Siemens S700 and S70 explained

Background:
  1. 00A6A6
  • Siemens S70
  • Siemens S700
  • Siemens Avanto
Manufacturer:Siemens Mobility
Yearconstruction:2002–present
Yearservice:2004–present
Predecessor:
Art-Sections:
  • S70/S700: 3 (two articulations)
  • Avanto: 5 (four articulations)
Wheeldiameter:
  • 660mm (new)
  • 580mm (worn)
Wheelbase:
  • 1.9m (06.2feet) (power truck)
  • 1.8m (05.9feet) (center truck)
Collectionmethod:Pantograph
Uicclass:
  • Bo′+2′+Bo′ (S70/S700)
  • Bo′+2′+2′+Bo′ (Avanto)
Aarwheels:B-2-B (S70/S700)
Wheels Driven:8
Bogies:
  • Siemens SF 70 (power truck)
  • Siemens SF 40 (center truck)[1]
Coupling:Dellner/Scharfenberg
Multipleworking:Within type

The Siemens S70 and its successor, the Siemens S700, are a series of articulated low-floor light-rail vehicles (LRV) and modern streetcars manufactured for the United States market by Siemens Mobility, a division of German conglomerate Siemens AG. The series also includes a European tram-train variant, the Siemens Avanto.

The S70 was manufactured from 2002 to 2017 and the improved S700 from 2014 to present, but the latter model designation was only introduced in 2019 and then retroactively applied to certain versions of the S70 built in earlier years. In this market, it competes mainly with Alstom and Kinki Sharyo low-floor LRVs and streetcars manufactured by Brookville and Inekon.

The Avanto was built for the European market starting in 2006 and was principally sold to tram-train systems which, in whole or part, share their tracks with heavy rail trains. In Europe, the Siemens Combino and Avenio models are the preferred offerings for purely light rail or tramway systems. In the tram-train market, its principal competitors are Alstom's Flexity and Citadis, as well as CAF's Urbos series.

History

The first order for S70 vehicles in the U.S. – where the three-section model was originally known as S70 Avanto but soon became known only as the S70 – was placed in 2001 for the METRORail system in Houston, Texas,[2] [3] and the first car was received by Houston in April 2003.[4] This first series of S70 cars entered service on January 1, 2004, the opening day of Houston's light rail system.[5] At Siemens's U.S. manufacturing facilities (in Sacramento, California), only the model S700 remains in production, the last S70s having been built in 2017, for Minneapolis–Saint Paul's Metro Transit light rail system.[6]

The first purchase of the European version, a five-section tram-train design sold under the Avanto brand name, was a 15-car order placed in July 2002 by SNCF, for its line between Aulnay-sous-Bois and Bondy,[7] which is now known as Île-de-France tramway Line 4.

S700 redesign and model number change

The model number S700 was adopted by Siemens Mobility in 2019 as a rebranding of a version of the S70 that had been in production since 2014.[8] [9] Versions later branded as the S700 used an adapted form of Siemens' model SF 40 center truck, first used in its SD660 model (first built in 1996 for Portland, Oregon's MAX Light Rail system) to the S70. This truck allowed longitudinal (sideways-facing) seating to be used in the center section, in place of the transverse seating used in the S70. The design change provided better passenger comfort and movement.[9] The first LRVs built to the newer design were the "Type 5" cars for the MAX Light Rail system, in 2014. Initially Siemens continued to sell LRVs with either center-section configuration and used the designation S70 for both.[8] In 2019, the company began using the designation S700 for new orders, and in 2020 it retroactively applied the S700 designation to all LRVs and streetcars that had been built to the newer design since its creation in 2013 or 2014.[9]

Size and configuration

The S70, S700, and Avanto have a modular design and can be built in a number of different sizes and configurations, including both light-rail vehicle (LRV) and streetcar versions.

The standard version of the S70 and S700 LRV is 95.4feet long, although the earliest S70 units delivered had a different, longer cab design that extended the length to 96feet. The streetcar version of the S700 is 85.25feet long, about 10feet shorter than the standard LRV.[10] Siemens also offers a US ("Ultra Short") variant of the LRV at 81.4feet, about 14feet shorter than the standard version. The San Diego Trolley and the Salt Lake City TRAX systems have purchased the US variants. The Avantos built for France have a length of 36.68frac=NaNfrac=.[11] [12]

The major change between the S70 and the S700 is the seating in the center section of the vehicle. The S700 has longitudinal seating in this section with passengers facing the aisle, while the S70 had more traditional seating with passengers sitting four-across, facing forward or back, with an aisle in between. This 2013 change, which was made to eliminate a seating layout that had been criticized as cramped[13] and ease the movement of passengers within that section,[14] was the primary design change that led Siemens eventually to adopt (in 2019) the new model number for the modified S70 design. The S700 also has some technology upgrades.

Most vehicles are double-ended, with operating controls at both ends and doors on both sides. An exception are 40 cars in service on TriMet's MAX system, which are single-ended and have cabs at only one end of each car. However, in service they always operate in pairs, coupled back-to-back, so that each consist has operating cabs at both ends.[15] TriMet reverted to a double-ended design for its latest order of S700s (placed in 2019).[8]

The S70, S700 and Avanto can be configured to operate on various overhead power supply systems. For example, the Avantos ordered for France are dual voltage, capable of operating on 750 V DC when running on tram or light rail tracks and on when running on main line tracks. Systems in the Americas most commonly use the 750 V DC system, but S700s are used on 600 V DC in San Diego and on 1500 V DC in Seattle. On the CityLynx Gold Line in Charlotte, the vehicles are additionally equipped with onboard batteries.

The S70 and S700 can also be equipped to interface with older Siemens light rail vehicles. The San Diego Trolley's S70 and S700 vehicles frequently operate with high-floor SD-100 vehicles.

Usage and current orders

United States

Notes and References

  1. Web site: First Class Bogies. Siemens. https://web.archive.org/web/20190722230416/https://www.mobility.siemens.com/mobility/global/SiteCollectionDocuments/en/rail-solutions/components-and-systems/bogies-catalog-en.pdf. 2019-07-22.
  2. Book: Jane's Urban Transport Systems 2004–2005 . . 2004 . 978-0-7106-2641-7 . Webb . Mary . Coulsdon, Surrey, UK . 499, 502.
  3. News: . May 2001 . Houston ground breaks, and orders from Siemens . 187 . . . UK . 1460-8324.
  4. News: . June 2003 . Systems News [regular news section] . 225 . . . UK . 1460-8324.
  5. News: Wansbeek . C.J. . April 2007 . 'Starter line' beats all expectations . 132–135 . . . UK . 1460-8324.
  6. News: . January 2021 . Worldwide Review [regular news section] . . Mainspring Enterprises Ltd. . UK . 37 . 997 . 1460-8324.
  7. News: Wansbeek . C.J. . January 2003 . Avanto: French 'tram-train' breakthrough . 10–13 . . . UK . 1460-8324.
  8. News: . October 2019 . Worldwide Review [regular news section, under 'Portland, OR'] . 394 . . Mainspring Enterprises Ltd. . 982 . UK . 1460-8324.
  9. News: . September 2020 . Siemens rebadges North American low-floor cars . 336 . . Mainspring Enterprises Ltd. . 993 . UK . 1460-8324.
  10. Web site: Siemens low-floor LRV literature . April 8, 2021 . . LRV literature.
  11. News: Haydock . David . April 2011 . France's first real tram train . . Platform 5 Publishing Ltd . 37–40.
  12. Siemens Breaks Its Own Record for Largest Light Rail Vehicle Order: Salt Lake City Orders 77 S70 LRVs Valued at Over $277M . 2008-05-15 . Siemens . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120224154428/http://press.siemens.us/index.php?s=43&item=916 . February 24, 2012 . 2010-03-17.
  13. News: Rose . Joseph . July 31, 2012 . TriMet asks cramped MAX riders to help design next-generation train's seating . . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20191216085704/https://www.oregonlive.com/commuting/2012/07/trimet_asks_cramped_max_riders.html . December 16, 2019 . 2020-11-13.
  14. News: Burroughs . David . April 19, 2019 . San Diego unveils new-generation Siemens LRVs . . 0744-5326 . 2020-11-13.
  15. Morgan, Steve. "Expansion for Portland's MAX: New routes and equipment", pp. 38-40. Passenger Train Journal, "2010:1" issue (1st quarter, 2010). White River Productions.
  16. Web site: Wheatley . Thomas . May 22, 2011 . Downtown streetcar to be built by Siemens . Creative Loafing Atlanta . 2017-07-16.
  17. Web site: Wheatley . Thomas . February 17, 2014 . Mysterious streetcar-like object spotted in Downtown . Creative Loafing Atlanta . 2014-02-17.
  18. Web site: Kimberly Turner . December 30, 2014 . It's Official: Atlanta Has a Streetcar! Photos From the First Day . Curbed Atlanta . 2014-12-30.
  19. Web site: Siemens S70 Data Sheet - Atlanta . 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150524103325/https://w3.usa.siemens.com/mobility/us/en/interurban-mobility/rail-solutions/high-speed-and-intercity-trains/Documents/Atlanta_DataSheet_2014_LR.pdf . May 24, 2015 . dead . 2021-09-27.
  20. News: . November 2020 . Worldwide Review [regular news section] . 441 . . Mainspring Enterprises Ltd. . 995 . UK . 1460-8324.
  21. News: January 6, 2012 . Repairs for LYNX trains to cost $6.5M . . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20200818101416/https://www.wsoctv.com/news/repairs-for-lynx-trains-to-cost-65m/329915899/ . 2020-08-18 . 2020-11-15.
  22. 2008-05-15 . Siemens announces biggest US light rail order . dead . . https://web.archive.org/web/20110616030723/http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/single-view/view/siemens-announces-biggest-us-light-rail-order.html . 2011-06-16 . 2008-05-16.
  23. Web site: Leier . Jean . January 20, 2010 . Light rail vehicle makes a stop in Atlanta . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100826002556/http://charmeck.org/city/charlotte/cats/news/pressreleases/Pages/1202010.aspx . 2010-08-26 . 2020-11-15 . Charlotte Area Transit System.
  24. Vantuono . William C. . November 29, 2016 . Siemens finalizes S70 streetcar deal with Charlotte . live . . 0033-8826 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161201015040/http://www.railwayage.com/index.php/passenger/light-rail/siemens-finalizes-s70-streetcar-deal-with-charlotte.html . 2016-12-01 . 2020-11-13.
  25. Web site: Siemens S70 Rendering . February 1, 2017.
  26. Web site: November 28, 2016 . Construction and vehicle contracts awarded for CityLYNX Gold Line Phase 2 project . Charlotte Area Transit . February 1, 2017.
  27. Web site: Siemens S70 Data Sheet - Houston . February 1, 2017.
  28. News: February 6, 2019 . Houston METRO orders more Siemens light-rail vehicles . Progressive Railroading . February 9, 2019.
  29. Web site: February 20, 2013 . New light rail vehicles begin service . Rider's Almanac . . 7 March 2015.
  30. Web site: October 2015 . Siemens wins new contracts for light-rail lines . Train's News Wire . 13 October 2015.
  31. Web site: January 8, 2018 . Minutes of the regular meeting of the Transportation Committee . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201116090934/https://metrocouncil.org/getdoc/5beff521-cb2b-4088-9732-e0685b39c5bd/Minutes.aspx . 2020-11-16 . . Minneapolis–St. Paul . 2 . 2020-11-16.
  32. Web site: October 9, 2017 . Minutes of the regular meeting of the Transportation Committee . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201116081433/https://metrocouncil.org/getdoc/76e0bdf9-52d9-49da-9f79-3f389e6b625c/Minutes.aspx . . Minneapolis–St. Paul . 2 . 2020-11-16 . 2020-11-16.
  33. News: October 28, 2016 . Twin Cities' Metropolitan Council Chooses Siemens to Provide New Light Rail Vehicles . Mass Transit . 2020-11-14.
  34. News: McKinney . Kevin . 2020 . Rush Hour [transit news section] . 44 . 52 . . White River Productions, Inc. . 3 – Third quarter 2020 . 0160-6913.
  35. News: Messina . Debbie . October 7, 2009 . Light-rail cars arrive in Norfolk . . 2009-11-08.
  36. Web site: June 14, 2017 . Siemens to build eleven light rail vehicles for Phoenix . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201114064937/https://press.siemens.com/global/en/pressrelease/siemens-build-eleven-light-rail-vehicles-phoenix . 2020-11-14 . Siemens . 2020-11-13.
  37. News: Clark . Douglas . October 6, 2020 . Valley Metro Regional Public Transportation Authority to expand light rail fleet in Phoenix, Arizona . Transportation Today . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201014001417/https://transportationtodaynews.com/news/19889-valley-metro-regional-public-transportation-authority-to-expand-light-rail-fleet-in-phoenix-arizona/ . 2020-10-14 . 2020-10-07.
  38. Web site: New Siemens trains now in service . . 2022-08-10 . January 10, 2022.
  39. Web site: May 12, 2006 . Siemens Lands $75M Portland Rail Contract . Business Wire via Mass Transit magazine . 2009-11-08.
  40. News: Redden . Jim . August 6, 2009 . TriMet puts new light-rail cars on track . . https://web.archive.org/web/20090831121611/http://www.portlandtribune.com/news/story.php?story_id=124959768388491400 . August 31, 2009 . October 5, 2015.
  41. Web site: Siemens S70 Data Sheet - Portland . 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150602094258/https://w3.usa.siemens.com/mobility/us/en/interurban-mobility/rail-solutions/high-speed-and-intercity-trains/Documents/Portland_DataSheet_2014_LR.pdf . June 2, 2015 . dead . 2021-09-27.
  42. News: July 31, 2019 . Siemens to supply S700 light rail vehicles to Portland . . 0373-5346 . 2020-11-13.
  43. Web site: April 22, 2020 . SacRT Purchases New Low-Floor Light Rail Vehicles . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20200426073424/https://www.sacrt.com/apps/sacrt-purchases-new-low-floor-light-rail-vehicles/ . April 26, 2020 . 2020-11-13 . . en.
  44. Web site: SacRT trains to get low-profile upgrade: Sacramento-built light rail vehicles part of system-wide modernization . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20200813121006/https://spotlight.newsreview.com/sacramento-regional-transit-district/community/sacrt-trains-to-get-low-profile-upgrade-sacramento-built-light-rail-vehicles-part-of-system-wide-modernization/ . 2020-08-13 . 2020-08-22 . . 6 July 2020 . Chico, California.
  45. Web site: SacRT Orders Nine Additional Low-Floor Light Rail Vehicles . Rancho Cordova Independent . Rancho Cordova Independent . 18 June 2024.
  46. Web site: SacRT orders additional nine S700 light-rail vehicles from Siemens Mobility . www.masstransitmag.com/ . www.masstransitmag.com . 18 June 2024.
  47. Web site: SacRT orders eight additional Siemens Mobility S700 LRVs . Siemens Mobility . Siemens Mobility . 18 June 2024.
  48. Web site: SacRT orders eight additional Siemens Mobility S700 LRVs . sacrt.com . Sacramento Regional Transit . 18 June 2024.
  49. Web site: SACRT LIGHT RAIL FACT SHEET . sacrt.com . 18 June 2024.
  50. News: October 7, 2009 . Siemens wins San Diego light rail contract . . https://web.archive.org/web/20210304002854/https://www.metro-magazine.com/10027005/siemens-wins-san-diego-light-rail-contract . March 4, 2021 . live . 2021-09-27.
  51. Web site: July 2013 . San Diego Trolley Renewal Project Fact Sheet . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140210151209/http://sdmts.com/documents/fact-sheet-trans-trolley-renewal.pdf . 2014-02-10 . San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) & San Diego Metropolitan Transit System (MTS) . 2020-11-13.
  52. Web site: April 19, 2019 . San Diego MTS unveils 5000-series Siemens Trolley cars . https://web.archive.org/web/20210227022448/https://www.metro-magazine.com/10031538/san-diego-mts-unveils-5000-series-siemens-trolley-cars . February 27, 2021 . live . Metro Magazine.
  53. Web site: N Ford Transit System Films - YouTube . 2019-04-20 . MTS Trolley - 5000 Series Siemens S70 First Day in Service on the Blue Line . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/uQgjjbW7chI . 2021-12-21 . live.
  54. News: . October 7, 2020 . San Diego Takes Delivery of Final LRV Needed For Extension . . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201010083258/http://passengertrainjournal.com/san-diego-takes-delivery-of-final-lrv-needed-for-extension/ . 2020-10-10 . 2020-11-15.
  55. News: . August 1, 2019 . San Diego selects Siemens S700 light rail vehicles . . 2021-02-04.
  56. Vantuono . William C. . March 28, 2018 . Siemens selected for OC Streetcar . live . . https://web.archive.org/web/20201106112711/https://www.railwayage.com/passenger/light-rail/siemens-selected-oc-streetcar/ . 2020-11-06 . 2020-11-13.
  57. Sound Transit to order 30 additional light rail vehicles . April 27, 2017 . . 2017-07-16.
  58. Web site: September 29, 2016 . Siemens to build 122 S70 light rail vehicles for Sound Transit's expanding system . https://web.archive.org/web/20161030132527/http://news.usa.siemens.biz/press-release/mobility/siemens-build-122-s70-light-rail-vehicles-sound-transits-expanding-system . October 30, 2016 . dead . Siemens . 2021-09-27.
  59. News: Guevara . Natalie . June 19, 2019 . Wider center, digital signs: Improvements abound in new Sound Transit light rail cars . seattlepi.com . Hearst . August 28, 2019.
  60. Web site: First new Link light rail vehicles enter passenger service. May 14, 2021. 2021-05-14. Sound Transit. en.
  61. Tramways & Urban Transit, February 2007, p. 64. Light Rail Transit Association (UK).
  62. "Siemens tram-train arrives in Mulhouse". Tramways & Urban Transit, January 2010, p. 27. Light Rail Transit Association (UK).
  63. News: Jake . Rupert . September 19, 2007 . City slapped with another light-rail lawsuit . . 2009-11-08.
  64. http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/urban-rail/single-view/view/atlanta-orders-siemens-avanto-streetcars.html Atlanta orders Siemens Avanto [sic] streetcars] Railway Gazette International. May 20, 2011. Retrieved 2011-05-20. In May 2011, Siemens announced that it had won the $17.2 million contract to build the four streetcars that run on the Atlanta Streetcar. The vehicles were built at Siemens' plant in Florin, California, but with major components, including the propulsion system, assembled at Siemens' plant in Alpharetta, Georgia.[16] The first of the streetcars was delivered on February 17, 2014,[17] and began passenger service on December 30, 2014.[18] [19]
    • Charlotte, North Carolina
      • Lynx Blue Line: 42 S70 units purchased and now operating.[20] First 16 cars, purchased for $50 million, have been in service since the opening of the Charlotte light rail system in November 2007.[21] Four additional units purchased in 2008 to keep up with higher-than-expected ridership[22] were received in early 2010.[23] In 2012, after 4 years of operation, the original 16 cars had to be repaired at the Siemens facility in California for an estimated cost of $400,000 each. A third order, for 22 LRVs, was delivered in stages between fall 2014 and spring 2017, and CATS now operates 42 S70 vehicles.
      • CityLynx Gold Line: Six S700 streetcar units were ordered in 2016, and were delivered in 2019–2020. These six cars were specified to have internal batteries to allow off-wire operations in some areas.[24] The S700 streetcars are a compact version of the S70 light rail vehicles[25] that currently operate on the LYNX Blue Line. The cost to purchase these six vehicles and spare parts is $40.4 million.[26]
    • Houston, Texas (METRORail): 18 S70 units purchased, the first of which was delivered in April 2003; delivery was completed in late 2004. Nineteen additional units were purchased later, procured using Utah Transit Authority (Salt Lake City) options, delivered starting in late 2012. The original cars are the long variant; the 2012–13 cars are the US ("Ultra Short") variant.[27] 14 more S700 units were ordered in early 2019.[28]
    • Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Minnesota (Metro): 64 S70 units purchased. Delivery of initial order of 59 began in 2012, with the first unit entering service in February 2013.[29] In October 2015, an option was exercised for five additional vehicles at a cost of $20 million,[30] and these were received in fall 2017.[31] [32] In October 2016, an order was placed for 27 more S70s,[33] to a modified design that has since been rebranded S700 by Siemens. Delivery began in May 2020.[34]
    • Norfolk, Virginia (Tide Light Rail): 9 S70 cars, ordered in 2007. First cars delivered October 2009.[35] Entered service with the opening of the Norfolk system, in 2011.
    • Phoenix, Arizona (Valley Metro Rail): 11 S700 vehicles ordered, in June 2017, with options for up to 67 more.[36] Fourteen options exercised in October 2020.[37] Began to enter service January 2022.[38]
    • Portland, Oregon (MAX Light Rail): 22 S70 and 18 S700 units purchased and now in operation. Order for initial 21 S70 cars announced on May 11, 2006;[39] later expanded by one car. Entered service starting in August 2009.[40] Order placed 2012 for another 18 cars;[41] delivered in 2014–2015 and subsequently rebranded as S700 by Siemens. An order for 26 S700 units was placed in July 2019,[42] with delivery scheduled to run from mid-2021 to fall 2022. Unlike Portland's previous S70 and S700 LRVs, these will be double-ended.
    • Sacramento, California (Sacramento RT Light Rail): 20 S700 units ordered in 2020 for the Sacramento RT Light Rail system, with options for a total of 76 cars. Shortly after the initial 20-unit order, Sacramento was awarded by the California State Transportation Agency another $23.6 million dollars to purchase an additional 8 units, thus bringing the total number of S700 units on order for delivery beginning in 2022 to 28.[43] [44] Seventeen additional cars were purchased in 2023 and 2024, bringing the total number of S700 units to 45.[45] [46] [47] [48] [49]
    • Salt Lake City, Utah
      • TRAX: 77 S70 US ("Ultra Short") units ordered; in service since August 7, 2011.
      • S Line: S70 US units
    • San Diego, California (San Diego Trolley): 11 S70 (922NaN2) units purchased in first order in October 2004, with delivery complete in July 2005. A second order, for 57 S70 US ("Ultra Short" 812NaN2) cars, was placed in October 2009;[50] the order was later increased to a total of 65 S70 US units in 2012.[51] 45 additional cars, now of the rebranded model S700 US,[52] entered service in April 2019[53] and the last cars in the order were received in October 2020.[54] Meanwhile, an additional 25 S700s were ordered in mid-2019.[55]
    • Santa Ana, California (OC Streetcar): 8 S700 streetcar units ordered in March 2018 for the under construction OC Streetcar light rail line.[56]
    • Seattle, Washington (Link light rail): 152 S700 units on order.[57] Of these, an order for 122 was placed in September 2016[58] and delivery began in 2019.[59] This $554 million contract was the largest contract in Sound Transit's history. The order was expanded by 30 cars in spring 2017. The LRVs will be used for expansion of the Central Link system. Entered service in May 2021.[60]

    France

    The S70 model used in France is known as the Avanto and locally designated as the U 25500. Unlike the S70 models in the USA, the Avanto has 5 sections instead of 3.

    Cancelled orders

    • An order for 22 S70 cars, placed in 2006 by Ottawa, Ontario for a planned expansion of its O-Train system, was later cancelled. Political problems had resulted in cancellation of the entire expansion project, which in turn led to lawsuits by Siemens and other contractors against the City of Ottawa.[63]

    See also

    Other Siemens light rail vehicles for the American market:

    • Siemens–Duewag U2 – high-floor LRV for either level boarding at high-platform stations or steps for passenger loading at street level
    • SD-100 and SD-160 – high-floor LRV for either level boarding at high-platform stations or steps for passenger loading at street level
    • SD-400 and SD-460 – high-floor LRV for both level boarding at high-platform stations and with steps for passenger loading at street level
    • SD660 – low-floor LRV for passenger loading at street level, custom built for Portland, Oregon
    • P2000 – high-floor LRV for level boarding at high-platform stations, custom built for Los Angeles
    • S200 – high-floor LRV for level boarding at high-platform stations (with movable steps for passenger loading at street level in San Francisco)

    External links