Barely over one year - constructed started October 23, 2020. It helps that subsurface work was largely limited to the platform locations. A lot of BRT projects are basically utility replacement projects with some transit work on top, which is where the actual cost and time go. That's very true for both SF projects. Geary Rapid (phase 1 of Geary BRT) just wrapped up on time/on budget after several years of construction; Van Ness BRT is a never-ending shitshow because there are hundreds of unmapped utilities that haven't been touched since 1956.
I think that is essentially the long term plan. They already are in the design/planning phase for the extension to Ruggles and for a Mattapan Square to Warren St. route along Blue Hill Ave. That would leave Seaver St., about which I've heard nothing, as the only gap.They need to go all the way from Mattapan to Ruggles
It still could be. The bus lanes could be moved to the center of Washington Street and stations established on islands. This would eliminate the double parking in the bus lanes.This is what the Silver Line should have been 22 years ago.
Barely over one year - constructed started October 23, 2020. It helps that subsurface work was largely limited to the platform locations. A lot of BRT projects are basically utility replacement projects with some transit work on top, which is where the actual cost and time go. That's very true for both SF projects. Geary Rapid (phase 1 of Geary BRT) just wrapped up on time/on budget after several years of construction; Van Ness BRT is a never-ending shitshow because there are hundreds of unmapped utilities that haven't been touched since 1956.
Hi all, first post on aB here. I've always been a huge transit fan (mostly buses and subways), just came to Greater Boston this fall for studies and discovered this forum recently. I've been reading many of the old posts and I absolutely loved them!
1. Does MBTA have any fixed or semi-fixed assignments of each bus to a route? In other words, does each specific bus typically run on a single route (or have a fixed schedule of jumping between multiple routes) every day, or are they decided kind of randomly?
2. I've read some extensive discussions here on battery electric buses, and I understand the T already has 5 BEBs for Silver Line. Do they already have concrete plans or orders for more BEBs, or is it still a wait and see situation now?
This project will repurpose Blue Hill Avenue’s existing wide, concrete median island into a pair of exclusive, center-running bus lanes and redesigns Mattapan Square (the southern terminus) to better accommodate bus movements in and out of the Mattapan Red Line light rail station. The project will also include improved pedestrian refuges, protected bicycle lanes, signal changes, and place-making elements.
Is there any chance of this going the extra step from what we have at Columbus Avenue and becoming "gold standard" brt, like what was proposed for 28x? It would be amazing to have built-out prepayment stations, although it seems unlikely given the present proposal.
The busses for the BRT routes would need replacement, but that leaves a lot of routes that could use the curret fleet of busses. Still a helluva lot cheaper than tunneling new LRV or HRT lines.A perfect world would see high level, fair-controlled platforms with full, built out stations covering the center bus lanes, but this is clearly impossible without a massive overhaul of the MBTA's fleet.