Finally, some good news for rail commuters in Connecticut: CDOT has ordered 60 new railcars for service on the branch lines.
To be manufactured by French rail
giant Alstom (the folks who built the TGV and are building the new generation of
Acela for Amtrak), these new unpowered cars will bring welcome enhancements
for riders.
THE CARS: The new cars will offer two-by-two seating (vs three by two seating on the M8s), some with work-station tables. There will be overhead luggage racks and the capability of onboard Wi-Fi (which CDOT promises will be installed). There will be USB plugs, automated station announcements, automatic doors and full ADA access. And there will be bicycle racks.
But given the spacious seating,
the new coaches will have 20% fewer seats per car than the M8s.
WHERE WILL THEY RUN? They will mostly serve the Hartford Line
between New Haven and Springfield, replacing ex-Shore Line East coaches built
by Bombardier and Mafersa. Even older
coaches, rehabilitated on a lease from MBTA, will be returned to Boston.
Currently CT Rail runs locomotive-pulled
three to five coach trains (supplemented by Amtrak’s two-coach consists) on The
Hartford Line.
The new cars are capable of running at 125 mph but the tracks between New Haven and Springfield are only rated for 110 mph in short stretches. Speed limits on the Danbury and Waterbury branches (where the new coaches may also run) are much lower. The new cars will not run on the mainline, the New Canaan branch or Shore Line East, which are all electrified and operate with M8 cars.
Alstom has extensive experience
building rail cars elsewhere in the world. But these new cars will have to be
built stronger (and heavier) to meet Federal Railroad Administration standards
for “buff strength”
and fire resistance in case of a crash.
Alstom tells me the first cars
in the order will arrive “sometime in 2026”.
THE COST: Given the $315 million purchase
price for the 60 new cars, that works out to $5.25 million each. The last M8 order from Kawaski in 2016 (for
self-propelled EMU cars) came in at $3.85 million each. The new Alstom coaches
will require dual-mode (diesel & electric) locomotives being purchased
separately.
CDOT also has an option to buy
an additional 313 Alstom coaches. The
current M8 fleet is over 500 cars, the first of which were ordered in 2006 but
not put into service until 2011 due to software issues during testing.
THE BOTTOM LINE: The branch lines have long needed new
cars, but ridership there is historically lower than on the mainline (New Haven
to Grand Central). And with post-COVID
ridership still no better than 70%, fewer seats makes sense (for now). Obviously CDOT hopes these sleek, roomy new
cars will attract new riders, but only time will tell.
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