1 / 38

Round One Public Outreach Workshops

Fall 2005. Round One Public Outreach Workshops. Steering Committee Meeting July 27, 2007. Agenda. Welcome & Introduction Meeting Purpose & Agenda Overview Consent : Draft December 13, 2006 Minutes Public Comment Study Status Bay Area to Central Valley High-Speed Train Program EIR/EIS

seth-bright
Download Presentation

Round One Public Outreach Workshops

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fall 2005 Round One Public Outreach Workshops Steering Committee Meeting July 27, 2007

  2. Agenda • Welcome & Introduction • Meeting Purpose & Agenda Overview • Consent: Draft December 13, 2006 Minutes • Public Comment • Study Status • Bay Area to Central Valley High-Speed Train Program EIR/EIS • Presentation & Discussion of Draft Plan Elements • Executive Summary • Regional Rail Evaluation • Regional Rail Phased Implementation • Study Schedule • August 2007 Public Outreach Workshops • September 2007 Plan Review and Adoption by MTC • Next Steps & Adjourn

  3. Regional Rail Elements • Rapid Transit (BART) • Railroad-Based Services • High-Speed Rail System • Interfaces to Other Regional Transportation Modes – Regional Bus and Ferry

  4. Regional Rail Issues • BART System • Core Capacity & Metro Service • System Expansion • Railroad Based Services • Accommodate Freight & Passenger • Appropriate Solution by Corridor • High Speed Rail System • Bay Area Entry from East (Altamont) • Bay Area Entry from South (Pacheco) • Effects on Regional Rail

  5. Regional Rail Vision • Backbone of System is the Core • Need for Regional Network • Local Transit • Regional / Express Network • Selecting Appropriate Technology by Corridor • Providing Connectivity • High Speed Rail May Accelerate System Development • Complementary Land Use Strategy

  6. System Alternatives No High Speed Rail

  7. Alternative 1 BART Lines & Connectivity Points

  8. Alternative 1 Regional Lines

  9. Alternative 2 BART Lines & Connectivity Points

  10. Alternative 2 Regional Lines

  11. Recommended Netowork Year 2050 – Long Term

  12. Alternatives Evaluation

  13. Plan Provision: Alternative 2 with further development of Metro operating plans and infrastructure; fourth track through Oakland; long term new Bay Crossing and San Francisco subway line (alignment to be determined)

  14. Plan Provision: Alternative 1 (No I-580 Connection) Plan Provision: Corridor Preservation Near Term; Phase in Rail Long Term

  15. Plan Provision: Alternative 1 Improve Standard Rail Shared with Freight

  16. Plan Provision: Alternative 1 Improve Standard Rail Shared with Freight

  17. Plan Provision: BART Core Capacity Near Term; 4-Track Crossing Long Term

  18. Plan Provision: Alternative 2 – Develop Lightweight Electrified Passenger Service; Provide Connection to Oakland Long Term

  19. Plan Provision: Alternative 1 Improve Standard Rail Shared with Freight

  20. Plan Provision: Blend – Separate Passenger Tracks with Low Level Bridge; Operate Standard Equipment Near Term; Operate Lightweight Equipment Long Term

  21. Plan Provision: Blend – Alternative 1 for Standard Rail (Standard Equipment Shared with Freight) ; Alternative 2 for BART (Connect to ACE at Isabel/Stanley)

  22. Plan Provision: Implement Passenger Service with Standard Rail along UPRR Corridor

  23. Possible Phasing – Near Term • Most projects already under development • BART Reinvestment & Core Capacity • Capitol Corridor Additional Main Tracks • UP Central Corridor Improvements • Caltrain Grade Separations • Dumbarton Connection • ACE Service Improvements • Corridor Preservation/Right-of-Way Access • Oakland Subdivision • North Bay • Central Valley • Grade Crossing Improvements & Separations

  24. Possible Phasing – Mid Term • BART completes current extensions • BART Metro Improvements • Further Development of Capitol Corridor, Caltrain • ACE Expansion • Dumbarton converts to lightweight equipment • Extension to Monterey County • North Bay initial services • Connectivity improvements & hubs

  25. Possible Phasing – Long Term • Transbay – Potential New Rail / BART Crossing • US 101 & North Bay expanded operations • Capitol Corridor Richmond – Martinez improvements & new Benicia Bridge; additional improvements Oakland – San Jose • Expanded Central Valley services & rail separation (Stockton) • Long term grade separations

  26. High Speed Rail

  27. High Speed Rail Effects • Near term projects in most of regional network would remain in place and would work with high speed rail • Ability to accelerate compatible projects (e.g., Peninsula services) • Altamont Effects • Improved Dumbarton Connection • Upgrade to Regional Services between Peninsula – Tri Valley – Sacramento & San Joaquin Valley • Pacheco Effects • Opportunity to upgrade Regional Services down to Gilroy; improved access to South Counties • Faster and more frequent service between Los Angeles & San Jose • Altamont + Pacheco Effects • Would not require development of 4-track sections Newark – Tracy • Would not require development of 4-track sections San Jose – Gilroy

More Related