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Yeah, if you measure from the Forsyth entrance of Ruggles to Huntington/Forsyth intersection (which is further west than the GL station) it's over 1300 feet.
If, on the other hand, a D-E connector is built, and some trains from Brookline and Newton (and Needham) start going up Huntington, then I think the idea has real merit. Relieve some pressure on the inner core, increase access to Back Bay Station, and increase connectivity to Longwood Medical Area.
underground river?!?
If that happens, the tunnel will hit Back Bay anyway, and the point will be moot
I'm confused; I was referring to a connection between Brookline Village and Riverway. How will that hit Back Bay?
Remnants of the Stony Brook.
We've had long conversations on various threads about extending the Huntington Ave. subway to South Station through Back Bay and along the Turnpike...
Could anyone with the know-how estimate how the culvert might affect a future burial of the E Branch? I imagine navigating under the brook would be a bit of a challenge.
Moving any large pipe is a pain, but I don't think the fact that it's a naturally-occurring flow makes it any worse. It's really all about culvert size and flow rate.
Understood. Thank you!
I studied the Stony Brook culvert as part of a class project and I know that many parts of it are at least large enough for adults to walk through while stooped over. I don't know if it's actually that big at Forsyth, but I would expect that the figures are locked away somewhere. Hopefully one day we will have reason to find out.
Re-opening an old discussion about connecting SL Waterfront light rail to Boylston through the Tremont Street Tunnel. All the proposals I've seen here to do that are generally complex in scope. Isn't there a quite simple street-running option?
- Portal out on Essex, which we've pretty much ascertained here is viable given the geometry of the Piers Transitway loop
- Turn southbound on Surface Road, take a lane or two for street running trolley - priority signals are of course a must here
- Where the ramps start, veer onto the un-developable grassy strip between the westbound Pike ramp and Hudson/Curve Street (surface stop for Ink Block area at Harrison Ave?)
- Street run on a short stretch of Marginal to Shawmut, turn north and into a TST portal (Tufts Medical Center station and OL connection) and head north in the tunnel towards Boylston and beyond
Yes, future generations would probably rue the decision to do this on the cheap. But if this has any shot at happening, wouldn't this be the "least-build" option?