Central Link Update – Nov 15th, 2007

These observations are from the Sound Transit Lunch Bus and members of construction crews that I have talked with the past few days. I rode the Sound Transit Lunch Bus on November 15th, 2007. It was a very pleasant trip and throughly enjoyed the MCI D4500 coach we had for the trip. Just needed a coffee, newspaper, and a place for laptop and I’d be set!

Rail is complete from Pine Street Tunnel located in the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel to Beacon Hill East Portal/Airport Way.

Rail is complete from Beacon Hill West Portland/MLK Way aka Mt. Baker to Tukwila International Blvd Station.

Rail is staged for Tukwila to Airport segment at Sea-Tac Airport. Guideway will be finished from Tukwila Intl. Blvd to the Airport by the end of the year. OCS poles have also been staged near

Foundation for Airport Station is finished and build up is in progress.

Central Link 101-110 is on the properly at the Operations and Maintenance Facility (unless it ST 108 was the last one.. thought I saw 109/110 sitting outside as well)

According to ST Public Relations, rail halfway completed in Southbound tunnel. The Emerald Mole/Tunnel Boring Machine is scheduled to come out of the Northbound Tunnel in mid-December. The TBM has been chewing 35-55 feet per day with good soil content.

Wire is strung from Tukwila Intl. Blvd Station to I-5/Southcenter and Martin Luther King Jr Way near Alaska St to Boeing Access Road, leaving I-5 to Boeing Access Road and Alaska Street to West Portal and through the tunnels remaining for wire.

Testing is scheduled to begin Spring/Summer 2008 from the O&M and Tukwila Intl. Blvd Station.

For more images of Central Link, including the Lunch Bus photos, check out my flickr…. http://www.flickr.com/photos/brian_macster

Seattle Streetcar in Testing

Coming to the City of Seattle in less a month, the Seattle Streetcar running from Westlake Center to Fred Hutchison Research Center in South Lake Union.

Here are some images of the Seattle Streetcar in testing on Thursday, November 15th, 2007 after the Sound Transit Lunch Bus

Wanna Buy a Ferry?

This post originally appeared on Orphan Road.

The New York Times reports that WSDOT is selling its old foot ferries on eBay:

“The state decided to get out of the passenger-only ferry business,” said Traci Brewer-Rogstad, director of operations for Washington State Ferries.

It has been four years since budget cuts, controversy and eventually declining ridership ended service on the so-called foot-ferry route that the two 350-passenger boats served between Seattle and Bremerton. The state is focusing its ferry system on its core operations, larger boats that carry vehicles as well as people. Yet the goal of getting rid of the passenger-only boats is intended to generate cash so that King County, and possibly other local governments, can get into the foot-ferry business themselves.

This week, King County approved raising property taxes by an average of about $22 a year for a $400,000 house to help pay for the operations of what it hopes will be an expanding year-round foot-ferry service that could include routes in Puget Sound and Lake Washington, which separates Seattle from suburbs like Kirkland and Bellevue. The sale of the Chinook and Snohomish would go toward capital investments, including buying or leasing smaller passenger ferries that are more fuel efficient and require smaller crews.

Indeed, King County is estimating $8.5M in revenue from the sale of the two ferries to go toward the Ferry District.

Free Riders

This post originally appeared on Orphan Road.

A Sounder rider wants to know why Sound Transit wasn’t checking tickets more agressively on a train to the Seahawks game. ST responds that this was an atypical situation, but the question serves to illustrate the different attitudes people have towards transit here in the Northwest.

Growing up in New York, I’d occasionally notice that the afternoon commute on the Long Island RR was just so packed that the conductors would give up on checking tickets. Most of the riders had monthly passes, so it didn’t really make a difference. But for a kid like me, who was sneaking into the city to go hang out in the East Village and pretend to be cool, I could sometimes get away with a free ride. Of course, they charged an extra $2 to buy the ticket from the conductor, so it wasn’t really worth the risk. Better to just buy the ticket and maybe re-use it if they didn’t punch it.

Across the pond, Matt noted that most European transit systems are similarly lackadaisical when it comes to collecting tickets. Transit is just part of the social compact there, and so many people ride it that the operating costs all come out in the wash anyway.

The costs of collecting and processing tickets are nontrivial. Skagit transit spends more collecting fares than it makes from the fares themselves. And the honor system seems to work in Houston, TX when it comes to fare collection.

Perhaps, as we build more and better transit systems in the region, and as more no-good transplants like myself move in, our collective attitude towards transit will move from “costly government pork project that I refuse to ‘subsidize’ ” to “indispensible element of urban public life.” I certainly hope so.