Good-bye Trams
T commuters will walk the line
By Phil Santoro | May 18, 2006
There are times, albeit rarely, when commuters get what they wish for.
Here's one for all those Wellington Station MBTA commuters who for many years have put up with the less-than-humane conditions of those ''people movers." They're going away.
An executive at National Development, which owns the two electronic trams that shuttle commuters between the Orange Line station in Medford and the nearby parking garage, says his company is getting rid of the high-maintenance people movers this year and will construct a $3 million enclosed overhead pedestrian walkway, which it hopes to have ready by January.
Shortly after the trams debuted in the early 1990s, commuters who use the garage at Wellington Station, near the city's Malden/Everett line, have complained that the trams are unreliable and inefficient. Commuters are often packed into the trams, which are supposed to hold 15 people. The trams also are supposed to be climate controlled, but users say they are often hot in the summer and cold in the winter. That is, when they run, which isn't regularly.
Ted Tye, managing partner of National Development, which also owns the garage and the adjacent Station Landing residential/retail complex, has said in the past that efforts have been made to repair the people movers, which were designed to carry about 1,000 people a day. But at times it has been difficult to find parts or even a knowledgeable repair person. Often the repairs were short-lived. Tye has been made aware of the problems and said he has tried to do something about them since his company took over ownership a few years ago.
At one point, a Starts & Stops reader, frustrated by her experiences using the trams, suggested they be scrapped and replaced by a much less complicated system -- a walkway. And, based on a survey of commuters at Wellington, that's exactly what Tye is going to do.
''When we surveyed people-mover users and found the vast majority had experienced service problems, we knew that something had to be done," Tye said in a news release. ''We have worked closely with the MBTA to develop a creative solution to a very complex situation."
Tye said in an e-mail that his company surveyed 240 Wellington commuters in 2004; 96 percent said they personally experienced a problem with the trams and 91 percent said they would prefer a walkway.
The 760-foot walkway will be built on the existing tram structure and will resemble walkways found at airports, Tye said. ''We were very limited in terms of the design which could be accommodated by the existing structural system. The skywalk was the best solution to provide reliability and safety for those using the connection to the MBTA."
The construction schedule has been established to minimize inconvenience to commuters, Tye said. Most of the walkway will be built offsite and brought to Wellington Station to be finished. Demolition of the tram system will begin in late summer. The skywalk will be constructed throughout the fall. Beginning in mid-August, the MBTA will provide temporary bus service between the garage and the station. Additional information will be available to commuters several weeks prior to the change in service.
A moving sidewalk will not be part of the walkway because of limitations at the site, Tye said. ''The project needs to be built on the existing structural steel system," he said. ''The current tram is built over an active rail yard in which the train tracks are spaced closely together, limiting the ability to excavate for any new structure. The current structural system was designed and spaced so as not to interfere with the rail yard operation. The new skywalk also needed to be designed to work within the structural design loads that could be accommodated by the existing structure. When calculating such items as weight and wind loads, engineers found that it was impossible to be able to include a moving sidewalk in the project."
At 760 feet, isn't it a long walk? ''Well, it is certainly longer than using the tram," said Tye. ''However, the tram was really designed to work in a southern climate or in an enclosed tunnel. About one-third of the people surveyed had actually been confined at some point in a disabled car. The cars were designed to stop automatically in the event of heavy wind, icing, power surges or outages, and other events. When a problem occurs, the cars stop in place, often in the middle of the tracks.
''When they stop, the Fire Department needs to be called to remove passengers. There have been frequent events of understandably frustrated passengers taking things into their own hands and trying to evacuate the cars in the middle of the tramway. We had a limited number of design alternatives available to fix the situation, and the best way to provide both reliability and safety was the skywalk. It will require the equivalent of walking a couple of city blocks, which is what most people do when they get off the T. Hopefully the safety and reliability benefits will outweigh the walk. While the new walk will be fully handicapped accessible," he said, designated handicapped parking spaces ''are also available adjacent to the platform at Wellington Station."
A moving sidewalk may have made for a more convenient way for commuters to travel between the station and the garage. But there is no guarantee it would be without its own problems. How many times have we encountered nonmoving sidewalks at airports or broken escalators at T stations?
''While no solution is perfect, commuters who have been commenting on this have been heard and substantial effort has gone into designing the system," Tye said. ''I think it will be a great improvement to the station."
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