F-Line to Dudley
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Okay, thanks for the detail. I see how there just isn't enough space for the outbound tracks to have a flying junction, and an at-grade solution makes just as problems as it solves.
So UR trains will have a few options out of Brookline Village. (1) Shoot up Huntington and either loop at TMC/Bay Village, or continue into one of the routings offered by the Bay Village station. (2) Stay on the Riverside line [to Reservoir and short-turn?]. (3) Loop down to Heath Street or Forest Hills.
So I guess the question is one you've brought up, and we've all been discussing. Is there any route to connect Dudley to the UR that's worth the cost. It seems like the routes here are also threefold. (1) Spend a lot of $$ trying to get down Ruggles St to connect UR to Orange, then portal-up on Melnea Cass and join the 'F-Line' to Dudley at the Wash intersection. (2) Lay a lot of street-running track down the length of Heath Street; deck the NEC and run GL above; Transfer for OL at Roxbury Crossing; street run down Malcolm X to loop at Dudley. (3) Build what rail conections we can; let Silver Line-style quasi BRT handle connections between key nodes on the south side.
I guess we can always revisit an UR southern leg if/when the acreage bound between Ruggles/Melnea Cass to the north, Tremont and Malcolm X to the south, Huntington to the west and Washington to the east is up for substantial redevelopment.
The southern half of the Ring has all sorts of problems from lack of contiguous grade separation. It's entirely possible we have to do a north LRT half and a south BRT half. The BRT half going Kenmore-->BV via Brookline Ave., some pick-'em routing to Ruggles and Dudley, Melnea Cass to Southie hitting Newmarket and the Red Line (pick-'em of either hitting Broadway or Andrew), and the Transitway. I prefer Andrew so it can actually serve the Southie neighborhood, but Broadway + bootstrap on the Haul Rd. has a speed advantage; let the study numbers inform that decision on whether more stops or more speed prevails for optimal utilization.
As integrity-of-concept goes the half-and-half works quite well, even if Roxbury and Dorchester aren't going to be totally thrilled with BRT and having to transfer to rapid transit at one of the quadrant nodes (Southie, Dudley + pick-em of local Orange stop, or TBD Huntington/BV/Kenmore). I think in that case you really do need to build more fingers touching the southern neighborhoods: Arborway non-optionally, dust off the 28X BRT proposal Dudley-Mattapan, the JFK/UMass UR BRT spur that sometimes gets kicked around, far better and more frequent Southie-scooping Transitway service, etc.
But, yes...that SW quadrant is doable on the surface out of Heath + RX with the air rights. It might not carry the traffic levels of full grade separation or a complete LRT ring (because SE quadrant is just no-go on anything but BRT), but it accomplishes the destination-pair goals within-cost and lets the money get spent on the Green Line capacity-bearing trunks. It's also fast; based on the bus schedules and improvements from fewer stops, trolley lane prioritization on MX Blvd. and the Huntington light, and the SW Corridor grade separation...I think 10 minutes under peak load is entirely accurate for BV-Dudley. That's the sort of bargaining we should be making. It doesn't happen at all if we dig our feet in on more mega-expensive grade separation. And in fact BILLION-DOLLAR grade separation will flat-out ensure that some of the capacity-increasing pieces of the Green Line don't get built, which harms everything by eliminating so many future expansion routes. Perfect is truly the enemy of good if we're going to get hung up on that stuff. The base build is daunting, but at least we know the transformation to the Green Line current and future will amoritize its cost over the span of decades (if the stations are responsibly built). Can't say the same if we start mandating absolute-perfection appendages.
The difference between Crazy Transit Pitches and ambitious-but-buildable is how much flexibility there are in the demands. Like conceding the SW quadrant to a (pretty brisk) surface route, conceding a straight or boomerang path from BU Bridge to LMA to a cross-platform transfer if a one-seat connection just isn't buildable, and definitely conceding the SE quadrant to BRT on can't-get-there-from-here-on-rails grounds. The result is still stratospherically better and more growth-supporting than the system we have today.