The EIS from Oct 2017 (a
Notice of Project Change, technically) provides a framework within which a station on the UHaul site could proceed to construction.
Meanwhile, W. Medford (my CR stop since 2005, and I moved here expecting a GLX) has a planning status similar to BLX to Lynn--line-on-map concepts and scorecarding, but not EIS-- and been off the radar for far too long (I don't think it was ever in any EIS, or if it was it is too far out of date).
No...didn't even make it to the DEIR. West Med was officially cut after the '05 Major Investment Study shoved it in one of the non-preferred Alts. It was on its last legs there, and would've absolutely breathed its last by '06. Stop roster was formally frozen by '08 with the re-phasing of the Mystic Valley Parkway extension cutting the Winthrop St. intermediate. To be fair West Med was always going to be a very awkward proposition, involving stubbing out on the south side of the grade crossing by the Dunkies parking lot in very tight quarters, having the bus berths spread on both sides of the street for lack of any space to cram a busway, and surging ped activity every 6 mins. in a way that High St.'s crosswalks were very ill-prepared to deal with.
That was always going to be a better one to revisit
after High St. got a big-sized grade separation project, which RUR frequencies will kick off the advocacy for since High St. gates-down frequencies are going to get pretty brutal by late this decade with interlined :15 bi-directional Lowell/Haverhill frequencies, 6 Downeaster round-trips, and the usual 2+ daily freight round-trips. The ROW is 4-track width here because of the extra freight sidings that used to run to the long gone B&M freight station by Canal St., so any sinking of the railbed would frame the retaining walls for quad-track incline by default. On a base CR-only build the width is going to be enough for 2 tracks sandwiching a 12 ft. island CR platform in the pit + a third side freight passing track for both passage of the full-high platform and also to keep those long daily "DOBO" sand freights to Boston Sand & Gravel from stalling on the mainline incline grade (Lowell Line is certified for 92-car freight lashups, so that is prevailing enough concern to get hard-wired into the base build). The width required for all of that on the base build is completely compatible with a GLX extension...in which case the cut is pre-provisioned for 2 x 2 running tracks and the station is fittable by GLX 'eating' the CR island and affording 2 CR main tracks to the side (crossovers before/after the inclines allowing passenger trains to pass the area of freight train stall risk on the incline). Canal St. ends up being eliminated near the start of the incline with a shortish road bridge over the partially-sunk tracks.
If that's what an 'any'-elimination is going to look like, the results are then plug-and-play for +1'ing from MVP to West Med, eating the CR station outright, and then stubbing out some tail tracks by Playstead Field after top of the incline. It all depends on what GLX right now chooses for its MVP station design. Is it going to stick with the original design up on the embankment such that you can twin the Route 16 rail overpass arch and the historic Mystic River arch with lookalike parallel span couple feet adjacent , or are they still considering the scaled-down ground-level solution stubbing out in the UHaul parking lot to save on egress construction. Obviously the original design on the embankment is more plug-ready compatible with an easy extension after the grade separation was built. However, the ground-level station Alt. had distinctly temporary "Amshack-y" feel with all the features cut to save money so it wouldn't exactly be a tragic waste of money if it were displaced back up on the embankment by a permanent structure 20 years later. It's probably going to take 20 years and considerable interregnum of RUR-era aggravation through those High St. crossing gates before that separation project gets cued up. Eastern Ave. Chelsea is still the consensus #1 crossing elimination systemwide for the painful speed restriction it induces and dangerous sightlines amid heavy gas tanker traffic. And the rest of Chelsea cluster (6th/Arlington + Spruce + Everett Ave. + 3rd + 2nd) shared between RUR and SL3/Urban Ring is close behind as primary elimination targets for clownshoes-overall traffic management...or at least a programmed zapping of all except hardest-to-eliminate Everett Ave. adjacent to the station stop. So West Med--in part because of the relative construction complexity of that trench under High St.--is a decided #3 on the pecking order requiring fairly long lead time to hash out.
I don't think the at-grade MVP station necessarily prevents it simply because it is so dumbed-down that its costs will be more-than amortized by ridership whenever it's time to switch back up on the embankment. But that should be a question they're forced to cover their asses with once community meetings start in earnest on it. And since Tufts is swinging the big TOD stick and providing the institutional momentum for this, they need to be on-the-ball about how RUR service levels + the festering sore of those High St. gates under RUR service levels affects the future environment for MVP. If they're made duly aware that grade crossing elimination upstream may be necessary in an RUR-only universe, and that the base design is likely to be GLX plug-compatible any which way, they may assert their institutional opinions differently on the at-grade vs. embankment option and push for more stringent cost control up on the embankment as the best option for their future portfolio.