Teban54
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Following up on the Commonwealth Beacon article mentioned above, TransitMatters also published a blog post with more details and analyses:
Where is Chelsea's subway station?
A few quotes from their post:
Regional Rail and Issues with Chelsea's Commuter Rail Station
Ridership
Unreliability
Use of Tobin Bridge Replacement: Transit vs. Add-a-Lane
Where is Chelsea's subway station?
A few quotes from their post:
Regional Rail and Issues with Chelsea's Commuter Rail Station
TL;DR: Regional rail solves some important issues, but not other equally important ones.The station receives trains infrequently (every 30-60 minutes) that take a circuitous route to Boston, is half a mile from downtown Chelsea, and lacks transfers to Chelsea’s major bus routes, the 111 and 116. These inadequacies may explain why Chelsea’s Commuter Rail ridership is modest, at best, despite having one of the densest walksheds on the network. Frequent Regional Rail service will be transformative in many ways, but Chelsea’s Commuter Rail line serves fundamentally different purposes than its overcrowded bus routes, and will still leave key needs unmet even with frequency improvements from Regional Rail.
Ridership
TL;DR: A "Chelsea subway station" would be a top-tier ridership station, even with today's bus riders alone (and no mode shifts).In fact, Chelsea's transit ridership ranks highly among the entire Metro Boston. If all 14,600 bus riders walked to or transferred at a subway station in downtown Chelsea (similar to Harvard’s role as both a neighborhood stop and a bus hub), it would be among the top 20 rapid transit stations with the highest ridership systemwide, comparable to other major transit hubs such as Forest Hills, Ruggles, Malden Center and Airport. The only stations with significantly higher ridership are: most stations in downtown Boston and the Back Bay neighborhood, as well as Harvard, Central, Kendall/MIT, and Maverick [2].
Unreliability
Also:The SL3 bus is hampered by traffic in the Ted Williams Tunnel and openings of the Chelsea Street Bridge. The Ted Williams Tunnel is notorious: an average inbound trip across the tunnel should be a 2-minute breeze, but a quarter of buses sit through at least 5 minutes of traffic during rush hours. The Chelsea Street Bridge can open as often as ten times per day, and each bridge opening disrupts SL3 service significantly: the section from Airport Station to Eastern Ave is typically scheduled for 5 minutes, but each bridge opening can lengthen this trip to 20 minutes or more.
TL;DR: Buses suck, SL3 included, and even after the redesign.Despite efforts from the MBTA’s Bus Network Redesign (BNR), unreliability persists. According to TransitMatters’ preliminary work on Pokey/Schleppie v2 (to be released soon), “bus bunching [3]” occurs on the 116 more often than any other route as of March 2025, even after recent frequency upgrades under BNR.
Use of Tobin Bridge Replacement: Transit vs. Add-a-Lane
TL;DR: If we're replacing the Tobin Bridge anyway, we should advocate for a transit lane over yet another travel lane.In contrast, adding a transit right-of-way will be a more efficient use of space on the replacement bridge, because transit can move more people in less space than cars can.
[...]
The Manhattan Bridge carries four times as many people by subway as it does by personal vehicles, despite allocating a similar amount of space for both. Likewise, the Longfellow Bridge brings 90,000 riders on the Red Line across the Charles River daily, but only 28,000 cars.