Streetcars in Jacksonville: What Will It Cost?

I don't have any objection to this at all and think it would be a great idea as long as it is run by someone in the private sector. I sure don't want the city of Jacksonville doing it.




Streetcars in Jacksonville: What Will It Cost?

According to the ill-informed, Jacksonville can't afford to invest in streetcars to take advantage of all the job creation, economic development and downtown revitalization they have been proven to stimulate. Public Transportation Advocates In Action shows why this view does not withstand the test of reality.

Published November 12, 2010 in
feature

Streetcars: What Does It Cost?

Costs of streetcar lines vary widely, because the characteristics of streetcar lines vary widely. In fact, it can be difficult to obtain the construction cost of a streetcar line, because building the line is often part of a larger project that includes other elements.



San Francisco's F Line cost $30 million per mile do to streetscaping enhancements.

San Francisco's new F Line provides a good example. This is a double-track streetcar line, built to Light Rail standards, which now carries almost 20,000 people per day (all in Vintage cars, we would note). The construction cost was about $30 million per mile, which is high even for Light Rail. But much of that money went for visual enhancements that have nothing to do with running streetcars, including extensive use of granite and marble and even planting palm trees along the right-of-way. A city that wanted just the streetcar line without thecarmen Miranda-style décor could build it for substantially less.

At the other end of the scale is the excellent and highly innovative two-mile streetcar line recently opened in Kenosha, Wisconsin. The total cost was just $4 million, or $2 million per mile, including five restored PCC streetcars.

Some other examples include:

•Portland, Oregon, the only line using modern streetcars. The 4.6 mile loop line was constructed for $12.4 million per mile, including seven new streetcars, built in the Czech Republic.

•Tampa, Florida, a 2.3 mile line built for $13.7 million per mile including eight Heritage streetcars. The cars themselves, replicas of 1920's Birney streetcars, cost $600,000 each (compared to up to $3 million for a modern Light Rail Vehicle).

•Little Rock, Arkansas, a 2.1 mile line built for $7.1 million per mile, including three streetcars.

•San Pedro, California, a 1.5 mile line that recreates the old Pacific Electric "Red Cars" for $4 million per mile, including three streetcars, one Vintage and two Heritage. The costs of Heritage and Vintage streetcars vary as much as construction costs of streetcar lines. Heritage streetcars cost between $200,000 and $800,000, depending on type and features (e.g., air conditioning). One of the best sources of Vintage streetcars is Milan, Italy, which is gradually selling off its vast fleet of 1920s-built Peter Witt cars, a type that was widely used in the U.S. These cars go for $25,000 -$35,000 each, and have been maintained so faithfully that they can go into service the day they arrive. Other Vintage cars vary greatly in price, depending largely on condition; some last served as chicken coops.

Since many Vintage and Heritage streetcar lines make use of volunteer labor, operating costs can be very low. Perhaps the best guide to operating costs for a major streetcar system that hauls lots of people and uses only paid labor -- transit company employees -- is our oldfa vorite, New Orleans. An APTA analysis, using data from the 1996 National Transit Database, compared 20 Light Rail systems' operating costs, including those of New Orleans streetcar lines (St. Charles Avenue and the Waterfront line). Operating costs were measured in four ways, and New Orleans ranked as follows (20th is lowest in operating cost):

•Operating expense per passenger mile: 16th

•Operating cost per vehicle mile: 17th

•Operating cost per vehicle hour: 18th

•Operating cost per passenger trip: 20th


St. Charles Avenue streetcar in downtown New Orleans


An interesting wrinkle on operating costs comes from Tampa, Florida. There, the organization that will operate the Heritage streetcars has raised an endowment of almost $7 million, the interest from which will cover part of the operating costs.

In closing the discussion of costs -- and stressing again that they vary widely -- let us offer a minor Philippic. The greatest threat to the future of rail transit is not Wendell Cox and the restof the anti-transit troubadors. 12 The greatest threat to America's rail renaissance is escalating costs, costs that go far beyond what is required to offer good service. We know Light Rail can be built and built well for $20 million per mile, because some systems do it; the latest extension of Dallas's DART Light Rail system came in at just over $18 million per mile. St. Louis and Baltimore did it, too. Why, then, do we see more and more Light Rail systems asking for $40 million, $60 million, and in one case more than $100 million per mile? The answer, too often, appears to be overbuilding, gold plating, and the pernicious practice of placating NIMBYs with tunneling, which should only be used when geographic obstacles make it unavoidable.

We see signs of the same disease appearing in streetcar lines. Museums build streetcar lines and operate them for a pittance. So can, and should, public authorities. San Francisco's F line is a great success, but why should a poor streetcar be billed for recreating the Taj Mahal?


Cleveland's Shaker Heights rapid transit line

The authors of this paper both recall vividly an incident all too typical in overbuilding.whenclevel a nd's fine old Shaker Rapid line was rebuilt, the cost was more than $100 million, and the result was slower trains running on less frequent schedules. When someone asked the local U.S. Representative about the outrage, the reply was, "Why not? It's free money, " meaning Federal funds. Bah! Humbug! Where's our old friend Mr. Scrooge when the taxpayer needs him?

Currently, the Federal Transit Administration's process for giving new rail proposals a "recommended" or "not recommended" rating is based too heavily on ridership forecasts. We strongly suggest it should also include a base line "should cost" figure of not more than $20 million per mile for Light Rail and $10 million per mile for streetcars (a similar "should-cost" figure should be set for urban highway construction). Exceptions should be granted, but only when circumstances such as the need to tunnel through a mountain or other unavoidable local conditions clearly justify them.



Charlotte's new state-of-the-art light rail line (above) cost $46.8 million per mile. On the other hand, St. Louis' most recent Metrolink light rail line (below) was completed for $21 million.


Something as simple as track placement can have a significant impact on capital cost. The St. Louis system tends to have single station platforms in the center while the Charlotte example has double the station amenities due to tracks being in the center.

Some rail advocates may see this as treason. In fact, we are trying to save rail transit from itself, to prevent Light Rail and streetcars from doing what Heavy Rail did and pricing themselves out of the market.

And just in case you have forgotten, please remember that we are conservatives. We believe that the right place for a taxpayer's dollar is in his own pocket, not the pocket of some fat cat politician or bloated government agency. Off with their heads!

Source: NAPTA (Public Transportation Advocates In Action)

For more information: http://www.napta.net/actioncenter/resources/publications/streetcars/06.asp

Applying the message to Jacksonville


Park Street is an example of a struggling walkable commercial corridor that could be brought back to life by a streetcar connecting downtown with Five Points. The New Orleans image above is an example of how a "no-frills" streetcar line could be installed in the existing street without the additional expense of modern stations, palm trees and sidewalks with brick pavers.

If we open up our eyes and ears and get creative, there is no reason we can't take the path of a Kenosha or Little Rock and construct a starter transit line connecting downtown to an adjacent district, such as Five Points, for well under $10 million per mile. Such a project would not only create jobs and alleviate growing congestion in Riverside, it would also spur economic development and market rate infill in downtown, LaVilla and Brooklyn, while opening the door for future extensions into other areas of our community.

Article by Ennis Davis

Views: 25

Comment

You need to be a member of First Coast Tea Party to add comments!

Join First Coast Tea Party

National Debt Clock

  

The First CoastTea Party is a non-profit organization. We have no deep-pocketed special interest funding our efforts.

You may contact us at:

First Coast Tea Party
1205 Salt Creek Island Dr
Ponte Vedra, FL 32082
904-392-7475

Helpful Links

Blog Posts

RYAN NICHOLS - Hardened Criminal?? Seriously??

If you're not already aware. This is what's going on in DC while dangerous criminals are allowed back out on the streets.  It's horrifying that this is happening to our citizens and veterans for protesting the hijacking of our election process. This is still happening! They are STILL being tortured and treated like full on terrorists. 

You may not be aware of the typical things they're forced to go through...…

Continue

Posted by Babs Jordan on August 14, 2022 at 8:44am

© 2024   Created by LeadershipCouncil.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service