Delvin4519
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- Oct 8, 2022
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I suppose Red-Blue is more akin to Boylston Outer in that regard than with a Huntington Avenue Subway.Every transit project pushes other projects further back. By this argument, we should build nothing.
The inability to keep construction costs low is also irrelevant to the discussion for the same reasons. An expansion done at $1 billion per mile is better than no expansions at all, especially when it's not clear whether other projects of similar construction methods can be done at lower cost-to-benefit ratios (and thus may be just as expensive).
If anything, Red-Blue is one of the most equitable expansion projects. Most other extensions (BLX Lynn, OLX, RLX etc) only have localized benefits to specific cities and neighborhoods, but Red-Blue benefits everyone. Blue Line riders get connections to crucial destinations on the Red Line. Red Line riders get much-needed connections to the airport, East Boston, etc. Orange and Green Line riders also see less direct but still substantial benefits, in terms of fewer people using both lines as a tedious Red-Blue connector, fewer people clogging up the downtown transfer stations (including Cambridge riders going to GC and State), and an alternative to MGH.
Red-Blue is only 1,000 feet to 2,000 feet. So Red-Blue is more akin to 2 billion per mile, not 1 billion.