Indy Connect announces recommended alternatives
for Red and Blue lines
Public open house and webinar to offer details
MEDIA CONTACT:
Jen Thomas, jen@jtprinc.com,
317-441-2487
INDIANAPOLIS
(Oct. 16, 2013) —The Indy Connect studies of the Red and Blue Rapid
Transit lines have reached another major milestone as the project teams
recommend alternatives that will be carried forward. The Indianapolis Regional
Transportation Council heard the recommended alternatives at a meeting this
morning.
In August,
the project took the preliminary alternatives to the public for input. “With
that public input, along with more technical analysis, alternatives have been
refined, decisions made and we’re ready to move to the next phase of planning,”
said Anna Tyszkiewicz Gremling, executive director of the Indianapolis
Metropolitan Planning Organization.
The next
phase of the planning process is an environmental review.
Separate
from the Indy Connect planning process, the Central Indiana Transit Study
Committee is looking at the funding issue. Its next meeting is Oct. 31 at 9
a.m. at the Indiana Statehouse.
The recommended
alternatives for the two lines follow.
Red Line recommended alternative
View Red Line Recommended Alternative
The Red
Line runs north and south, between Carmel and Greenwood through downtown
Indianapolis.
Starting
from the north, the 25-mile route runs from Carmel City Center along City
Center Drive to Pennsylvania Street.
From there, project teams had been looking at connecting to College
Avenue via Meridian Street or Pennsylvania Parkway. A data analysis determined
that Pennsylvania Street/Parkway would likely outperform Meridian Street;
therefore Meridian Street was removed from further consideration. During the
public involvement process in August, stakeholders suggested seriously
considering Illinois Street rather than Pennsylvania Street for the corridor
between 96th and 116th streets due to the high density of
employment. Though a data analysis comparing Illinois and Pennsylvania Streets
has not yet occurred, the team will continue investigating both options and
arrive at a decision by the end of the December.
The route
will run south on College Avenue to 38th Street. Public comment and continued analysis will
help solidify route recommendations south of 38th Street to 16th
Street, which vary between using Meridian Street or the Capitol Avenue /
Illinois Street pair. South of 16th
Street, the Capitol Avenue / Illinois Street pair and Washington/Maryland
Street pair will be used to reach the Downtown Transit Center.
From the Downtown Transit Center, the route
will run southeast using primarily Virginia Avenue, with a slight deviation
onto East and McCarty Streets, to a combination of Shelby Street and Madison
Avenue, ending just south of Smith Valley Road in Greenwood.
Recommendations call for 30-40 bus rapid transit
stations along the entire route, with stops located north of 38th
Street and south of South Street approximately every mile and between 38th
Street and South Street approximately every half-mile. Bus rapid transit vehicles, which look, operate, and feel like
a light rail vehicle and are essentially light rail without the tracks, is the
recommended vehicle that would operate on the Red line.
Blue
Line recommended alternative
View Blue Line Recommended Alternative
The 24-mile Blue Line will be a bus rapid transit service
that runs east and west between Cumberland and the Indianapolis International
Airport through downtown Indianapolis. The route primarily uses Washington
Street, with 32 stations spaced approximately every half-mile to mile along the
route.
Initial service will focus east of downtown where some of the
highest ridership in the region already exists. Service will begin in
Cumberland and extend through downtown to a turnaround near the former Central
State Hospital site at Tibbs Avenue. The Indianapolis International
Airport would be served by a new Express Bus utilizing I-70, as well as IndyGo’s
Route 8 service.
Blue Line service will operate with other traffic in the existing
outside lanes of Washington Street. Stations will have improved shelters
and amenities, raised platforms and off-board fare collection. These
features, coupled with signal priority and stations that are further apart,
will cut travel time by more than 20 percent compared to the current Route 8
service. The Blue Line will also provide real-time customer information,
Wi-Fi and larger, more comfortable vehicles.
Next steps
The Indy Connect plan
will be shared during an open house and a free webinar.
The open house is
on Nov. 14 between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. at the Indianapolis Artsgarden. To
take an IndyGo bus to the open house, visit www.Indygo.net to plan your trip or call 317-635-3344. Bilingual support and sign
language interpretation will be available. Residents can call 317-327-5136 to
request additional accommodations and services.
The webinar is on Oct. 30 at noon.
Anyone with Internet access can
participate in the Webinar. Planners
will explain the rationale behind the recommended alternatives on the Red and
Blue Rapid Transit Lines and take questions
.
To register, visit
www.indyconnect.org/pages/Stay-Connected/
. The Webinar will be recorded
and posted on the Indy Connect website after the event.
About Indy Connect
When fully implemented, the Indy Connect plan will add five rapid
transit lines, double the current local bus service, and add express bus routes
and community circulators. It
would
complement IndyGo’s Downtown Transit Center, a project currently underway that
will serve as a central downtown hub for destinations, boardings and transfers.
Indy
Connect is a partnership of the Indianapolis
Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO), the Central Indiana Regional
Transportation Authority (CIRTA) and IndyGo. For more information, visit us at
www.indyconnect.org
, or
join us on
Facebook
(http://www.facebook.com/IndyConnect)
and
Twitter
(@IndyConnect)
.
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