The Spine Line
is a proposed transit line from Downtown
Pittsburgh to the Oakland area of Pittsburgh and possibly beyond, with
some proposals going as far as Monroeville. It has a long history,
apparently starting in 1907 and being serious considered in the 1960s
with many starts and stops since then. Several studies have been
made. These studies suggest various routes and modes (complete
subways, at grade light-rail, bus rapid transit, and various
combinations). Here is historical information gathered on the concept
up to Spring 2012.
2010s
Subway
tunnel is hardly a money pit,
Post Gazette, March 29,
2012.
Mostly about the NSC (North Side Connector), but mentions the
spine line and how it was killed in the 90s.
Oakland transit line explored,
Post Gazette, March 28, 2012.
Talks about the Onorato's task force and its launching of a "worldwide appeal for private investors willing to develop a Downtown-to-Oakland transit".
Groups want to revive light-rail to Oakland,
Post Gazette, March 16, 2012.
Talks about a report by the Pennsylvania Public Interest Research Group titled
A Better Way to Go: Meeting America's 21st Century Transportation Challenges with Modern Public Transit.
Has a nice summary history of the spine line.
Rapid transit seen between Downtown and Oakland.
Post Gazette, March 30, 2011.
Discussion of Bus Rapid Transit on the spine-line corridor.
Pittsburgh
Hopes for Privately Funded Transit Connection to Oakland,
The
Transport Politic, February 24, 2010.
Asks for private funds in
exchange for development rights. Claims the line could serve 100,000
riders a day by 2030. Mentions both the Center and Colwell
alignments. Does not even mention an underground option, but a
response mentions a Vancouver underground project that cost $159M/mile.
2000s
Transportation
Key to World-Class Pittsburgh,
POP City, July 16, 2008.
Mentions that PAT moves 70 Million people a year, including half the
downtown workforce, saving 1.8 Million hours in travel time and
$34Million in gas savings. Includes the quote: "Build the Spine Line for Godssakes".
Return
of the Spine Line?,
Blog Post on Tales of the 91A, March 22,
2008.
A somewhat comical history of the spine line, once again
putting all blame on its failure on Dunn and Cranmer, but also adding Mike Dawida
(the Three Stooges, as the author refers to them).
Expansion of Pittsburgh's light-rail system to Oakland remains far
off.
Pittsburgh Business Times, March 3, 2008,
Talks about
the formation of the "Transportation Action Partnership" and its
purpose of moving the spine line into reality. Predicts cost at at
least $1Billion. Says it is unrealistic to expect full public
funding.
Lost
Tracks: The planned T extension to the North Shore is the last
surviving remnant of bigger, better plans,
City Paper, September 29, 2005.
In the the context of the NSC, it talks about
previous plans for the Spine Line dating back to 1906, and mentions
how the project was killed by Larry Dunn and Bob Cranmer in 1996,
apparently by stacking the Port Authority board.
Note large gap in years here. We can refer to these as the It's Dunn
years.
1990s
Spine Line to Oakland is too costly, given the area's other needs.
Post Gazette, July 10, 1996.
This is a letter to the editor written by the Chairman of the Port Authority trying to justify the canceling of any future work on the spine line project. It is very defensive.
Here is a response.
Spine chilling: PAT scraps light rail plan
continued on page 4.
Post Gazette, May 8, 1996.
The title says it all. Includes a quote from the former PAT board chairman : [Dunn and Cranmer] represent a point of view that is wholly suburban
Stop and go transit expansion gets another green light.
Post Gazette, Jan 23, 1995
Light
rail extension to be costly: Study says 'spine line' would attract
riders, cut time, lift revenue,
Post Gazette, Mar 19, 1991.
Puts cost at $229M for nor North Side connection, $328M for Oakland
along Colwell Street, $445M for Oakland along Center, and $228 for
Squirrel Hill extension. If you multiply by 2.25 you get to the
actual cost of the NSC, so perhaps we can just multiply them all by
2.25, which puts the Colwell Street segment to Oakland at around $750M.
1980s
PAT revises Spine Line
plan; study labels it cost-efficient
Pittsburgh Press, Sep 12, 1985.
A backbone for the city.
Post Gazette, Feb 4, 1983.
PAT initiates $100,000 study of spine line
.
Post Gazette, Jan 29, 1983.
1970s
Transit Finally on Track.
Post Gazette, May 9, 1979
About the South Hills light rail, but also discusses the spine line
.
Spine Line Transit Plan Cut as Costly.
Post Gazette, Nov 2, 1977.
The first round of shutting down the idea.
Caliguiri Vows to Revive Spirit of Renewal in City.
Post Gazette, Apr 12, 1977
First mention of spine line
I could find.
Laval
Metro Extension, Montreal (2007).
Overview of the reasonably
recent line extension that came in 7% under budget and two months
early. The overall cost was $142M/km ($228M/mile) for the fully
underground 5.2km line (same length as downtown to CMU) -- total cost
$748 million. It mostly was built using cut and cover, but parts
including going under a river were bored (more
info). This is a rare success story in subway construction. It
was so successful that there are already plans for another extension
with two additional stops.
Canada Line,
Vancouver BC (2009).
Overview of the reasonably recent line
that was built as a public-private partnership. The cost was only
about $105M/km ($2B for 19km). About 1/3 is underground and 2/3 above
ground, mostly on elevated guideways. Most of the underground portion
was constructed using cut and cover under an existing street, although
it was bored under two rivers. The ridership is exceeding projections
with over 110,000 riders per day.
Woodward
Light Rail, Detroit (Proposed).
Technically this is a street
car, not a light rail (it runs on tracks built into the road and
shared by auto traffic). The proposal is for 3.3 miles and therefore
about the same length as the Downtown to CMU trip. It's predicted
cost is $137 million. It is funded by a public/private partnership.
There are questions about whether it can ever be extended since the
travel times on roads are too slow for a commuter line.
What if Washington Never Built Metro?
From DC.STREETSBLOG.ORG.
Talks about the costs and benefits of the DC metro including $212 Billion in real estate value within 1/2 mile of metro stations.
Why $1 billion doesn't buy much transit infrastructure anymore
From the Atlantic Cities Place Matters, Nov 2011.
Talks about the costs of various projects around the world.
US Rail Construction Costs
From the blog Pedestrian Observations
Has a list of recent projects with their cost per km. Despite the
title of the post, most of the examples are from foreign countries.
List of United States light rail systems by ridership (wikipedia)
Nice summary of ridership for over 30 different light rail systems across the country.
Recapturing Global
Leadership in
Bus Rapid Transit
An 80 page report from May 2011 by the Institute for Transportation Development Policy. Includes Pittsburgh Busways as one of the studied systems giving
it a score of 57 on its scale (the Cleveland Healthline gets 63).
A bus
by any other name is still ... a train?.
Discusses the BRT craze and how it has gone too far and is over hyped.
Argues that the Silver Line in Boston (referred to as the "Silver
Lie") has been mostly a failure. Note, however, that the authors are
a light rail advocacy group.
BRT creep
makes bus rapid transit inferior to rail
Argues that it is too easy to make shortcuts with BRT and the end result is a substandard system. Gives several examples.
Rail
Transit vs. "Bus Rapid Transit": Comparative Success and Potential in
Attracting Ridership.
What is interesting are the poor Pittsburgh
numbers (trips/weekday) which are somewhat surprising
in the context of the hype about the Pittsburgh "BRT":
South Busway: Projected 35,000, Actual 14,500
East Busway: Projected 80,000, Actual 24,500 (2010)
West Busway: Projected 50,000, Actual 9,500
These numbers are consistent with many other sources so I believe they
are reasonably correct. The numbers are low by any standards
(e.g. the Boston red line ridership is 226,000 rides/weekday, and the
green line 237,000 -- Boston has about double the population of
Pittsburgh). Of course there could be many reasons for the low
relative ridership, including over hyped original numbers by
politicians, population decline, bad management, or simply that BRT is
not an optimal solution, or at least the Pittsburgh Busway form of it.
Note that the Pittsburgh South Side light rail gets about 29,000
riders per weekday (49,000 estimated), so it is not much better than the
East Busway.
Photo-Report
Pittsburgh West Busway.
An analysis of the West Busway. It is not very flattering.
They only built 5 of the 8 planned miles for the cost of all 8 miles ($320M in 2000 dollars, = $85Million/mile in 2012 dollars).
Ridership is much lower than projected: only 9500/weekday, instead of the 50,000 that were forecast.
"Bus Rapid Transit" Analysis
Analysis of over 20 different existing BRT projects. Since this is on a light rail advocacy site, there is surely some negative bias here.
BRT: Deserving of of its Poor Reputation?
A blog from a Pittsburgher comparing BRT to Light Rail.
Bus Rapid Transit - Not for New Jersey
East Liberty Ridership
Data on load factors for all lines through East Liberty, including all the busway lines. This claims the total busway ridership is 24,369 for the lines that go through East Liberty.
Martin Luther King Jr. East Busway.
A detailed history of the East Busway Extension.
Discrimination Suit
Against PAT.
A law suit against PAT claiming the use of cheaper
busways in predominantly African American neighborhoods and cleaner
more expensive light-rail in white neighborhoods is discriminatory.
Cleveland
HealthLine BRT.
Along Euclid Ave in Cleveland. Length 6.8
miles (but only 4 are truly BRT), cost $195M (2008), about 15K riders/weekday, dedicated lanes for 4 miles, automated traffic signals, reduced car lanes from 2 to 1, raised platforms on the first 4 miles,
special stations, center lanes, tickets vending machines at stations.
East Liberty Station: Realizing the Potential.
A 104 page report by Pittsburgh City Planning on improvements to the East Liberty Busway Station and surrounding area.