METRO Magazine Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

'Quiet cars' gain ground on commuter rail systems

NJ Transit is publicizing the Quiet Commute cars on its Website and also plans to wrap one of the cars to advertise their availability.

by METRO Staff
August 10, 2010
'Quiet cars' gain ground on commuter rail systems

 

3 min to read


[IMAGE]Quiet.jpg[/IMAGE]New Jersey Transit (NJ Transit) will designate "Quiet Commute" cars on some trains in a 90-day pilot program beginning Sept. 7. NJ Transit will be the largest system with quiet cars once the program begins.

Quiet Commute cars will be available on weekdays on the first and last cars of Northeast Corridor express trains. The 3900-series was selected because the trains' relatively long trip times and regularly high ridership provide an ideal testing environment, according to NJ Transit.

Ad Loading...

The agency worked with Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) to learn about their experience managing a quiet car program.

"We want to make sure that it works, that there aren't any unforeseen consequences," Executive Director James Weinstein said. "We don't believe that there are - we think it's going to be a huge success. It's one of the things our customers ask for most."

In fact, SEPTA's quiet cars have been so popular that the agency is expanding its program from covering just peak hours to now covering the full work day. "We understand by expanding it to midday hours, that we're reaching a new demographic," Chief Press Officer Jerri Williams said. "We're not just reaching people that are used to it because they're commuting to and from work but, now, we're reaching those people that just come occasionally into Philly. We have a whole new education program, talking to them and having things in the paper, so they're fully aware of what the program entails."

In its customer surveys, SEPTA found that 92 percent of passengers agreed with a proposal to extend the quiet car program to all services, where possible. In addition, more than 90 percent of riders said the experience of riding in a quiet car met or exceeded their expectations.

NJ Transit will collect customer feedback on board and online during its pilot program. Assuming it goes well, Weinstein says the agency will likely begin adding quiet cars on the system's other 11 rail lines. "Based on the reaction we've gotten from our customers whose lines weren't chosen for the pilot, I see us rolling this out pretty quickly thereafter," he said.

Ad Loading...

Quiet car rules are enforced by fellow passengers and conductors, both agencies said. "It's basically self-policed," Weinstein said. In the initial stages, NJ Transit conductors will hand out small business cards explaining the quiet car rules - a practice borrowed from SEPTA's program.

"You know, no cell phones, if you have an iPod, you need to use your earpieces and keep the volume down to a minimum, if you do need to speak, you need to speak in a whisper - those types of rules," Williams said. "They were all laid out in a very friendly, comfortable way. It's a courtesy that we're hoping that all the passengers understand and follow."

"If you're looking for a relaxing ride, all of those things contribute to depriving you of that," Weinstein said.

NJ Transit is publicizing the Quiet Commute cars on its Website and also plans to wrap one of the cars to advertise their availability.

 

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Rail

A man sits in a passenger rail seat and looks at his phone.
Railby Elora HaynesJune 8, 2026

The Invisible Infrastructure of Passenger Flow

What a seat reservation system on Austria’s Railjet trains reveals about the future of rider experience, and why U.S. agencies should pay attention.

Read More →
Aerial view of Caltrain's electric service.
Railby StaffJune 5, 2026

Caltrain Board Approves FY27 Budget, Endorses Efficiency Measures

The move ensures Caltrain service will continue operating as usual in the near term, but long-term financial challenges remain for the rail agency absent a new revenue source.

Read More →
Alstom purchasing site for Acela network manufacturing
Railby StaffJune 4, 2026

Alstom Acquires Delaware Site to Support Amtrak NextGen Acela Fleet

The company is investing more than $55 million to acquire and improve the property and will employ approximately 100 people at this site once it is operational.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
World Cup Crowds Will Test Transit Systems
ManagementJune 3, 2026

When Routine Fails: How Public Transit Must Adapt for the World Cup

The 2026 FIFA World Cup will test transit agencies’ ability to manage unpredictable travel patterns, making real-time data and operational flexibility critical to moving millions of visitors efficiently.

Read More →
A rendering of a California High-Speed Rail vehicle
Railby StaffJune 2, 2026

California Selects Team for Nation’s First True High-Speed Rail Track and Systems Contract

The board action follows completion of track installation at the 150-acre southern railhead in Kern County, which will serve as the staging and distribution hub for high-speed track and systems installation.

Read More →
Sound Transit Sounder train
Railby StaffJune 2, 2026

Seattle's Sound Transit Launches New Sounder Railcars into Service

Alstom manufactured all the cars under a $46.5 million contract and came into service in anticipation of summer crowds for soccer and baseball.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Railby StaffJune 2, 2026

Alstom Partners With Universities to Build Rail Talent Pipeline

The partnerships include a new engineering scholarship fund at Alfred State College in Western New York and collaborations with transportation centers at the University of Pennsylvania and New York University.

Read More →
Managementby StaffJune 1, 2026

Chicago's NITA Act Moves Into Next Phase as Service Improvements Begin

Rider-focused improvements will begin rolling out across the system immediately as CTA, Metra, and Pace increase service this summer in the six-county region.

Read More →
Managementby StaffMay 29, 2026

Seattle’s Sound Transit Adopts Updated ST3 System Plan

The updated system plan incorporates cost savings across the agency, including new revenue sources and financial policies, to set the agency on a sustainable path for the future.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
An EMBARK bus going down the street.
Managementby Alex RomanMay 28, 2026

Inside Look: EMBARK Expands Fare-Free Transit Program Through New Public-Private Partnership

The OKC transit agency says sponsorship helps subsidize the Third Friday Free initiative while reducing barriers for first-time riders and boosting ridership across buses, streetcars, and river cruises.

Read More →