Metro Subway

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Metro Subway
Metro Subway train entering the Reisterstown Plaza station, bound for Owings Mills
Info
Type Rapid transit
Status Operational
Locale Baltimore, Maryland
Terminals Owings Mills (west)
Johns Hopkins Hospital (east)
No. of stations 14
Daily ridership 45,000 (daily)
Operation
Opened 1983
Owner Maryland Transit Administration
Operator(s) Maryland Transit Administration
Character Underground and surface
Rolling stock 100 Budd cars
Technical
Line length 15.2 mi (24.5 km)
No. of tracks 2
Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in) (standard gauge)
Electrification Third rail
Operating speed 70 mph (110 km/h)

The Metro Subway[1] or Baltimore Metro is a single-line rapid transit system serving the greater Baltimore, Maryland, United States area and operated by the Maryland Transit Administration. Despite its name, less than half of the line is underground; most of the line outside of the central city is elevated or at grade.

Contents

[edit] History

The origins of the Metro Subway lie in a transit plan drawn up for the Baltimore area written in 1966 that envisioned six rapid transit lines radiating out from the city center. By the time this vision began to be translated into reality, construction costs in the United States had risen to the point of making transit construction prohibitively expensive, and there was less federal money available for transit projects than had been in the past. When the Metro Subway finally opened in 1983, it was only a single line, the "Northwest" line of the 1966 plan. Service was provided between Charles Center in downtown Baltimore and Reisterstown Plaza in the northwest section of the city. (A decade later, much of the "North" and "South" lines of that plan would come into existence as the Baltimore Light Rail.)

In 1987, an extension from Reisterstown Road Plaza to Owings Mills in Baltimore County was added, much of it running the median of I-795. In 1994 a further extension from Charles Center to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore City was also opened. This last extension was an extremely truncated version of the 1966 plan's "Northeast" line.

The current system is 15.2 miles (24.5 km) long, including 6.2 miles (10.0 km) underground, 2.2 miles (3.5 km) elevated, and 6.8 miles (10.9 km) at grade.

Once the project was completed in 1994, the total cost for the Metro Subway was $1.392 billion.

[edit] Operation

[edit] Route

Metro Subway system map
Metro Subway system map

The Metro Subway's route consists of a single line in a shape that can be described as an extremely lopsided "U". Trains head due south underground from Johns Hopkins Hospital, turn west as they pass under Baltimore's central business district, then north and ultimately northwest towards Owings Mills. The route leaves its tunnel northwest of Mondawmin station, entering an elevated structure that parallels Wabash Avenue and the Western Maryland Railroad. The route eventually leaves the older railroad right of way to enter the I-795 median, which it occupies all the way to the system's Owings Mills terminus.

Trains heading for Johns Hopkins Hospital are referred to as eastbound trains, while trains heading towards Owings Mills are said to be going west.

[edit] Schedules

A trip from one end of the line to the other takes about half an hour. Headways range from 8 minutes during daytime peak to 11 minutes late at night, 15 minutes all day on weekends. Trains run from 5 a.m. to midnight on weekdays, 6 a.m. to midnight on weekends.

[edit] Fares

See: Current MTA Fares

[edit] Connecting services

Most Metro Subway stations are served by a number of MTA bus routes; some routes, whose route numbers are prefixed with the letter "M", were drawn up specifically to serve as feeders for the Metro Subway. There is no direct connection to the Light Rail or to MARC — a fact that may strike the passenger as a distinct oversight in planning. The Metro Subway's Lexington Market Station is a 200-yard walk from the Light Rail stop of the same name, and the State Center Station is about 1.5 blocks away from Light Rail's Cultural Center. In addition, MARC Penn Station is about a one-half mile walk from State Center, and MARC Camden Station is about five blocks from Lexington Market.

[edit] Stations and connecting services

Exterior of the Charles Center Metro Subway station in downtown Baltimore
Exterior of the Charles Center Metro Subway station in downtown Baltimore

[edit] Rolling stock

Metro Subway train at State Center station
Metro Subway train at State Center station

Most of the Metro Subway's cars were manufactured by the Budd Company Red Lion plant in Northeast Philadelphia in 1983, with a supplementary set of essentially identical cars being purchased in 1987 when the line expanded. The cars are identical to those used on the Miami Metrorail, as the two systems were built at the same time, and the two agencies were able to save money by sharing a single order. Trains draw power from an electric third rail. The cars are 72 feet long and 9.5 feet wide and have a top speed of over 70 mph. Cars are semi-permanently attached in married pairs, and 2-, 4-, and 6-car trains are all seen on the line. Each car can hold up to 166 passengers (76 seated, 90 standing).

During 2003 and 2004, the Metro Subway fleet saw a significant overhaul. Car seats were replaced and the floors reupholstered. External destination rollsigns were replaced with LED displays, and internal systems that displayed and announced train destinations and upcoming stops were installed.

The MTA currently own 100 Metro Subway cars; approximately 54 are in use during peak weekday travel times.

[edit] Future

While the current Metro Subway is an important part of Baltimore's transit picture, the prohibitive cost of building new rapid transit lines — particularly the sort of underground lines that would be necessary in a densely populated area — have clouded prospects for future expansion. As of 2005, the state of Maryland is considering a new transit line, dubbed the Green Line, that would begin at the Metro Subway's Johns Hopkins Hospital terminus and run to the northeast corner of the city. If this line were implemented as an extension of the existing line, the entire Metro Subway might ultimately be rebranded as the Green Line (it is already colored green on MTA maps).

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References