Charles Street Trolley Explained

Charles Street Trolley
Type:Streetcar
Status:Proposed
Locale:Baltimore, Maryland
Map State:collapsed

The Charles Street Trolley is a proposed streetcar line running through northern portions of Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Kittelson & Associates, Inc., a consulting firm hired by trolley advocates, estimates that the line would be likely to carry 2.5 million riders per year.[1]

The proposal is backed by a public-private group known as the Charles Street Development Corporation.[2] A second group, known as Friends of the Trolley is also backing the project; it was reported in November 2011 that FotT had hired a community organizer.[3] As envisioned, the line would probably use modern, low-floor light rail cars, but the use of newly-built replica-vintage rail cars is an alternative also being considered.[4]

A website for what appears to be a third group—the Baltimore Streetcar Campaign—is also active in advocating for a Charles Street trolley plan.

Certain portions of the proposed routing would be similar to that covered by the Maryland Transit Administration's proposed Yellow Line., the proposed alignment also overlaps significantly with a proposed extension of the Charm City Circulator.[5]

While the proposed trolley is not a project of the MTA, the two groups have expressed a willingness to work together on certain elements of a transit plan for the area involved.

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Notes and References

  1. News: A Streetcar Named Conspire. Urbanite Baltimore. June 2009. Michael Anft. June 27, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140725004713/http://www.gbc.org/Media%20Clips/June%202009/06-2009-Urbanite.pdf. July 25, 2014. dead.
  2. News: The Interview: Robin Budish, community organizer for Baltimore Streetcar Campaign. The Baltimore Sun. February 4, 2012. Lorraine Mirabella.
  3. News: Charles Street trolley supporters hire community organizer. The Baltimore Sun. Lauren Budik. November 1, 2011.
  4. Web site: The Charles Street Trolley Frequently Asked Questions. December 2008. Charles StreetTrolley Corp.. PDF. February 5, 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110725161436/http://www.charlesstreet.org/trolley/pdfs/FAQ.pdf. July 25, 2011.
  5. News: Competing visions of mass transit for the Charles St. corridor. The Baltimore Sun. Candy Thomson. October 1, 2012.