As someone who currently lives in Medway, getting into the city can be a huge pain in the ass, and a Commuter Rail extension to Millis would be amazing for mobility in this area. The gap between the Franklin Line and the Framingham Line is kinda large for an area so close to the city, and a lot of people choose to drive in on 109 instead of trying to take the T.
But it's admittedly hard to justify an extension to Millis based on density, especially considering the NIMBY opposition from Dover residents. IMO, any extension to Millis should be routed via the Franklin Line, which would avoid Dover and the Needham Line altogether, in addition to utilizing existing infrastructure like the Framingham Secondary. At Walpole, trains would turn north onto the Framingham Secondary, with a stop in
Medfield Center (instead of an isolated park and ride at
Medfield Junction). Trains would then head west into Millis,
stopping in the middle of town at the Cliquot site. Putting a station at the Cliquot site is probably a better choice than reactivating
the historic station, as Millis has been eyeing a mixed-use redevelopment at the Cliquot site for a couple of years (see attached image). A layover yard could potentially be located
at this disused property, which is currently the end of the tracks to the west of Millis Center. It wouldn't be cheap to extend a branch of the Franklin Line to Millis, but it would be cheaper and easier than an extension of the Needham Line via Dover.
At a minimum, the
Medway GATRA shuttle needs to be expanded with better frequencies. There should be a new stop in Millis somewhere (previously considered but never implemented), another new stop
in the center of Medway at one of the shopping plazas, and a final new stop at
Choate Park or
Medway Community Church, either of which would be a better terminus than the existing stop at Medway Middle School.
Potential mixed-use redevelopment at the Cliquot site:
View attachment 58673
Yeah, I agree that Medfield + Millis + Medway is a better fit for a commuter rail branch off of Walpole. That would also provide access to jobs in Norwood and Dedham, and, if timed right, could provide access to Patriot Place via transfer. Despite linking Boston and Providence, the Providence Line doesn't actually follow the BosWash buildup between the two cities; the Franklin Line does, so it makes sense that an orientation towards it would be useful.
(Loathe as I am to admit it, I do think a PnR at/near Medfield Junction might be necessary; with such low density, there will still be a lot of people driving to the train, and building more parking in Medfield Center would be counterproductive. It looks like there's a... gym? Office building?
Near the Route 27 crossing. Could make for some TOD + parking. [All the moreso if you can acquire the industrial lot on the other side of the street.])
Yeah, I can see some problems, but a neat idea. Any details you'd like to share?
My first though is just that green line trains are slow, so this trip would take a long time for that long distance. The current allowed top speed is what? 35 mph? With trains designed to max out at 50? Those trains aren't comfortable enough for the hour+ trip to downtown. Unless you saw some other practical use case?
The idea isn't super well developed, but yeah, the idea is to convert the extant ROW between Needham Junction and Dover's downtown to light rail. It's actually not that long: only 3 miles.
That sounds overly optimistic. Today it's 40 minutes for the 8 miles from Park Street to Newton Highlands (averaging 12 mph). From there to Millis adds another 13 miles, far more than doubling the length of the line. It would be faster in that section, but averaging 30mph doesn't sound reasonable. The fastest historical average speed I can find on any rapid transit line is 21mph on the Red Line. I think Millis to Park Street would be at least 80 minutes, and it wouldn't be comfortable. Google says that same drive is 45-70 minutes, even in the morning, so the train wouldn't be very competitive.
Riverside-Newton Highlands averages 23MPH today, with a 40MPH max speed. JFK-Braintree averages 26MPH with the same max speed. With wider stop spacing (Probably one stop in Dover, one in Medfield, two in Millis, and two in Medway) and a 50MPH line speed, 30MPH average seems perfectly reasonable. That would mean Newton Highlands-West Medway in around 40 minutes.
I think TheRatmeister is correct to point out that the overall average speed of the Green Line is misleading when applied to a route like this one. The Central Subway is
slow. But when you look at speed on the Riverside Line itself, whose character is much closer to a hypothetical Dover Branch, the speeds are much faster. I just checked, and today the Red Line averages 37 mph between JFK/UMass and North Quincy, despite having an overall average speed of about 19 mph across the whole line; the outer Riverside Line is currently around 23mph but historically has been as high as 25 mph.
But even in the "worst case scenario" where the Dover Branch is slower than Riverside, traveling at an average of 20 mph, the three miles would take 9 minutes, and at 30 mph (comparable to the
D Line between Newton Highlands and Chestnut Hill), it would be just
6 minutes. Even with a forced 5 minute transfer at Needham Junction, I think that would still put the overall journey time at just about 1 hour, which seems competitive to me. (And that's without taking into account GLR improvements like a Huntington Subway, as
@TheRatmeister points out.) Through-running would (I think) get that journey down to 50 minutes.
(I know you two were discussing running time all the way out to Millis, which I do think would be unnecessary when compared to a Regional Rail branch as described above.)
As for the Dover Branch itself, the <10 min travel times means that
single tracking should be sufficient to achieve Regional Rail-equivalent
half-hour headways. Adding a small midpoint passing siding would enable 15-min headways, if desirable.
Electrification would be the big question. I would not want the T to invest in light rail BEMUs (or River Line-style diesel light rail) just for this little line, and I can't really think of any other corridors that would call for rolling stock like that. (Maybe something with the Marblehead Branch? But that's a big reach, and of course located entirely on the other side of the region.) So, yes, full electrification would be needed for this, and yes there are many projects whose priority I would put above this one. That being said, one of these days I'll actually sit down and looking at our per-driver spending on roads, and I'm guessing that 3 miles of single track catenary will actually look pretty reasonable by comparison.
As for
stations: one option is to just have a station in
downtown Dover, probably in the lot current occupied by the
Town Garage.
Historically, there was a station at
Charles River Village (I'm guessing around
here). The 1998 study linked upthread assumed that there would be no station at this location, given its extremely low density, especially compared to Needham's four (!) other stations. I tend to agree; there will almost certainly never be major development here, and the walkshed will remain very light in population.
In favor of a station is the availability of a (small) parking lot (on a lot where it could potentially be expanded), which is otherwise scarce along the ROW. This location also happens to be almost exactly on the midpoint of the line's three miles, so building a simple station could be a parsimonious way to take advantage of potential holds at the passing siding. And the site is adjacent to a 30-acre park along the banks of the Charles (a bit larger than the Public Garden), which could make for a decent leisure destination.