• Inverted Worcester Line?

  • Discussion relating to commuter rail, light rail, and subway operations of the MBTA.
Discussion relating to commuter rail, light rail, and subway operations of the MBTA.

Moderators: sery2831, CRail

  by BandA
 
What is really sad is that Mass ADA requirements prevent incremental improvements or any reasonableness tests for cost. Track 1 platforms for the three remaining Newton stations could have been easily added, and even made ADA accessible, and should have been done in the mid-1980s, if the Track 2 platform was left non-ADA.
  by BandA
 
Wicked asked why they didn't build center platforms in ~1962 for the Newton stations. In that clean-room scenario, Track 1 would be pressed hard against the highway lane. A center platform has to be a little wider than a side platform so that people don't back up and fall. In Auburndale, the pike embankment would have needed at least a retaining wall. The biggest problem would have been nowhere to place the bridge pillars, so you would need more expensive bridges with overhead girders.

Besides the lack of Track 1 platforms, the MTA moved Riverside Station so they could build a big parking lot, but preventing folks from transferring with the local trains (what we now call Commuter Rail). They could have easily put an additional station at the original Riverside location with a small loop to turn the trolleys.
  by charlesriverbranch
 
I seem to recall that circa 1970 there were three inbound trains from Framingham weekday mornings and three outbound trains in the afternoon, and that was it.
  by wicked
 
BandA wrote: Thu Sep 15, 2022 1:37 pm Wicked asked why they didn't build center platforms in ~1962 for the Newton stations. In that clean-room scenario, Track 1 would be pressed hard against the highway lane. A center platform has to be a little wider than a side platform so that people don't back up and fall. In Auburndale, the pike embankment would have needed at least a retaining wall. The biggest problem would have been nowhere to place the bridge pillars, so you would need more expensive bridges with overhead girders.

Besides the lack of Track 1 platforms, the MTA moved Riverside Station so they could build a big parking lot, but preventing folks from transferring with the local trains (what we now call Commuter Rail). They could have easily put an additional station at the original Riverside location with a small loop to turn the trolleys.
Thank you for explaining.