413 CRIB (love the name) plus
Z-shaped rail FTW, love it.
Throwing down mini-high platforms for flag stops in most/all of Charlemont, Shelburne Falls, Millers Falls, Erving, Orange, and Baldwinville, plus real stations in Athol and Gardner, would make this a vastly most useful service. Rail hits every one of those downtowns - make use of it!
This is me diverging a bit off-topic, but this hits on an idea that I've had for a while that we might call "Flyers for All": creating an economic investment in small/rural communities by subsidizing rail (or bus) service throughout the year to provide affordable "weekend getaways" for city residents (providing a car-free alternative). Take a small downtown like Shelburne Falls: walkable, with small inns/BnB's, cafes and a few restaurants, sitting along a beautiful river, and walking trails a stone's throw away (walking distance in some cases, but also easily covered by a single van's shuttle service). It would be easy to do a pleasant weekend getaway, with one's S.O. or family or a group of friends.
Shelburne Falls is relatively well-known, but a small place like Baldwinville could also do this -- even a single bed-and-breakfast, in walking distance of the Ware River Rail Trail and (what looks like) the walking path around Depot Pond, could provide an infusion of weekend foot traffic in the small downtown, if fed by a reliable (and affordable) train service.
I see mutual benefits: small towns get more consumer dollars flowing through them and an opportunity to grow a tourism industry based on the inherent natural beauty of the rural landscape, and cities get new access to quiet greenspaces that don't break the bank. (And by using a train [or bus], the "tourism hub" gets spread out across a linear corridor, preventing any one town from becoming the sole destination with raised prices among increased demand.)
The following graphics were from the first community meeting, and not included in the final report, but they do a decent job of illustrating where folks want to go. The Central Segment, which includes Leominster, Fitchburg and Wachusett, notably doesn't have a particularly strong demand for Chelmsford/Lowell for some reason. While I believe these charts are somewhat flawed in including all travel, hence their strong lean to local trips, it's still decent data for planning purposes.
I mean, Lowell and Chelmsford are the same shade of blue as Boston and Waltham. If demand to Boston is sufficient for the commuter rail, then that suggests the same might be true for Lowell?
Well, okay, looking at the On The Map data, the demand to Lowell is clearly lower:
Which ties back to this:
While I'm at it, the other maps from this presentation I think do a good job of illustrating what I think was the single biggest flaw in this proposal - travel demand on this corridor isn't East-West oriented, it's South oriented. Greenfield would be better served by the Valley Flyer than this Northern tier route, and indeed it proved a successful state supported Amtrak services, even launched as it was in the middle of the pandemic. The Berkshire flyer is a little more in the air, but I attribute that to its alignment of Pittsfield to Albany. That 413 Region CRIB actually seems more likely to fulfill regional travel needs.
Right, and this extends to the Central Mass segment as well; the study's Central Segment has as many residents who work in Worcester as in Boston proper. If you add in Cambridge alongside Boston, those combined exceed all destinations except Leominster; but, in turn Worcester plus Marlboro combined are neck-and-neck. All of which is why I gamed out a
Gardner <> Worcester x Worcester <> Boston service plan a couple of years ago.