Red Line (Washington Metro)
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The Red Line of the Washington Metro is a rail rapid transit service operating between 27 stations in Montgomery County, Maryland and the District of Columbia. It is a primary line through downtown Washington, and the oldest and busiest line in the system. It forms a long, narrow "U" capped by its terminal stations at Shady Grove and Glenmont.
It is the only line which does not share its track with any other line, except from January 27, 1997 to September 17, 1999, when the Green Line Commuter Shortcut used Red Line tracks from Brookland-CUA to Farragut North. Unique to the Washington Metro, some peak service Red Line trains operate on an abbreviated route, between Grosvenor-Strathmore and Silver Spring. On April 20, 2006 WMATA, Montgomery County, and the state of Maryland announced an agreement to end the off-peak terminations at Grosvenor, having those trains operate instead between Shady Grove and Silver Spring.
Internally, the Red Line is known as the Shady Grove Route (A) and Glenmont Route (B), split at Metro Center.[1]
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[edit] History
By 1969, WMATA had decided on the current routing and stations, except for the extension beyond Rockville to Shady Grove:[2]
[edit] Rockville Route
This route begins at the Metro Center Station (12th and G Streets, Northwest) and extends westward in subway under G Street, thence northwestward under Lafayette Park and Farragut Square, continuing under Connecticut Avenue to Yuma Street. From this point the route proceeds westward in subway under Yuma Street to Tenley Circle, thence northward under Wisconsin Avenue to the District of Columbia-Maryland boundary. The route continues northward under Wisconsin Avenue, through Bethesda, to a point south of the Capital Beltway. The route crosses over the Capital Beltway along the east side of Rockville Pike, thence northward in subway along Rockville Pike to a point south of Randolph Road, thence proceeds under private property in subway to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The route continues northwestward on the surface along the B&O Railroad to a terminal at Rockville. The following stations are provided: Metro Center, Farragut North, Dupont Circle, Zoological Park, Cleveland Park, Van Ness, Tenley Circle, Friendship Heights, Bethesda, Medical Center, Parkside, Nicholson Lane, Halpine Road, and Rockville. Storage tracks and inspection facilities are provided north of the Rockville terminal. A future extension is planned extending northward to Germantown, alignment to be determined.
[edit] Glenmont Route
This route begins at the Metro Center Station and extends eastward in subway under G Street to 6th Street, thence southeastward under Judiciary Square, eastward under D Street, and northward under Union Station. The route then proceeds northward on the surface along the B&O Railroad to the District of Columbia-Maryland boundary. The route continues northward through Silver Spring along the B&O Railroad, thence in subway under 16th Street and Georgia Avenue to a terminal at Glenmont. The following stations are provided: Gallery Place, Judiciary Square, Union Station, Rhode Island, Michigan Avenue, Fort Totten, Takoma Park, Silver Spring, Forest Glen, Wheaton, and Glenmont. The main maintenance yard is provided south of the Rhode Island Station. Storage and inspection facilities are provided north of the Glenmont Station.
Funding for the extension to Shady Grove was conditionally approved in July 1975.[3]
Service on the Red Line (and the Metro as a whole) began on March 29, 1976, operating between Farragut North and Rhode Island Ave. Gallery Place's opening was delayed due to a court order regarding lack of handicapped access, but it opened in the middle of the line on December 15, 1976.
The western end of the line was extended one station to Dupont Circle on January 17, 1977, three stations to Van Ness-UDC on December 5, 1981, five stations to Grosvenor-Strathmore on August 25, 1984, and four stations to Shady Grove on December 15, 1984.
The eastern end was extended four stations to Silver Spring on February 6, 1978, which added Maryland to the system for the first time, two stations to Wheaton on September 22, 1990, and one station to Glenmont on July 25, 1998, completing the line.
A short time after the Green Line branch north of Fort Totten opened in the early 1990s, the Green Line Commuter Shortcut began as a six month experiment. Passengers could board the Green Line between Greenbelt and West Hyattsville and travel as far as Farragut North without having to transfer; the trains bypassed Fort Totten via a single-track spur between the West Hyattsville and Brookland-CUA stations. Due to its success, it was continued until the mid-city portion of the Green Line was completed in 1999.
A new station, New York Ave-Florida Ave-Gallaudet U, located between Union Station and Rhode Island Ave-Brentwood, opened on schedule on November 20, 2004, the first in-fill station (a new station between existing stations) in the system.
[edit] Chronology
Below is a chronological list of dates when specific portions of the Red Line opened for service.[4]
Date | Event | Total number of stations | Total line length |
---|---|---|---|
March 29, 1976 | Line opens between Farragut North and Rhode Island Ave-Brentwood | 5 | 4.6 mi (7.4 km) |
December 15, 1976 | Gallery Pl-Chinatown opens between existing stations | 6 | 4.6 mi (7.4 km) |
January 1, 1977 | Extension to Dupont Circle opens | 7 | 5.7 mi (9.2 km) |
February 6, 1978 | Extension to Silver Spring opens | 11 | 11.4 mi (18.3 km) |
December 5, 1981 | Extension to Van Ness-UDC opens | 14 | 13.5 mi (21.7 km) |
August 25, 1984 | Extension to Grosvenor-Strathmore opens | 19 | 20.3 mi (32.7 km) |
December 15, 1984 | Extension to Shady Grove opens | 23 | 27.3 mi (43.9 km) |
September 22, 1990 | Extension to Wheaton opens | 25 | 30.5 mi (49.1 km) |
January 25, 1998 | Extension to Glenmont opens | 26 | 31.9 mi (51.3 km) |
November 20, 2004 | New York Ave-Florida Ave-Gallaudet U opens between existing stations | 27 | 31.9 mi (51.3 km) |
[edit] Routing
The Red Line begins aboveground at Shady Grove, and parallels CSX Transportation's Metropolitan Subdivision (served by MARC Brunswick Line trains) to south of Twinbrook. There it enters a tunnel and curves west to Rockville Pike at White Flint. Until Tenleytown, the Red Line is under, next to, or over (at the Capital Beltway) Rockville Pike and Wisconsin Avenue. The tunnel curves east at Tenleytown into Yuma Street to reach Van Ness, curving back south there under Connecticut Avenue to beyond Farragut North. A curve under Lafayette Park takes the tunnel east under G Street NW through Metro Center to Gallery Pl-Chinatown. From Gallery Pl-Chinatown through Judiciary Square, the line runs southeast, turning east again at D Street to reach Union Station. There it turns north and surfaces adjacent to Union Station's platforms, follows the Washington Terminal yard tracks north to Brentwood where the line turns northwestward and again joins CSX Transportation's Metropolitan Subdivision tracks, running in a unique gauntlet arrangement with the freight railroad tracks straddling the Metro tracks. The line runs in this manner northwest across the District-Maryland line, through Takoma Park and past Silver Spring. It reenters a tunnel at 16th Street West and heads north under Georgia Avenue to the end at Glenmont.
The following stations are along the line, from northwest to northeast.
- Shady Grove
- Rockville
- Twinbrook
- White Flint
- Grosvenor-Strathmore
- Medical Center
- Bethesda
- Friendship Heights
- Tenleytown-AU
- Van Ness-UDC
- Cleveland Park
- Woodley Park-Zoo/Adams Morgan
- Dupont Circle
- Farragut North
- Metro Center (Transfer station for the Blue, Orange, and planned Silver Lines)
- Gallery Pl-Chinatown (Transfer station for the Green and Yellow Lines)
- Judiciary Square
- Union Station
- New York Ave-Florida Ave-Gallaudet U
- Rhode Island Ave-Brentwood
- Brookland-CUA
- Fort Totten (Transfer station for the Green Line, and the Yellow Line during off-peak)
- Takoma
- Silver Spring
- Forest Glen
- Wheaton
- Glenmont
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, Adjacent Construction Design ManualPDF (5.24 MiB), April 2006 (Revision 2), pp. IX.4, IX.6
- ^ Financing Subway System for National Capital Region: Joint Hearings Before the Committee on the District of Columbia and the Subcommittee No. 4 of the Committee on the District of Columbia, 1969, p. 129
- ^ Washington Post, Rockville and Greenbelt Lines Are Funded by U.S. for Metro, July 27, 1975
- ^ WMATA FactsPDF
[edit] External links
- world.nycsubway.org: Red Line
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