| Caltrain: “Blended System” operationally feasible |
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| Thursday, August 18, 2011 | |
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California's Caltrain said an analysis of preliminary data has indicated that the Peninsula's rail corridor can accommodate integrated high-speed rail and Caltrain service largely through modernizing and then sharing the corridor's existing track infrastructure in most areas. The analysis supports a concept proposed by U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo, State Senator Joe Simitian and State Assemblyman Richard Gordon that calls for the project to minimize community impacts and considerably reduce the project's cost by remaining substantially within the existing Caltrain right-of-way. LTK Engineering Services to assessed the capacity of the corridor using a computer model to simulate rail operations. The analysis demonstrates that electrification of the corridor and installation of an advanced signaling system could provide sufficient track capacity to feasibly operate six electric Caltrain trains and two high-speed trains per hour. The addition of a seven-to-eight-mile four-track section near the middle of the rail line would provide a set of passing tracks and expand capacity even further to accommodate these trains. To date, design alternatives for the project have consisted of fully grade-separated, four-track options that span most of the corridor's length. The Caltrain analysis indicates that a much-less intrusive, more cost-effective alternative is sufficiently valid to justify additional study.
Compared to previous alternatives, the blended approach would accommodate high-speed rail at a lower cost by primarily utilizing Caltrain's existing right-of-way and would connect to the Downtown Rail Extension Project, providing Caltrain and high-speed trains with access to the Transbay Transit Center, which is currently under construction in downtown San Francisco. |
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