Boston transportation
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Roads
Boston's streets may seem as though they were not planned—a common fiction is that they evolved from old cowpaths—but in the 17th century they avoided swamps and marshes and followed shorelines before the original peninsula comprising the city was expanded with landfill in the 19th century. Except for the Back Bay and part of South Boston, Boston has no street grid, which is confusing for American drivers. Roads change names and lose and add lanes seemingly at random, and many drivers are flummoxed by rotaries. Legally, cars already in a rotary have the right of way; that's not the way it always works in reality.
Back in the 1940s urban planners saw the need for improved road transportation, otherwise Boston's developement would be limited. The state Department of Public Works had the novel idea of building a futuristic 1.5 mile "Highway in the Sky" through downtown Boston, with enough on- and off-ramps to service local destinations. This elevated John F. Fitzgerald Expressway - more commonly known as the Central Artery - was intended to work in concert with the Inner Belt, that was to circle downtown Boston from the South End and Back Bay across the Charles River to Cambridge and Charlestown. Local traffic would use the elevated Central Artery, while through traffic would use the Inner Belt.
Construction on the Central Artery began in 1950, but the roadway was not without controversy. The new artery, which displaced more than 20,000 people and demolished more than 1,000 structures, was seen as ugly and divisive of city neighborhoods. Its construction spurred citizen groups and others to successfully oppose the building of the Inner Belt. Central Artery construction concluded in 1959 as part of Interstate 93, was designed for 75,000 vehicles per day. But from the outset, its 27 on- and off-ramps between Kneeland Street and Causeway Street, combined with a lack of merge and breakdown lanes, made for less than smooth traffic flow. Stall and crawl commuting was born.
By the early 1990s traffic on the elevated artery was an incredible 190,000 vehicles per day, with an accident rate four times the national average for urban interstates. Traffic was bumper-to-bumper for six to eight hours per day, with projections of traffic jams doubling by 2010. Plus, the elevated structure itself was decaying.
For most of the 1990s and early 2000s, driving in Boston was disrupted by the Big Dig, the most expensive (roughly $14 billion) road project in the history of the United States. State officials claim that it will solve the region's traffic woes, but critics recall the same promise in the 1950s when they pushed through the Central Artery—the elevated highway the Big Dig is replacing.
Subways
Mbta-logo.jpg
Main article: Boston subway.
There are four subway lines in the metropolitan Boston area: the Red Line, Green Line, Orange Line, and Blue Line, all of which head into and out of downtown Boston. That is one of the system's strengths—the subways do an excellent job of getting people to and from downtown. However, there is little cross-town service (The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, which runs the system, has begun developing a cross-town bus line, though). Also, the subways stop running at 12:45 a.m. each night, although bars and clubs in Boston are open until 2 a.m. The MBTA runs "Night Owl" buses between 1 and 2:30 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. The basic fare is $1.25, extra to get on or off at some of the more remote stations, such as Quincy or Riverside. Monthly commuter passes and day and week visitor's passes are available.
Boston has the oldest subway system in North America—the first car began running under Tremont Street in 1897 (today, that line is part of the Green Line). The Red, Blue and Orange lines are traditional subway lines with third rail power (although the Blue Line switches to overhead lines north of Boston Harbor). The Green Line and the Mattapan branch of the Red Line are really light-rail lines, using trolley cars. The Mattapan line uses refurbished pre-war "PCC" trolleys; the Green Line relies on more modern LRV cars from Japan and Italy. The Green Line is actually four different lines; it starts as one and about halfway through the system it splits into four different lines, the B (Boston College), C (Cleveland Circle), D (Riverside) and E (Heath Street) trains. Because the split is only present on the outbound end of the line one may take any train inbound, but when going outbound one must be careful of which train one gets on or else one will end up in a very different place. Because the Green Line runs through many college campuses it is often referred to by Boston students as the "drunk college-kid express".
In the early 1960s, the then-new MBTA hired Cambridge Seven Associates to help develop a new identity. Cambridge Seven came up with a circled T to represent such concepts as "transit," "transportation" and "tunnel." Today, Bostonians call their subway "the T."
The colors of each line have a meaning: The Green Line runs into the leafy suburbs of Brookline and Newton; the Blue Line runs along the ocean; the Red Line used to terminate at Harvard University (whose school color is crimson) and the Orange Line used to run along Washington Street, which was once called Orange Street.
Elevated sections
Despite the first section being built underground, many later parts were built as elevated railways. The only old-style elevated remaining is the Red Line at Charles-MGH, between the tunnel under Beacon Hill and the Longfellow Bridge. Until 2004, the Green Line was elevated near North Station; the tunnel to replace it is under construction. The part north of there will remain elevated, but it runs along a concrete arch bridge.
The Boston Elevated Railway was the company that owned all the elevateds and subways. The following els once existed:
- Causeway Street Elevated (closed 2004), from the Haymarket Incline to the Lechmere Viaduct
- Washington Street Elevated (closed 1987), from Forest Hills to an incline north of the Masspike
- Charlestown Elevated (closed April 4, 1975), from the Haymarket Incline to Everett
- Atlantic Avenue Elevated (closed 1938), from the Washington Street El at the Castle Street Wye at Herald Street (Tower 'D') to the Charlestown El and Causeway Street El at North Station (Tower 'C')
References
- Chronology of subway construction in Boston (http://groups-beta.google.com/group/misc.transport.road/messages/c0f7b56afde3738e,9bd97b8b00caa5f8,0002bad2d43ab033,769196816fedffa3,36265cd2618553b3,0ef04cbf9779a310,a9d2990fe8b2070b,c535117554d2069b,77c2ea22b2ffe469,1ce8ef0c86e650c2?thread_id=24b6a6889862a1e2)
Commuter rail
The MBTA's commuter rail system, sometimes known as the Purple Line, brings people from as far away as Worcester and Providence, Rhode Island into Boston. Lines from the North Shore and northwestern suburbs begin and terminate at North Station; lines from the South Shore and the west start and end at South Station. There are approximately 125,000 one-way trips on the commuter rail each day.
Bus Rapid Transit
In an effort to provide service intermediate in speed and capacity between subways and buses, the MBTA has begun projects using the Bus Rapid Transit, or BRT, system. Currently, the MBTA has one BRT line, the Silver Line.
Buses
Main article: MBTA Bus
The MBTA operates 162 bus routes within the Greater Boston area with a combined ridership of approximately 375,000 one-way trips per day. Included are four of the few remaining trolleybus lines in the U.S. (71, 72, 73 and 77a). The basic bus fare is $0.90; monthly commuter passes are available, as are transfers between some bus lines and the subway.
In addition, South Station is a major bus depot for inter-city travel.
Walking and Bicycling
Boston is known to travel agents as 'America's Walking City' ... perhaps because it is so hard to drive. Yet Boston is a compact city, sized right for walking or bicycling, and the area enjoys some of the highest rates of non-automobile commuting in the country. Most of the area's cities and towns have standing committees devoted to improvements to the bicycle and pedestrian environment. The Minuteman Bikeway and Charles River bike paths are popular with recreational cyclists and tourists. Many MBTA riders use a bicycle to get to the station.
Satellite parking
The MBTA operates several large parking facilities on its subway and commuter rail lines. While these tend to fill up with commuters on weekday mornings, they provide a good place for visitors to leave their cars and see the city without parking hassles on evenings and weekends.
Intercity Trains
There are two major rail stations in Boston: North Station and South Station. There is a third station in Back Bay and a fourth, outside the city, on Rte. 128. All of these are served by commuter rail and Amtrak. Amtrak's Northeast Corridor service terminates at South Station; Amtrak's Downeaster service to Maine terminates at North Station. There is no direct rail connection between North Station and South Station; most transfers from one side to the other can be done using the MBTA Orange Line from North Station to Back Bay. See also North-South Rail Link.
Planes
Boston enjoys extensive domestic and international airline service at three airports:
- Logan International Airport in East Boston
- T. F. Green Airport in Providence, Rhode Island
- Manchester Airport in Manchester, New Hampshire
There are also several general aviation facilities including Hanscom Field in Bedford and Norwood Municipal Airport. Express train service is planned from T.F. Green to Boston.
See also
External links
- http://www.bigdig.com
- http://www.mbta.com
- http://www.mbta.com/insidethet/taag_history.asp — MBTA History
Sources:
- http://www.mbta.com/profile/glance/ridership.cfm
- http://www.mbta.com/profile/glance/infrastructure.cfm
- http://www.mbta.com/schedmaps/maps/system/
- http://members.aol.com/netransit/
- http://www.boston-online.com/Transportation/Trains/
- Car Free in Boston (http://www.car-free.com/carfree/)
- http://www.pathfriends.org/