Light rail in Auckland

Proposed light rail network (Stages 1 to 3)
Legend
Auckland Dockline Tram
Daldy Street North
Fanshawe Street/Daldy Street South
Fanshawe Street
Lower Hobson Street
Downtown(Britomart)
Vulcan Lane
Victoria Street
Wellesley Street
Mayoral Drive
Karangahape Road
Piwakawaka Street
New North Road
George Street
View Road
Eden Park(Kingsland)
Valley Road
Burnley Terrace
Elizabeth Street
Dominion/Balmoral Road
Sandringham/Balmoral Road
Kensington Avenue
Halesowen Avenue
Hazel Ave-Kings Road
Sandringham/Mount Albert Road
Mount Roskill Shops
Wesley Community Centre
Denbigh Avenue
Stoddard Road
Stoddard Road/Sandringham Road
Stoddard Road depot

Auckland, New Zealand, is considering adding light rail lines to replace some of its most heavily used bus lines.[1] Many of these new light rail lines, if built, would echo Auckland's former tram system.[2]

Auckland was served by a network of traditional tram or streetcar routes until the mid-20th Century.[3][4] The original tram network had 72 kilometres (45 mi) of track.[5]

Steve Hawkins, Auckland Transport's Chief Engineer, said that the bus routes on Symonds Street and Fanshawe Street require as many as 150 buses each.[6] The Light Rail study is considering replacing the bus routes on Dominion Road, Manukau Road, Mt Eden Road, Symonds Street and Queen St with light rail routes. All of those bus routes replaced routes on Auckland's 20th Century Tram network.

Auckland Mayor Len Brown pointed out that the city's ten-year plan did not include funding for building new light rail routes.[6]

Stuff.co.nz quoted Auckland Transport officials who described how the study was considering the option of building light rail routes, with a dedicated right of way, and the option of building routes where rail vehicles shared the road with other vehicles, as with a traditional streetcar system.[6] Officials projected that the maximum passenger capacity of a true light rail line would be 18,000 passengers per hour, while the maximum capacity of a system where vehicles shared the road with other vehicles would max out at 12,000 passengers per hour. They said 2,500 passengers per hour was the practical maximum for a bus route.

References

  1. Keith Barrett (2015-01-23). "Auckland to launch light rail study". International Railway Journal. Retrieved 2015-01-27. THE board of Auckland Transport has called for studies to be carried out into the construction of a light rail network in New Zealand's largest city.
  2. "Light rail gets thumbs up from opposition". 3 News. 2015-01-24. Retrieved 2015-01-27. Auckland Transport says it's investigating whether light rail on Queen St, Symonds St, Sandringham Rd, Dominion Rd, Mt Eden Rd and Manukau Rd is a good alternative to buses. Most of those routes had trams running on them before they were removed in the 1950s.
  3. Sandy Smith (2015-01-27). "Beijing to Add Four More Metro Lines". Next City. Retrieved 2015-01-27. The transportation agency in New Zealand’s largest city, Auckland, is taking the first steps toward returning trams to a number of city streets that last saw them in the 1950s.
  4. Wayne Thompson (2015-01-25). "From apps to zones: Is this how we get city moving?". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2015-01-27. Auckland Transport has also pitched light rail for some highly congested bus routes. Light rail, or trams, on a priority path could shift 18,000 people an hour compared with a bus on a shared path shifting 2500 people and a bus on a priority path's 6000 people an hour.
  5. Mathew Dearnaley (2015-01-23). "Light rail returns to the spotlight". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2015-01-28. The city's transport authority has revealed it is investigating replacing buses with electric light rail on a handful of busy isthmus routes such as Symonds St, Mt Eden Rd, Dominion Rd and Sandringham Rd - all part of a 72km tram network before their tracks were ripped up in 1956.
  6. 1 2 3 Maria Slade (2015-01-23). "Len Brown cool on light rail in Auckland transport plan". Stuff.nz. Retrieved 2015-01-28. Auckland Transport (AT) says bus routes in the central city and along main roads such as Dominion Road and Manukau Road are at near capacity, and light rail is the most practical solution.
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