Millennium Line

Last updated

Millennium Line
Translinkmillennium.svg
Millenniumline.svg
BrentwoodStationTrains.jpg
A pair of trains at Brentwood Town Centre station
Overview
Owner TransLink (South Coast British Columbia Transportation Authority)
Locale Metro Vancouver, British Columbia
Termini
Stations17 (6 under construction)
Service
Type Rapid transit
System SkyTrain
Operator(s)British Columbia Rapid Transit Company
Rolling stock ART Mark II, 2 cars per trainset
Daily ridership288,000 (2022) [lower-alpha 1] [1]
History
OpenedJanuary 7, 2002;22 years ago (2002-01-07)
Technical
Line length25.5 km (15.8 mi)[ not verified in body ]
Number of tracks2
Track gauge 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Electrification Third rail (Linear motor)
Operating speed80 km/h (50 mph)
Route map
Millennium Line Millennium Line highlighted in yellow
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potential extension to UBC
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Arbutus
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South Granville
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Oak–VGH
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Broadway–City Hall
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Canada Line
Arrow Blue Left 001.svg to Richmond & Airport │to Waterfront Arrow Blue Right 001.svg
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Mount Pleasant
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Great Northern Way–Emily Carr
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Pfeil oben.svg future extension (under construction)
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VCC–Clark
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Expo Line
to Waterfront
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Commercial–Broadway
Translinkbus.svg Translinkexpo.svg
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Renfrew
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Rupert
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Vancouver Zone 1
Burnaby Zone 2
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Gilmore
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Brentwood Town Centre
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Holdom
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Sperling–Burnaby Lake
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Lake City Way
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Production Way–University
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Lougheed Town Centre
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Burnaby Zone 2
Coquitlam Zone 3
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Burquitlam
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Coquitlam
Port Moody
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Queens
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Moody Centre
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West Coast Express
Arrow Blue LowerLeft 001.svg to Mission │ to Waterfront Arrow Blue UpperRight 001.svg
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Inlet Centre
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Port Moody
Coquitlam
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Falcon
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Vehicle Storage Facility
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potential extension
to Port Coquitlam
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Coquitlam Central
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Lincoln
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Lafarge Lake–Douglas

Wheelchair symbol.svg All stations are accessible

The Millennium Line is the second line of the SkyTrain rapid transit system in the Metro Vancouver region of British Columbia, Canada. The line is owned and operated by BC Rapid Transit Company, a subsidiary of TransLink, and links the cities of Vancouver, Burnaby, Coquitlam and Port Moody. The line was opened in 2002 and was named in recognition of the new millennium.

Contents

Route

The Millennium Line operates from VCC–Clark station in Vancouver to Lafarge Lake–Douglas station in Coquitlam. The line is elevated to Burquitlam station, where it then goes through a 2-kilometre (1.2 mi) bored tunnel to the city of Port Moody. In Port Moody, the line runs at grade level, rising to cross railway tracks. From Coquitlam Central station, the line is elevated to the terminus at Lafarge Lake–Douglas station.

When the Evergreen Extension opened in late 2016, eastbound trains crossed the westbound tracks to access the new northernmost platform (Platform 3) at Lougheed Town Centre station. Trains then operated left-track running to a crossover junction just before Burquitlam Station, where trains crossed back to right-track running. Westbound Millennium Line trains crossed over to left-hand running just south of Burquitlam station, which allowed them to access westbound Platform 2 at Lougheed Town Centre station. This unusual service design allowed same-platform interchange for Expo Line passengers arriving at Lougheed Town Centre and continuing west towards VCC–Clark station on the Millennium Line.

On June 25, 2018, service patterns were changed to eliminate all left-track running. This change meant passengers arriving westbound at Lougheed on the Expo Line who wished to continue towards VCC–Clark could either change platforms at Lougheed or remain on their Expo Line train until its terminus at the next station, Production Way–University, where they could make a same-platform transfer to a westbound Millennium Line train. For passengers arriving eastbound at Lougheed, transfers between eastbound Millennium and Expo Line trains were now same-platform. TransLink stated the change to traditional right-track running would provide faster and more reliable trips for passengers as the many track changes the initial service pattern required had resulted in delays. [2] [3]

History

Early proposals

When the Expo Line was opened in 1985, an extension to Lougheed Mall in east Burnaby was proposed. The most likely junction point for the spur to Lougheed Mall would have been from Royal Oak station, up Edmonds Street to Lougheed Mall, although early SkyTrain route maps also suggested an extension northeast from New Westminster. [4] [5] Neither plan was realized, although the extension of Expo Line tracks to Columbia Station in 1989 and the completion of the SkyBridge to Surrey in 1990 resulted in a short spur east of Columbia station, which was later incorporated into the new Millennium Line.

Phase I: Columbia to Commercial Drive (2002)

Commercial Drive station under construction in September 2001 Commercial Drive station construction.jpg
Commercial Drive station under construction in September 2001

In 1995, the British Columbia government announced that an entirely new line, a street-level light rail line, would be built along Broadway and Lougheed Highway to Lougheed Mall (served by Lougheed Town Centre station), as the first phase of the "T"-Line [6] (one of three Intermediate Capacity Transit System lines) outlined in the Metro Vancouver's Livable Region Strategic Plan that extended into Coquitlam. [7] An 18-month review of rapid transit was scheduled and started in January 1998 but was cut short by the government's announcement of its choice of Bombardier's technology in June 1998. [8] This meant that the first phase of the line would have to connect to the existing Expo Line to use its maintenance yard. Connecting the two lines at Broadway station was deemed impracticable, so the lines were connected in New Westminster. Switches to the Millennium Line were installed on the Expo Line just east of Columbia station. Expo Line service was reduced to a single track over the Skybridge during the installation of these switches.

The Millennium Line opened for revenue service on January 7, 2002 (a preview for SkyTrain passengers took place on the prior two days), [9] with trains operating between Waterfront station on the Expo Line and Braid station in eastern New Westminster.

For the second phase, service was extended to Commercial Drive station (since merged with Broadway station to form Commercial–Broadway) on August 31, 2002 (with full integration with the bus network occurring on September 3, 2002). [10] [11]

Lake City Way and extension to VCC–Clark (2003–2006)

Lake City Way station, located between Sperling–Burnaby Lake and Production Way–University stations, opened on November 21, 2003. [12] Three years later, the line was extended to its present terminus, VCC–Clark station, on January 6, 2006. [13] The Millennium Line was now completed at a cost of $1.2 billion, $40 million under budget. [8] :51

In 2007, the non-interlined portion of the Millennium Line served an average of 70,000 passengers per day. Of these, 14,000 passengers arrived on trains travelling from Expo Line stations west of Columbia station, and 7,000 transferred from the Surrey section of the Expo Line. [14] In 2009, it was estimated that ridership had grown to at least 80,000 passengers per day. [15]

Initially, the Millennium Line service followed the Expo Line from Waterfront to Columbia stations, then looped back into Vancouver via the new route, passing through Commercial–Broadway again at a different platform, and terminating at VCC–Clark station. After a reconfiguration on October 22, 2016, in preparation for the opening of the Evergreen Extension, the Millennium Line ran between VCC–Clark station in the west to Lougheed Town Centre station in the east. Transfers to the Expo Line were now made possible at Production Way–University and Lougheed Town Centre stations. Braid and Sapperton stations were reassigned to the Expo Line. [16]

Phase II: Evergreen Extension (2016)

The second phase of the Millennium Line was to be an extension from Lougheed Mall to Coquitlam (then known as the Port Moody–Coquitlam (PMC) Line), [17] which would have provided a "one-seat ride" from Coquitlam to VCC–Clark station. A short spur [18] and switches to the PMC Line were installed to the east of Lougheed Town Centre station and a third platform was roughed-in in anticipation of the extension. Phase II was placed on hold following a change in provincial government.

A SkyTrain extension from Lougheed Town Centre station to Coquitlam Town Centre was proposed when the original Millennium Line was built and the necessary junction tracks for such an extension were built at the station during its initial construction. At one point prior to 2008, the mode planned for the extension was changed to light rail instead of SkyTrain, which meant that the junction tracks would have remained unused. However, in February 2008, plans reverted to the use of SkyTrain technology for the extension, to facilitate higher ridership, shorten travel times and to integrate seamlessly with the existing SkyTrain network. As a result, the junction tracks and roughed-in third platform at Lougheed Town Centre station were used as part of the Evergreen Extension. [19]

Construction of the Evergreen Extension began in 2013 and was completed in late 2016. The extension opened for revenue service on December 2, 2016. [20] [21]

Expansion plans

Broadway extension

A map showing the extension along Broadway in relation to existing lines and surface streets SkyTrain Broadway Subway map.svg
A map showing the extension along Broadway in relation to existing lines and surface streets
Staging pit for the tunnel boring machine at the site of Great Northern Way-Emily Carr station in April 2022 Great Northern Way-Emily Carr station (20220414 184342743).jpg
Staging pit for the tunnel boring machine at the site of Great Northern Way–Emily Carr station in April 2022
"Traffic decks" were built atop station construction sites to avoid road closures. Broadway Subway construction near Yukon Street, Vancouver - July 2022 - 02.jpg
"Traffic decks" were built atop station construction sites to avoid road closures.

On March 16, 2018, the provincial government approved the construction of the "Broadway Subway Project", an initiative which will extend the Millennium Line west to Arbutus Street and add six new stations. [22] The extension will be 5.7 kilometres (3.5 mi) long, all but 700 metres (2,300 ft) of which will be underground, and cost an estimated $2.83 billion. Originally scheduled for a 2025 opening, the expected opening was pushed back to early 2026 in November 2022. [23] [24] [25] The delay was caused by a labour dispute involving concrete workers which started in June 2022. [25]

While six new stations are confirmed for the Broadway extension, one will become part of the existing Broadway–City Hall Canada Line station, which is scheduled to be upgraded as part of the project: [lower-alpha 2] [26] [27]

Construction

Preliminary work on the extension began on February 19, 2019, with the installation of trolley poles and wires on 12th Avenue between Arbutus and Granville Streets that were required in order to reroute trolley buses off of Broadway for the duration of the construction of the subway. [28] [29] On June 22, 2020, trolleybuses were removed from Broadway. [30] The provincial government initially had a plan to have a contractor selected by April 2020 to allow for construction to begin later that year. [31] On July 17, 2020, the provincial Ministry of Transportation announced that Acciona Infrastructure, a Spanish conglomerate, and Ghella, an Italian company, would be in charge of construction. [32] Demolition of buildings, to make room for station entrances and construction staging areas, began in February 2021. [33]

Major construction on the extension began on May 13, 2021. [23] [34] "Traffic decks" began to be installed over Mount Pleasant, Broadway–City Hall, Oak–VGH, South Granville, and Arbutus stations, to avoid closing Broadway while station construction takes place underneath. Construction of the elevated guideway at the eastern end of the extension began on December 13, 2021. This 700-metre-long (2,300 ft) guideway is the only above-ground portion of the extension, and connects the existing VCC–Clark station to a tunnel portal adjacent to the Emily Carr University of Art and Design. [35]

The tunnel boring machines for the project were delivered to Vancouver between April and June 2022. Two identical machines, each 6 metres (20 ft) in diameter and 150 metres (490 ft) in length, would dig about 18 metres (59 ft) of tunnel per day, at a depth of 15 to 20 metres (49 to 66 ft) below the surface. [36] [37] The two machines were given the names Elsie and Phyllis; the first machine, Elsie, began tunneling the eastbound tunnel from Great Northern Way–Emily Carr station in October 2022, with Phyllis beginning work on the westbound tunnel in late November. Both machines had reached Broadway–City Hall station by May 26, 2023, [38] [39] and South Granville station by February 8, 2024. [40] Phyllis completed boring at Arbutus station on March 20, 2024; tunnel boring is expected to fully complete in the second quarter of 2024. [41]

University of British Columbia extension

On January 14, 2008, the Government of British Columbia announced a commitment to the expansion of the Millennium Line to the University of British Columbia (UBC) by 2020 as part of a $14-billion transit spending package to address global warming. It was not clear what route the new line would take, but it was hinted that there would be less use of cut-and-cover tunnelling to minimize disruption to businesses along Broadway and avoid the same problems seen during the Canada Line construction along Cambie Street. [42] This expansion failed to materialize.

On February 15, 2019, the TransLink Mayors' Council again approved an extension of the line to the UBC campus, although funding for this continuation past Arbutus Street had not yet been secured. [43] In 2022, TransLink unveiled a proposed route for the extension: the line would continue west under Broadway, with stations at Macdonald and Alma Streets. It would then deviate slightly north to a station serving the redevelopment at the Jericho Lands. In the University Endowment Lands, the line would either take an elevated route following University Boulevard, or a tunnelled route underneath the University Golf Club, to get to UBC at a station under the University Boulevard bus loop. [44] The station locations at Macdonald Street, Alma Street, and the Jericho Lands were approved by the Vancouver City Council in March 2022. [45]

Port Coquitlam extension

When the Evergreen Extension was built, the first few metres of track and a track switch to allow for an eventual eastward extension to Port Coquitlam were built at Coquitlam Central station. This would create two branches where trains would alternate between going east to Lafarge Lake–Douglas station or to Port Coquitlam. A feasibility study was conducted, started during early 2020 and running for about six months. Port Coquitlam mayor Brad West, the Port Coquitlam city council, and the Coquitlam City Council all voiced support for the extension. However, as of 2022, no funding had been secured nor a formal plan created. [46]

Stations

StationCityConnectionsLocation
VCC–Clark Vancouver East 6th Avenue at Clark Drive
Commercial–Broadway Translinkexpo.svg Translinkbus.svg Commercial Drive at Broadway
Renfrew Grandview Highway at Renfrew Street
Rupert Broadway at Rupert Street
Gilmore Burnaby Lougheed Highway at Gilmore Avenue
Brentwood Town Centre Lougheed Highway at Willingdon Avenue
Holdom Lougheed Highway at Holdom Avenue
Sperling–Burnaby Lake Lougheed Highway at Sperling Avenue; near Burnaby Lake
Lake City Way Lougheed Highway at Lake City Way
Production Way–University Translinkexpo.svg SFU Lougheed Highway at Production Way
Lougheed Town Centre Translinkexpo.svg Lougheed Highway at Austin; adjacent to the City of Lougheed shopping centre
Burquitlam Coquitlam Clarke Road at Smith Avenue
Moody Centre Port Moody Translinkwce.svg Barnet Highway at Williams Street
Inlet Centre Barnet Highway at Ioco Road
Coquitlam Central Coquitlam Translinkwce.svg Translinkbusrapid.svg Barnet Highway at Pinetree Way
Lincoln Pinetree Way at Lincoln Avenue
Lafarge Lake–Douglas Pinetree Way at Guilford Way; adjacent to Lafarge Lake

See also

Notes

  1. Combined with Expo Line
  2. All locations are approximate, with final station locations within one block of the given intersections.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Expo Line (SkyTrain)</span> Rapid transit line in Metro Vancouver, Canada

The Expo Line is the oldest line of the SkyTrain rapid transit system in the Metro Vancouver region of British Columbia, Canada. The line is owned and operated by BC Rapid Transit Company, a subsidiary of TransLink, and links the cities of Vancouver, Burnaby, New Westminster and Surrey.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canada Line</span> Rapid transit line in Metro Vancouver, Canada

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Waterfront station (Vancouver)</span> Metro Vancouver public transportation facility

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Burrard station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

Burrard is an underground station on the Expo Line of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. The station is located in Downtown Vancouver on Burrard Street, where Melville and Dunsmuir Streets meet, and is the western terminus of the R5 Hastings St that provides service to Simon Fraser University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Columbia station (SkyTrain)</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">New Westminster station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lougheed Town Centre station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

Lougheed Town Centre is an elevated station on the Expo and Millennium Lines of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. The station is located at Lougheed Highway and Austin Road in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. Initially a Millennium Line station, a reorganization of SkyTrain service patterns in 2016 brought a branch of the Expo Line over the existing tracks to serve the station. It is one of three stations where transfer between the Expo Line and the Millennium Line is possible, the other two such points of transfer being Commercial–Broadway and Production Way–University stations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Production Way–University station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

Production Way–University is an elevated station on the Expo and Millennium Lines of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. The station is located at the intersection of Lougheed Highway and Production Way in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. Initially a Millennium Line station, a reorganization of SkyTrain service patterns in 2016 made Production Way–University a terminus for a branch of the Expo Line.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">VCC–Clark station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

VCC–Clark is an elevated station on the Millennium Line of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. The station is named after the nearby Vancouver Community College (VCC) located in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada and serves as the western terminus of the Millennium Line.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Evergreen Extension</span> 2016 extension of Metro Vancouvers SkyTrain Millennium Line

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Broadway–City Hall station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Coquitlam Central station</span> Metro Vancouver public transportation station

Coquitlam Central station is an intermodal rapid transit station in Metro Vancouver served by both the Millennium Line—part of the SkyTrain system—and the region's West Coast Express commuter rail system. The station is located on the north side of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) tracks in Coquitlam, just west of the Lougheed Highway rail overpass, near the Coquitlam Centre shopping mall. 601 parking spaces are available on site. All services are operated by TransLink.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Commercial–Broadway station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

Commercial–Broadway is a rapid transit station complex in Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain system in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It serves an elevated portion of the Expo Line and a below-grade portion of the Millennium Line. It is a major transit hub, with the third-highest number of boardings of any SkyTrain station, and a terminus of the region's busiest bus route, the 99 B-Line.

The SkyTrain rapid transit system in Greater Vancouver, Canada, was conceived as a legacy project of Expo 86 and was finished in time to showcase the fair's theme: "Transportation and Communication: World in Motion – World in Touch". Construction was funded by the provincial and federal governments. Vancouver had plans as early as the 1950s to build a monorail system, with modernist architect Wells Coates pencilled in to design it; that project was abandoned. The lack of a rapid transit system was said to be the cause of traffic problems in the 1970s, and the municipal government could not fund the construction of such a system. During the same period, Urban Transportation Development Corporation, then an Ontario crown corporation, was developing a new rapid transit technology known as an "Intermediate Capacity Transit System". In 1980, the need for rapid transit was great, and Ontario needed buyers for its new technology. "Advanced Rapid Transit" was selected to be built in Vancouver to showcase the Ontario project at Expo 86.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Great Northern Way–Emily Carr station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

Great Northern Way–Emily Carr is a planned underground station for the Millennium Line of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. It will be located at the intersection of Great Northern Way and Thornton Street adjacent to the Emily Carr University of Art and Design in the Strathcona neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Originally scheduled to open in 2025, the station's projected opening was pushed back to early 2026 in November 2022.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arbutus station</span> Metro Vancouver SkyTrain station

Arbutus is a planned underground station on the Millennium Line of Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain rapid transit system. It will be located at the northeast corner of the intersection of West Broadway and Arbutus Street in the Kitsilano neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and will be the western terminus of the Millennium Line when completed. Originally scheduled to open in 2025, the station's projected opening was pushed back to early 2026 in November 2022.

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