The agency does anticipate, however, picking up a Virginia Railway Express option to purchase 21 railcars from Japanese rolling stock manufacturer Nippon Sharyo at an estimated cost of $2.5 million per car.
Chicago Metra announced that due to changes in the availability of capital to fund its $2.4 billion modernization plan and promising new alternatives, the agency is temporarily suspending its current search for a vendor to build 367 new railcars.
Metra has identified modernization of rolling stock as one of its highest capital priorities due to the age of its fleet and the fact that the condition of cars and locomotives is so essential to providing high-quality, reliable and comfortable service.
Metra anticipates being able to acquire some of the 367 new cars sooner than expected and at a substantial savings. Metra’s peer railroad Virginia Railway Express (VRE) has a remaining option to purchase 21 railcars from Japanese rolling stock manufacturer Nippon Sharyo at an estimated cost of $2.5 million per car. Because VRE uses the same type of railcars as Metra, the agency recently reached out to VRE about acquiring this option, since VRE may no longer need its full order.
The cost of the entire Metra purchase of 367 new railcars had been estimated at approximately $1.2 billion or $3.3 million per railcar. This is $800,000 more per car than the expected cost of each VRE car. If Metra is able to acquire the railcar option from VRE, it could result in savings of approximately $17 million, with delivery of the first set of new railcars in early 2018.
“The most important thing we can do right now is be flexible and creative in our efforts so that we can continue to achieve what we set out to do — invest in infrastructure and enhance service and reliability for the benefit of our customers,” said Metra Chairman Martin J. Oberman.
The projected availability of capital funding for the entire purchase has changed since Metra’s modernization plan was first proposed. The fact that the state of Illinois has put on hold more than $300 million in funding that had been previously budgeted in Metra’s capital program is likely to result in the need to spread out over a longer period of time the acquisition of the remaining 346 cars and the planned acquisition of new locomotives.
To overcome this problem and meet the need to update its fleet, Metra is aggressively investigating whether it can acquire and rehabilitate a number of later model cars from other commuter railroads that may no longer have a need for them. This approach may well result in lowering the need for as many new cars, while providing upgraded and completely renovated cars for Metra’s customers at a lower overall cost.
On a recent episode of METROspectives, METRO Magazine’s Executive Editor Alex Roman sat down with Ana-Maria Tomlinson, Director of Strategic & Cross-Sector Programs at the CSA Group, to explore a bold initiative aimed at addressing those challenges: the development of a National Code for Transit and Passenger Rail Systems in Canada.
Competitive FTA grants will support accessibility upgrades, family-friendly improvements, and cost-efficient capital projects at some of the nation’s oldest and busiest transit hubs.
The 3.92-mile addition will soon take riders west beyond its current Wilshire and Western station in Koreatown, continuing under Wilshire Boulevard through neighborhoods and communities including Hancock Park, Windsor Square, the Fairfax District, and Carthay Circle into Beverly Hills.
Under the plan, all long-distance routes will transition to a universal single-level fleet, replacing today’s mix of bi-level and single-level equipment.
The milestone is a significant step toward modernizing the MAX Blue Line’s power infrastructure, one of the oldest components of the region’s light rail system.
The firm will lead the Tier 2 environmental review program for the Coachella Valley Rail Corridor, including the conceptual and preliminary engineering needed to develop project-level environmental clearance.
The ATP board’s approval of ARC enables ATP to begin pre-construction activities and advance final design for Austin Light Rail under the first phase of what will be a multibillion-dollar contract.
Additionally, construction activity is estimated to generate more than $154 million in tax revenue, including more than $20 million for Los Angeles County.