This post is one of those rare opportunities in which the content 
is relevant to both blogs. As a result it will appear on both blogs. 
With that being said, I ask you this question; Could Rail Transit in 
Columbia Be Closer Than We Think? Short answer; Yes. Relatively short 
answer; yes but nobody knows it. Long answer; yes but nobody knows so 
I'm going to explain how it can happen.   
The redevelopment of Columbia Town Center has slowed
 considerably due to the recession but in 2012 plans have begun to pick 
up steam again and in 2013 construction has begun and this year 
construction has continued as well as new plans being introduced. Part 
of the Master Plan for Columbia Town Center includes a Rail Transit Stop
 that will link Columbia to Baltimore. This same stop could also 
eventually link to the DC Metro for a truly regional comprehensive Rail 
Transit System. 
Everybody says this is way off in the future but in 
order to keep producing posts for this blog, I spend my days looking at 
maps any and all types ideas. In doing so I found a way that can link 
Columbia to Baltimore relatively easily and by using mostly existing 
tracks it will be much cheaper than most other projects coming down the 
pipeline.
In order to make this appear feasible we must first 
look at what's already there. Right now we have the Central Light Rail 
Line. In the Baltimore Regional Rail Transit Plan the Central Light Rail
 Line will break into two separate lines; The Blue Line and the Yellow 
Line. The Blue Line is already built to what is proposed in the Regional
 Rail Plan going from Hunt Valley to Cromwell Station between in 
Ferndale/Northern Glen Burnie (although my goal is to extend it to 
Annapolis) Then there's the Yellow Line, when completed it will share 
some track space with the Blue Line as already but when completed it 
will go from Towson to Columbia Town Center. 
To break up the two lines and "birth" the Yellow 
Line, all that would have to be done is to change the maps. If one is to
 ride the Central Light Rail Line (Blue Line) they will no longer have 
the spurs going to Penn Station or BWI Airport. The Yellow Line in its 
infancy will be those spurs starting at the Airport. joining the Blue 
Line for the vast majority of its length until it's expanded and then 
ending at Penn Station. Eventually the Yellow Line will get to Penn 
Station by way of Charles Center, Mercy Hospital, and Mount Vernon but 
that's way in the future.
Now back to Columbia, the Yellow Line is the Line 
that is to be extended to Columbia. Its southern end is at the Airport. 
Therefore we have to find a way to connect Columbia to the Airport. 
Before the Yellow Line (as I will be calling it from now on) turns into 
the Airport it runs parallel to Aviation Boulevard (MD 170) it will 
roughly continue to do so intersecting the MARC Penn Line at the BWI 
Amtrak Station. It will then travel through land that is largely 
undeveloped and is being banked for the future BWI "Aerotropolis. In 
Hanover at the Howard/Anne Arundel County line, the line will join the 
MARC Camden Line.
When funding more funding is in place the Yellow 
Line will continue on its own southbound with stops at the Baltimore 
Commons Business Park and Arundel Mills Mall/Maryland Live Casino which 
is one of Maryland's fastest growing areas. After leaving Arundel Mills 
it will meet the MARC Camden Line at the Dorsey MARC Station. Again, 
this won't be right away.
Once the Yellow Line joins the MARC Camden Line it 
will share tracks until there's a westward split between the Jessup and 
Savage MARC Stations. This leads into a largely industrial part of 
Savage and Jessup and skirts Guilford, an out-parcel of Columbia, This 
spur of train tracks ends in between Guilford, and the Columbia Villages
 of Owen Brown and King's Contrivance. Given how there's no real funding
 in place for tunneled rail transit this is the end of the line for now.
 It does give Rail Transit access to Columbia, not Columbia Town Center 
just yet. 
When the time comes for a Town Center expansion I 
would have it go up Broken Land Parkway and have it go through Oakland 
Mills for a stop at its Village Center (pictured above)as the Multi-Modal pathway 
proposed will make for a great right of way. This will also spur much 
needed reinvestment and redevelopment for the Village of Oakland Mills. 
Using this same Multi-Modal path, the Yellow Line will cross Rote 29 and
 will reach its ultimate southbound destination; Columbia Town Center.
Although I have started the route to Columbia by 
hardly laying any track down, when the route goes all the way to Town 
Center via Arundel Mills, there will have to be new tracks laid down, 
dug up and tunneled. However this "el cheapo route" will surely help the
 Mastered Planned vision of the Yellow Line come to fruition and that 
Rail Transit in Columbia actually is a lot closer than we think.
 
 
6 comments:
Nice Share. I wait the update
We definitely need a light rail in columbia
We definitely need a light rail in columbia
YO did you know there’s a rail spur from the Camden Line that terminates at the north end of Guilford?
You should have a look at THAT right of way before some douchebag acquires it and puts a hulking eyesore warehouse on it
Oh, I thought it terminated at Guilford, but it actually stretches all the way to the POWER LINES at Snowden River Parkway. MARC should already have a downtown station in Columbia.
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