Gillette Stadium Transportatio Improvements

TomG02

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Everyone knows how horrible it is to leave Gillette Stadium. Most streets other than Route 1 are closed off to event traffic — even streets that lead to I-95 like Route 140 and North/Beach/Mechanic St are largely restricted to residents — and public transit is abysmal, with only one train per direction running on weekends. I’d love to see what could be done to change this.
In the current environment where taking transit to Gillette is hardly an option, I definitely think closing off *every* local road is a bit much. Route 1 clearly can’t handle the burden of Gillette’s traffic alone — looking at Google yesterday at around midnight, the road was practically stopped all the way to 95 north and 495, while 140 and North/Beach/Mechanic had very light traffic outside of people with North St entrance passes and those parking in nearby neighborhoods exiting the stadium (despite 140 and Mechanic having easy and direct access to 95). I understand the rationale for doing this (who wants standstill traffic on a neighborhood street at midnight?) but considering that I believe Washington St and 115 allow cars after games as the primary routes for those headed to Medfield, Millis, etc, I don’t see why the others can’t either.
On the public transit front, I’d propose having shuttle buses to and from Mansfield, Sharon and Walpole stations. A positive affect of local streets being closed is that these buses would be allowed to use the streets to access the stations (Washington St to Walpole, 140 to Mansfield and Mechanic to Sharon), making this an attractive option for event attendees. These buses would be timed to connect with the Franklin and Providence commuter rail lines, inbound and outbound, allowing for attendees to park their cars at Forge Park, University Ave, or other park and ride stations, and take the train and shuttle to their events. Shuttles would depart and enter Gillette using the back exit onto North St, avoiding Route 1 entirely, allowing for a more predictable journey.
Additionally, the 34E could potentially be extended to the Walpole/Foxboro border (walking distance to the stadium) by remaining on Washington St all the way to Route 1 on event days. This probably wouldn’t be ideal as it would make an already lengthy local bus route even longer and temporarily remove service to downtown Walpole. However, an extension of this route would allow for frequent service between Dedham, Westwood, Norwood, Walpole and the stadium, and unlike the train to stadium shuttles, would only be a two seat ride for park and riders.
 
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What benefit would that have over the existing special trains that run directly to the stadium?
 
What benefit would that have over the existing special trains that run directly to the stadium?
They would allow for more people to reach the stadium using public transit, and from more locations (the event trains to Providence, for instance, don’t run for all events).
 
They would allow for more people to reach the stadium using public transit, and from more locations (the event trains to Providence, for instance, don’t run for all events).
Why not just run more event trains? Both SS and Providence. They commonly sell out before the day of the event, suggesting the demand is there. Standard CR schedules don't coordinate well with event timing.

And to really attract more customers there needs to be a bar car on the event trains. (I know, it would be a nightmare.)
 
And to really attract more customers there needs to be a bar car on the event trains. (I know, it would be a nightmare.)
There's precedent. The T has 2 cafe cars assigned to the Cape Flyer fleet, and can probably come up with more bargain-basement quick conversions as the single-level fleet gets displaced. The Flyer does sell alcoholic beverages onboard, but the concessions are outsourced to some local vendor so the T doesn't have any involvement other than providing the car setup. Give Kraft that contract (and liability) and I bet it can happen. The game trains have had plenty of onboard B.Y.O.B. activity in their 50 years of running, so I doubt having insanely overpriced concessions would increase the rowdiness factor over what isn't much of a problem today.
 
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Why not just run more event trains? Both SS and Providence. They commonly sell out before the day of the event, suggesting the demand is there. Standard CR schedules don't coordinate well with event timing.

And to really attract more customers there needs to be a bar car on the event trains. (I know, it would be a nightmare.)
I’d assume they aren’t running more event trains because they can’t, due to the line being single tracked. But no non-event trains run to Foxboro on the weekends or to Providence, so it could probably be done.
 
How about running weekend service on the Foxboro Line? Taking the T to Gillette would be more convenient if the Foxboro Line ran a full weekend Commuter Rail schedule in addition to the game trains.
 
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