Tokyo, Japan, August 21, 2014 – While
most travelers enter Japan from Narita International Airport, Haneda
Airport which is closer to Tokyo’s downtown and sees 60 million
passengers annually, is being
upgraded with improved rail links. The airport has resurfaced as an
international destination since a fourth runway was added as part of the
Japanese government’s program to increase tourism in the country.
The
monorail that’s operated by Japan Railways East (JR East) and its
subsidiary Tokyo Monorail are looking to expand the 'train to the plane' system to Shinjuku
(a major tourist destination), central Tokyo and Shin-Kiba with a 3 km
(about 2 miles). The project is budgeted at $1.1 billion dollars.
Currently,
passengers can connect from the monorail to JR East and the Tokyo
subway at the at Hamamatsucho monorail terminal. The line extension
would reduce the average trip time from 24 to 18 minutes and a train
transfer eliminated.
Welcome to The International Transportation Photojournalist and Syndicator of News Stories and Images Since 1993 - Joseph M. Calisi's Transportation Blog. All my materials on this blog are copyrighted.
Monday, July 20, 2015
Metro-North M-2 Cars Saying Goodbye With New Reporting Marks
New Haven, CT, July, 2015 -
It appears the last of the M-2 cars
on the property have completed their service on Metro-North. Some have gone so
far as to say the 'Cosmo' cars just might’ve been the best commuter car ever
built in this country.
In what could be described as a last goodbye to the region they served so well for almost 40 years, the last eight M-2 cars departed Cedar Hill Yard recently as a CSX diesel loco towed them to their final resting place. The car numbers were obliterated and replaced with FICX reporting marks, a symbol of the new owner Frontier Industrial Recycling.
In what could be described as a last goodbye to the region they served so well for almost 40 years, the last eight M-2 cars departed Cedar Hill Yard recently as a CSX diesel loco towed them to their final resting place. The car numbers were obliterated and replaced with FICX reporting marks, a symbol of the new owner Frontier Industrial Recycling.
The final destination is a scrap
yard in the famous railroad town of Ashtabula, Ohio.
Adieu to the M-2, you served us
well.
Photo caption: Cosmo cars on the layup track in New Haven, Ct. during an ERA tour in March, 2015.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Ex-NYCT ‘Redbird’ Used As A Tourist Center To Close
Queens,
NY, July 15, 2015 -
The R-33S subway car that was salvaged from the
drink before it could be lowered off the shores of Cape May, NJ has apparently
worn out its welcome on Queens Blvd. In 2005, it was saved to be a welcome/tourist
center in Queens Blvd outside borough headquarters and the nearby courthouse.
At the time, former
Borough President Helen Marshall’s office paid for a $500,000 rehab and laying
of the track panels that are beneath the car.
Ironically, the car that was built in 1963 never
operated on the IRT #7 Flushing line. Out of 1400 of this car type built, this ‘Redbird’
was one of 770 that received a general
overhaul and this color (nicknamed Gunn Red) red paint in the 1980s.
The
closing is seen as a failure to market the salvaged subway car as a tourist
center in Queens. Maybe it can be moved to Times Square where it would sit over
the IRT 1, 2 and 3 7th Avenue subway lines where it really operated in its
heyday.
The Redbirds
went out of service in November of 2004 on the Flushing line.
The staffer that worked in the car was quoted in the
local media that she was disappointed it was closing but a new concept could
replace it.
SEPTA Media-Sharon Hill Trolley Service Changes Begin on July 20
Philadelphia, Pa., July 15, 2015 -
For more information
on the Route 101/102 Trolley Modernization work, visit http://www.septa.org/rebuilding/101-102-modernization.html.
Buses are being used in place of
trolleys along SEPTA Routes 101 and 102 (Media-Sharon Hill Line) through
Sunday, September 6, 2015 due to a 12-week trolley modernization project. New
timetables for Routes 101 and 102 will begin on Monday, July 20. The new
schedules reflect some Route 101 trip time adjustments and Route 102 bus
re-routing to accommodate track construction on Springfield Road and Woodlawn
Avenue.
The Media-Sharon Hill
Line is comprised of three parts: the trunk from 69th Street Transportation; Center
to Drexel Hill Junction (Shadeland Avenue) used by both Route 101 and 102;
stops from Huey Avenue to Media used by Route 101, and; stops from Garrettford
to Sharon Hill used by Route 102.
During the 12-week
summer trolley shutdown, 16 SEPTA in-house and third party contractor groups
will work on a variety of projects on all three portions of the line. The work schedule
will typically be Monday-Saturday, from 7 a.m.-7 p.m.
Scheduled work in 10
phases over the 12-week period on Route 102 are:
·
Rail replacement;
·
Concrete roadway and repaving the parking lanes, and;
·
Installation of rubber rail boots around the new rails to lessen
vibration and noise.
The last time the
trolley track and roadway were replaced in this area was 1983.
During this first of
10 phases of the construction, substitute Route 102 buses between Clifton
Heights and Aldan will travel via Baltimore Avenue, Oak Avenue and Providence
Road due to the Springfield Road and Woodlawn Avenue construction as trips will
be15-20 minutes longer.
Boarding locations
will be moved to Baltimore Avenue at Trolley Station and
Providence Road at Woodlawn Avenue. For details, visit: http://septa.org/rebuilding/101-102-modernization-phase-2.html.
Monday, July 13, 2015
Santa Fe Railway’s Harvey House Girls Honored
Santa Fe, New Mexico, May 23, 2015 –
Now, museums along the Santa Fe route dedicated to the Harvey Houses that were actual former facilities. Belen, NM is where the one of the famous 'The Harvey House' establishments once flourished. This museum is dedicated to its history in Belen and is adjacent to the Santa Fe Railway (now BNSF) right-of-way.
After Fred Harvey
met with Charles Morse (President of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe
Railway) in 1870s with the idea of setting up Harvey Houses with hotel
and dining along the Santa Fe right of way
became a reality, a profound change came to the American west. The
innovative chain of 84 elegant hotels, lunchrooms and restaurants that
predated Route 66, were staffed by single women. In Santa Fe, New
Mexico, those women were honored by New Mexico Governor
Susana Martinez as well as the mayors of Santa Fe and Albuquerque.
The
anniversary of the Harvey House franchise was celebrated because of what
it did for women and the higher standard the Harvey Houses created for
the hotel business out west.
Those
approximately 100,000 women that staffed the Harvey Houses were
frequently immigrants or from small towns that were looking for economic
opportunities. Women from farms and small towns earned money
and sent it home to help support the family homestead.
The rules the
women had to abide by began with not being not married was strictly
enforced as well as being clean and well-groomed. The women provided the
cooking, cleaning and other upgraded hotel services
as these clean and modern establishments offered a superior option to
the lower grade nearby hotels. These trackside institutions that were
100 miles apart, flourished until the Route 66 highway was created which
gradually eroded the Harvey House luster and
ultimately led to their closure when automobile use which no longer
limited travelers to hotels near the Santa Fe Railway.
Now, museums along the Santa Fe route dedicated to the Harvey Houses that were actual former facilities. Belen, NM is where the one of the famous 'The Harvey House' establishments once flourished. This museum is dedicated to its history in Belen and is adjacent to the Santa Fe Railway (now BNSF) right-of-way.
Saturday, July 4, 2015
Amtrak Studies Additional St. Paul-Chicago Rail Service
July 2, 2015 -
Some time ago, Amtrak began to study the feasibility of additional St. Paul-Chicago rail service on behalf of the Minnesota and Wisconsin departments of transportation (MnDOT and WisDOT) and La Crosse County, Wisc. The verdict was a clear 'yes'.
The theory is that the second daily train would provide improved eastbound reliability and increased train frequency. An assessment of schedules, ridership, revenue, infrastructure investments, operating costs, and equipment needs associated with adding a second daily train between Minnesota and Chicago closer to midday hours also needed to be examined.
The study assumed the second round trip train would use the same route as the current Empire Builder service between Chicago and St. Paul with the addition of a Milwaukee Airport Rail Station stop.
The study said the St. Paul and Chicago route is the most feasible for initial service with potential extensions to Minneapolis and St. Cloud. It recommends an environmental review of the project, which would have a robust public involvement component and provide eligibility for federal funding. At this time, MnDOT, WisDOT and LaCrosse County are determining how to fund this step.
Annual ridership on the additional daily train, with a morning departure from Chicago and a mid-day departure from St. Paul, is estimated at about 155,000 passengers. This is an increase over the current Empire Builder ridership of approximately 104,000 between St. Paul and Chicago, with departures from St. Paul in the morning and Chicago in the afternoon. The top speed for passenger trains in this corridor is 79 mph.
There are anticipated capital investment costs for infrastructure capacity improvements, with a planning level cost estimate of approximately $95 million for the Chicago to St. Paul scenario. The St. Cloud and Minneapolis scenarios had higher infrastructure costs. If new equipment is required, it would cost an additional $46.4 million.
The study estimates annual state operating support (the difference between ticket revenue and operating and capital equipment costs) for the Chicago to St. Paul initial service would be approximately $6.6 million in 2014 dollars. The cost share among the funding parities for the service would be determined at a later date. Current federal regulations limit Amtrak participation to covering the first 15 percent of the operating cost.
The study is viewable at: http://www.dot.state.mn.us/passengerrail/.
Some time ago, Amtrak began to study the feasibility of additional St. Paul-Chicago rail service on behalf of the Minnesota and Wisconsin departments of transportation (MnDOT and WisDOT) and La Crosse County, Wisc. The verdict was a clear 'yes'.
The theory is that the second daily train would provide improved eastbound reliability and increased train frequency. An assessment of schedules, ridership, revenue, infrastructure investments, operating costs, and equipment needs associated with adding a second daily train between Minnesota and Chicago closer to midday hours also needed to be examined.
The study assumed the second round trip train would use the same route as the current Empire Builder service between Chicago and St. Paul with the addition of a Milwaukee Airport Rail Station stop.
The study said the St. Paul and Chicago route is the most feasible for initial service with potential extensions to Minneapolis and St. Cloud. It recommends an environmental review of the project, which would have a robust public involvement component and provide eligibility for federal funding. At this time, MnDOT, WisDOT and LaCrosse County are determining how to fund this step.
Annual ridership on the additional daily train, with a morning departure from Chicago and a mid-day departure from St. Paul, is estimated at about 155,000 passengers. This is an increase over the current Empire Builder ridership of approximately 104,000 between St. Paul and Chicago, with departures from St. Paul in the morning and Chicago in the afternoon. The top speed for passenger trains in this corridor is 79 mph.
There are anticipated capital investment costs for infrastructure capacity improvements, with a planning level cost estimate of approximately $95 million for the Chicago to St. Paul scenario. The St. Cloud and Minneapolis scenarios had higher infrastructure costs. If new equipment is required, it would cost an additional $46.4 million.
The study estimates annual state operating support (the difference between ticket revenue and operating and capital equipment costs) for the Chicago to St. Paul initial service would be approximately $6.6 million in 2014 dollars. The cost share among the funding parities for the service would be determined at a later date. Current federal regulations limit Amtrak participation to covering the first 15 percent of the operating cost.
The study is viewable at: http://www.dot.state.mn.us/passengerrail/.
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