I've been reading a lot of the past NSLR discussions here, and thinking: where else would make for a good North/South connection of the two systems, other than connecting North Station to South Station? Other major cities with great regional rail I'm familiar with don't rely on only one tunnel to connect everything up in the city center. So this is more like what NSLR2 might like look after NSLR is built. My proposal:
Route:
This tunnel runs from the maintenance yards in Somerville to Widett Circle. From the north, it runs under Third St in Cambridge, to Wadsworth, then under the Charles. In Boston, it runs under Dartmouth to probably Malden St., depending on where the portals end up.
Connections to other lines:
I haven't figured exactly where portals would be at the north and south rail yards, but instead wave my hands and say it's possible to connect to the lines there.
The Providence Line is more complicated, probably requiring tunneling through the retaining wall north of Roxbury Crossing, under the Southwest Corridor Park. It would descend under the ROW, then curve north into the new Back Bay Station.
And for the Framingham line, I can't figure out easily. That maybe can't use this tunnel.
Why these stations?
Well, they're big job centers. Also, the Back Bay platforms are long enough to have a short pedestrian connection to Copley, so these two stations connect to three T lines.
Also, it's just kinda wild to go by the Charles, look at the skyline around Kendall, and consider that Cambridge has less than commuter rail station (Porter is half in Somerville), and it's on the far other side of town. One of the most often complained about difficult commutes is North Shore to Cambridge. Why not just send some trains to Cambridge?
I am curious if anyone else has thought much about this. If NSRL already existed, what interconnection would you want to see built next? Maybe something further out, but it's hard to find a good path.
Route:
This tunnel runs from the maintenance yards in Somerville to Widett Circle. From the north, it runs under Third St in Cambridge, to Wadsworth, then under the Charles. In Boston, it runs under Dartmouth to probably Malden St., depending on where the portals end up.
Connections to other lines:
I haven't figured exactly where portals would be at the north and south rail yards, but instead wave my hands and say it's possible to connect to the lines there.
The Providence Line is more complicated, probably requiring tunneling through the retaining wall north of Roxbury Crossing, under the Southwest Corridor Park. It would descend under the ROW, then curve north into the new Back Bay Station.
And for the Framingham line, I can't figure out easily. That maybe can't use this tunnel.
Why these stations?
Well, they're big job centers. Also, the Back Bay platforms are long enough to have a short pedestrian connection to Copley, so these two stations connect to three T lines.
Also, it's just kinda wild to go by the Charles, look at the skyline around Kendall, and consider that Cambridge has less than commuter rail station (Porter is half in Somerville), and it's on the far other side of town. One of the most often complained about difficult commutes is North Shore to Cambridge. Why not just send some trains to Cambridge?
I am curious if anyone else has thought much about this. If NSRL already existed, what interconnection would you want to see built next? Maybe something further out, but it's hard to find a good path.