Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
What I'd like to see is:
- Train leaving both morning and evening from both Halifax and Dartmouth
- Double tracking in town to eliminate delays
- Track upgrades and additional double track sections outside of town to allow higher speeds and more consistent speeds making the service faster than automobile.
But... it would probably take a good $$billion to achieve that, and that would be much better spent on HFR in the corridor at this point. No because it would "make money" but because it would make sense. I doubt HFR would have a fare recovery ratio of one or greater anyway so money would not be directly made.
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Would this really cost $1B? The Ocean route used to have more double track. It would only need to be rebuilt; the ROW would not need to be expanded, and the distances are pretty short. The cost is on the order of $1M per km for adding a single track to an existing railbed. The rural areas could presumably improved incrementally.
A single replacement 102/103 interchange cost $20M and I have not read a single comment saying that cost was unreasonable. The Windsor Street Exchange work is $47M. I think investment along those lines could significantly improve the rail infrastructure (and some WSE-related work is going to be rail improvements). Another project would be to bring either the North End or South End lines into downtown Halifax, or even connect them together. The North End ROW is still there as parking plus Cogswell is getting torn up soon, but nobody seems to be connecting those dots.
The service and infrastructure are so disastrously poor at this point that there is low-hanging fruit all over the place. The problems are not problems of low demand or engineering and construction, they're management problems.
I've posted this before but the history of this rail line in NS makes the story even sadder:
- A railway is started as the Nova Scotia Railway in 1853 and a route is built to Pictou via Truro with NS tax dollars
- After Confederation, NSR is absorbed by the Intercolonial Railway in 1872. HQ moves to Moncton, and the focus is on service in the Maritimes with connections to Quebec and Maine.
- The track is upgraded by 1910 or so; it runs in a dedicated ROW with dozens of bridges and no at-grade crossings. There is a commuter rail route called "The Suburban" along with interprovincial and regional provincial rail routes.
- ICR becomes a part of CN in 1918. HQ moves to Montreal. Freight rates start bouncing up and down dramatically. Many factories close. This becomes a major political issue in the 1920's. Nothing really happens and the 1920's are a lost decade in the Maritimes.
- CN is privatized in 1992
- Some CEO decides to sell off some track to make a quick buck in the 2000's, and some of the double track is reduced to single track
- People talk about how maybe one day we could restore circa 1910 level infrastructure