Viaducting all of Framingham for grade separation but failing to provide any cost estimates other than a single "grade separation is expensive, on the order of hundreds of millions of dollars" sentence is burying the lede just a little too far. At least on the Fitchburg Line report with Waltham Center separation they so much as hazarded a guess on a round figure. Totally mum here.
This one could easily cost $⅓ billion at the most conservative paper estimates...nevermind at estimates in the inflation-happy construction world we live in...since it involves:
- Separation of 4 total grade crossings (2 on the B&A main, 2 on the Framingham Secondary)
- A brand new elevated station on a compact footprint with maximal vertical circulation needs
- A mid-viaduct line junction (meaning tri-legged viaduct) and a mid-viaduct interlocking tying into the new/funded Wellesley-Framingham tri-track segment (meaning likely a tri-track viaduct period)
- 3000 ft. total's worth of maximum-height viaduct and embankment work on 3 separate legs of the junction
- Approximately one mile's worth of embankment inclining on the 3 separate legs of the grade separation and re-graded wye legs
- Challenging construction mitigations for traffic flow, since Framingham (unlike Waltham) eschews any sort of orderly paralleling street grid and has massive traffic impacts for any single road disruption...something they have found through piles and piles of studies thinking of ways to improve traffic flow (with and without grade separations) through here.
- Complete reconfiguration of all legs of the Framingham Jct. wye for differing inclines, and having to accommodate daily freight traffic on all legs of the wye and through the Framingham Secondary junction mid-construction.
- EIS'ing concerns for building above the Sudbury Aqueduct, which passes through the wye at the west end of the viaduct and through the west-end incline embankment (and is why doing a depressed cut instead is physically impossible)
- Chewing through paper and design at-cost while negotiating with the infamously planning-hostile City of Framingham. As the TM report notes, they've deadlocked themselves through 40 previous grade separation studies. As well as deadlocking themselves multiple times over on dirt-simple things like MBTA-requested security fencing around the ROW and basic crossing protection improvements.
$⅓ billion if we're lucky. I can't fathom how this boiled down in spite of ^all that^ to such a certainty that progress with "optimization of the grid and crossings" never once entered into their minds as a fallback or interim option. It's presented as total all or nothing. Good freaking luck with an all-or-nothing in this particular spot.