crossings and no uncontrolled access by pedestrians or vehicles. Lagos State is financing construction of the Blue Line from its own resources. A concession contract is being awarded to finance, supply and operate the railway equipment, including electric power, signalling, trains, and fare collection.

Agbado-Marina Red Line edit

The second line, the Red Line, will run from Marina to Agbado.[16] The line will share the existing 30 metre wide Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) right-of-way.[1]

Other lines edit

LAMATA has long term plans to build up to seven lines.[16]

Bus terminals edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d . Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority. 2014. Archived from the original on 2016-12-01. Retrieved 2014-03-02.
  2. ^ a b Bisiriyu, Rasheed (April 11, 2008). "N70bn Lagos light rail ready in 2011". The Punch.
  3. ^ "Lagos Light Rail". Railways Africa Magazine. 2010-12-12. Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  4. ^ "Eyebrows Raised Over Stalled $1bn Light Rail Project In Lagos".
  5. ^ "Lagos says blue, red rail lines will be ready by December 2022". February 25, 2021.
  6. ^ a b Miller, Nevil (1966). "Lagos steam tramway and its unique locomotives'". The Railway Magazine. 115: 103–106. ISSN 0033-8923.
  7. ^ "Turning Lagos Into a Megacity". PM News. April 14, 2004.
  8. ^ Farukanmi, Olorunnimbe (January 24, 2003). "Battle of Generals". Vanguard.
  9. ^ a b Momodu, Shaka (December 3, 2003). "Lagos Launches $135m Rail System". This Day.
  10. ^ Kalinowski, Tess (2011-09-06). "TTC subway cars bound for Nigeria". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2012-12-05.
  11. ^ "Eko Rail's Trains Begin Journey to Lagos". PR Newswire. 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2012-12-05.
  12. ^ "Report on sales of surplus assets" (PDF). Toronto Transit Commission. 2009-05-28. Retrieved 2013-06-15.
  13. ^ "First subway cars leave Toronto for Lagos". International Railway Journal. 2011-09-28. from the original on 2011-10-03. Retrieved 2013-06-15. The Blue Line is expected to carry 300,000 passengers a day with trains running at 5-minute headways.
  14. ^ . Nigerians Abroad. 2011-05-11. Archived from the original on 2013-10-26. Retrieved 2013-06-14. Subway cars — equivalent of trains — are series of connected railroad cars used for intra city (urban) transportation, usually underground and operated by electricity.
  15. ^ "Toronto Transit Commission 5670-5807". CPTDB. Retrieved 2013-06-14.
  16. ^ a b c The Report: Nigeria 2012. Oxford Business Group. 2012. ISBN 9781907065668. Retrieved 2013-06-15. Also under development is the Lagos light rail network, which will be regulated by LAMATA. The $1.2bn contract to build the Blue Line, which will run 27.5 km through 13 stations from Okokomaiko to Marina, was awarded to the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation. In anticipation of the Blue Line's 2015 completion, Nigerian firm Eko Rail has bought 255 subway cars from Canada's Toronto Transit Commission. Also being developed is the 30-km Red Line, to run between Marina and Agbado. LAMATA hopes to later add five more lines, to be serviced by Eko Rail.

Further reading edit

  • Conover, Ted (2010). "Drive Soft-Life No Get Duplicate". The Routes of Man: How Roads Are Changing the World and the Way We Live Today. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 263–297. ISBN 978-1-4000-4244-9.

External links edit

  • official site
  • official site
  • "Lagos Rail Mass Transit System, Nigeria". Net Resources International (railway-technology.com). Retrieved 2013-04-14.
  • Subways.net Lagos Rail Mass Transit
  • Smith, David (2011-01-14). "How Lagos hopes a railway will end daily endurance test and change lives". The Guardian. Retrieved 2012-12-05.
  • (PDF). Metro Report International. March 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-12-27. Retrieved 2012-12-04.

transport, lagos, currently, consists, four, modes, road, water, rail, contents, roads, airports, railways, timeline, history, rolling, stock, routes, okokomaiko, marina, blue, line, agbado, marina, line, other, lines, terminals, also, references, further, rea. Transport in Lagos currently consists of four modes road water rail and air Contents 1 Roads 2 Airports 3 Railways 3 1 Timeline 3 2 History 3 3 Rolling stock 3 4 Routes 3 4 1 Okokomaiko Marina Blue Line 3 4 2 Agbado Marina Red Line 3 4 3 Other lines 4 Bus terminals 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksRoads editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2023 Federal Highways are A1 north from Lagos as part of the Trans African 8 TAH 8 Lagos Mombasa Highway E1 north from Lagos to Oyo State A5 north from Lagos F101 east from Lagos via Agbwa Epe Sumage to A121 near Oso in Oyo State the Lagos Abeokuta Expressway 81 km from Ikeja to Abeokuta the capital of Ogun State the Lagos Ibadan Expressway to Oyo State as part of TAH 2 Trans African Highway 2 the Trans Sahara Highway or African Unity Rd the Lekki Epe Expressway east from Lagos One road to the Republic of Benin F100 west from Apapa Rd in Lagos as the Lagos Badagry Expressway part of The Trans African 7 TAH 7 Lagos Dakar Trans West African Coastal Highway for about 60 km along the coast to the border at Akrake Other major roads include Itokin Rd east from Ikorodu as the Ikorodu Epe Rd the Iken Sekungba Rd north from Ketu to Ogun State the Epe Ijebu Ode Rd north from Epe to Ogun State Airports editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2023 Murtala Mohammed International in Ikeja 1978 Railways editLagos is connected with Abeokuta by 77 km of the Western Railway 1899 on the 1067 mm 3ˈ6 Cape Gauge with a new 1435 mm 4ˈ8 standard gauge line from Lagos to Ibadan opened 2021 Main article Lagos Rail Mass Transit Lagos Rail Mass TransitOverviewOwnerLagos State Managed by Eko Rail under a Concession AgreementLocaleLagos NigeriaTransit typeRapid TransitOperationBegan operationDecember 2022 expected Operator s Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority LAMATA Number of vehicles15 four car BMU CNR Dalian for Blue LineTechnicalSystem length35 km 22 mi Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeLegend nbsp Agbado nbsp Iju nbsp Agege nbsp Ikeja nbsp Shogunle nbsp nbsp Airport nbsp nbsp nbsp Mafoluku nbsp nbsp Ajao Estate nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Oshodi nbsp Mushin nbsp Jibowu nbsp Yaba nbsp Ebute Metta nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Depot nbsp nbsp Okokomaiko nbsp nbsp LASU nbsp nbsp Volkswagen nbsp nbsp Trade Fair nbsp nbsp Alakija nbsp nbsp Festac Town nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Mile 2 nbsp nbsp Alaba nbsp nbsp Iganmu nbsp nbsp nbsp National Theatre nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Iddo nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Lagos Harbour nbsp nbsp Ebute Ero nbsp nbsp MarinaThis diagram viewtalkeditLagos Rail Mass Transit is a system being developed and under construction in Lagos Nigeria The system the first modern rail based public transport in Sub Saharan Africa outside of South Africa is being sponsored by the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority LAMATA and is envisioned to consist eventually of seven lines 1 The railway equipment including electric power signalling rolling stock and fare collection equipment will be provided by the private sector under a Concession Contract LAMATA is responsible for policy direction regulation and infrastructure for the network 2 The concessionaire will generate its own dedicated electricity 3 The first section of the network Phase I of the Blue Line was scheduled to enter revenue service by the first quarter of 2014 1 but had not yet opened as of September 2014 amid delays 4 Timeline edit 2008 A metro is proposed for Lagos allegedly with a completion date of 2011 2009 Construction commences on the Blue Line 1 2010 Lagos Rail Mass Transit to proceed citation needed 2016 Phase I the Blue Line from Marina to Mile 2 planned to open in December 2016 2018 After an Alstom review of the project Phase I the Blue Line from Marina to Mile 2 is now set to open in 2021 2021 The Lagos State Government announced that the Blue and Red Lines will open in December 2022 5 2022 January LAMATA purchases two Talgo VIII trains History edit The Lagos tramway ran from 1902 to 1933 6 The passenger line was one of the earliest public transport system built within Lagos carrying travelers traders and workers from the train station at Iddo going to Lagos Island 6 The idea of developing rapid transit in Lagos dates from the 1980s with the Lagos Metroline network conceived by the Alhaji Lateef Jakande during the Second Nigerian Republic 7 The initial Metroline project was scrapped in 1985 by Muhammadu Buhari at a loss of over 78 million to the Lagos tax payers 8 The idea of developing a light rail network for Lagos was revived by Governor Bola Tinubu in the early 2000s with a formal announcement of its construction in December 2003 9 This initial 135 million proposal was part of the greater Lagos Urban Transportation Project to be implemented by the newly formed Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority LAMATA 9 LAMATA initially concentrated on developing a Bus Rapid Transit system running from Mile 12 to Lagos Island In 2008 LAMATA began also to make progress with the rail project focusing initially on the Blue Line and the Red Line Rolling stock edit In September 2011 LAMATA announced that it would acquire some H5 series subway trains formerly used by the Toronto Transit Commission TTC The cars are being refurbished in the United States and converted to standard gauge before being imported and put into service on the Blue and Red lines The same contract also included an option for some H6 series subway cars from the TTC however this has since been cancelled 10 11 12 13 The trains were built as two unit married pairs 14 with a driver s cab in the front right corner of each car 15 Routes edit Okokomaiko Marina Blue Line edit In April 2008 the Lagos State Government approved 70 billion for construction of the Okokomaiko Iddo Marina Line with an estimated completion date of 2011 2 Advisory services are being provided by CPCS Transcom Limited an Infrastructure Development consulting firm based in Ottawa Canada Construction actually commenced in January 2010 and completion is now expected in 2015 16 The Blue Line is now being built by China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation The Blue Line will run 27 5 km from Marina to Okokomaiko with 13 stations End to end journey time will be approximately 35 minutes It is being built as a high capacity electrically powered rail mass transit system Most of the route will be on the surface running east west in the central reservation of the rebuilt Badagry Expressway between Igbo Elerin Road Okokomaiko and Iganmu The line will run on elevated structure from Iganmu along the south side of the expressway passing the junction with Eric Moore Road crossing just south of the National Theatre to Iddo then south to Lagos Island with a terminal at Marina Construction is underway between National Theatre and Mile 2 A Maintenance and Storage Facility MSF will be constructed at Okokomaiko with a track connection from the Blue Line to the depot The entire Blue Line will operate over a secure and exclusive right of way with no level crossings and no uncontrolled access by pedestrians or vehicles Lagos State is financing construction of the Blue Line from its own resources A concession contract is being awarded to finance supply and operate the railway equipment including electric power signalling trains and fare collection Agbado Marina Red Line edit The second line the Red Line will run from Marina to Agbado 16 The line will share the existing 30 metre wide Nigerian Railway Corporation NRC right of way 1 Other lines edit LAMATA has long term plans to build up to seven lines 16 Bus terminals editIkeja Bus Terminal Ikeja Mafoluku Bus Terminal Ikeja Oshodi Bus Terminal Oshodi Oyingbo Bus Terminal Lagos Mainland Yaba Bus Terminal Lagos Mainland TBS Bus Terminus Lagos IslandSee also editTransportation in Nigeria LAMATA Rapid transitReferences edit a b c d Lagos Rail Mass Transit Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority 2014 Archived from the original on 2016 12 01 Retrieved 2014 03 02 a b Bisiriyu Rasheed April 11 2008 N70bn Lagos light rail ready in 2011 The Punch Lagos Light Rail Railways Africa Magazine 2010 12 12 Retrieved 2010 12 12 Eyebrows Raised Over Stalled 1bn Light Rail Project In Lagos Lagos says blue red rail lines will be ready by December 2022 February 25 2021 a b Miller Nevil 1966 Lagos steam tramway and its unique locomotives The Railway Magazine 115 103 106 ISSN 0033 8923 Turning Lagos Into a Megacity PM News April 14 2004 Farukanmi Olorunnimbe January 24 2003 Battle of Generals Vanguard a b Momodu Shaka December 3 2003 Lagos Launches 135m Rail System This Day Kalinowski Tess 2011 09 06 TTC subway cars bound for Nigeria Toronto Star Retrieved 2012 12 05 Eko Rail s Trains Begin Journey to Lagos PR Newswire 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2012 12 05 Report on sales of surplus assets PDF Toronto Transit Commission 2009 05 28 Retrieved 2013 06 15 First subway cars leave Toronto for Lagos International Railway Journal 2011 09 28 Archived from the original on 2011 10 03 Retrieved 2013 06 15 The Blue Line is expected to carry 300 000 passengers a day with trains running at 5 minute headways Lagos settles for refurbished subway cars for its light rail project Nigerians Abroad 2011 05 11 Archived from the original on 2013 10 26 Retrieved 2013 06 14 Subway cars equivalent of trains are series of connected railroad cars used for intra city urban transportation usually underground and operated by electricity Toronto Transit Commission 5670 5807 CPTDB Retrieved 2013 06 14 a b c The Report Nigeria 2012 Oxford Business Group 2012 ISBN 9781907065668 Retrieved 2013 06 15 Also under development is the Lagos light rail network which will be regulated by LAMATA The 1 2bn contract to build the Blue Line which will run 27 5 km through 13 stations from Okokomaiko to Marina was awarded to the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation In anticipation of the Blue Line s 2015 completion Nigerian firm Eko Rail has bought 255 subway cars from Canada s Toronto Transit Commission Also being developed is the 30 km Red Line to run between Marina and Agbado LAMATA hopes to later add five more lines to be serviced by Eko Rail Further reading editConover Ted 2010 Drive Soft Life No Get Duplicate The Routes of Man How Roads Are Changing the World and the Way We Live Today New York Alfred A Knopf pp 263 297 ISBN 978 1 4000 4244 9 External links editLAMATA Rail Services official site Lagos State Waterways Authority official site Lagos Rail Mass Transit System Nigeria Net Resources International railway technology com Retrieved 2013 04 14 Subways net Lagos Rail Mass Transit Smith David 2011 01 14 How Lagos hopes a railway will end daily endurance test and change lives The Guardian Retrieved 2012 12 05 Eko Rail wins Lagos Blue Line concession PDF Metro Report International March 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 12 27 Retrieved 2012 12 04 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transport in Lagos amp oldid 1194102238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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