kz1000ps
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Green Line E branch detours eyed for fall
July 7, 2006
E branch service on a half-mile stretch of the MBTA's Green Line is expected to be shut down for three months this fall for track repairs, forcing more than 2,000 daily riders to take buses between Brigham Circle and Heath Street, T officials announced this week.
The $2.3 million project, scheduled from Sept. 5 through early December, will go before the MBTA's board of directors next week. If approved, passengers would take the Route 39 bus, which would add trips to handle the additional traffic.
Drivers along Huntington Avenue from the Brookline border into the city are expected to be affected by both the construction and increased bus traffic. If the project is approved, T officials said, the contractor would have to seek city approval for a plan to accommodate the traffic.
T spokesman Joe Pesaturo said the stretch of track to be replaced is more than 20 years old and highly worn after sharing Huntington Avenue with passenger and commercial vehicles. The project would run from Brigham Circle to the curve at South Huntington Avenue.
Once the work is complete, the T will put new low-floor Breda trolleys, which are more accessible to the disabled, on the E branch.
A meeting to explain the project and answer rider questions will take place Monday from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Tobin Community Center in Roxbury.
MAC DANIEL
Green Line E branch detours eyed for fall
July 7, 2006
E branch service on a half-mile stretch of the MBTA's Green Line is expected to be shut down for three months this fall for track repairs, forcing more than 2,000 daily riders to take buses between Brigham Circle and Heath Street, T officials announced this week.
The $2.3 million project, scheduled from Sept. 5 through early December, will go before the MBTA's board of directors next week. If approved, passengers would take the Route 39 bus, which would add trips to handle the additional traffic.
Drivers along Huntington Avenue from the Brookline border into the city are expected to be affected by both the construction and increased bus traffic. If the project is approved, T officials said, the contractor would have to seek city approval for a plan to accommodate the traffic.
T spokesman Joe Pesaturo said the stretch of track to be replaced is more than 20 years old and highly worn after sharing Huntington Avenue with passenger and commercial vehicles. The project would run from Brigham Circle to the curve at South Huntington Avenue.
Once the work is complete, the T will put new low-floor Breda trolleys, which are more accessible to the disabled, on the E branch.
A meeting to explain the project and answer rider questions will take place Monday from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Tobin Community Center in Roxbury.
MAC DANIEL