Silver Line (MBTA)

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The Silver Line is the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority's (MBTA's) sole Bus Rapid Transit line, running in two, unconnected sections, from Dudley Square in Roxbury to downtown Boston, Massachusetts and from South Station to several points in South Boston and to Logan Airport in East Boston.

The Silver Line is planned to be built in three phases; only phase I and part of phase II have been completed. Phase III, a connection between the two sections, is planned for some time after 2010.

Silver Line buses are wheelchair ramp equipped using a kneeling bus and a flip-out ramp. See MBTA accessibility.

Contents

Phase I

Phase I of the Silver Line runs between Dudley Square in Roxbury and downtown Boston (with free transfer slips provided to all subway lines but the Blue Line). The full line started running July 20, 2002, replacing the Washington Street Elevated, which closed in 1987. In the interim, the route was served by the 49 bus (which had existed as a feeder route before 1987); Silver Line phase I is internally known as the 749.[1] (http://groups-beta.google.com/group/ne.transportation/browse_frm/thread/f530416257fc6e25/ceec654061ef0f95?q=749+%22silver+line&rnum=3&hl=en#ceec654061ef0f95)

Station listing

Station Opened Transfers and notes
Dudley Square July 20, 2002
Melnea Cass Boulevard July 20, 2002
Lenox Street July 20, 2002
Massachusetts Avenue July 20, 2002
Worcester Square Late 2002
Newton Street July 20, 2002
Union Park Street July 20, 2002
East Berkeley Street July 20, 2002
Herald Street July 20, 2002
New England Medical Center July 20, 2002 Orange Line
Chinatown July 20, 2002 Orange Line
northbound buses only
Boylston July 20, 2002 Green Line
southbound buses only
Downtown Crossing at Temple Place July 20, 2002 Orange Line and Red Line at Downtown Crossing

Phase II

Phase II of the Silver Line utilizes overhead electric power in a new tunnel from South Station to Boston's World Trade Center and on surface reserved right of way 1/2 mile further east to Silver Line Way. Dual-mode buses continue beyond Silver Line Way on diesel power over three routes:

A Silver Line Waterfront service from South Station to Silver Line Way operates using trackless trolleys. One more service is planned:

When this route opens, the service running only to Silver Line Way is to be discontinued.

The SL1 operates in a loop at Logan Airport and only serves the terminals, at the arrivals level. There are free shuttle buses connecting the terminals and other airport destinations, including the Airport station on the Blue Line, hotels, rental cars and the water taxi. A system of moving walkways connects terminals A and E and central parking. See the Logan Airport article for lists of which airlines serve each terminal.

History

The Phase II tunnel was constructed in conjunction with Boston's "Big Dig" and was originally referred to as the South Boston Piers Transitway. Tunnel sections were fabricated in a nearby, World War II-era dry dock and floated into place. Phase II opened on Friday, December 17, 2004, with the first route (Silver Line Waterfront, officially 746) running only to Silver Line Way.

When dual-mode buses were placed in service on December 31, 2004, the SL2 and SL3 extensions opened. SL1, to Logan Airport, opened June 1, 2005.

As not enough dual-mode buses were available, some rush-hour service was provided by CNG buses, with transfers at Silver Line Way. Through service was suspended after January 5, and was not brought back until March 5, with all buses dual-mode starting on March 14. Beginning on March 26, late night and weekend trips ran combined, running both around the BMIP loop and to City Point.

On January 2, CNG buses started running on a Sunday-only (16:00 to 22:00 only) shuttle route (746-5) between Silver Line Way and the airport terminals. The agreement with the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection called for airport service by January, but the MBTA didn't yet have enough buses for full service.[2] (http://groups-beta.google.com/group/ne.transportation/browse_frm/thread/876169bcbb718fca/160e8949b8069baf?q=%22silver+line%22&rnum=5&hl=en#160e8949b8069baf)

Station listing

Station Routes Opened Transfers and notes
South Station all December 17, 2004 Red Line, MBTA Commuter Rail, Amtrak, intercity buses
Courthouse all December 17, 2004 John Joseph Moakley US Courthouse
World Trade Center all December 17, 2004 Boston Convention and Exhibition Center, seasonal ferry to Provincetown, Lenticular art on the lobby level of the station
Silver Line Way all December 17, 2004
Logan Airport Terminal A SL1 June 1, 2005 Massport and rental car shuttle buses
Logan Airport Terminal B south SL1 June 1, 2005
Logan Airport Terminal B north SL1 June 1, 2005
Logan Airport Terminals C & D SL1 June 1, 2005 stop is outside Terminal D
Logan Airport Terminal E SL1 June 1, 2005 most international arrivals, Hilton hotel, next stop is Silver Line Way
Northern Avenue at Harbor Street SL2, SL3 December 31, 2004
Northern Avenue at Tide Street SL2, SL3 December 31, 2004
25 Dry Dock Avenue SL2 (outbound) December 31, 2004
88 Black Falcon Avenue SL2 (terminal) December 31, 2004 Cruise ship terminal
Black Falcon Avenue at Design Center Place SL2 (inbound) December 31, 2004
Dry Dock Avenue at Design Center Place SL2 (inbound), SL3 December 31, 2004
Summer Street at Power House Street SL3 December 31, 2004
East First Street at M Street SL3 December 31, 2004
City Point SL3 December 31, 2004 continues to Farragut Road weekdays until 19:00

Phase III

Phase III comprises the connection of the two halves of the Silver Line via an underground busway from Boylston station on the Green Line to South Station. It has not been funded yet and is not expected to be completed until after 2010. At this time, three possible routings are being debated. The total cost for the un-determined route is expected to be US$780 million.

Future BRT options

In addition to the Silver Line, BRT is being considered as a means of implementing the Urban Ring Project and providing improved crosstown service.

Silver Line critiques

In MBTA nomenclature, BRT lines are named by colors, not by number. This system is intended to equate BRT lines with subway lines as equivalent services. There are historical reasons for this equation. The Silver Line is the result of a court order mandating restoration of local service after the Washington Street Elevated portion of the Orange Line was demolished and the Orange Line was re-routed onto the Southwest Corridor right-of-way. Proposals to build a new subway line under Washington Street or a new trolley line along Washington Street were deemed impractical (for the same reasons that the Orange Line was moved), which is why BRT was chosen as a solution.

As for phase II, BRT was chosen despite the partly separate right-of-way because the Ted Williams Tunnel to Logan Airport is an Interstate Highway (I-90), and Interstate Highway standards do not allow rail tracks in the road.

Detractors of Silver Line service insist that BRT is still a bus, not a high-speed transit line, and provides equivalent quality and speed to other buses. Logically, it is therefore undeserving of the dignity of equality with Boston's subway lines. These groups sometimes refer to the Silver Line Phase I as the "#49 bus" (this being the bus line with an identical routing that the Silver Line replaced) and the "Silver Lie" (used because of concerns from groups that the MBTA has reneged on a promise of real rapid transit.)

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