Our weekly “New Starts” roundup of new and newsworthy transportation projects worldwide.

Caltrain Electrification Project Formally Gets Underway

Metro magazine reported that a July 21 formal groundbreaking marked the start of construction on the Caltrain electrification project.

The ceremony at the Millbrae Caltrain station brought California Governor Jerry Brown, U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, and a host of state and local business leaders, transportation advocates, elected officials, and environmentalists together to applaud a project that promises to increase the capacity of the 150-year-old commuter rail line connecting San Francisco and San Jose. In the process it will reduce congestion on parallel U.S. 101, one of the busiest freeway corridors in the nation.

Bay Area officials have pushed for this improvement, which will include new electric multiple-unit trains, since 1999. In 2012, area governments and the state of California came up with the matching funds for a $647 million full funding grant agreement from the Federal Transit Administration. That grant was awarded in April, making the start of work possible.

When completed in 2021, the electrification project will cut travel times on the Caltrain corridor and increase the number of trains to six per hour at peak times. A Caltrain fact sheet states that the project will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 176,000 metric tons, increase daily Caltrain ridership by 21 percent, and produce $2.5 billion in economic benefits for the San Francisco peninsula.

Thai Government OKs Bangkok Purple Line Extension

The Thai cabinet has approved a 101-billion-baht ($3 billion U.S.) project that will double the length of the Purple Line of the Bangkok Metro with a 23.6-km (14.7-mile) extension from the current southern terminus at Tao Poon south to Rat Burana, the International Railway Journal reports.

Bangkok Purple Line (Photo by Rsa)

The extension will include a 12.6-km (7.8-mile), 10-station subway tunnel and a 11-km (6.8-mile) elevated viaduct with seven stations. Two of the stations will have park-and-ride garages accommodating a total of 3,000 cars. The extension will include interchange stations with one currently operating line and two extensions, one now under construction and the other planned. The extension is forecast to carry 477,098 riders daily.

Bids for work on the line will be solicited starting in October. The project is estimated to take seven years to complete.

Contract Awarded for New York Subway Tunnel Repairs

New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority has awarded a $529.1 million contract for repairs and improvements to the Canarsie subway tunnel to a joint venture involving TC Electric and Judlau, a subsidiary of the OHL Group, Global Rail News reports.

The work will fix damage to the tunnel caused by Superstorm Sandy in 2012 and increase capacity on the line. The work includes replacement of the track bed, rails and ties, replacing damaged electrical components and replacing the signaling system. Flood protection systems will also be installed under the contract.

The tunnel, which carries the L subway line under the East River, is one of the key transit links between Manhattan and Brooklyn.

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