Urban Ring Project (MBTA)

MBTA Urban Ring
Parent Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
Founded Suspended, but partial implementation of some segments is proceeding
Headquarters 10 Park Plaza, Boston, MA 02116
Locale Boston, Massachusetts
Service area Boston, Chelsea, Everett, Medford, Somerville, Cambridge, and Brookline
Service type Bus rapid transit
Routes 1 circumferential, with 2 major spurs
Stations 31 proposed
Daily ridership 282,000–293,000 passengers per day in 2025 (estimated)
Fuel type Diesel
Operator MBTA
Chief executive Beverly A. Scott
Website www.massdot.state.ma.us/theurbanring/

The Urban Ring is a proposed project of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority and the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, to develop new public transportation routes that would provide improved circumferential connections among many existing transit lines that project radially from downtown Boston.[1] The Urban Ring Corridor is located roughly one to two miles from downtown Boston, passing through the Massachusetts cities of Boston, Chelsea, Everett, Medford, Somerville, Cambridge, and Brookline.[1] The project is expected to convert 41,500 car trips to transit trips daily.[2]

The Major Investment Study split the project into three phases, the first of which (enhanced bus service) was partially implemented. As of January 2010, the planning of Phase 2 has been suspended because MBTA and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts have insufficient funding to build a substantial portion of that phase (projected to cost $2.4 billion).[2] Some interim bus service improvements are under way in the absence of major funding.

Background

Transportation advocates in Boston have complained that rail transit riders cannot travel from one outlying area to another without first traveling to the downtown hub stations, changing lines, and traveling outbound again. Some of the radial transit lines, notably the Green Line, are so overcrowded that service is very slow and limited in capacity because of rush-hour "crush loads". There are several crosstown bus lines, such as the #1, #66, CT1, CT2, and CT3 routes, but they are slow, unreliable, and subject to bus bunching because they must operate in mixed street traffic.

A circumferential rapid transit line was proposed by the City of Boston as early as 1923, and circumferential transit has been studied as early as 1972, in the Boston Transportation Planning Review.[3] Detailed proposals were not studied until the late 1990s.[4]

Project proposal

The proposed project has three phases. The first phase has been partially implemented. Phase 1, as it is commonly called, involves expanding "crosstown" bus lines serving the entire corridor and "express commuter" lines connecting to suburban locations. Phase 2 will create six overlapping Bus Rapid Transit lines forming a complete ring around downtown Boston. Phase 3 includes the implementation of rail service on the most heavily traveled portion of the ring, from Assembly Square in southeastern Somerville to Dudley Square in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston, via East Cambridge.

Phase 1

Phase 1[5] as recommended in the Major Investment Study, would expand the "crosstown" (CT) bus system by extending and increasing frequency on the three existing lines, and by adding eight new lines. It also adds "express commuter" (EC) lines for connections to locations outside the corridor. Estimated ridership according to the Phase 2 DEIR would have been 40,000 for 2003, at a capital cost of $100 million, for low-floor, low-emissions buses.

The MBTA determined that Phase 1 of the Urban Ring project did not meet the threshold requirements for an extensive environmental review, and so can be implemented as a part of its normal service planning process. However, of the eleven CT routes and three EC routes proposed, only CT1, CT2, and CT3 are currently running as of 2014.[6]

Phase 2

Draft EIR

Map of the proposed Phase 2 system
MBTA-owned right of way along Ruggles Street, which would have been used for the Urban Ring busway

The MBTA filed the Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) for Phase 2 with the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) Office on November 30, 2004.[7] In its FY2005-10 and draft FY2006-11 Capital Improvement Plans, the MBTA has not budgeted any money for the Urban Ring project, beyond supporting the EIR process.[8]

Phase 2[9] would convert and expand five of the "crosstown" lines (CT2, CT3, CT4, CT5, and CT8) into bus rapid transit lines that overlap and form a complete ring around the urban core.

BRT connections with the commuter rail lines would be improved by expanding the following existing stations:

The following new Commuter Rail stations would be created:

The new BRT lines would make additional connections at other commuter rail stops, rapid transit stops, and bus hubs.

Some parts of the BRT system would run in mixed traffic, including through the Ted Williams Tunnel and to the terminals at Logan International Airport. Dedicated lanes are provided for certain portions, including:

Ridership was estimated at 106,000 passengers per day in 2010; capital cost was estimated at $500 million.

2008 revised draft EIR

As of June 2008, the revised route of the ring had the following stops:

Station Existing Connections City / Neighborhood Notes
Logan International Airport East Boston West Garage
Airport station East Boston
Griffin Way Chelsea Possibly moved to create Box District Station as part of the Silver Line (MBTA) extension project to Chelsea
Chelsea station Chelsea Will be renamed Downtown Chelsea as part of the Silver Line (MBTA) extension project to Chelsea; Will no longer have transfers to the Newburyport/Rockport Line
Mystic Mall Future terminus for the Silver Line (MBTA) extension project to Chelsea; Future location of the Newburyport/Rockport Line Chelsea stop
Everett / Massachusetts Route 16 / Gateway Center Everett
Wellington station and bus hub Medford
Assembly station Somerville
Sullivan Square station and bus hub Charlestown Future Commuter Rail Stop
Inner Belt Road Somerville
Lechmere station Cambridge Station relocation part of Green Line Extension Project; detailed planning underway as of 2014
First Street / Cambridgeside Galleria Cambridge
Binney Street Cambridge
Fulkerson Street Cambridge Served only by one of the BRT routes, the others will go direct to Kendall
Kendall station / Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge
Massachusetts Avenue / Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Via Albany Street
Cambridgeport at George Washington Park Cambridgeport Crossing into Grand Junction Railroad right-of-way
Commonwealth Avenue at Boston University Bridge
(Boston University West station)
Boston Via widened Grand Junction Railroad bridge
Yawkey station Boston (Fenway–Kenmore) Opened on March 10, 2014 for commuter rail service
Kenmore station Boston (Fenway–Kenmore) Minor spur served by only 1 BRT route (#57 bus)
Existing station at west end of Longwood Medical Area
at Avenue Louis Pasteur and Longwood Ave
Boston Underground station proposed
Ruggles station Boston
Washington Street at Melnea Cass Boulevard Roxbury Possibly at existing Silver line station
Dudley Square and bus hub Roxbury
Crosstown Center Dorchester
BU Medical Center Boston
Broadway station South Boston Unused (since 1919) streetcar tunnel above Red Line tracks
A Street South Boston
World Trade Center station South Boston

This routing skips Gilman and Union Squares in Somerville, but these locations would be connected to the new Lechmere Station via the Green Line Extension Project, originally expected to be operational by the end of 2014, but initiated as of 2014. The Grand Junction Railroad crossing of the Charles River would be widened to include bus lanes and a multi-use path.

Construction of the Silver Line Gateway busway - the only part of the Urban Ring to enter construction - in Chelsea in 2015

There would be two major spurs. Three different routings are being considered for the first spur, on the west side of the ring, which leaves from Commonwealth Avenue and goes to:

The second major spur, on the south side of the ring, would leave from between Crosstown Center and the BU Medical Center, and go to:

These are fairly close to the route covered by the 66 bus.

An interim surface routing is proposed, with multiple stops in the Longwood Medical Area, while the tunnel is under construction.

The capital cost for this version of the plan is estimated at $2.2 billion, with a projected daily ridership of 170,000. 53% of the route is either in a bus-only lane, dedicated busway, or tunnel.[10] This was increased from the previous plan for Phase 2, to improve travel times. As a result of the implementation of Phase 2, ridership growth on the Red, Orange, Blue, and Green lines would be slowed, but Commuter Rail ridership boosted. The Urban Ring would have a higher collective ridership than the Orange Line, Blue Line, or the entire Commuter Rail system.[10]

Phase 3

Phase 3[11] would add a rail line on the most heavily traveled portion of the corridor, from Assembly Square in Somerville to Lechmere, Kendall Station, crossing Massachusetts Avenue near MIT, and connecting at Longwood Medical Area, Ruggles, and Dudley Square. The exact alignment will be determined through further environmental review, and includes possible stops in Union Square Somerville, Cambridgeport and/or Kenmore Square, and a possible new tunnel under the Charles River.

There are now three alternatives being considered for Phase 3, which differ from the alternatives described in the Major Investment Study (MIS) and Draft Environmental Impact Review (DEIR). Employment growth projections have also changed since those documents were written. The three proposed options for what type of rail service to build are:

Estimated ridership is 282,000–293,000 passengers per day in 2025; about 47,000 would be diverted from cars, and most of the rest would be diverted from trips on congested radial lines, reducing the need to travel through downtown Boston.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 eot Urban Ring Notice
  2. 1 2 "Urban Ring Phase 2: Fact Sheet", Executive Office of transportation, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, January 2009 (archived 2011)
  3. "Circumferential Transit Report". Boston Transportation Planning Review. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. October 1972. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
  4. Central Transportation Planning Staff (15 November 1993). "The Transportation Plan for the Boston Region - Volume 2". National Transportation Library. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  5. Sources for this section: The official project brochure and Phase 2 Draft EIR.
  6. MBTA Bus Schedule
  7. "Urban Ring Documents Library", MBTA. (archived 2006)
  8. "MBTA Financials", MBTA. Also cf. "Inside the T: Capital Investment Program: The FY06 – FY10 Capital Investment Program", MBTA, (archived 2005)
  9. Sources for this section: The official project brochure and Phase 2 Draft EIR.
  10. 1 2 Sempra Energy
  11. Source: Official project brochure.
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