St. Louis Commuter Rail

The St. Louis Commuter Rail is a series of proposed commuter rail lines being developed by Metro's Moving Transit Forward Plan.

St. Louis Commuter Rail
Overview
StatusCurrently in the planning stage
LocaleGreater St. Louis
Service
TypeCommuter rail
Operator(s)Bi-State Development Agency
Technical
Line length80 miles (Projected)
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)

Early proposal

According to Metro, there are only about 80 miles of corridors being considered. Commuter rail lines were in Metro's plans in 1994 when voters approved a one-fourth cent transit sales tax, but officials dropped them later because the cost was not worth the benefit and the fare would be expensive.

Latest proposal

The 2010 Moving Transit Forward long-range plan proposes corridors running from the Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center near downtown St. Louis. The options (which are dependent on the successful completion of planned Amtrak high-speed rail routes) could run to Alton, Illinois, and Eureka or Pacific, Missouri. The use of existing high-speed rail infrastructure would mean costs could be limited to building stations, purchasing trains and operating the service.[1]

Proposed corridors

Pacific Corridor
This corridor could run from the Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center[2] in downtown St. Louis Southwest through St. Louis County along existing Union Pacific track through Maplewood, Webster Groves, Kirkwood, Valley Park, Eureka or Pacific, Missouri along the Franklin County line.[3]
Bismarck Corridor
This corridor could run from the Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center through Maplewood, Broadway, Jefferson Barracks, Oakville, Arnold, Kimmswick, Imperial, Festus, Hematite, De Soto, Blackwell, Mineral Point, Irondale, and Bismarck
Alton Corridor
This corridor could also run from the Gateway Multimodal Transportation Center[2] through East St. Louis, Madison, Granite City, Wood River to Alton.[4]

References

  1. Metro (2010). "Moving Transit Forward St. Louis Regional Long-Range Transit Plan" (pdf). metrostlouis.org. p. 56. Retrieved 23 August 2014. Two routes have been identified, one between Downtown St. Louis and Alton, IL, and the other from Downtown St. Louis to Eureka or Pacific, MO. Though these projects are included as plan options, they are not included in the capital investment strategy. They depend entirely upon the success of Federal and State initiatives to build intercity, high-speed rail connections between Chicago, St. Louis and Kansas City.
  2. http://stlouis.missouri.org/5yearstrategy/1999/ch2_infr.html
  3. http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2010/02/15/st-louis-metro-promotes-transit-investment-plan-but-will-need-sales-tax-support-to-see-it-through/
  4. http://interact.stltoday.com/blogzone/political-fix/political-fix/2009/12/expanded-metro-options-affect-st-louis-county-sales-tax-campaign/


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