Has there been any talk for where the revere T station would be built? I don't think it makes sense to put a station near wonderland, the neighborhood is already served by the blue line and it's too far for easy transfers.
South Salem makes a lot of sense though.
The only B&M-era station in Revere was by MA 145. That site is basically useless today so long as there's screaming high-speed parkway traffic surrounding it on all sides from 16 & 1A careening into the rotary. And thus it has never ever been a modern study target because walking access (hell, even practical bus stop access) is downright futile amidst the current road config. *Maybe* in some future universe where you've converted 1A to a full grade-separated expressway, changed the 16/1A interface into a full interchange down by Railroad St., enormously consolidated all the ramp spaghetti out to the rotary by getting rid of the 16 carriageways entirely, and busted 16 between the 1A interchange and 145 intersection down to calm city street...would you have a set of surrounding conditions ripe for a a transit stop. Because then the transit stop wouldn't be 1/8th as terrifying to reach from all sides. But that's an awful lot of if's and an awful lot of other parties that would have to pre-facilitate a taking out of the garbage to make the RR location in the pit the least bit inviting for a local station.
No...this is the 'Zombie Wonderland' proposal making its
nth comeback. It's a born loser. Noboby, but nobody, will ever use that to make transfers with that walk. It doesn't even ask the right set of questions, because BLX-Lynn fixing Lynn bus terminal is the key to unlocking last-mile North Shore frequencies...not a CR station. It worsens induced-demand parking at that induced-demand albatross of a garage. The City has given up the ghost on any Wonderland TOD. It's all Logan valet lots and an ill-advised big box strip mall across the street that'll be guaranteed vacant in 2 years. And the vacant NECCO factory is now a way bigger neighborhood troubleshooting problem than the stalled-out redev around the former dog track. Suffolk Downs is the only TOD that matters to Revere now; Wonderland is nothing but a write-off until they execute on SD. TransitMatters
should be parsing these flagging local barometers, as the timing for a CR station would never be worse than now with the ashes-to-ashes/dust-to-dust state of area TOD. Prior studies always rated it pure shit on ridership, which should've been enough to keep this zombie proposal from resurfacing again. But frequency increases are not going to change the fact that Wonderland has never been less of a (non-parking) destination than it is right now. How did this make first-wave implementation amid that?
By TM not adjusting out of abstract-world...that's how. They're still assuming that TOD potential is statically extant here. It's not static at Wonderland...it has in 12 years' time ebbed itself into a crater for a loooong hibernation, and been massively eclipsed on the priority pile because of Suffolk Downs going on the board. Local trending matters the world here, but they're assuming it doesn't and that the TOD bona fides are static and everlasting. It
might rebound, but not for 20 years at least because of the bigger fish Revere has to fry. So how does this end up landing on TM's first-priority implementation plan in spite of that? By never adjusting to local trends.
Regarding the Salem tunnel extension, are they planning a cut and cover? There would be huge negative effects on downtown Salem during construction unless they're able to keep Washington St and Bridge St open.
I'm not even sure why this is in the cards. If you simply double-tracked the Salem mainline platform and reanimated the Peabody Branch turnout from inside the tunnel to a separate Salem platform for short-turns (even if just as Salem and not continuing to Peabody), the tunnel isn't a problem--AT ALL--for these headways. B&M used to run asstons more service through here. If you have throttles at both portals in the form of DT platforms at Salem (mainline) and South Salem, the tunnel is reduced to a small scoot between station dwells. The Peabody Branch turnout, in turn, cuts out before the Salem platform allowing thru traffic into the northside's #1 ridership station with BOTH mainline platforms occupied.
It's this abstract-world insistence that Beverly is a "justice" target that's forcing them to have to look at doubling-up the tunnel, because in that arbitrary decision the Peabody-side turnout @ Salem-proper gets devalued in their minds for not thru-routing to Beverly. Well...Beverly doesn't do Salem's ridership for one. And the swing bridge during peak boating season is its own limiter. Expanding the tunnel seems to be a way of artificially stretching out the meets around swing bridge openings to force-feed this Beverly integrity-of-concept. And I'm not sure there's much integrity in that concept if you ID Salem as its own future semi-breakaway North Shore bus depot where the last-mile Yellow Line frequencies are significantly picking up the slack all-around and actively
diverging Salem from Beverly as the ever-moreso #1 station with-a-bullet. So Beverly 'justice', the bridge, the tunnel...it's not clear in the slightest that ANY of those are real-world constraints vs. multimodally working the whole map here: frequency increases to the limit of the swing bridge AND bus increases (where all the area med offices will surely supply buff ridership).
But...TM is extremely target-fixated on that 'justice' target for Bev, so no other options are being considered. In reality there's a wide spread of options, and lots of options for the installment-plan implementation. But if you cling to the abstract that it's a failure if each and every frequency hitting Salem isn't also hitting Bev Depot 1:1...yeah, that's threading a wormhole where expanding the Salem Tunnel looks like a non-optional touch. Where in the real world tapping actual
breadth of options we might not EVER need to consider that drastic or disruptive.
And a public private partnership with north shore medical center is fantasy. It's a mile from the commuter rail tracks, I don't see them forking over money.
More importantly, I
could see them forking over the money for an expanded array of bus routes run out of a Salem mini-hub which cover the spread of CR hits (Montserrat, Bev Depot, and Salem Terminal). But integrity-of-concept seems to be precluding that here, so TM's only presenting the bigger-leap RUR version.
That's depressingly self-limiting, because I don't know how you goose the top-line ridership of these enhanced frequencies in the trans- 128-to-495 region without
explicit overtures to massively expanding the last-mile bus options. I mean, that's quite literally what's buttering TM's bread here. Whether connecting buses--specifically infill between the diffuse outer regions of the Yellow Line and the nearest RTA's--is out-of-scope for the main mission statement here, the fact that they are dependent on it means that an implementation plan has to spell out some actionable standards for ridership-piping connections at these stations. Especially with them having such an appetite for adding
more stations. At minimum they need this document to spell out the handoff of what types of last-mile connections RUR stations need so the towns and RTA's can immediately formulate their own action plans based off some clear bucket list and follow the right marching orders for infilling their side of the network.
This isn't saying nearly enough on what the last-mile marching orders are. "TOD and public-private and blah blah. . ." with voice trailing off is, as you correctly surmise, not going to work when the very name-check of North Shore Med/Bev Hospital puts a blinding spotlight on an inhibiting last-mile problem. Can a supposedly authoritative document pretty-please acknowledge the greater transit modal universe that's going to have to work hand-in-hand to realize this vision???
WHAR local bus, WHAR?!?!