Teban54
Senior Member
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I'll start with this one by explaining why I feel a Nubian subway (whether via I-93, Harrison or Washington) is a necessity in the long term. Most of these points were raised in the discussion starting from here.With the exception of some of SoWa, the Broadway-Nubian route serves basically the same areas. The only people who would see a difference would be those who are starting/ending a journey at South Station already, but for those people a light rail line along Washington St would serve them. I don't think a line along Albany/93 is a substitute for a line along the Washington St corridor, nor is a line to Broadway and Seaport. Given this, it seems silly to build two essentially parallel routes, except one has a much worse walkshed due to its location along 93, that would have to share traffic between them, as opposed to a pair of lines serving somewhat different groups of people.
- Surface light rail on Washington is good for intermediate neighborhoods, but terrible for Nubian, where majority of the ridership comes from. The many intersections (and LRT's worse speed for handling them) mean you won't see much time savings from SL5, and it's really not "equal or better" than the El. People might still end up taking the bus to Ruggles.
- The low reliability of a streetcar branch also means you can't increase frequency meaningfully before bunching becomes commonplace, so it hurts capacity as well. Current SL4/5 have 4-5 min average headways during PM rush, better than any GL branch.
- For GL Reconfiguration, having a high-reliability, high-frequency faucet into Tremont is important due to reverse branching from Huntington. If you want to boost service on the important Huntington-SS-Seaport corridor, additional frequency for Bay Village-Park-GC-NS has to come from Nubian.
You did make a good point about walkshed, but:
- The Nubian subway has a specific focus of offering a speedy ride to Nubian (and leaving local demand for Washington streetcar).
- It also serves BMC, a valuable node in itself that's just a little bit out of the way from Washington.
- Widett Circle has worse walkshed than a station at Albany/E Berkeley.
- And I mean, you can build a subway under I-93 and still hit Broadway, if you really prefer Broadway over South Station. Compared to a standalone Widett-Broadway grade-separated route and a Washington streetcar, this alternative essentially gives you three service patterns for little additional cost (and much better RL transfer).
FWIW, I'm not concerned about Regional Rail lines at Ruggles and further north. The Huntington-South Station-Seaport subway essentially serves as a "semi-ring" in this case, and if you're building a Ruggles-Nubian subway (whether it continues underneath LMA or not), extending some form of service east to BMC seems like a piece of cake. So the specific demand patterns relevant here are: (Ashmont, Braintree, Fairmount, Old Colony) - (Nubian, BMC, maybe Ruggles and LMA).I'm referring to the debate of Broadway vs South Station here. I understood your point arguing for South Station over Broadway to be that the line would connect with all regional rail routes (Assuming NSRL). My counterpoint is that with a RR infill station at Widett Circle, a line from Ruggles to Broadway would also connect with almost all, or with an extension to Kenmore/Lansdowne all of, the lines as well, essentially negating the advantages of a link to South Station for this purpose.
To get to Nubian and BMC, any alignment south of South Station has to choose between missing Regional Rail (don't forget pseudo-rapid-transit Fairmount) or missing Red Line (or having a highly inconvenient transfer to either). South Station gets you both. Also, this distance is also short enough that I feel buses may be a better solution.
To get to LMA, there's always the option of transferring to the Huntington subway at South Station. Yes it's circuitous, but Broadway-Nubian-Ruggles-LMA is also quite a zigzag (and again, choice between RR and RL). You need to really get down to Andrew, Newmarket and JFK/UMass to offer significant distance reductions, at which point it feels more like a branch. I know @Riverside has long been skeptical that any circumferential solution for this will be competitive with the SS-Huntington transfer, and while I plan to look into this further, right now I'm not sure if the cost of specifically building this connection can be justified (especially with no ROWs). That's why my original proposal basically treats this as a byproduct of the Nubian subway (or a 50-50 purpose), not a dedicated circumferential connection.
(Thinking about it now, I wonder if there will be value in shifting Newmarket further north to Southampton St, such that it can be better aligned with a route to Andrew. Old Colony remains an issue, though. I guess the main point is: If we're building a dedicated line between southside lines and LMA, it's probably more worthwhile to look at connecting at Newmarket and JFK/UMass.)
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