Acela & Amtrak NEC (HSR BOS-NYP-WAS and branches only)

The slowness of Metro-North tracks has to do with engineering incompetence (the tracks were (re)built too close together for tilting) and malevolent dispatching (Metro-North owns and dispatches those tracks, and its default moods towards anything not owned by Metro-North are 'anger,' 'jealousy,' and 'suspicion') - capacity is a complete non-issue today and won't become an issue for a long, long, long time.

Not totally true.

-- Acela tilt restriction has been lifted. That was temporary all along.

-- There is a legitimate train spacing cap because of the incredibly small signal blocks. And that's not going to improve much when the moving-block PTC system goes live next year. Very little can exceed 90 MPH because the overlapping MNRR locals and expresses on all 4 tracks means Amtrak attempting to go faster gets Amtrak bunched up in a clog faster. No amount of crossover dancing is going to help here. It really is that crowded that the speed differential can't be ratched up at daytime load.

You can pack more trains with better state-of-repair like eliminating the movable bridge speed restrictions, finishing the last of the catenary renewal (2017 completion because they take 1 track out of service at a time, but it's on the home stretch), and so on. But they have to proceed in an orderly fashion at low speed. That's not a bad thing. You push the speeds elsewhere so you can deal with reaching the population centers here.

Off-peak when the train spacing is lower...that could push Amtrak's speeds up when moving-block PTC goes live. But higher nighttime and weekend speeds is not a game-changer.

Well, let me make one small qualifier. The flat junction between the tracks to GCT and the tracks to NYP might pose a capacity problem in the future. Rebuilding that junction solves the problem.
It's in the Amtrak NEC Infrastructure Master Plan. Expensive one, but that'll get done.



I mean, maybe you specifically aren't saying that, but I see an awful lot of resistance to the idea of a Hartford-Providence ROW and I honestly don't understand where a lot of it comes from, especially in the context of people seriously discussing a Long Island crossing alternative.
I don't. Quiet corner of CT wants good rail service. Especially the communities that suffer with driving on "Suicide 6" and against the grain of casino traffic on CT2. I can't speak for western Rhode Island, but I don't see a hell of a lot of opposition from Manchester to Willimantic to Plainfield, etc. They even agreed tentatively to the last I-384 Willimantic routing; that was the stupid Army Corps that quashed it and said it would only sign off the alternative that bulldozed the most houses of the available options. The lack of connectivity to Hartford is a real sore spot. That's why they keep trying again and again to find an equitable interstate routing...they know it's important.


Watch Hill crossing is never going to happen. Of all the cross-Sound megaprojects, that's the one that just won't die no matter how many studies say it doesn't work and doesn't do what people think it'll do because of that whole point of skipping too many destinations. And LIRR's track congestion is arguably more spectacular than Metro North's. Maybe bailing out early on the Oyster Bay Branch is doable...but I don't even know how you get as far as the Port Jeff Branch...let alone past Ronkonkoma in all that train traffic. It's going to be a whole other level of nuts on the Main Line after ESA opens. They may cede some Penn slots, but the "transfer at Jamaica" traffic and stuff running thru to the west tip at Long Island City is going to overwhelm. Why do you think the MTA is shitting bricks about its subway capacity in Queens (7 train in particular)?
 
Last I heard of this planned project was that Congress had shot it down, supposedly due to the financial crisis that is still supposedly gripping the country. This was last year sometime during the summer.

Has there been any new developments as of late? I mean, is it still going to move forward? :confused:
 
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I don't. Quiet corner of CT wants good rail service. Especially the communities that suffer with driving on "Suicide 6" and against the grain of casino traffic on CT2. I can't speak for western Rhode Island, but I don't see a hell of a lot of opposition from Manchester to Willimantic to Plainfield, etc. They even agreed tentatively to the last I-384 Willimantic routing; that was the stupid Army Corps that quashed it and said it would only sign off the alternative that bulldozed the most houses of the available options. The lack of connectivity to Hartford is a real sore spot. That's why they keep trying again and again to find an equitable interstate routing...they know it's important.

Well, of course nobody in the areas that stand to benefit the most from this are opposed. (I would certainly hope that nobody in this region is opposed.)

Where I see the opposition coming from is from places like New York and Washington and I frankly can't figure out why.
 
Whats wrong with the widest section , West Haven to Port Jefferson....if you did a immersed tunnel...yes the Fisherman would raise hell but it could be done quickly... The FRA goes via Worcester not Providence with spur service along the Knowledge Corridor.
 
wait there's no way anything but a bore is actually feasible for something that long / deep, right?
 
Correct. The Sound's very shallow and mostly silt. Other than the mileage of tunneling involved it's very ho-hum engineering and construction orders of magnitude easier than the Chunnel. The grades descend so gradually they'd be imperceptible over the middle. Dig loose fill, encase it, dig more loose fill, encase it. Seismic mitigation would stick to a fill scenario and not a bedrock bore, probably with expansion joints between encasement segments that would let it move laterally like a water-tight hose in a 500-year liquefaction earthquake event.

The Watch Hill routing (at least in its I-495 days, but probably also for rail) was always the one that would be some crazy quilt of tunnels under water, at-grade on the islands, sections of short bridges and causeways between nearby islands, and multiple portals. Everything else is a pretty much a shallower, shorter Chunnel under silt.



The problem is entirely about what's being connected.
1) Watch Hill skips entirely too many destinations.

2) The CT shoreline landing points are all very built-up and would require land-taking of dense development (road or rail) to hook it into the existing transportation system.

3) There's problems with whether Long Island (road or rail) can handle the traffic. On road all the canceled cross-NYC expressways hamper what I-495 can feasibly carry.

4) On rail LIRR is a more chaotic proposition because of the day-long traffic pulses from a blur of merging branchline and transfer traffic than the more orderly overlap of New Haven Line local vs. express patterns.

5) There's the problem of what it connects to in CT.
-- On road the Watch Hill routing the 495-to-CT/RI79 hook-in didn't spare I-95 enough congestion.
-- On rail Watch Hill feeds into some of the same segments of the Shoreline that can't be expanded >2 track. And is an awkward backtrack for the commuter- and weekender- oriented short-haul services that would want Long Island-New London access for beaches and casinos.
-- On the Oyster Bay and Bridgeport road routings I-95 was still overloaded because of all the east-west big city destinations having more demand than the US7 or CT25/CT8 expressway hook-ins would've helped for carrying away some traffic to the north.
-- On rail the Oyster Bay and Bridgeport routings hit the same New Haven Line east-west demand to the big destinations that's far > than northbound load-spreading. You'd still be stuck with having at least one of your HSR flanks have to alt-route on the New Haven Line to satisfy the bigger chunk of demand, which isn't a very big improvement over New Rochelle-New Haven.
-- Re: the same tunnel routings the N-S Waterbury and Danbury Branches--and the landbanked Botsford Branch from Bridgeport to Newtown--are too inherently slow, inadequate ROW capacity, and unable to be straightened or bypassed because of the riverfronts they follow and surrounding density right at the mouths of those rivers. CT8's a pretty meandering drive shaped by the Naugutuck River and the high cliffs alongside it; there's no HSR bolt-on to a highway ROW here like there sorta is on the inland HSR routing via I-684 in Westchester County and I-84 Newtown-Waterbury.



Really, the only Sound crossing that avoids as many as 4 out of 5 of these problems is I-91 out of New Haven to Wading River/William Floyd Parkway on Long Island, or Springfield Line to Wading River (abandoned/preserved extra portion of the Port Jeff Line) such that north-south is the primary traffic direction and not east/west I-95 or New Haven Line upon touchdown in CT. In essence, you'd turn the Port Jeff Line into the contiguous Springfield Line south extension and/or (but probably both) doing the Port Jeff @ Wading River to Main Line @ Riverhead connector that LIRR reserved but never built a century ago. Trace the power line ROW's east of Port Jeff through Wading River and to Riverhead...that whole ROW is still 'officially' provisioned and protected by LIRR as a deep-future consideration.


But even that crossing still has these problems:
-- It's the single longest and single most expensive underwater bore of any of the options at 20 miles of tunnel.

-- Problem #2 above rears its ugly head in a BIG way. The touchdown area on the shore right by Tweed New Haven Airport is built up and would take a nuke dropped on the (100% legit) NIMBY objections to get I-91 or the Belle Dock Branch the extra 3 miles down to the East Haven shore.



These were the blockers that time-and-again killed the umpteen highway crossing proposals. Not the engineering. It's where the traffic's going to on either shore (E-W > N-S). Whether there's enough change from where it's going on either shore for the crossing to be much of a reliever, or if it just makes induced demand worse. And whether the feeders to the crossing on the LI side are even equipped to handle it. Rail follows the exact same demand patterns, so the questions muddling the viability of these crossings end up being much the same. You can find ways to justify them most of the way, but it's muddled on the unanswered questions and always seems to fall well short of pulling the trigger.
 
Correct. The Sound's very shallow and mostly silt. Other than the mileage of tunneling involved it's very ho-hum engineering and construction orders of magnitude easier than the Chunnel. The grades descend so gradually they'd be imperceptible over the middle. Dig loose fill, encase it, dig more loose fill, encase it. Seismic mitigation would stick to a fill scenario and not a bedrock bore, probably with expansion joints between encasement segments that would let it move laterally like a water-tight hose in a 500-year liquefaction earthquake event.

The Watch Hill routing (at least in its I-495 days, but probably also for rail) was always the one that would be some crazy quilt of tunnels under water, at-grade on the islands, sections of short bridges and causeways between nearby islands, and multiple portals. Everything else is a pretty much a shallower, shorter Chunnel under silt.



The problem is entirely about what's being connected.
1) Watch Hill skips entirely too many destinations.

2) The CT shoreline landing points are all very built-up and would require land-taking of dense development (road or rail) to hook it into the existing transportation system.

3) There's problems with whether Long Island (road or rail) can handle the traffic. On road all the canceled cross-NYC expressways hamper what I-495 can feasibly carry.

4) On rail LIRR is a more chaotic proposition because of the day-long traffic pulses from a blur of merging branchline and transfer traffic than the more orderly overlap of New Haven Line local vs. express patterns.

5) There's the problem of what it connects to in CT.
-- On road the Watch Hill routing the 495-to-CT/RI79 hook-in didn't spare I-95 enough congestion.
-- On rail Watch Hill feeds into some of the same segments of the Shoreline that can't be expanded >2 track. And is an awkward backtrack for the commuter- and weekender- oriented short-haul services that would want Long Island-New London access for beaches and casinos.
-- On the Oyster Bay and Bridgeport road routings I-95 was still overloaded because of all the east-west big city destinations having more demand than the US7 or CT25/CT8 expressway hook-ins would've helped for carrying away some traffic to the north.
-- On rail the Oyster Bay and Bridgeport routings hit the same New Haven Line east-west demand to the big destinations that's far > than northbound load-spreading. You'd still be stuck with having at least one of your HSR flanks have to alt-route on the New Haven Line to satisfy the bigger chunk of demand, which isn't a very big improvement over New Rochelle-New Haven.
-- Re: the same tunnel routings the N-S Waterbury and Danbury Branches--and the landbanked Botsford Branch from Bridgeport to Newtown--are too inherently slow, inadequate ROW capacity, and unable to be straightened or bypassed because of the riverfronts they follow and surrounding density right at the mouths of those rivers. CT8's a pretty meandering drive shaped by the Naugutuck River and the high cliffs alongside it; there's no HSR bolt-on to a highway ROW here like there sorta is on the inland HSR routing via I-684 in Westchester County and I-84 Newtown-Waterbury.



Really, the only Sound crossing that avoids as many as 4 out of 5 of these problems is I-91 out of New Haven to Wading River/William Floyd Parkway on Long Island, or Springfield Line to Wading River (abandoned/preserved extra portion of the Port Jeff Line) such that north-south is the primary traffic direction and not east/west I-95 or New Haven Line upon touchdown in CT. In essence, you'd turn the Port Jeff Line into the contiguous Springfield Line south extension and/or (but probably both) doing the Port Jeff @ Wading River to Main Line @ Riverhead connector that LIRR reserved but never built a century ago. Trace the power line ROW's east of Port Jeff through Wading River and to Riverhead...that whole ROW is still 'officially' provisioned and protected by LIRR as a deep-future consideration.


But even that crossing still has these problems:
-- It's the single longest and single most expensive underwater bore of any of the options at 20 miles of tunnel.

-- Problem #2 above rears its ugly head in a BIG way. The touchdown area on the shore right by Tweed New Haven Airport is built up and would take a nuke dropped on the (100% legit) NIMBY objections to get I-91 or the Belle Dock Branch the extra 3 miles down to the East Haven shore.



These were the blockers that time-and-again killed the umpteen highway crossing proposals. Not the engineering. It's where the traffic's going to on either shore (E-W > N-S). Whether there's enough change from where it's going on either shore for the crossing to be much of a reliever, or if it just makes induced demand worse. And whether the feeders to the crossing on the LI side are even equipped to handle it. Rail follows the exact same demand patterns, so the questions muddling the viability of these crossings end up being much the same. You can find ways to justify them most of the way, but it's muddled on the unanswered questions and always seems to fall well short of pulling the trigger.

I don't know where Watch Hill is , so I can't comment.

Theres one spot in a side area of the New Haven Yard which would be a perfect area for a tunnel approach... You would have to bore under the built up area to reach the Sea Meet up location , but its in an area which I doubt would cause much NIMBY opposition. https://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ll=41.291173,-72.929783&spn=0.00411,0.006539&t=h&z=18

On the Long Island Side you can go via the Port Jefferson Branch but then you run into the Congested Main Line at Hicksville. I would continue the line down to Medford and then Triple Track and Grade Separate the Ronkonkoma line to Farmingdale and continue onto the abandoned Central Branch and then onto the Hempstead Branch > Lower Montuak line and into Penn Station. This would avoid most of the heavily congested sections of the LIRR network.

Once North of New Haven it does get abit Tricky but not as complicated as you think. I would Triple Track and Grade Separate the line from New Haven to Hartford with Brief 4 Tracked Areas. Hartford to Worcester the Line would follow the Old Manchester Branch to Manchester edge and then follow I-84 to I-90 which would be straighter then just follow I-84 out from Hartford. In Mass I would follow I-90 to Newtown and then merge onto the Worcester Line into Boston. The CT would be pretty easy with the exception of Grade Separation in Downtown Berlin , Meriden and Wallingford which could get messy and the Hartford Station Rebuild. The MA segment would require a lot of tunnels and could be quite costly.

I think the Amtrak Plan using 684 and 84 out to Providence is a mistake and I don't see it being any cheaper then the LI Plan once you factor in all the expensive land that will need to be bought up , the super rich NIMBYs , the Topography and Environmental opposition...its an expensive mess... It also bypasses a large chunk of the NEC population including the secondary corridors... Upgrading and expanding New England's Rail network should connect any missd cities.
 
Watch Hill is the fancy, seaside part of Westerly RI, so it represents tying into the NEC at the CT/RI line (and therefore avoiding all of CT's coastal meanderings, and joining the tracks in RI just as they get straight and fast)
 
Watch Hill is the fancy, seaside part of Westerly RI, so it represents tying into the NEC at the CT/RI line (and therefore avoiding all of CT's coastal meanderings, and joining the tracks in RI just as they get straight and fast)

Keep in mind that if you try to island hop from Greenport through the mouth of the Sound to get to Watch Hill, the Sound is significantly deeper, ~250ft, which would probably require deep boring.
 
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I don't see what the point of crossing Long Island Sound is unless you go Westerly-Greenport.

If you go any other way, you have some or all of the following problems:

1) A wider open-water crossing
2) A less straight routing (ie: more time)
3) Higher expenses due to higher density of development

If you don't cross Westerly-Greenport, then just go Boston-Hartford-NYC.
 
Amtrak has recently said that the Hudson River Tunnel will only last for about 20 more years, then it would have to be replaced by a new tunnel.

This is due to the fact that the tunnel was ravaged and flooded out by Hurricane Sandy. :eek:
 
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I don't see what the point of crossing Long Island Sound is unless you go Westerly-Greenport.

If you go any other way, you have some or all of the following problems:

1) A wider open-water crossing
2) A less straight routing (ie: more time)
3) Higher expenses due to higher density of development

If you don't cross Westerly-Greenport, then just go Boston-Hartford-NYC.

And Westerly-Greenport is no panacea because it skips too much, is the longest and most complicated build over deepest water, and requires land-taking road or rail because the tie-ins (road or rail) are all 2 or more miles inland from touchtown...on both sides.


Honestly, of all the available options East Shoreham/Wading River to East Haven/New Haven is the most attractive for north-south demand that doesn't overload shoreline routes (95 or NEC), and shortest distance to plow from touchdown point to the tie-in points. And that one's still brutal for land-taking on the East Haven side. And we haven't answered the question of whether the Long Island source routes (495 or the LIRR mainline) can handle it.


...and now you know why 9 different proposals--more than half of them proposed multiple times over--all fizzed out.
 
No new developments yet, according to Wikipedia.org;



Future[edit]

As of 2013, the Federal Railroad Administration is drawing up a master plan for developing the corridor through 2040, taking into account various projects and proposals by various agency and advocacy groups. The plan is to be complete in spring 2015.[26]

In 2013, Japanese officials pitched the country's maglev train technology, the world's fastest, for the Northeast Corridor to regional U.S. politicians.The trains could travel from New York to Washington in an hour.[27]

"A vision for High-Speed Rail"[edit]

In October 2010, Amtrak released "A vision for High-Speed Rail on the Northeast Corridor", an aspirational proposal for dedicated high-speed rail tracks between Washington, D.C., and Boston.[28] Projected to cost about $117 billion (2010 dollars), the project would allow speeds of 220 miles per hour (350 km/h), reducing travel time from New York to Washington to 96 minutes (including a stop in Philadelphia) and from Boston to New York to 84 minutes.[29][30]

The proposed alignment would closely follow the existing NEC south of New York City; north of the city, several different alignments would be studied. One option would parallel Interstates 684, 84, and 90 through Danbury, Waterbury, and Hartford, Connecticut; another would follow the existing shoreline route (paralleling Interstate 95); a third would run along Long Island and a new bridge or tunnel across Long Island Sound to Connecticut.

In 2012, Amtrak revised its cost estimate to $151 billion. The 438-mile (705 km) HSR route is planned to be completed by 2030 (Washington to New York) and by 2040 (New York to Boston).[3] :confused:
 
New York to Washington in a hour?!!!

That would probably match the speed of a jetliner!!! :eek:
 
Amtrak has recently said that the Hudson River Tunnel will only last for about 20 more years, then it would have to be replaced by a new tunnel. :eek:

That makes no sense given the age of some of tunnels in this region...
 

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