Buffalo Metro Rail

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Template:About Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox rail line

Buffalo Metro Rail is the public transit rail system in Buffalo, New York, operated by the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority (NFTA). The system consists of a single, Template:Convert light rail line that runs for most of the length of Main Street (New York State Route 5) from KeyBank Center in Canalside to the south campus of the University at Buffalo in the northeast corner of the city. The first section of the line opened in October 1984; the current system was completed in November 1986. In Template:American transit ridership, the system had a ridership of Template:American transit ridership, or about Template:American transit ridership per weekday as of Template:American transit ridership.

History

Urban rail transit in Buffalo before 1950

Template:Further Streetcars and interurban railways existed in Buffalo from the 1830s to 1950, with several lines also radiating into surrounding communities such as Tonawanda, Niagara Falls and even the Niagara Peninsula in Canada. These lines merged in 1902 to form the International Railway Company in 1902.<ref>Buffalo’s Historic Streetcars and Buses, D. David Bregger, Arcadia Pub., c2008. Template:ISBN</ref> With the rise in bus usage starting in the mid-1930s, streetcar ridership declined rapidly until 1950, with several streetcar lines being shuttered over time until the rail system was eliminated altogether.<ref>The Last Decade of Buffalo Streetcars, date unknown, Harold Ahlstrom (National Railway Historical Society, Inc.</ref>

Planning and construction of current system

1975 "Projected rail transit route alignment"

Despite the decline of Buffalo's industry and population over the next few decades, federal funds and a desire to revitalize downtown spurred the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority, the IRC's successor, to construct the modern Metro Rail line, starting in 1979. It came amid a surge in light rail construction in mid-sized cities nationwide, as Denver, Portland, Sacramento, and San Jose also built systems at the same time.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The line opened in stages: the surface portion opened on October 9, 1984,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> while the subway opened as far as Amherst Street Station on May 20, 1985,<ref name=PRN-1985aug>Template:Cite news</ref> following an opening ceremony on May 18. The line was further extended to University Station, serving the University at Buffalo, on November 10, 1986, due to construction issues at LaSalle Station.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> At the time of the start of construction, the line was intended to be the first line for an extensive heavy rail system that would spread throughout the city and suburbs. However, during the construction of the line and afterward, Buffalo's population declined significantly by approximately 55% from around 580,000 in 1950 to about 261,000 in 2010 and the new line's ridership was much lower than originally anticipated. The cost of the urban section was so high that no funding was available to extend the lines into the suburbs, including the Amherst campus of the University at Buffalo. Efforts to obtain funding for feeder lines have historically been met with little to no success.

Renovations and expansion

Although a centerpiece of the original line, the downtown transit mall did not live up to expectations. Because of poor traffic patterns on Main Street, some business groups occasionally called for the removal of the transit system so that they can return to normal vehicle traffic and curbside parking.Template:Citation needed

In 2008, Buffalo began a project to reintroduce cars to Main Street.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The project in question involved creating a shared trackbed/roadway with curbside parking, as well as the permanent closure of the Theater Station, which occurred on February 18, 2013. The closure of Theater Station meant that Fountain Plaza Station, located Template:Convert south in the 500 block of Main Street, now serves as the northern terminus of the Free Fare Zone. On January 23, 2015, after less than two years of construction, traffic was reintroduced to the 600 block of Main Street, between Tupper and Chippewa Streets, in the Theater District.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On December 15, 2015, traffic was reintroduced to the 500 block of Main Street, between Chippewa and Mohawk streets, in the Central Business District. In late 2022, traffic was reintroduced to Lower Main between Exchange and Scott Street. Work began in July 2023 to complete the final stretch of Cars Sharing Main Street, with work between Mohawk and Exchange. The project is being constructed in conjunction with the total replacement of the trackbed in the 400 block as well as the installation of a crossover track to decrease the effects of single-tracking during the process.Template:Citation needed

On January 9, 2017, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced in his State of the State address that funding would be secured for the Amherst and Cobblestone line extensions. If successful, this would be the first extension in the service's history.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Funding for an environmental review into the Amherst extension was approved in 2018, and it was expected to take between 24 and 30 months.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 2019 Tim Kennedy and Crystal People-Stokes secured a $100M state commitment to fund renovation and repair work throughout the system that had largely been delayed since the line's opening. The funding is intended for total track replacement, catenary replacements, fastener and pad replacements, as well as two station complete rebuilds (Canalside and Church) and increased passenger comfort amenities at other stations.Template:Citation needed Following the reconstruction of Church Station, expected to begin in July 2024, NFTA intends to begin the process for a redesign of the Lafayette Square station.

Operations

Route

File:Main Street in Buffalo NY with light rail and Shea's Performing Arts Center (2015).jpg
Metro Rail near Shea's Performing Arts Center
Train departing Amherst Street Station.
A light rail train departing Amherst Street station

Metro Rail is a light rail transit (LRT) system as characterized by the American Public Transportation Association,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> although it shares some characteristics with rapid transit.

About 80% of its track (Template:Convert) is an underground subway with high-level platforms. This section has eight stations that are spaced fairly widely apart, comparable to subway systems elsewhere. This section is cut-and-cover from Allen/Medical Campus to Utica, then deep-bored from Delavan/Canisius College to University. The remaining 20% of its track (Template:Convert) are on the surface on Main Street in downtown Buffalo, which includes a brief underpass of Buffalo’s tallest building, the Seneca One Tower.<ref name="nycsubway.org">Template:Cite web</ref> On the surface section, trains interact with automobile traffic from the theater district where it emerges from the tunnel until Mohawk Street where it reverts to a transit mall and at cross streets, where movements are governed by traffic signals.

Metro Rail operates electric multiple-unit light rail vehicles (LRVs) in two-to-four car trains with power drawn from an overhead catenary system. Catenary poles on the surface section are spaced every Template:Convert to support the overhead electrical lines.<ref name="nfta.com">Template:Cite web</ref> Three-car trains are limited to rush hour and special events and four-car trains to special events.<ref name="nycsubway.org" /><ref name="nfta">Template:Cite web</ref> The Buffalo trains join Philadelphia's SEPTA light rail cars as the only modern non-articulated LRVs operating in the United States. Template:Clear

Stations

Name Image Type Platform Opened Fare zone Notes
University File:Buffalo Metro Rail 3-car train laying over at University Station (2015).jpg Underground Side Template:Dts Fare-paid zone Serves the University at Buffalo South Campus.
LaSalle File:Minnesota Linear Park - 20191119 - 01.jpg Serves The North Park Neighborhood, The Central Park Neighborhood, Shoshone Park.
Amherst Street File:NFTA Amherst Street Metro Rail station, Buffalo, New York - 20190713.jpg Island Template:Dts Serves Buffalo Zoo.
Humboldt–Hospital File:Buffalo Humboldt Hospital Station 02 (2012-07-19).jpg Serves Sisters of Charity Hospital and Darwin D. Martin House.
Delavan/Canisius University File:Delavan-Canisius College Station.jpg Serves Canisius University and Forest Lawn Cemetery.
Utica File:Utica Metro Rail Station, Buffalo, New York - 20200518.jpg Side
Summer–Best File:Summer-Best station.jpg Serves Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site and Kleinhans Music Hall.
Allen/Medical Campus File:Allen-Medical Campus Station.jpg Serves Allentown and Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus.
Theater File:Sheas.jpg Street level Template:Dts Free fare zone Permanently closed on Template:Dts.
Fountain Plaza File:Fountain Plaza station - September 2019.jpg Serves the Chippewa Entertainment District.
Lafayette Square File:Lafayette Square station - September 2019.jpg Serves Buffalo & Erie County Public Library, Buffalo Convention Center and downtown Buffalo.
Church File:Church station - September 2019.jpg Serves downtown Buffalo.
Seneca File:Seneca station - July 2019.jpg Serves Sahlen Field, Seneca One Tower and downtown Buffalo.
Canalside File:Erie Canal Harbor station - December 2023.jpg Serves Buffalo–Exchange Street station (Amtrak), LECOM Harborcenter and Canalside.
Special Events File:Special Events Station - July 2016.jpg Template:Dts Limited service for events at KeyBank Center.
DL&W Template:Dts Once completed, will replace Special Events station and serve KeyBank Center and Canalside.

Template:Notelist

Fares

Fares are collected through a proof-of-payment system, enforced through random ticket inspections. Travel is free on the above ground portion of the system.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Regular fare is $2; various passes are also available for sale. All stations have ticket machines.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, NFTA temporarily suspended fare collection starting in late March 2020. Fare collection resumed on June 29, 2020.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Schedules

Metro Rail runs as follows: Monday-Friday from 5:10Template:Nbspam-12:50Template:Nbspam, Saturdays from 7:05Template:Nbspam-12:50Template:Nbspam and Sundays and holidays from 8:00Template:Nbspam-11:50Template:Nbsppm (although most bus service is available until approximately 12:30Template:Nbspam). Trains run as often as once every ten minutes at rush hour and generally no less often than once every twenty minutes. In July 2008, the NFTA reported that the passenger count "eclipsed the previous year's tally by 23%."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As a result, the following September, the NFTA implemented an earlier start for the weekday schedule in response to an 11% increase in ridership over eight months of growth.

Ridership

{{ #invoke:Chart | bar chart | group 1 = 7135746:6918812:7213820:6335643:6568165:6355955:5797407:5857687:5478002:5373321:5631864:5850313:5680505:6805512:6215596:6061323:6460100:5058300:4300500:5218700:4899700:4560600:4492200:4394000:1999900:1890200:2386400:2433300:2228400:0 | width = 600 | group names = Annual ridership | x legends = 1996::::2000:::::2005:::::2010:::::2015:::::2020:::::2025 }}

Plans for expansion

Template:Main

File:Buffalo Metro Rail routemap with Tonawanda-Amherst extension.svg
Routemap with proposed Tonawanda-Amherst extension

Buffalo Metro Rail was ranked 25th in the nation in light rail daily ridership service in 2013, with 5,058,300 passengers. However, it is noted that the line currently lacks extended branches to the suburbs, being confined to the city limits of Buffalo. One group, the Citizens Regional Transit Corporation (CRTC), advocates for expansion.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As indicated in its statement, the CRTC seeks to educate the public, public officials, their authorities, and agencies in the Buffalo-Niagara region about the benefits of a comprehensive transportation system including an expanded Metro Rail. In April 2011, the group stated that the 600 block of Main Street, which has Shea's Performing Arts Center along with hotels and bars, should be converted into a mixed automobile and rail system.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The 600 block was re-opened to automobile traffic in 2015.

In December 2012, the NFTA announced it had secured funding of $1.6 million to commission a study in 2013 of bus and rail access to University at Buffalo's North Campus. If a rail project were to be approved, the system would be running in 7–10 years. On February 28, 2013, it was announced that a group consisting of representatives from the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus, planners from the City of Buffalo, the Buffalo Sabres and NFTA are working on a plan to extend the southern terminus of the rail line just beyond the NFTA rail yard at the DL&W Terminal to a new parking garage being built near the Medical Campus.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Amherst corridor

In the December 4, 2006, edition of The Spectrum, a publication of the University at Buffalo (UB), it was announced that school president John B. Simpson was planning to get a project underway that would connect UB's North, South and downtown campuses via a transportation system. The proposed systems included a subway, trolley or light rail. A study that was published in 2014 detailed four alternatives chosen for the corridor, including a light rail corridor and three bus rapid transit corridors. The light rail corridor would extend from a turnout at University station, head north to Niagara Falls Boulevard past the Boulevard Mall, turn to Sweet Home Road, enter the University at Buffalo North Campus and parallel Interstate 990 ending at the Crosspoint Business Park in Getzville.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Planning and funding is currently underway for a northbound Niagara Falls Boulevard extension to the University at Buffalo North Campus.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As of 2019, the proposed turnout tunnel to Niagara Falls Boulevard has been shortened, increasing the overall length of the street-side light rail portion of the route, and a new tunnel has been added to the design near I-290. In addition, the chosen corridor would parallel Audubon Boulevard and end at a park-and-ride after passing under I-990, rather than continuing to the Crosspoint Business Park.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The NFTA has also released a finalized scoping report and a draft environmental study report,<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> and has been receiving community input on the project.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Airport corridor

The Airport corridor would begin in Downtown Buffalo, near Church station and continue in an easterly direction in/out Division Streets, diagonally in a northeastern direction near Jefferson Avenue toward the Buffalo Central Terminal, cross Broadway and then continue eastbound in its private right-of-way to the Thruway Plaza, Walden Galleria and Buffalo-Niagara International Airport.

Tonawandas corridor

The Tonawandas corridor would operate from LaSalle station northwesterly to the city of Tonawanda using the abandoned Erie Railroad tracks. The NFTA purchased 12 Presidents' Conference Committee (PCC) streetcars in the 1980s to serve the Tonawanda turn-out, a proposed Metro Rail extension to Tonawanda and North Tonawanda. These cars were built by the St. Louis Car Company and acquired by Cleveland, Ohio's Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority second-hand in 1953. It was determined after initial trial runs that the PCCs were too wide for existing station platforms and the plan was abandoned. The PCCs were sold to the Brooklyn Historic Railway Association (BHRA) and scrapped in 2003 when the BHRA folded.

DL&W Terminal renewal

Template:Main The Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority (NFTA) is redeveloping the former Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad (DL&W) terminal to include a new indoor Metro Rail DL&W station on the first floor, adjacent to the Buffalo River, with direct access to Canalside via the Buffalo Bricks Walkway.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The project will replace the Special Events Station and mark the first extension of Metro Rail service since the system opened.

The station design includes capacity for two four-car trains, stair and escalator access to the terminal’s second floor. A $3 million enclosed pedestrian skybridge, partially funded with federal aid, will connect the second floor to the KeyBank Center.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

NFTA has partnered with developer Savarino Companies on a $30 million plan to redevelop the building’s first and second floors, totaling about Template:Convert of indoor space and Template:Convert of outdoor space.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Although Savarino Companies ceased operations in August 2023, work on the $87 million project has continued under a separate entity, Savarino DL&W Development, LLC.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The station and skybridge are expected to open in 2026,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> with the remainder of the redevelopment targeted for completion in 2027.

Rolling stock

Template:Infobox train

The NFTA has a fleet of 27 (originally 29) rigid-bodied (non-articulated) LRVs for the Metro Rail system, numbered sequentially from 101 to 127. They were built in 1983 by Tokyu Car Corporation (now known as Japan Transport Engineering Company).<ref name="nfta.com" /> The cars' body shell design is notably similar to that of the earlier articulated US Standard Light Rail Vehicle, whose shells were also fabricated by Tokyu Car Corp. for Boeing Vertol. The cars have a maximum service speed of Template:Convert, but trains run at Template:Convert in the above-ground section of the line.<ref name="nfta.com" /> There are three sliding doors on each side of each LRV; these doors can be opened by passengers by push buttons on the outside wall of the train when trains are stopped at stations on the above-ground section of the line.<ref name="nfta.com" /> However, in practice, train operators typically open all doors and extend all the retractable staircases at all above-stations. The NFTA acquired twelve PCC streetcars from the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority in 1990 for service on the never-built Tonawandas branch. They were later sold to the Brooklyn Historic Railway Association in 2003.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

Rehabilitation

In May 2006, it was announced that all of the LRVs would be rehabilitated by AnsaldoBreda. The rehabilitation featured many improvements, including enhanced video monitoring of the railcar interiors, an upgraded braking system, rebuilt HVAC systems, rebuilt door systems, a new interior closely representing the agency's new look, upgraded propulsion systems and repairs to the body shells. In addition, the rail cars were to receive new monitoring systems, an automated announcement system calling out stations, new door chimes and interior/exterior LED signage to replace existing roll signs. The total project cost was estimated at $40 million for rehabilitation of the 27 cars.<ref name="rehab">Template:Cite news</ref>

Because the refurbished cars have new car-to-car communications equipment, they are not compatible with unrefurbished cars and cannot run with them on the same line.<ref name="buffalonews-2012mar9">Template:Cite news</ref> The project originally planned to use SuperSteel's manufacturing facilities in Schenectady, New York, for the overhaul. However, due to the loss of orders and a dip in the economy, SuperSteel closed the facility in April 2009. The closure cost 175 jobs and delayed the rehabilitation.<ref name="dailygazette.com">Template:Cite news</ref> The project later was moved to Gray Manufacturing Industries, located in Hornell, New York.<ref name="gmihornell">Template:Cite web</ref> The first two cars were due back in revenue service in July 2010.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

After a lengthy delay, which put the project years behind the original schedule, the first two cars (fleet numbers 114 and 123) were returned to service on March 9, 2012. However, the cost of refurbishment per car had since gone up and now averaged $1.7 million per car with a total cost of $45 million to complete all cars in the fleet. Three more cars (numbers 110, 111 and 126) were sent out and were expected to be completed before the end of 2012, but did not return to service until the fall of 2013.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On October 1, 2014, car 113 also returned to service. By May 2021, 26 cars had been refurbished and the program was planned to end with a total of 27 (the entire fleet), with completion predicted for around July 2021.<ref name="buffalonews-2021may9">Template:Cite news</ref> The refurbishment is expected to extend the life of each car by 15 years.<ref name="buffalonews-2021may9"/>

See also

Notes

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References

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