Re: Silver Line to Chelsea (Study Meeting)
For only a 3-minute difference in travel times between the street-running and max-build/Urban Ring-recycling dedicated ROW, take the street-running. Those numbers tell us: 1) the Urban Ring ROW in Chelsea-proper on the freight spur and Eastern Route is slow as hell, and 2) the streets west of the bridge just are not congested enough to merit the extra cost.
And it will cost bigtime...those projections for the 2 build alternatives are almost laughably low. If that CTfastrak abomination between Hartford-New Britain is teaching us anything, it's that trying to graft 2 full-width bus lanes onto an active rail mainline and an abandoned 2-track branchline throws up so many unforeseen design obstacles that it's impossible to keep it within cost. That atrocity is costing CT taxpayers 4x its original projections and isn't done bloating yet. Too many speed constraints around rail curves with inadequate road shoulder space to be had, too much land-taking, too many overhead bridges that have to be nuked out of orbit and rebuilt twice as wide for safe passing or signaled on the busway as single-file underneath, and too many grade crossings where the angle and sightlines don't work for a bus that has to brake *and* steer on a non-fixed path.
On this ROW
this driveway on Cottage is a busway no-go. No shoulder space, and the building's loading docks are at the far corner of the building leaving trucks backing out blind onto the ROW all day long. This block before Eastern Ave. and the bridge is impossible without land-taking and leveling 1 of these 2 neighboring warehouses. Or having a one-way road between blocks where buses at Cottage wait at a red light for buses at Eastern to pass, and vice versa. Clusterfuck. The
Family Dollar store abutting the Broadway bridge would have to get leveled to widen that overpass. And either a building abutting the south side of the
Washington St. overpass has to go or the Heard St./Washington intersection has to get cut in order to shiv a busway next to Chelsea CR station. No way to do this without blowing up buildings or doing some sections of signals + single-file buses at the property pinch points under the overpasses a la the design compromises CTfastrak is making. For the price tag the T is quoting here and the scant travel time difference between alternatives, evidence strongly points to going very constrained and very slow through here.
Don't bother. The existing/under-construction Massport haul road nets the biggest time savings. And it does that because it's sitting on what used to be a 4+ track linear Eastie freight yard. All they're doing is scooping out the artificial fill between Brennan St. and the 1A ramps that the DOT dumped in when it demolished the yard to build 1A in the mid-50's, and putting in new retaining walls that re-establish the old property lines of the ex- yard cut. That's why the haul road construction is flying so cheaply under the radar (well...plus Massport is actually competent at running a construction project). Dimensions here are totally different from what's on the other side of the river on the ex- running tracks; the T has a very big sense of false security projecting costs for a Chelsea busway based on costs for the Massport Eastie haul. The land use footprint couldn't be any more different between the two.
Get max usage out of Massport's handiwork and try not to tart up the surface bus stops in Chelsea with any Washington St. excess so that $25M doesn't bloat to $75M...and this is going to be a damn good service that'll be fully underway in a couple years. Press forward with the rest for +3 stinking minutes on the schedules, and we pretty much know how this will play out: 10 years of hype and overpromises, a giant "WTF???" when the price tag gets revised up into 9 figures, residents angry by the land-taking and fucked up traffic patterns the busway design compromises force, another cut-and-run from the state perpetuated on a neighborhood that's already been burned by this before, and heaping mistrust all around. This is "Keep It Simple, Stupid" situation if ever there was one.