W Line (RTD) explained

W Line
Type:Light rail
System:RTD Rail
Locale:Denver Metropolitan Area
Stations:15
Owner:Regional Transportation District
Operator:Regional Transportation District
Linelength:12.12NaN2
Tracks:1–2

The W Line, also called the West Rail Line, is a light rail line in Denver, Lakewood, and Golden, Colorado, United States. The W Line was the first part of FasTracks to break ground, on May 16, 2007. The line, the only line to traverse the West Corridor, opened for service on Friday, April 26, 2013.[1]

History

The Denver, Lakewood and Golden Railroad started operations in the area in 1893, switching to electric traction by 1909 as the Denver and Intermountain Railroad. The route ran from the downtown Denver interurban loop, along Lakewood Gulch and 13th Avenue, continuing out to Golden. Interurban service continued until 1950, when all Denver area trolley and interurban service ceased.[2]

Plans to resurrect a railway line from Denver to Golden were advanced in the mid-1970s and in the 1980s RTD purchased the right-of-way to an unused rail corridor between the two cities.[3] A study conducted in 1997 stated the need for a rapid transit corridor through the region, and settled on 13th Avenue as the locally preferred alternative. An environmental impact statement was started in 2001 and finished with a record of decision in 2004.[4] A "rail-pulling" ceremony was held on the 13th Avenue corridor on May 16, 2007, and construction started in earnest in early 2008.[5]

As project costs climbed above the initial estimates, cuts were made, including reducing the line from a double track to a single-track operation from west of the Federal Center Station to the end of the line at the Jefferson County Government Center.[6]

The first full test run of the line happened on January 3, 2013, in anticipation of the official opening, April 26, 2013, eight months ahead of schedule.[7]

Route

The W Line follows the Central Platte Valley Corridor (CPV) from Union Station, stopping at Ball Arena-Elitch Gardens, Empower Field at Mile High station and a relocated Auraria West Campus station. It then leaves the CPV corridor, traveling under U.S. Route 40/U.S. Route 287, crosses over the UP/BNSF consolidated mainline on a new bridge, travels under Interstate 25, and then over the South Platte River. The corridor then travels west along the Lakewood Gulch until Lamar station, where it begins to follow 13th Avenue until it reaches the Lakewood Industrial Park at Oak station. From there, the line turns south along the Remington spur to reach the Denver Federal Center. From the Federal Center, the line narrows to a single-track line and travels west along U.S. Route 6 to the western terminus at Jefferson County Government Center in Golden. The single-track section limits headways to no better than every 15 minutes over that section of the line.[8]

The W Line is the first light rail route in metro Denver to make extensive use of gated grade crossings within its right-of-way (there were only four such grade crossings on the previously existing network). Some of the route goes through residential areas and concerns about noise led to an innovative solution for the warning system at crossing gates. The warning bells will adjust their volume in response to the ambient noise resulting in 50-70 dB during the evening hours compared to the standard volume of 90-100 dB.

Stations

Four stations along the route were in use previously, including the station which was relocated approximately 300feet to the north, and eleven new stations were built for the line.[9] [10] Three different fare zones exist along the W Line.[11]

StationMunicipalityOpenedMajor connections & notes
DenverApril 5, 2002

MallRide
Flatiron Flyer
April 26, 2013Park and ride

1,900 spaces

Park and ride: 800 spaces
Denver/Lakewood
Lakewood
Park and ride: 1,000 spaces
Park and ride: 200 spaces
Park and ride: 1,000 spaces
GoldenPark and ride: 705 spaces

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: January 21, 2016 . W Line Fact Sheet . January 7, 2022 . Regional Transportation District.
  2. Web site: See the history and diversity of the West Corridor, RTD's FasTracks first light rail line . https://web.archive.org/web/20100620005100/http://www.inside-lane.com/2009/09/29/see-the-history-and-diversity-of-the-west-corridor-rtds-fastracks-first-light-rail-line/ . June 20, 2010 . April 6, 2010 . Kevin Flynn's Inside Lane.
  3. Web site: T.R. Witcher . Denver Opens Long-Awaited Extension to Transit System . https://web.archive.org/web/20130609230316if_/http://www.asce.org/CEMagazine/ArticleNs.aspx?id=23622324988#.UbUJutYaRTY . June 9, 2013 . September 18, 2020 . Civil Engineering Magazine.
  4. Web site: Project History . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20200221211452/http://www.rtd-fastracks.com/wc_3 . February 21, 2020 . July 21, 2018 . Regional Transportation District.
  5. Web site: Project Background . April 6, 2010 . Regional Transportation District.
  6. Web site: Transportation project more than a billion dollars over budget . April 6, 2010 . 9 News.
  7. News: January 3, 2013 . RTD's West Rail Line sees glitches on first full test run . en-US . The Denver Post . February 26, 2022.
  8. Web site: December 31, 2014 . W Line Lessons Learned . January 8, 2022 . Regional Transportation District.
  9. Web site: Auraria Campus Happenings . August 14, 2011 . Auraria Higher Education Campus.
  10. Web site: Auraria Station . April 6, 2010 . Regional Transportation District.
  11. Web site: November 9, 2012 . West Line Operations Brochure . https://web.archive.org/web/20160428154009/http://www.rtd-fastracks.com/media/uploads/wc/WestOperationsBrochure11912.pdf . April 28, 2016 . February 26, 2022 . Regional Transportation District.