Sacramento RT Light Rail
The Sacramento RT Light Rail system is a light rail system, consisting of three rail lines, 54 stations, and 76 vehicles. It is operated by the Sacramento Regional Transit District.
Sacramento's light rail system, with an average of 36,800 weekday daily boardings in Q3 2018, is the sixteenth busiest in the United States.
History
Prior to 1980 efforts by community organizers led by the Modern Transit Society to bring light rail to Sacramento were stopped by the Regional Transit District Administration and Board of Directors.In 1980 a new General Manager, Bob Nelson, was hired.
A management troika of GM Nelson, RT General Counsel John Kettleson, and Public Affairs Director, Ombudsman and Special Assistant GM Bill Green, was successful in completely reorganizing the agency, vastly improving service, reversing its negative public reputation with a focused positive PR and marketing campaign, and obtaining swift approval and funding for a bold new light rail project.
The light rail system opened in 1987. The new line linked the northeastern and eastern corridors with Downtown Sacramento. More specifically, the "starter line" started at Watt/I-80 station to Butterfield station. As light rail ridership increased, RT continued to expand the light rail system. In September 1998, the line was extended from Butterfield station to Mather Field/Mills station. In September 2003, Sacramento Regional Transit opened the first phase of the South Line, which was a extension to South Sacramento. In June 2004, light rail was extended from the Mather Field/Mills station to Sunrise Boulevard, and on October 15, 2005, a extension from the Sunrise station to the city of Folsom was opened.
In December 2006, the final leg of the Amtrak/Folsom project was extended by, to the downtown Sacramento Valley Station, connecting light rail with Amtrak inter-city and Capitol Corridor services as well as local and commuter buses. In 2012, SACRT completed the first phase of the Green Line. The second phase of the line is planned to reach to the Sacramento International Airport. In August 2015, RT extended service south to Cosumnes River College. RT currently operates 97 bus routes in a service area.
Sacramento RT Light Rail ridership peaked at 16.8 million rides in 2008, but has declined to 9.7 million rides in 2018, a drop of 42% during that period.
System
Lines
Gold Line: Downtown–East Sacramento–Rancho Cordova–FolsomGreen Line: Downtown–River District
Headways
All routes operate every 15 minutes on weekdays and every 30 minutes at night and on the weekend.Stations
The stations along the network are open-air structures featuring passenger canopies for protection from adverse weather. Twenty-six stations offer bus transfer services and 22 have park-and-ride lots with a total of 10,113 available parking spaces. Works of public art included at several stations were developed as part of the RT Public Art Program, and represent an array of media including, mosaics, sculptures, metalwork and murals. Each was commissioned to incorporate an identity and sense of place unique to the neighborhood surrounding the station.Most popular stations
Numbers provided are average weekday boardings and alights:- 16th Street: 7,100
- Meadowview: 5,400
- St. Rose of Lima Park: 3,900
Rolling stock
Numbers | Built | Manufacturer | Model | Notes | |
35 | 1 | 1912 | American Car Company | "California" car |
|
101–126 | 26 | 1985–1986 | Siemens-Duewag | U2A | |
127–136 | 10 | 1990–1991 | Siemens | U2A | |
201 202–240 | 40 | 2002 2003 | Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles | SRV-I | |
301–320 | 20 | 1987 | Urban Transportation Development Corporation | ||
20 | 2020 | Siemens | S700 | on order |
Future projects
With the acquisition of low-floor Siemens vehicles, the system's stations are planned to be reconfigured for level boarding.Sacramento RT has several plans to expand the light rail system, but most have been placed on hold due to a lack of funding.
The most recent Sacramento Regional Transit Master Plan, adopted September 2009 included plans to extend the system to Elk Grove, Roseville, and Citrus Heights. Such extensions are unlikely before 2050.
Green Line to Sacramento International Airport
The Green Line extension to Sacramento International Airport will extend service 12 miles to the airport via the Natomas neighborhood. The line would extend northwest from the existing Green Line terminus at the 7th & Richards / Township 9 station. The plan to extend light rail to the airport has been in the works since early 1990s, and is the project most requested by residents of the Sacramento region. The agency is currently completing environmental documents for the project.The project, estimated at nearly $1 billion, would be the costliest in RT's history and securing funding has been a challenge. Transportation officials most recently proposed funding the project with a half-cent sales tax increase in Sacramento County, but the measure was narrowly defeated in November 2016. This project is planned to start construction by the year 2022.