Market–Frankford Line

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     Market–Frankford Line
Market–Frankford Line train departing 52nd Street station in West Philadelphia
Info
Type Rapid transit
Status Line open
One station currently closed for reconstruction
Locale Philadelphia and Delaware County, Pennsylvania
Terminals 69th Street Terminal
Frankford Transportation Center
No. of stations 28
Daily ridership 178,715 (FY 2005)
Operation
Opened March 4, 1907
Owner City of Philadelphia
(Frankford to 15th St)
SEPTA
(15th St to 69th St)
Operator(s) SEPTA
Character Elevated and underground
Technical
Line length 12.9 mi (20.76 km)
No. of tracks 2
Gauge 5 ftin (1581 mm)
Electrification 600 volts DC
Line map
Handicapped/disabled access 69th Street Terminal
Millbourne
63rd
Handicapped/disabled access 60th
Handicapped/disabled access 56th
52nd
46th
40th
34th
Handicapped/disabled access 30th
15th
Handicapped/disabled access 13th
11th
8th
5th
Handicapped/disabled access 2nd
Spring Garden
Handicapped/disabled access Girard
A Handicapped/disabled access Berks
B Handicapped/disabled access York–Dauphin
A Handicapped/disabled access Huntingdon
B Handicapped/disabled access Somerset
Handicapped/disabled access Allegheny
A Handicapped/disabled access Tioga
Handicapped/disabled access Erie–Torresdale
B Handicapped/disabled access Church
Margaret–Orthodox
Handicapped/disabled access Frankford

The Market–Frankford Line (MFL) (also called the Market–Frankford Subway–Elevated Line (MFSE), El or Blue Line) is a rapid transit line in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority.

Contents

[edit] Route

The Market-Frankford Line begins at 69th Street Terminal, just west of the city line in Upper Darby, and runs on a private right-of-way to the city line. From there it is elevated over Market Street until 46th Street, where it curves off to the north and heads underground via a portal at 44th Street. At 42nd Street, the tunnel returns to the alignment of Market Street.

At 32nd Street, the tunnel carrying the Subway-Surface lines joins the MFL tunnel. The MFL tracks are in the center and the trolley tracks are on the outside. 30th Street station consists of an island platform between the two innermost tracks for Market–Frankford Line trains, and outboard "wall" platforms for Subway–Surface route 10, 11, 13, 34, and 36 trolleys. After passing beneath the Schuylkill River, the next stop to the east for Market–Frankford Line trains is at 15th Street; Subway-Surface trolleys also have stations at 22nd Street and 19th Street. 15th Street is the central interchange station for the MFL, Subway-Surface trolleys, and Broad Street Line. The Subway-Surface tracks end in a loop beneath Juniper Street at Market just after crossing above the Broad Street Line. The Juniper Street platform connects to 13th Street station on the MFL.

Though it now tunnels in a straight line directly beneath Philadelphia City Hall, prior to 1936, the original MFL trackage between 15th and 13th Street stations separated and went around the sides of City Hall (eastbound trains around the south side, westbound trains around the north side). Parts of that original alignment can still be seen from subway-surface cars as they pass around the south side of City Hall en route to Juniper Street station. The Market Street tunnel continues east to Front Street and then turns north, where it rises in the median of I-95. The rail line and freeway share an elevated embankment for about 1/2 mile, including Spring Garden station (which replaced Fairmount station on the Frankford Elevated). The line then heads under the southbound lanes and over Front Street on an elevated structure that turns northeast onto Kensington Avenue, which merges with Frankford Avenue, which the line follows to its end. Just north of Bridge Street, a quick curve to the north brings the line to its terminus at the Frankford Transportation Center.

[edit] Operation

During rush hours (trains beginning from approximately 7 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.), SEPTA uses skip-stop operation. Trains marked "A" stop only at the stations marked "A" and "All Trains" on system maps, and "B" trains stop only at "B" and "All Trains" stations. Trains run on the line from approximately 5 a.m. to 12:30 a.m., and buses provide night service from midnight to 5:30 a.m.

In FY 2005, 25,220,523 passengers rode the Market-Frankford Line. Its weekday average ridership of 178,715 made it the busiest line in the entire SEPTA system. The Market–Frankford Line required 142 vehicles at peak hours, cost $86,644,614 in fully allocated expenses, and collected $54,309,344 in passenger revenues, for an impressive farebox recovery ratio of 63 percent.[1]

On Monday, February 11, 2008, SEPTA expanded the Morning & Afternoon Weekday Service with off peak trains running every six minutes instead of every eight minutes. It represents a 12% increase in MFL Service through the day.

[edit] History

A bridge to carry the line across the Schuylkill River, just north of Market Street, was built from July 1903 to August 1905. Construction on the Market Street Elevated began on October 17, 1904, and the line opened on March 4, 1907, from 69th Street Terminal to a loop around City Hall at 15th Street. The line was elevated west of the river and underground east of the river. The tunnel was also used by streetcar lines, now SEPTA's Subway-Surface lines, that entered the line just east of the river and turned around at the City Hall loop.

Extensions took the line east to 2nd Street on August 3, 1908, and via several curves to the Delaware River between Market Street and Chestnut Street on September 7, 1908. The Delaware Avenue Elevated (also called the Ferry Line, because of the multiple ferries across the river) opened on October 4, 1908 as a further extension south along the river to South Street. The only two stations on this extension were Market–Chestnut and South Street.

The Frankford Elevated opened on November 5, 1922[1], with trains from 69th alternating between Frankford and the Ferry Line. In 1937, operations were changed to use the Ferry Line only during the day and not at all on Sunday. In 1939 the line to the ferries was closed and the structure was demolished. The old interlocking tower and stub remains of the junction with the Ferry Line survived until the realignment into the median of I-95 in the 1970s.

A new section of tunnel from 22nd Street, where the Market–Frankford line started rising towards the Schuylkill River, to 32nd Street was built in the 1930s as part of a program of railroad improvements undertaken by the City of Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania Railroad, but funding ran out before the subway extension was complete. Construction resumed in 1947, and the current configuration opened on November 6, 1955. The old elevated structure was removed by June 20, 1956. In addition to extending the Market Street subway tunnel west to 44th Street, with new stations at 30th, 34th and 40th streets, a new trolley tunnel was built under Market, Ludlow and 36th streets and the former Woodland Avenue, leading to a new western portal at 40th Street for routes 11, 13, 34 and 36. (Route 10 trolleys use a portal at 36th and Ludlow.) New stations for the trolleys were constructed at 22nd, 30th, 33rd (between Market and Ludlow), 36th (at Sansom), and 37th (at Spruce) streets. The 24th Street trolley station and tunnel portal was abandoned.

An 'A' train arriving at Girard.
An 'A' train arriving at Girard.

Skip-stop operation began on January 30, 1956. In the original skip-stop configuration, in addition to the A and B stops shown on the map above, 2nd and 34th Street were "A" stations, and Fairmount (replaced by Spring Garden) was a "B" station; the A and B designations at these stations were changed to "All-Stop" because of increased patronage in the 1990s. As I-95 was built through Center City Philadelphia in the late 1970s, part of the Frankford El was relocated to I-95's median, and the Fairmount station was replaced with Spring Garden, on May 15, 1977.

SEPTA has completed, in 2003, replacement of the old Bridge-Pratt terminal with a new $160,000,000 Frankford Transportation Center located on private right-of-way. [2]

Currently, SEPTA is undertaking a $567,000,000[3] complete reconstruction of the Market Street Elevated between Millbourne and the 44th Street portal. The new Market Street Elevated, consisting of a center-pillar viaduct, will allow PennDOT to widen Market Street to four lanes without having elevated supports impeding the flow of traffic between 63rd Street and 44th Street. The project has already reconstructed 46th Street, 52nd Street, 56th Street, and 60th Street, and also includes the reconstruction of Millbourne stations, which is scheduled to be done in June 2008 and 63rd Street. The Construction is slated for completion in 2009.[4]

As with many other rail lines, the signal system on the Market–Frankford Line has progressed from the original lineside block signals using semaphores, to three-aspect Type D color light (green, over yellow, over red) signals, to cab signalling, eliminating the lineside block signals.

[edit] Extension Proposal

An extension of the Market–Frankford Line from Frankford to Roosevelt Boulevard and Bustleton Avenue has been proposed in conjunction with an extension of the Broad Street Subway, but persistent political and economic obstacles are likely to prevent the implementation of any such extension. A description can be found in the Broad Street Subway article.

[edit] Rolling stock

M-4 car placard
M-4 car placard

The SEPTA fleet for the Market–Frankford line consists of 220 M-4 rail cars, with seating for 49 and standing room for 55, each costing $1.29 million.[5]

The M-4 cars, manufactured by AdTranz, were brought into service in 1997 to replace the M-3 "Almond Joy" stock, so called because of their distinctive ventilation fan housings, which resembled the almonds atop a Peter Paul Brand (now Hershey's) Almond Joy bar. The M-3 cars, manufactured in 1960 by the Budd Company, were replaced a few years before their expected lifespan because of their lack of air conditioning and generally shaky ride quality. Early in their service lives, some M-3 cars had fareboxes by their center side doors; these were necessary for collecting fares during the hours after midnight, when SEPTA closed cashier's booths at many stations during the era of 24-hour rapid transit service. "Owl" service (12:00 AM-5:00 AM) trains operated on a twenty-minute headway (interval between trains) at that time.[6]

The M-3 cars were themselves replacements for both the original "Market Street" cars, designated Class A-8 by SEPTA's predecessor, the Philadelphia Transportation Company (PTC), and built by the Pressed Steel Car Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa. (Cars #1-135, 1906-1911), the J.G. Brill Co. of Philadelphia, Pa. (Cars #136-215, 1911-1913), and the second series "Frankford" cars, designated Class A-15 and built by the J.G. Brill Co. (Cars #501-600, 1922). Though six of the "Frankford" cars survived retirement in 1960 as work train cars, none lasted until 2000.

[edit] Station list

Miles Station A B Photo Connections Notes
0.0 69th Street Terminal A B aerial 100, 101, and 102. Please see station page for bus connections.
0.4 Millbourne aerial originally called 66th Street, closed as of May 2007 for total reconstruction
0.8 63rd Street A B aerial 31 Westernmost elevated station, in city and county of Philadelphia.
1.1 60th Street A B aerial Previous connection, Route 46 trolley rebuilt station opened June 18, 2007
1.5 56th Street A B aerial 31, G rebuilt station opened February 27, 2006
1.9 52nd Street A B aerial 31, 52; Previous connection, Route 70 trolley
2.5 46th Street aerial rebuilt station opened April 14, 2008
3.2 40th Street A B 30, 40, LUCY Gold, LUCY Green; diverted/nighttime routes of Subway-Surface lines original station at 40th Street was elevated.
3.7 34th Street A B 31, LUCY Gold, LUCY Green original station at 36th Street was elevated.
4.1 30th Street A B 9, 30, 31, 44, 121, 124, 125, LUCY Gold, LUCY Green, Amtrak and SEPTA Regional Rail. Free transfer to Subway-Surface Lines. Original station at 32nd Street was elevated.
5.1 15th Street A B 17, 27, 31, 32, 33, 38, 44, 48, 121, C, Regional Rail at Suburban Station. Free transfer to Subway-Surface Lines and Broad Street Line.
5.4 13th Street A B 17, 33, 44, 48, 121, 124, 125. Free transfer to Subway-Surface Lines.
5.6 11th Street A B 23; Regional Rail at Market East Station, Greyhound, other intercity buses, & New Jersey Transit buses at Philadelphia Greyhound Terminal
5.8 8th Street A B 47, 61, Broad-Ridge Spur, PATCO Speedline; Previous connection, Route 47 trolley, Route 61 trackless trolley
6.0 5th Street A B Previous connection, Route 50 trolley
6.3 2nd Street A B 5
7.1 Spring Garden A B aerial 25, 43 Replaced the Fairmount station when I-95 was built
7.8 Girard A B aerial 15
8.5 Berks A aerial 3
8.9 York–Dauphin B aerial 3, 39, 89 split between York northbound and Dauphin southbound. Original name of station was Dauphin-York.
9.3 Huntingdon A aerial 3, 39
9.6 Somerset B aerial 3, 54
10.2 Allegheny A B aerial 3, 60, 89
10.6 Tioga A aerial 3, 89
11.3 Erie–Torresdale A B aerial 3, 56 Originally called Torresdale.
11.8 Church B aerial 3, 5 Originally called Ruan-Church.
12.3 Margaret–Orthodox A B aerial 3, 5, 59, 75, 89, J, K Original called Margaret–Orthodox–Arrott.
12.9 Frankford Transportation Center A B aerial 3, 5, 8, 14, 19, 20, 24, 25, 26, 50, 58, 66, 67, 73, 84, 88, R This station replaced Bridge-Pratt (Frankford Terminal)

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.septa.org/inside/reports/ASP2007.pdf SEPTA (May 2006). Annual Service Plan 2007. p. 79PDF (539 KiB)
  2. ^ SEPTA (July 2006). SEPTA Capital Improvements in the City of Philadelphia. p. 5.PDF (1.96 MiB)
  3. ^ http://www.theelseptaatwork.com/ (September 2006).
  4. ^ SEPTA (July 2006). SEPTA Capital Improvements in the City of Philadelphia. pp. 7&8.PDF (1.96 MiB)
  5. ^ NYCSubway.org
  6. ^ Trainstation.com video description
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