Metromover

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Metromover
Metromover double-unit train Omni 2012-04.jpg
A double-unit Metromover train in the Arts & Entertainment District
Overview
Transit type Automated people mover
Number of lines3
Number of stations21
Daily ridership22,800 (weekdays, Q3 2023) [1]
Annual ridership5,587,200 (2022) [2]
Website miamidade.gov/transit
Operation
Began operationApril 17, 1986 (Inner Loop)
May 26, 1994 (Outer Loops)
Operator(s) Miami-Dade Transit (MDT)
Technical
System length4.4 miles (7.1 km)
Electrification Third rail
Average speed9 mph (14 km/h)
Top speed31 mph (50 km/h)
System map
Metromover system map.svg
Metromover
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School Board
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Adrienne Arsht Center
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I-395
Dolphin Expressway
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Museum Park
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Eleventh Street
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Park West
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College North
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Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr.
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Government Center
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College Bayside
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First Street
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Bayfront Park
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Miami Avenue
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Third Street
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Knight Center
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Riverwalk
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Fifth Street
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Brickell City Centre
(Eighth Street)
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Tenth Street Promenade
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Brickell
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Financial District
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Omni Loop
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Brightline
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Inner Loop
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Brickell Loop

Metromover is a free to ride automated people mover system operated by Miami-Dade Transit in Miami, Florida, United States. Metromover serves the Downtown Miami, Brickell, Park West and Arts & Entertainment District neighborhoods. Metromover connects directly with Metrorail at Government Center and Brickell stations. It also connects to Metrobus with dedicated bus loops at Government Center and Adrienne Arsht Center station. It originally began service to the Downtown/Inner Loop on April 17, 1986, and was later expanded with the Omni and Brickell Loop extensions on May 26, 1994.

Contents

The Metromover serves primarily as an alternative way to travel within the greater Downtown Miami neighborhoods. The system is composed of three loops and 21 stations. The stations are located approximately two blocks away from each other, and connect near all major buildings and places in the Downtown area. As of 2022, the system has 5,587,200 rides per year, or about 22,800 per day in the third quarter of 2023.

Out of only three downtown people movers in the United States, the other two being the Jacksonville Skyway and the Detroit People Mover, the Metromover is by far the most successful in terms of ridership, the only completed system of the three, [3] and considered to be a catalyst for downtown development. [4]

History

An Adtranz C-100 Metromover train in its original livery Miami - panoramio (6).jpg
An Adtranz C-100 Metromover train in its original livery

In 1987, the then-one-year-old people mover system set a record in daily ridership of 33,053 on a Saturday, attributed to the new Bayside Marketplace. [5] That same year was when the planning began to extend the system to Brickell and Arts & Entertainment District (then Omni), [6] which would not be completed until 1994. Until November 2002 when the half-penny transit tax was approved, the Metromover had a fare of 25 cents. The fare was lifted because it was realized that the cost of collecting the fare nearly exceeded the revenue generated from the fare, as well as the fact that more Metromover ridership would likely lead to more Metrorail ridership. [7] After becoming free, from 2002 to 2005, along with a large increase in population, rising gas prices and booming downtown development, Metromover ridership nearly doubled from 4.7 million in 2002 to about 9 million in 2005. [8] However, ridership fell with the subsequent economic downturn and high unemployment in the latter half of the decade. By 2012, ridership had once again increased with downtown population, high gas prices and a recovering economy. In early 2011, Metromover saw an increase in ridership during a sharp peak in gas prices, at the same time as there was a decrease in Metrorail and Metrobus ridership as well as a decrease in employment. [9] However, from January 2010 to January 2011, Metrorail saw a 7% increase in ridership, and both Metrorail and Metromover were expected to see additional ridership increases throughout 2011 due to rising fuel prices. [10] When the Omni and Brickell extensions were first planned, it was estimated that ridership on the fared system would reach 43,000 daily by 2000, [4] a number the now free system has yet to reach.

Operations

There are 21 accessible Metromover stations located throughout Downtown Miami and Brickell roughly every two blocks. The Metromover links all of Downtown and Brickell's major office buildings, residential buildings, hotels, and retail centers. Major attractions such as the Stephen P. Clark Government Center, American Airlines Arena, Arsht Performing Arts Center, the Cultural Plaza (Miami Art Museum, Historical Museum of Southern Florida, Miami Main Library), Bayside Marketplace, Mary Brickell Village, Miami-Dade College, Museum Park (which services Perez Art Museum Miami as well as the Frost Science Museum) and the Brickell Financial District can all be reached by the Metromover.

Rare double cars on the Brickell loop late at night. Metromover tandem cars at Eighth Street.jpg
Rare double cars on the Brickell loop late at night.

Running clockwise, the Downtown (Inner) Loop serves all Downtown stations except Third Street station. The Outer Loop (Brickell and Omni Loops) runs counterclockwise and share tracks around the downtown area, serving all stations except for Miami Avenue Station. The Brickell loop runs a line into the Brickell area to the south of downtown, while the Omni Loop contains a line with stations in the Arts & Entertainment District neighborhood north of Downtown. This unusual pattern, a circular central loop where the trains running counterclockwise are those running from and back to destinations outside the loop, whereas trains in the opposite clockwise direction are only running a tight inner circular route, is also followed by the New York JFK Airport AirTrain system. The inner loop generally runs tandem two car trains while the outer loops only run with single cars. Each car can carry over 90 passengers.

The Metromover car maintenance base, unusual for a maintenance yard, is a building located downtown, at SW 1st Ave and SW 1st St, which lies between Government Center and 3rd St stations on the outer counterclockwise loop, at the point where the two loops split to run in adjacent parallel streets.

All loops run from 5 am to midnight, seven days a week. [11] This schedule is adjusted during events. Trains on the Inner Loop run in tandem and arrive every 90 seconds during rush hours and every three minutes otherwise. Outer Loop trains arrive every 5 to 6 minutes; every 2.5 to 3 minutes where the track is shared. [7]

The cost of building the system was about $153.3 million. The operating budget for the Inner and Outer (Brickell and Omni) loops in FY 2007 was $8,888,794. Ridership total for FY 2007 was 8.7 million. [12] Not including capital costs, this gives an approximate cost of $1.02 per ride. Metromover does not charge for rides; however, a $2.25/1.1 fee is charged if transferring to Metrorail or Metrobus.

Stations

The Metromover currently operates 21 stations, all within the Miami city limits.

StationLinesConnectionsOpened
Government Center              Metrorail: Green Line, Orange Line
Metrobus: 2, 7, 7A, 9, 11, 51, 77, 93, 95, 119 (S), 120, 207, 208, 246, 277, 500, 836 Express
Miami Trolley: Coral Way
Broward County Transit: 95, 595
May 20, 1984
Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr.              Metrobus: 7, 7A, 836 Express
Brightline (at MiamiCentral)
April 17, 1986
College North              Metrobus: 7, 7A, 9, 120April 17, 1986
College/Bayside              Metrobus: 9, 93, 119 (S), 120April 17, 1986
First Street             NoneApril 17, 1986
Bayfront Park              Metrobus: 3, 93, 119 (S), 120April 17, 1986
Knight Center              Metrobus: 119 (S), 120, 836 ExpressApril 17, 1986
Third Street         NoneApril 17, 1986
Miami Avenue      Metrobus: 7, 7A, 9, 11, 77, 93, 119 (S), 120,

836 Express

April 17, 1986
School Board      Metrobus: 9, 10May 26, 1994
Adrienne Arsht Center      Metrobus: 3, 10, 16, 32, 93, 101 (A), 113 (M), 119 (S), 120May 26, 1994
Museum Park      Metrobus: 3, 93, 95, 119 (S), 120May 26, 1994
Eleventh Street      Metrobus: 9, 119 (S)May 26, 1994
Park West      Metrobus: 9, 119 (S), 120May 26, 1994
Freedom Tower      Metrobus: 7, 9, 119 (S), 120May 26, 1994
Riverwalk     NoneMay 26, 1994
Fifth Street     NoneMay 26, 1994
Brickell City Centre      Metrobus: 95

Miami Trolley: Brickell Key & Mercy Hospital

May 26, 1994
Tenth Street Promenade      Metrobus: 95, 595

Miami Trolley: Brickell Key & Mercy Hospital

May 26, 1994
Brickell      Metrorail: Green Line, Orange Line

Metrobus: 8, 8A, 24, 102 (B), 207, 208, 500
Miami Trolley: Biscayne, Brickell, Coral Way

May 20, 1984
Financial District      Metrobus: 102 (B)May 26, 1994

Rolling stock

A Bombardier Innovia APM 100 Metromover train at Knight Center Knight Center Downtown Skyscrapers.jpg
A Bombardier Innovia APM 100 Metromover train at Knight Center
Bombardier Innovia APM 100 interior Metromover empty.jpg
Bombardier Innovia APM 100 interior

Metromover mainly uses 29 Bombardier Innovia APM 100 vehicles, the first 12 of which were delivered during the summer and fall of 2008. [13] These newer vehicles replaced the first 12 Westinghouse C-100 cars which were built by Westinghouse Electric in 1984, and include a more aerodynamic design, as well as an onboard CCTV system. [14] Deliveries of an additional 17 cars from Bombardier Transportation began in July 2010, and as of early 2014 have largely replaced the second order of 17 Adtranz C-100 vehicles, built by Adtranz predecessor AEG-Westinghouse in 1992.

Ridership

Sortable chart detailing monthly weekday ridership averages by Calendar Year; right hand chart giving annual averages may use "fiscal year" without disclosure, where the FY begins in October and has 75% of its time in the next year with only 25% in the starting year. Note the large jump in ridership in 2002 when the fare was removed after the passing of the half-penny tax. Yearly averages are rounded to the nearest 500, and the highest month is also in bold. After years of growth, Metromover ridership began falling in 2017, following years of sharp declines in Metrobus and Metrorail ridership. Ridership peaked again in early 2020 at over 30,000 per weekday before crashing during the years long covid pandemic.

#Month201020112012201320142015201620172018
1January27,90029,70028,00031,80032,20032,80034,40032,60028,700
2February25,60030,70031,00032,70034,70033,20035,30032,90030,100
3March25,60030,50032,40032,50035,30035,00036,40034,10031,100
4April26,30030,70029,70030,40031,10032,40034,70031,700
5May26,80029,20028,90028,90030,30029,70032,20029,300
6June25,80029,60029,50032,50030,20030,10031,30028,100
7July25,50029,40029,00029,10030,40030,60032,10029,800
8August26,80029,00027,20028,70031,10031,10030,60028,900
9September28,10030,10029,90031,40031,80032,00032,00024,700
10October30,00031,10031,10033,00033,90035,00031,500 [15] 29,300
11November30,00030,10032,20033,90032,90035,20034,10030,000
12December27,70027,20029,60031,40032,30033,20032,00029,200
13Year Average27,00030,00030,00031,00032,00032,50033,000
Average Weekday Passengers
(Metromover loops only)
Fiscal YearRidership
199512,700
199612,000-0.6%
199713,500+12.5%
199813,269-1.7%
199913,880+4.6%
200014,383+3.6%
200116,849+17.1%
200216,4440.0%
200325,521+55.2%
200428,192+10.5%
200528,473+1.0%
200627,042-5.0%
200728,058+3.8%
200826,682-4.9%
200925,883-3.0%
201027,175+5.0%
201129,775+9.6%
201231,000+4.1%
201332,800+5.8%

Average weekday passengers

This table includes Metrorail ridership as the two systems were built together and are mutually reliant on the thousands of daily transfers at Government Center and Brickell stations.

YearAnnual passengers
(with Green & Orange lines) [16]
Average weekday passengers
(with Green & Orange lines) [17]
199518,614,00063,100
199618,092,40060,100
199718,098,90060,800
199817,363,80058,140
199917,839,10060,654
200018,280,10061,639
200118,629,80063,514
200219,103,80063,508
200321,297,40076,769
200424,673,90083,486
200525,538,50088,173
200625,777,60085,400
200726,510,80087,767
200827,799,60090,392
200925,778,20085,875
201025,559,40087,075
201127,515,10092,334
201228,498,500104,000
201330,531,100*105,500*

*Record high

Incidents

Expansion

Port of Miami

In May 2011, a study was proposed to analyze the idea of extending the Metromover to the PortMiami. This, with Metrorail and the new MIA Mover would create a direct rail transit link from the airport to the seaport. However, the study, which would take at least a year and cost about $120,000, was only a proposal to be voted on and the idea has not been reported on since 2014. [22]

South Beach

There have been multiple proposals for a Metromover service to southern Miami Beach. One was as part of the proposed Resorts World Miami megaproject in Miami's Arts & Entertainment District neighborhood, announced in mid-2011, a Metromover expansion from Downtown Miami to South Beach was being pushed as recompense for building a casino. The line could potentially run from the Arts & Entertainment District across the Venetian Causeway to 17th Street in South Beach ending at the Miami Beach Convention Center. The line could have three stations in South Beach along 17th Street- Alton Road, Meridian Avenue and Washington Avenue. This would connect Miami Beach to rail mass transit for the first time, and provide a direct rail connection into one of the Miami area's most visited neighborhoods. The line would also allow for future expansions later across South Beach. [23] More recently, proposals for a separate, most likely at-grade, light-rail system known as BayLink have been revived. [24] [25]

Miami-Dade originally planned to have a monorail along the southern edge of MacArthur Causeway from Downtown Miami to South Beach. [26] However, in November 2022, the original plan would be changed to Metromover because the budget did not allow for the proposed monorail and it would not provide a one-seat ride from Downtown Miami to South Beach. [27]

Northward Expansion

A county plan unveiled in March 2021 shows an extension north from the current School Board station along North Miami Avenue, connecting the system to Midtown, Wynwood, and The Design District. An infill station called Herald Plaza would also be added on the site of the former Miami Herald building, eventually connecting the Metromover system to Miami Beach. [28]


See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Miami-Dade Transit</span> Primary public transit authority of Miami, Florida

Miami-Dade Transit (MDT) is the primary public transit authority of Miami, Florida and the greater Miami-Dade County area. It is the largest transit system in Florida and the 15th-largest transit system in the United States. As of 2022, the system has 60,734,900 rides per year, or about 248,700 per weekday in the third quarter of 2023. MDT operates the Metrobus with their paratransit STS systems run by LSF. MDT also operates two rail transit systems: Metrorail and Metromover.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tri-Rail</span> Commuter rail service in South Florida

Tri-Rail is a commuter rail service linking Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach in Florida, United States. The Tri prefix in the name refers to the three counties served by the railroad: Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade. Tri-Rail is managed by the South Florida Regional Transportation Authority (SFRTA) along CSX Transportation's former Miami Subdivision; the line is now wholly owned by the Florida DOT. The 80.0-mile-long (128.7 km) system has 19 stations along the Southeast Florida coast, and connects directly to Amtrak at numerous stations, to Metrorail at the Tri-Rail and Metrorail Transfer station, Miami Intermodal Center, and MiamiCentral, and to Brightline at MiamiCentral.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Government Center station (Miami)</span> Miami-Dade Transit metro station

Government Center station is an intermodal transit hub in the Government Center district of Downtown Miami, Florida. It is operated by Miami-Dade Transit and serves as a transfer station for the Metrorail and Metromover rapid transit systems and as a bus station for Metrobus, Paratransit, and Broward County Transit buses. MiamiCentral is directly connected via a pedestrian bridge over NW 3rd Street. The station is located near the intersection of Northwest First Street and First Avenue, a part of the Stephen P. Clark Government Center Building. It opened to service May 20, 1984, next to the site of a former FEC railway station which is now MiamiCentral.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brickell station</span> Miami-Dade Transit metro station

Brickell station is a Metrorail rapid transit station in Miami, Florida, serving the system's Green and Orange Lines. One of the core stations of Miami's public transport network, it serves the financial district of Brickell. Combined, the Metrorail and Metromover station complex at Brickell sees roughly 8,430 boardings each weekday, making it the system's second-busiest station.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Museum Park station</span> Miami Metromover station

Museum Park is a Metromover station located on the southeast corner of Biscayne Boulevard and I-395 in Miami, Florida. Originally opened as Bicentennial Park in 1994 and closed in 1996, the station reopened with the completion of the Pérez Art Museum Miami at the newly renamed eponymous park in 2013.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Miami Intermodal Center</span> Ground transportation hub for Miami International Airport

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brickell</span> Neighborhood of Miami in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States

Brickell is a neighborhood in Miami, Florida, historically referenced at times as Southside, located directly east of Interstate 95, south of the Miami River and north of Coconut Grove. Brickell is known as the financial district of Miami, as well as South Florida.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Greater Downtown Miami</span> Neighborhood in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States

Downtown Miami is the urban city center of Miami, Florida, United States. The city's greater downtown region consists of the Central Business District, Brickell, the Historic District, Government Center, the Arts & Entertainment District, and Park West. It is divided by the Miami River and is bordered by Midtown Miami's Edgewater, and Wynwood sections to its north, Biscayne Bay to its east, the Health District and Overtown to its west, and Coconut Grove to its south.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Metrorail (Miami-Dade County)</span> Rapid-transit rail system in Miami, Florida

Metrorail is a rapid transit system in Miami and Miami-Dade County in the U.S. state of Florida. Metrorail is operated by Miami-Dade Transit (MDT), a departmental agency of Miami-Dade County. Opened in 1984, it is Florida's only rapid transit metro system, and is currently composed of two lines of 23 stations on 24.4 miles (39.3 km) of standard gauge track. Metrorail serves the urban core of Miami, connecting Miami International Airport, the Health District, Downtown Miami, and Brickell with the northern developed neighborhoods of Hialeah and Medley to the northwest, and to suburban The Roads, Coconut Grove, Coral Gables, and South Miami, ending at urban Dadeland in Kendall. Metrorail connects to the Metromover in Downtown, which provides metro service to the entirety of Downtown and Brickell. Additionally, it connects to South Florida's commuter rail system at Tri-Rail station, as well as Metrobus routes at all stations. In 2022, the system had 11,951,400 rides, and about 45,400 per day in the third quarter of 2023.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arts & Entertainment District</span> Neighborhood of Miami in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States

The Arts & Entertainment District, or previously known as Omni, is a neighborhood of Downtown Miami, Florida. It is bound roughly by North 19th Street to the north, North 10th Street to the south, North West 2nd Avenue to the west, and Biscayne Boulevard to the east.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">MIA Mover</span>

The MIA Mover is an automated people mover (APM) system which opened at the Miami International Airport (MIA) in metropolitan Miami, Florida, United States on September 9, 2011. The MIA Mover is designed to quickly transport landside passengers between Miami International Airport's Main Terminal and the Miami Intermodal Center (MIC). The MIA Mover is one of three separate automated people movers operating at the airport. The others are the Skytrain, which operates within Concourse D, and the MIA e Train people mover connecting Concourse E's satellite building.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Government Center (Miami)</span> Neighborhood in Miami, Florida

Government Center is a district in the western portion of downtown Miami, Florida bound roughly by I-95 and West (NW/SW) 3rd Avenue to the west, South (SW/SE) 1st Street to the south, North (NE/NW) 5th Street to the north, and East (NE/SE) 1st Avenue to the east.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Park West (Miami)</span> Neighborhood of Miami in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States

Park West is a neighborhood of Greater Downtown, Miami, Florida. It is roughly bound by Biscayne Boulevard to the east, West (NW) First Avenue to the west, North (NE/NW) 7th Street to the south and Interstate 395 to the north. As of 2010, about 4,655 residents live in Park West. The neighborhood is named 'Park West' due to its location just west of Museum Park.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Transportation in South Florida</span> Overview of transportation in South Florida

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BayLink is a long-proposed transit connection between Miami and Miami Beach, Florida. Proposals have ranged from streetcar, light rail, monorail, Metromover, or Metrorail extension that would connect Downtown Miami to South Beach via the MacArthur Causeway, with the light rail or streetcar options potentially having loops at both ends. In 2020, the project was previously approved by commissioners as Miami Beach Monorail, a $770 million public-private partnership project connecting 5th Street in South Beach to Metromover on the mainland at the Genting property in Omni. In November 2022, the project would be changed to Metromover because the budget did not allow for the proposed monorail and it would not provide a one-seat ride from Downtown Miami to South Beach.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Metrobus (Miami-Dade County)</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">MiamiCentral</span> Brightline and Tri-Rail train station

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