McFlyParadox t1_j9vt8qw wrote
Reply to comment by LightBound in A man was shoved onto Blue Line tracks in Revere. He landed on his feet and just barely missed getting hit by an oncoming train. by _Hack_The_Planet_
At this point, I'd be cool with them ripping all the hardware - rails, ties, switching, everything, even concrete in places where it needs to be repoured - out of the tunnels, and replacing it all with modern gear, one line at a time. And then they do the red line and orange line, dig another tunnel or two to connect the commuter rail between North Station and South Station. Would probably have to replace entire lines with bus service for years, while the line was being gutted and rebuilt, but it's honestly getting to that point. There is only so much you can do when you need spend half your maintenance time just getting equipment in and out of the tunnels. And maybe if we're really good, we can finally have the yellow line. As a treat.
Big-Dig-it-up, but for public transportation this time.
attigirb t1_j9vzvdv wrote
Big Dig 2: Transit Boogaloo
free_to_muse t1_j9y30px wrote
Sounds good. T grand reopening summer of 2038.
McFlyParadox t1_j9y3azx wrote
As I said: one line at a time.
So, yeah, it probably would take a couple of decades to do all the work. But it wouldn't be a couple decades of "No trains".
free_to_muse t1_j9y3zri wrote
Ok great. Just 5 years for the line that goes to your home. And then the next 5 years for the line that goes by your work.
MgFi t1_j9y827f wrote
You can suffer waiting for the line to be rebuilt, or you can suffer waiting for the line to be rebuilt. It's your choice.
free_to_muse t1_j9yx8wd wrote
So flippant. If you shut down a train for 5 yrs, people just don’t keep doing the same thing until it reopens. You’ll destroy countless businesses and communities, perhaps permanently. People will move, and change their behavior to not need the train. So when the train comes back, it’s a different world.
MgFi t1_ja0yjhw wrote
My comment was meant to imply that whether they degrade service to rebuild the line while keeping it running, or they shut the line down to rebuild it faster or more completely, it's going to impact people either way. The same effects you mention will happen, regardless of which option is chosen, although if the line is kept running in some reduced capacity, there might be less of it. When the line is brought back up to full service, the world will be different either way.
PassCommon1071 t1_ja09wm1 wrote
And design/re-fit so the system won't be drowned in sea level rise in 30 to 50 years.
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