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mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
Thu Dec 19, 2019, 05:50 PM Dec 2019

Virginia to build Long Bridge and acquire CSX right of way to expand passenger train service

Transportation
Virginia to build Long Bridge and acquire CSX right of way to expand passenger train service

By Luz Lazo
Dec. 19, 2019 at 3:47 p.m. EST

Virginia will build a new rail bridge over the Potomac River connecting Arlington and the District to significantly expand commuter and passenger train service over the next decade, Gov. Ralph Northam (D) announced Thursday. ... The state will own the new two-track span, to be constructed alongside the aged and overburdened Long Bridge. It will allow a 75 percent increase in frequency of Virginia Rail Express commuter trains and a doubling of Amtrak service between the District and Richmond, officials said.

The bridge will be built by as early as 2027 as part of a $3.7 billion investment that also includes adding new track in the Washington-to-Richmond corridor and acquisition of hundreds of miles of passenger right of way from the private company CSX. ... The agreement with CSX is designed to make future expanded train service possible across the state, including from Doswell west to Clifton Forge, and from Richmond south to the North Carolina border, officials said. ... The 10-year project will be paid for with local, state and federal money, Virginia officials said, but the state still needs a funding commitment from the District, Maryland and Northern Virginia.

This is the second time in just over a month that Virginia has committed to financing a major river crossing. Last month Northam and Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R) announced a joint, billion-dollar plan to rebuild and widen the American Legion Bridge. It was a major breakthrough for a long-desired expansion that promises to relieve congestion at the Washington region's worst traffic bottleneck.
....

Further south, plans are to add a third track from Franconia to Occoquan at a cost of $220 million and a $330 million rail bypass at Franconia-Springfield, which will allow the movement of trains when other trains are serving the station. ... “Our vision is definitely on growth,” Mitchell said in an interview earlier this week. “We would like to get to a place where we have nearly hourly service between Richmond and D.C. We would like to continue expanding trains to places like Newport News, Norfolk and Petersburg. We would like to be able to continue expanding VRE service, because they do relieve congestion on the 66 and 95 corridors.”

The acquisition from CSX also includes the 186 miles of tracks in the Buckingham Branch Line between Doswell and Clifton Forge, which would allow Virginia to launch an east-west train route from Norfolk to the Roanoke area. As part of the deal, Virginia will also acquire rights to use the abandoned S-Line from Petersburg to Ridgeway, N.C., an investment that would facilitate plans for high-speed train system in the Southeast. ... Under the agreement with CSX, the railroad will give Virginia permanent rights to increase the number of Amtrak and VRE trains operating on CSX tracks. ... Today Amtrak runs five Northeast Regional trains to Richmond. Officials anticipate adding six additional daily roundtrips to Richmond and one extension to the Hampton Roads area.

Virginia Railway Express, which runs eight trains on the Fredericksburg line, will add five new roundtrip trains during the rush hour and introduce three roundtrips on Saturday and Sunday. The agreement, officials said, will also allow VRE to add special Friday evening trains to give Virginians the option to use VRE after hours. ... Some trains could start as soon as the deal with CSX is finalized next summer and additional trains by 2026.

Robert McCartney contributed to this article.

Luz Lazo is a transportation reporter at The Washington Post covering passenger and freight transportation, buses, taxis and ride-sharing services. She also writes about traffic, road infrastructure and air travel in the Washington region and beyond. She joined The Post in 2011. Follow https://twitter.com/luzcita

Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation
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Virginia to build Long Bridge and acquire CSX right of way to expand passenger train service (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 OP
Big news, great for VA and for NC unc70 Dec 2019 #1
There used to be two passenger (and freight) routes that went south from Richmond. mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #4
From arlnow.com nitpicker Dec 2019 #2
Have you seen the spinoff of arlnow.com, alxnow.com? mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #3
Virginia Buys a Railroad mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #5
Virginia has $3.7 billion deal to expand rail service between Richmond and Washington mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #6
Excellent Recursion Dec 2019 #7
A few more tweets mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #8
This is the 10th anniversary of Virginia-sponsored rail service to Lynchburg. mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #9
Virginia's big buy-in on rail could transform regional mobility mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #10
Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation -- Major Initiatives mahatmakanejeeves Dec 2019 #11
Virginia's $3.7 billion rail plan called a 'game changer.' Here's what we know about it. mahatmakanejeeves Jan 2020 #12

unc70

(6,330 posts)
1. Big news, great for VA and for NC
Thu Dec 19, 2019, 06:37 PM
Dec 2019

VA is making a big effort on developing rail service. The rights to the S-Line will greatly help moving along on the high speed link between NC and places to the north.

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
4. There used to be two passenger (and freight) routes that went south from Richmond.
Fri Dec 20, 2019, 09:13 AM
Dec 2019
https://www.csx.com/index.cfm/customers/maps/csx-system-map/

The Seaboard Air Line Railroad went south from Richmond to Petersburg. Then it aimed southwest to go through Henderson, Raleigh, and Sanford. The tracks were removed north of the North Carolina-Virginia line about twenty-five years ago. The tracks in North Carolina are still in place. The line had a lot of curves.

The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad also went south from Richmond to Petersburg. Then it kept going south, to Rocky Mount, NC, and Wilson. CSX kept that line intact. This is the line the Florida trains take from the northeast corridor on the way south.

nitpicker

(7,153 posts)
2. From arlnow.com
Fri Dec 20, 2019, 06:45 AM
Dec 2019
https://www.arlnow.com/2019/12/19/breaking-governor-announces-deal-for-new-potomac-rail-bridge-expanded-passenger-rail-service/#more-228153

(snip)
Currently Long Bridge, built in 1904 and owned by CSX, carries every passenger, commuter, and CSX freight train that crosses the Potomac River. But it has only two tracks, and is at 98 percent capacity in peak times. The new bridge will relieve this bottleneck, providing track for passenger and commuter trains while freight trains exclusively use the existing Long Bridge.
(snip)

The Commonwealth has negotiated improvements with CSX to increase service levels. These improvements will be phased in over 10 years, resulting in the additional service:
•Doubling the number of Virginia Amtrak trains;
•Providing nearly hourly Amtrak service between Richmond and Washington, D.C.;
•Increasing Virginia Railway Express (VRE) service by 75 percent along the I-95 corridor, with 15-minute intervals during peak periods and adding weekend service;
•Increasing Amtrak service to Newport News and allowing for improved schedule of the third Amtrak train to Norfolk;
•Laying the foundation for Southeast High Speed Rail through the acquisition of the abandoned S-Line which runs from Petersburg into North Carolina; and
•Preserving an existing freight corridor between Doswell and Clifton Forge for future east-west passenger service.
(snip)

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
3. Have you seen the spinoff of arlnow.com, alxnow.com?
Fri Dec 20, 2019, 09:05 AM
Dec 2019
https://www.alxnow.com/

This is a big deal. I almost put the story in LBN, but I decided it was of local, not national, interest.

Also, good morning.

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
5. Virginia Buys a Railroad
Fri Dec 20, 2019, 10:16 AM
Dec 2019
Eastern Railroad Discussion > Virginia Buys a Railroad
Date: 12/19/19 13:02
Virginia Buys a Railroad
Author: mpatrickstone

https://www.richmond.com/news/virginia/plus/virginia-has-billion-deal-to-expand-rail-service-between-richmond/article_460c07a4-84d1-5b0c-9c0f-6dd384d7aa7b.html

As part of the blockbuster deal CSX sold VA the 173 miles of right of way, and 186 of track between Doswell and Clifton Forge.
.
.
.
Date: 12/19/19 16:40
Re: Virginia Buys a Railroad
Author: ctillnc

The details indicate that all Amtrak trains (except Auto Train, of course) would serve Main St Station in Richmond. This has been the intent all along. Virginia is also buying the CSX S-line (ex-SAL) right of way between Petersburg and Ridgeway, NC, just south of Norlina. This is the abandoned segment needed to implement the SEHSR project. The Ridgeway-Raleigh segment is currently served by CSX for local freight.

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
6. Virginia has $3.7 billion deal to expand rail service between Richmond and Washington
Fri Dec 20, 2019, 11:56 AM
Dec 2019
BREAKING TOP STORY
Virginia has $3.7 billion deal to expand rail service between Richmond and Washington
By MICHAEL MARTZ Richmond Times-Dispatch 19 hrs ago

Trains will run almost every hour between Washington and Richmond — including Main Street Station downtown — within 10 years under a deal between Virginia and CSX Corp. that will open the gateway for expanded rail service in the region and other parts of the state.

The blockbuster $3.7 billion agreement that Gov. Ralph Northam and CSX announced Thursday will give Virginia control over hundreds of miles of railroad track and underlying right of way in three rail corridors, including the former RF&P line that parallels Interstate 95 between Richmond and Washington. It will not expand the two-track rail line that runs through Ashland, which the state already has promised to preserve.

The cost of the project would be split roughly three ways between Virginia, Amtrak and regional partnerships, but would not require any new state money, state officials said.
....

Virginia will send $525 million to CSX, based in Jacksonville, Fla., for right of way and existing track on three rail lines. ... The agreement will allow the state to build and own track for high-speed passenger rail service, including expansion of Long Bridge, a 115-year-old railroad bridge across the Potomac River that is critical to passenger and freight service along the Eastern Seaboard but operating at near full capacity.
....

The deal also includes:

• passenger train rights to 30 miles of track between Richmond and Petersburg;
• 75 miles of right of way on the abandoned S-Line between Petersburg and Ridgeway, N.C., to eventually allow high-speed rail service to the Southeast; and
• 173 miles of right of way and 186 miles of track on the Buckingham Branch Line between Doswell and Clifton Forge for eventual cross-state passenger service.

....

[email protected]

(804) 649-6964

Staff writer C. Suarez Rojas contributed to this story.


Recursion

(56,582 posts)
7. Excellent
Sat Dec 21, 2019, 02:46 PM
Dec 2019

Finally a sensible plan for a new river crossing, rather than just hurling more cars over it by extending VA 28.

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
8. A few more tweets
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 01:56 PM
Dec 2019

I don't see electrification happening.

These capacity improvements to bring more trains are good news, but two key upgrades will still be needed for high-speed rail to Richmond: electrification and high platforms. Without them, Acela trains won't work south of DC.



ALERT: Virginia, CSX reach $3.7B deal that will vastly expand Amtrak, VRE service (including weekend service) in and out of DC over next 10 years.
It’ll be biggest change to region’s rail service in decades. It starts next year: https://wtop.com/dc-transit/2019/12/major-amtrak-vre-expansion-set-under-3-7-billion-virginia-csx-deal/


mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
9. This is the 10th anniversary of Virginia-sponsored rail service to Lynchburg.
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 03:58 PM
Dec 2019
Valentine, from Lynchburg, highlights this is 10th anniversary of Virginia sponsored rail service to Lynchburg. She chokes up talking about Sen Schewel who died this week and was a big supporter of that service


mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
10. Virginia's big buy-in on rail could transform regional mobility
Thu Dec 26, 2019, 12:53 PM
Dec 2019
Virginia’s big buy-in on rail could transform regional mobility
TRANSIT By Wyatt Gordon (Virginia Correspondent) December 20, 2019

“We cannot pave our way out of congestion.” With that declaration, Virginia Governor Ralph Northam announced a historic 3.7 billion dollar rail deal with CSX on Thursday that will allow the Commonwealth to vastly expand Amtrak and Virginia Railway Express (VRE) service over the next decade.

In the deal, Virginia acquired 225 miles of track and purchased the right of way to a further 350 miles of CSX-owned railroad. Northam also announced funding for the construction of 37 miles of new track to remove rail capacity chokepoints between Richmond and Washington, DC.

The list of projects that will be unlocked thanks to this deal reads like a rail enthusiast’s wish list: VRE service will expand by 75% and add in weekend operations, direct train connections between DC and Richmond will become a nearly hourly affair, VRE and MARC trains will have access to each other’s networks for the first time, high-speed rail to Raleigh is now possible, and planning for a mooted “Commonwealth Corridor”—linking the Blue Ridge Mountains and Hampton Roads by rail—can begin.


Here's what the proposed passenger rail network could look like under Northam's deal. Image by Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation.
....

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
11. Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation -- Major Initiatives
Fri Dec 27, 2019, 11:17 AM
Dec 2019
Rail

Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation -- Major Initiatives

Long Bridge Project: It is the most important project across all transportation modes currently in Virginia. Its completion has the potential to transform state-sponsored and commuter rail services throughout Virginia. Although this project is based in Northern Virginia, it will impact passenger rail service in every region of the state.

I-95 Corridor Improvements

DC2RVA (Washington, D.C. to Richmond)

Arkendale to Powell's Creek: It provides for the design and construction of a third track along the heavily congested nine-mile stretch of CSX’s main line from Powell’s Creek to Arkendale in Northern Virginia. In 2010, the project received a $75 million grant from the federal High Speed Intercity Passenger Rail Program. Dedicated funding in the SYIP to complete the Arkendale project includes $16.5 million in IPROC funds. The third track segment will be used to meet, pass, and overtake trains to enhance the performance schedule for intercity passenger service, high speed passenger rail service, and Virginia Railway Express commuter service while preserving freight operations. This is a critical section of third track needed between Washington, D.C. and Fredericksburg.

Newport News Bland Boulevard Amtrak Station: This new location located at the intersection of Bland Boulevard and Interstate 64 will be more energy efficient and will allow the existing Amtrak trains to avoid entering a CSX coal yard for turning and servicing. DRPT has allocated $20.5 million of IPROC funds toward construction of a platform, servicing facility, and associated turning and storage facilities. The City of Newport News is funding approximately $20.5 million for the station and associated costs. This multimodal station will increase transportation options through new inter-city bus service with local connections including Hampton Roads Transit, shuttles to the airport, and taxi service. Construction is scheduled to begin in 2019 and will be completed by 2021.

Second Amtrak Frequency to Norfolk and Hampton Roads Schedule Optimization: As part of the initial agreement with Norfolk Southern to return Amtrak service to Norfolk in 2012, as well as the agreement with CSX to fund Acca Yard improvements, Amtrak will be bringing a second daily frequency to Norfolk beginning March 4, 2019. New service to Norfolk also includes an optimized schedule for the Newport News station as well. Norfolk now has two convenient morning options to get to Washington, and two evening options to return. Newport News riders can now also get to Washington by 9:20 AM, and get back home by 8:20 PM Monday through Friday. The new Newport News schedule also allows Richmond-Main Street station customers the same Washington arrival time, and back again by 7. Click here for more information on the new optimized Hampton Roads Amtrak services.

Amtrak Passenger Information Display Systems: The unstaffed Amtrak station in Ashland, VA has two main-line tracks on which north and south bound trains arrive. In order to determine which side of the tracks to stand on, passengers must wait until the trains are within sight and then migrate to the appropriate side. Furthermore, there is no way to notify passengers at the station of arrival times for trains in the event of delays. Currently, at the Richmond Main Street Station, passengers are notified of train arrival times and ushered to the platform by the station security guards who rely on the Amtrak mobile app for alerts, who then verbally announce arrival times. Installing Passenger Information Display Systems (PIDS) at Ashland and Richmond Main Street Stations will provide a safe, ADA-compliant method of arrival notifications, which will improve the overall customer experience. DRPT has allocated $1.23 million of IPROC funds for design and installation of these systems. Per the CTB approved station policy, the localities will fund the operation and maintenance of the PIDS

Brooke and Leeland Station Expansion Study, Design, & Construction: It will expand the length of the platforms and add a second platform edge to allow VRE trains to serve the stations on either track. Currently, there is only one platform at these stations, so trains must cross over to the adjacent track to make a station stop. This constrains capacity for Amtrak and CSX freight trains on the line.

Norfolk International Terminals Central Rail Yard Improvements: This project will lead to the construction of an intermodal rail yard within Norfolk International Terminals to increase the terminal's rail capacity. The proposed intermodal yard will be located in an area currently occupied by structurally deficient and functionally obsolete warehouses. The primary objective of this project is to increase NIT's rail capacity by improving rail-served market access to the terminal and capture a larger percent of cargo by rail.

Virginia International Gateway/Commonwealth Railway Marshalling Yard Expansion: It consists of developing additional on-dock rail capacity for the purpose of transferring containerized cargo between rail service and ship lines. Increased capacity will be achieved through the construction of new track and associated infrastructure configured to allow loading and unloading of containers by terminal container handling equipment. The primary objective of this project is to increase VIG's container throughput to approximately 40% of the full build-out capacity of the terminal. A marshalling yard expansion outside the terminal is also needed to accommodate the additional rail throughput.

Virginia-North Carolina High Speed Rail Compact

Virginia Statewide Rail Plan: Virginia's rail network is a valuable asset for the Commonwealth. It provides an efficient means of moving freight and passengers both within and through the state. By diverting freight and passenger traffic from road to rail, Virginia's rail network relieves congestion, saves lives, improves air quality, helps grow the economy, and complements the Virginia highway network while reducing capital and maintenance expenditures.

DRPT is also a funding partner with nine shortline railroads on numerous smaller scale projects throughout the Commonwealth. To view those projects, please review DRPT's SYIP.

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,660 posts)
12. Virginia's $3.7 billion rail plan called a 'game changer.' Here's what we know about it.
Mon Jan 13, 2020, 12:56 PM
Jan 2020
Transportation

Virginia’s $3.7 billion rail plan called a ‘game changer.’ Here’s what we know about it.

By Luz Lazo
Jan. 11, 2020 at 4:20 p.m. EST

Virginia closed 2019 with a bold pledge to significantly grow passenger rail service in the commonwealth this decade by building a new rail bridge over the Potomac River, adding new rail track in the Washington-to-Richmond corridor and buying hundreds of miles of passenger right of way from CSX.

The $3.7 billion plan, announced Dec. 19, will put Virginia in control of rail service increases, allow Amtrak to double the number of trains operating in the state and expand Virginia Railway Express service to the nation’s capital beyond peak rush hour within a decade.

New intercity and commuter train service could begin as early as this year, according to the proposal’s timeline.

Environmental and rail advocates have called the plan a “game changer” that will transform rail transportation in the Washington region. A major chokepoint in the region’s rail system would be eliminated, and a path toward separating passenger and freight trains — improving efficiency — would be established.

“It is going to allow us to control our destiny when it comes to rail service, commuter rail service, the performance of the service and the reliability,” Virginia Transportation Secretary Shannon Valentine said.

Some details about how the plan will be carried out have yet to be finalized. The central deal with CSX still needs a sign-off, and funds still need to be raised, but here’s what is known about the plan and what to expect this year:

[Virginia to build Long Bridge and acquire CSX right of way to expand passenger train service]

The deal

{snip}

Luz Lazo
Luz Lazo is a transportation reporter at The Washington Post covering passenger and freight transportation, buses, taxis and ride-sharing services. She also writes about traffic, road infrastructure and air travel in the Washington region and beyond. She joined The Post in 2011. Follow https://twitter.com/luzcita
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