Purple Line (San Diego Trolley) Explained

Purple Line
Type:Commuter rail
System:San Diego Trolley
Status:Announced
Locale:San Diego County, California, United States
Stations:12 (proposed)
Planopen:2035 (proposed)
Event1label:2011
Event1:Draft 2050 Regional Transportation Plan published
Event2label:2019
Event2:Project announced as the Purple Line
Event3label:2021
Event3:Mode changed from light rail to commuter rail
Owner:SANDAG
Operator:San Diego Trolley, Inc.
Linelength Mi:30.5
Speed:110mph (max)
Map State:uncollapsed

The Purple Line is a commuter rail line proposed by the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) as part of the San Diego Trolley system. It would run from San Ysidro Transit Center at the United States–Mexico border to Kearny Mesa with a possible extension to Carmel Valley. Most of it would run along a similar route to I-805. The Purple Line could include up to 12 stations, a new maintenance facility, and a storage yard. Projected ridership on the Purple Line was previously expected to be over 40,000 daily trips when previously studied as a light rail line with a peak hour frequency of 7–10 minutes. With its mode being changed to higher-speed and higher-capacity commuter rail, a new study will eventually be conducted to determine how many more daily trips will be generated.[1] The line is proposed to be opened in 2035 if funding is available at a proposed total project cost of $15.56B.[2]

History

Planning

In April 2011, the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) released a draft of its 2050 Regional Transportation Plan, which the SANDAG board of directors approved on October 28, 2011. An inland Trolley line from San Ysidro to Kearny Mesa, though not yet called the Purple Line, was included in the plan.[3] [4] [5]

Line name announced

In April 2019, SANDAG approved the final version of a November ballot initiative to increase the countywide sales tax by a half-cent, which further detailed future transit plans and specifically mentioned and estimated the cost to build the proposed San Ysidro-Kearney Mesa trolley extension. It was then given its official title, the Purple Line.[6]

Mode changed from light rail to commuter rail

In 2021, SANDAG released their 2021 Regional Plan, in which they updated the mode of the Purple Line proposal from light rail to commuter rail. As a commuter rail line, trains could run as fast as 110mph.[7]

Potential stations

Potential stations according to the SANDAG plan could include:[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SANDAG 2023 Regional Transportation Improvement Plan . 141.
  2. Web site: A Transformative Transportation Vision For the 2021 Regional Plan . Explore.
  3. Web site: 2050 Regional Transportation Plan – Chapter 6 – Systems Development: Offering More Travel Choices . . 6–15–6–18 & 6–33 . October 28, 2011 . 2013-08-01.
  4. News: Ojeda . Artie . SANDAG Approves Transportation Plan . . October 28, 2011 . 2011-10-30.
  5. Web site: PROJECTS :: San Diego's Regional Planning Agency . . October 28, 2011 . 2013-08-01.
  6. https://www.sandag.org/uploads/meetingid/meetingid_4281_20839.pdf "SANDAG Board of Directors Agenda, June 24, 2016, Item 16-06-10, FIRST READING: REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION ORDINANCE NO. RTC-CO-2017-01: THE SAN DIEGO COUNTY ROAD REPAIR, TRANSIT, TRAFFIC RELIEF, SAFETY, AND WATER QUALITY ORDINANCE AND EXPENDITURE PLAN PROVIDING FOR THE IMPOSITION OF A ONE-HALF OF ONE CENT RETAIL TRANSACTIONS AND USE TAX FOR A FORTY-YEAR PERIOD COMMENCING ON APRIL 1, 2017
  7. Web site: Central Mobility Hub and Connections Comprehensive Multimodal Corridor Plan . 89.
  8. Web site: 2023-03-23 . Purple Line Concept Map 2023-03-23 .