Northgate Link Extension
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Legend
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Northgate Link Extension (formerly known as "North Link"[1]) is a Link Light Rail extension in Seattle, Washington that will connect the University District to Northgate. Northgate Link will travel in two tunnels from University of Washington station, the northern terminus of the University Link Extension, through underground stations at U District and Roosevelt towards Northgate, emerging on the east side of Interstate 5 and continuing on an elevated guideway to Northgate station. The extension was approved in 2008 by voters in the Sound Transit 2 (ST2) package, began construction in 2012, and is expected to open for service in 2021.
Routing
For the Northgate Link Extension project, the tunnel already under construction for University Link will continue north to the University District and the Roosevelt neighborhoods before emerging at the surface along I-5 near NE 94th Street to serve the elevated Northgate station.
Sound Transit is preparing to extend mass transit from Northgate to Lynnwood, which voters approved as part of the Sound Transit 2 Plan in 2008, along with funding to continue planning future service all the way to Everett. This project is known as the Lynnwood Link Extension Project.
Stations
Name | City/Neighborhood | Location |
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University Link Tunnel to Capitol Hill and Westlake | ||
University of Washington | University District, Seattle | Montlake Blvd. NE and NE Pacific St. |
North end of University Link | ||
U District | University District, Seattle | NE 45th St. and Brooklyn Ave. NE |
Roosevelt | Roosevelt, Seattle | NE 65th St. and 12th Ave. NE |
North end of tunnel (Maple Leaf Portal); south end of elevated section | ||
Northgate | Northgate, Seattle | 1st Ave. NE and NE 103rd St. |
End of line; future extension to Lynnwood |
Construction
Construction on the Northgate Link Extension began in 2012 and is scheduled to open for service in 2021.[2]
Tunnels
The first tunnel segment, one of two 3.4-mile (5.5 km) parallel tunnels between Roosevelt Station and the Maple Leaf Portal, was completed on March 17, 2015, by a 21.5-foot (6.6 m) diameter tunnel boring machine named Brenda.[3] Brenda and a sister machine named Pamela will together dig six tunnel segments between the portal and the University of Washington station, with expected completion in late 2017.[4]
Pamela was stopped 650 feet (200 m) north of U District station for six weeks from late December 2015 to early February 2016 after encountering hard soil that damaged five motors and the main gear of the machine. Repairs and possible replcements are expected to take three to eight months, potentially delaying the project's opening if the five months of float time is exceeded.[5]
References
- ↑ "New Project Name". Sound Transit. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
- ↑ "Northgate Link Extension Project Phases". Sound Transit. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
- ↑ Mike Lindblom (March 17, 2015), "Transit-tunnel machine reaches daylight at Roosevelt Station", The Seattle Times
- ↑ Northgate link extension—Maple Leaf Portal and tunnels, Sound Transit, retrieved March 17, 2015
- ↑ Lindblom, Mike (February 11, 2016). "Another Seattle tunnel drill (not Bertha) damaged, needs repair". The Seattle Times. Retrieved February 11, 2016.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Northgate Link Extension. |
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