MBTA Construction Projects

Re: T construction news

^^ Then why bother with the giant glass shell?

So you can go from the subway to the mini shelters without getting wet, and then from the shelters to the buses without getting wet.

Glass canopy = rain and snow protection
Shelters = wind and cold protection.

The biggest shortfall is that the glass does not extend to where the 57 - the most popular route - stops.
 
Re: T construction news

^^Wait, are you really saying you think this is a good design, even if the real bus shelters are kept in place?
 
Re: T construction news

^^Wait, are you really saying you think this is a good design, even if the real bus shelters are kept in place?

Im saying that even in "enclosed" stations like Wonderland, you have bus shelters.
 
Re: T construction news

Well there you are, now it's all explained.
 
Re: T construction news

From the pictures it looks like those pieces of glass will be rotated...


I believe they are infilling the glass enclosure now, and the glass fins that we have been seeing for the last few months are to help with lateral deflection.

Hope they accounted for the snow load though since in the winter I imagine that it will be a great big igloo, as I imagine that the glass ribs will catch quite a bit of snow.
 
Re: T construction news

I believe that this is the best place to put this, considering it is more general than anything else:

Wintertime repairs scheduled for Park St.

Riders will be forced to use single stairwell at busy T station

This winter, the MBTA will shut down the Park Street station?s outbound headhouse to replace its deteriorating stairwell, which has already had temporary footing installed but officials say is in desperate need of long-term repairs.

The project, expected to cost $1.4 million, will include demolishing and replacing the cast iron stairs and risers, which have become ?severely corroded and cracked,? according to Charles O?Reilly, the MBTA?s assistant general manager of design and construction.

?This will cure a potential public safety hazard,? O?Reilly told the MBTA Board of Directors earlier this month.

The new stairwell will be comprised of three sections, making any future repairs easier and giving the T the option to not close the headhouse to riders again during those repairs.

Park Street station is the T?s fourth-busiest in the system, with an average of 19,350 customers entering the station on a typical weekday. The work will involve closing down the headhouse to riders for more than a month starting in early January, and Transportation Secretary Bernard Cohen asked whether the station?s other stairwell to the street could handle the increased volume closing down the other headhouse would bring.

But O?Reilly assured the board the stairwell could, adding that extra staff would be designated at the station to direct riders around the work and keep a safe flow to customers in and out of the station.

LINK
 
Re: T construction news

That's a huge amount of money for a staircase.

I have some "good" news. State is going to be done by January!

...2010

Elevator service will be operational by November!

...2009

That's straight from the top.
 
Re: T construction news

Park Street station is the T?s fourth-busiest in the system, with an average of 19,350 customers entering the station on a typical weekday.
Which three are busier?
 
Re: T construction news

Hope they accounted for the snow load though since in the winter I imagine that it will be a great big igloo, as I imagine that the glass ribs will catch quite a bit of snow.

Good thought.

Someone really needs to send some pictures of this atrocity to Kunstler.
 
Re: T construction news

Which three are busier?

Just a guess, but North/South stations and Govt Center? Or Back Bay? That said, prior to this article I would have guessed Park to be #1.

Also, won't the exit/Charlie entrance @ the end of the Westbound platform be open?
 
Re: T construction news

Just a guess, but North/South stations and Govt Center? Or Back Bay? That said, prior to this article I would have guessed Park to be #1.
I bet it actually is, and its #4 ranking is the outcome of some faulty statistical criterion. Nearest competitors might be Downtown Crossing and Harvard.
 
Re: T construction news

I think the ranking is based on the number of riders entering a station as a point of origin, not the number of riders using a station for connections / transfers.
 
Re: T construction news

I was just thinking...

If the red sox win, will heavy items be breaking the new glass?

IMG_6198.jpg


IMG_6199.jpg
 
Re: T construction news

I think jass was referring to the inevitable celebration that would come following another World Series - particularly if it was at Fenway Park. If a mob was to get out of hand, I could see this glass being damaged.
 
Re: T construction news

Fields Corner finished

The MBTA officially unveiled the new Fields Corner station yesterday, a $30 million project that is many years in the making and part of a larger vision to upgrade aging stations on the Red Line.

The improvements include a new busway, station lobby, larger platforms, lighting and a updated communications and security system. The station, with new elevators and an escalator, is also now fully accessible to riders with disabilities.

The local community has fought for station improvements for years, and politicians such as Sen. Jack Hart and Rep. Martin Walsh acknowledged it hasn?t been an easy 16 years. The station was first built in 1928 and hasn?t had a massive overhaul until now.

?I can?t believe what a difference this will make ... for the people of Fields Corner,? said Tom Gannon of the Fields Corner Civic Association, who has been lobbying for the project over four generations of MBTA general managers.

It is now the second station to be completed as part of a $100 million Red Line rehabilitation project. The T reopened Savin Hill station in 2005, while work on Shawmut station is nearly complete and the new Ashmont station is slated to finished next year.

On an average weekday, the Field Corner station handles about 5,000 riders between those entering or exiting the subway or buses.

LINK
 
Re: T construction news

5,000 isn't that big in the grand scheme of things, is it? Glad this is done though, anyone have any pics?
 
Re: T construction news

I traveled out to Fields Corner today, to take a look at the Fields Corner Station and have a peek at the DNA Lofts building on Dorchester Avenue.

The Fields Corner Station is outstanding. Excellent selection of materials and design. Don't get me wrong, it's not the second coming of Grand Central, but it is a stellar project in its own right.

The adjacent retail plaza is also in the midst of a much needed facelift. Granted it could be put to far, far better use, but it is at least clean and welcoming now.

The only downside to the visit was the hideous three deckers. I really want to like them, but they are so worn out and tired looking. Those massive front porches all look like they are about to drunklenly tip over onto the street. They really are just a visual blight.

Of course this area needs a radical rezoning to take advantage of the $30 million transit investment. It makes no sense to have one story retail and three family homes scattered around such a wonderful transit node.
 
Re: T construction news

Here are two more pieces about Fields Corner, both by the Dorchester Reporter. One is a more detailed article regarding the station's completion, and the other is a timeline for some of the more recent Red Line restoration projects. First, the article:

Next stop: 21st century in Fields Corner

By Pete Stidman
News Editor


Great fanfare and a soon-to-be-cut bright red ribbon greeted commuters at the Fields Corner Red Line Station on Tuesday morning. Many of them sported confused looks as they mounted stairs to and from the station's new subway platforms - part of a $30 million station renovation - as they spied the governor, the mayor, MBTA general manager Daniel Grabauskas and every elected official in the neighborhood stepping up to a podium in the crosshairs of several TV cameras.

"I saw general manager Grabauskas and [state transportation secretary Bernard] Cohen get off the train this morning," state Sen. Jack Hart said to the crowd&emdash;praising Grabauskas' hands-on approach. "I thought it was a ceremonial first ride at first, I did. But it wasn't. They came here on the train from Beacon Hill."

Grabauskas himself thanked neighborhood activists for their influence in the new station's design, naming Tom Gannon, president of the Fields Corner Civic Association, Sandi Bagley, co-Chair of the Fields Corner Station' working committee and several others.

Gov. Deval Patrick plugged the new station's greater accessibility for people with disabilities, state Rep. Martin Walsh called Grabauskas a wonderful general manager "regardless of what you read in the newspaper," and Mayor Thomas Menino made a timely point, hailing Viet-AID's nearly completed project across the street from the station at 1460 Dorchester Ave.

"Transit-oriented development, it's good for our city, it's good for our environment," Menino said. "Let's continue to work together to make it happen."

The comment comes just a month after another Vietnamese-American Initiative for Development [Viet-AID] project - Bloomfield Gardens, on the opposite side of the station on Geneva Avenue - was delayed when several abutters argued against its proposed height and density at a Boston Redevelopment Authority meeting.

When Gannon took the microphone, he highlighted the vigilance needed by communities to push such projects along.

"In 1992, we started working on issues here. Now those issues are down to a minimum. We have been following this ball for 16 years," Gannon said, also touting the fact that the first Guinness beer was poured at the Blarney Stone bar in 1965 - a local claim to fame.

Rep. Walsh also sounded a historical note from the podium, recalling when members of Dorchester's former delegation in the State House, with names such as Thomas Finneran, Jim Brett, Paul White and William Bulger, first managed to get $67 million in the budget for the renovation of all four Dorchester stations back in 2000.

Rep. Marie St. Fleur added that a vote on the budget item - which slowly grew through multiple votes and MBTA appropriations to $100 million and made Ashmont Station's reconstruction a separate line item backed with a private developer's project (which became the Carruth Building) - was one of the first votes she took as a state lawmaker.

The Fields Corner renovation included a new station lobby, new platforms that accommodate six-car trains, new elevators and escalators, a new lobby and new bus ways, among other improvements.

With similar upgrades, Savin Hill station re-opened in 2005. A Shawmut Station rehab is largely complete, save the repair of some drainage problems at track level. And the T hopes to complete the Ashmont Station reconstruction next year.

Aside from maintenance concerns and a few details, many neighborhood leaders said they were happy with the project's results in Fields Corner.

"It's a world of difference from what it was years ago," said Lee Adelson, president of the Trinity Square Neighborhood Association, chair of the Fields Corner Main Street board, and also a member of the Fields Corner station's oversight committee. "We toured all the other stations and looked at what they had and what we didn't have. We didn't get everything we wanted. But we got just what we needed."

Although the working committee for the station rehabilitation has dissolved itself, Ed Crowley, a member of the Fields Corner Civic Association who also works days inspecting construction sites, said there is still reason to advocate a little before Barletta Construction and its sub-contractors leave the site entirely.

Asphalt in the station's new bus ways, installed by a sub-contractor, is buckling in several locations. The problem is likely due to an error in how the asphalt was bonded to the concrete underneath it, said Crowley.

In at least two spots viewed by the Reporter, heavy bus tires have re-molded the asphalt so much as to reveal the concrete underneath. That concrete underneath was apparently not scarified or torn up as city streets routinely are before they are repaved. In other locales on the bus way, the asphalt is being pushed up onto the sidewalk or into storm drains. The wavy road could provide a challenging job for snow plows this winter.

Crowley also looked to the bridge over the bus way, as well as the span across Dorchester Avenue, both of which fell outside of the project's purview. Both, with their crumbling concrete and rusty steel, provided a stark contrast to the brilliant shine of the new glass and metal station.

"That's a story for another day," he said.

LINK

Here is a black and white photo of the new station platform (also credit the Reporter for this):

FIELDSStation%2039-08.jpg


And here is the timeline:

Long track led to Red Line restorations

By Bill Forry
Managing Editor


Although civic leaders had long called for action, the present transformation of Dorchester's Red Line stations dates back to well organized grassroots activism in the late 1990s. The now dormant Dorchester Allied Neighborhood Association (DANA) tapped into emerging e-mail chains to ferment an alliance of dissatisfied T-riders along the spine of the Dorchester Avenue corridor. The activists' focused lobbying kept lawmakers lazer-locked on their own efforts to push through bond money to fund the T improvements. A succession of MBTA general managers - Robert Prince, Michael Mulhern and Daniel Graubuskas - were regularly quizzed about their own internal efforts to prioritize the Dorchester project, deemed in the Reporter and elsewhere as the most decrepit branch of the MBTA system. In 1999, a DANA-sponsored meeting featuring Prince and other MBTA and elected officials drew hundreds to the Murphy Community Center. That meeting may have been the tipping point - as state officials got an ear-full and an eye-full from residents in the flesh.

Here are some of the milestone moments in the Red Line restoration movement.

1998

House of Representatives approved first bond bill to fund improvements to the four Dorchester stations, but the bill stalls in State Senate.

1999

MBTA chief Robert Prince, then a Dorchester resident, tells the Reporter that the prospects of rebuilding Ashmont, Shawmut, Fields Corner, and Savin Hill stations "looks good." "Short of my demise, we're going to put things in place that are irreversible," Prince said.

February 2000

In a community meeting organized by DANA at the Murphy Community Center, several hundred turn out to tell Prince - and other state officials - of their demands for better quality stations.

August 2000

MBTA Board approves Prince's request to begin design work to rehabilitate Savin Hill station - regarded as the stop in most dire need of rehabilitation - although bond bill has not yet been approved by governor.

Fall 2000

State legislature - with the key support of Speaker of the House Tom Finneran and the sign-off of Gov. Paul Cellucci - approves approximately $66 million in a transportation bond bill to renovate and rebuild the Ashmont, Shawmut, Fields Corner and Savin Hill MBTA stations.

February 2001


Meeting at Cleveland School in Fields Corner serves as kick-off planning meeting for the re-design of the four stations. Design advisory committees (DACs) are formed to give oversight to each of the four projects.

October 2003

The renovations at Fields Corner, Shawmut, and Savin Hill stations get symbolic start with a groundbreaking ceremony for the now $67 million project. Beginning with a press conference at Fields Corner Station, transportation and elected officials joined locals in riding Red Line trains to Shawmut, where Epiphany School students met them, and then to Savin Hill, which Walsh said was "the last station on the entire spider to be fixed," referring to the web-like MBTA rail map.

June 2005

Modernized Savin Hill station re-opens.

August 2005

A construction contract is awarded to Barletta Heavy Division, Inc. for the for complete station reconstruction and modernization at Ashmont Station, bringing total cost of Dorchester Red Line rehab over the $100 million mark.

July 2006

Demolition begins at Ashmont Station. Work continues at this date and the project is expected to be complete in 2009.

May 2008

Community celebration marks the dedication of Shawmut Garden, which has replaced the foreboding tunnel cap above the T stop of the same name. Work is now all-but complete at the underground station, which like Fields Corner and Ashmont, has remained open throughout most of the project.
 
Re: T construction news

"In at least two spots viewed by the Reporter, heavy bus tires have re-molded the asphalt so much as to reveal the concrete underneath. That concrete underneath was apparently not scarified or torn up as city streets routinely are before they are repaved. In other locales on the bus way, the asphalt is being pushed up onto the sidewalk or into storm drains. The wavy road could provide a challenging job for snow plows this winter."

Bus stations should always, ALWAYS be made of concrete, not asphalt.
 

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