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And these aren't cow towns, unless by your personal definition, Fresno and Bakersfield aren't "real" cities. :rolleyes: There will also be express trains that bypass all the Central Valley stations for those that want to get from LA to SF nonstop. |
This has become such an embarrassment for the state and reeks of corruption, incompetence, and a complete disregard for tax payer money. This is the poster child of how NOT to built rail.
If it was only California's problem then that's their business but the incompetence of CHSR has set other viable HSR corridors back decades. Opponents will always rightly point to this endless financial pit being built on the never-never time frame as a reason that HSR should not be built in their jurisdiction. |
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The naysayers then ended up being wrong about it, just like the naysayers now will too be wrong. |
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Is it newsworthy that 2008 money is not the same as 2023 money? It's also odd that on an urbanist forum, folks would be upset that a route covering more people (and in theory would increase ridership) is somehow a bad thing. If I was a contractor I wouldn't want to be paid in 2008 money...lol. I think it's because forumers didn't know that millions of people live in the Central Valley? There's more people living there than in their states or provinces lol. |
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Also, the system was approved by CA residents. Kinda hard for the project to be disregarding their money, when they themselves voted for it. The only things embarrassing about CA HSR are the shitty PR, and how many people completely misunderstand the project, and misunderstand rail transit, and don't know how things like large construction projects and politics work in America, who fail to avoid the multitude of propaganda sources that take advantage of that ignorance in order to convince them that CA HSR is a doomed fail train to nowhere. |
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https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...720&fit=bounds https://hosting.photobucket.com/imag...720&fit=bounds |
The advocacy for the I-5 route, a route so obviously illogical and inferior, has been one of the most peculiar aspects of the CaHSR saga. The project's goal is to operate trains at 200+ mph. At that speed the minor geographical diversion to serve most of the Central Valley population centers - centers that will likely prove to be huge ridership generators not to mention the economic impact - will be about as insignificant as a flight that is 1:35 versus one that is 1:15. No planning body in their right mind would choose to run an arrow straight western route that ignored several million people to save 20 minutes on an end to end express train schedule for the SF/LA business set. The thought is preposterous. The notion of fast modern branch line connections to CV cities from the I-5 route being the solution is also so myopic - those lines would likely never come to fruition. The obvious best plan is the plan that was chosen. The idea that this isn't obvious to everyone makes me wonder about people.
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I think the big swing-and-miss in recent years was California's election of a governor with presidential ambitions. Jerry Brown knew he was ending his political career as governor, so he was willing to fund HSR. Presidential hopefull Newsom acted like there wasn't any money, even though the state collected $100 billion in surplus tax revenue during his first term. Interest rates were near zero for many years; now they're 5%+. |
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I wasn't referring to Bakersfield and Fresno as cow towns, but Merced, Gilroy, and Hanford? Yes. All are under 90,000 people with little in the way of urban economies. They're basically agricultural outposts. You don't build HSR with the hope of spurring TOD in CV cities. That's mission creep again. HSR should compete with air travel. It exists to connect big cities- cities people fly between. Just as you don't have airlines stopping at every little burgh they fly over, I see no need for HSR to do the same. The problem with this project is it's trying to everything, when it really should have a focused objective of connecting the state's two largest regions- the Bay Area and greater LA. The CV would still be served, albeit less directly, but it should never have been the focus. Just my opinion. I do hope for the best, as I'd love to be able to one day take the HSR to SF. I just feel like there have been several crucial errors made, and the route itself is one such error. It's not unheard of for transportation projects to be cancelled halfway or more through construction. Look at all the cities in this country with unused subway tunnels-- projects that seemed like great ideas but either made too many missteps or the political climate changed, and they got canned. That's not an impossibility with CAHSR. I worry we might end up with only a line in the CV at the rate this project is going. |
There will be SF-SJ-LA express trains that bypass every other station in between. How is that dramatically different than an I-5 alignment doing the same but having the additional anti-benefit of not directly serving the intermediate stations with all stop trains filling out the schedule?
Also where are all these unused subway tunnels? |
Would be nice to get some certainty about when the Pacheco Pass and Palmdale-Burbank Tunnels will start digging.
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Everybody needs to just wait...the system is hundreds of miles long and it's not going to be built overnight. All the lawsuits didn't help and those were indented to derail or stall the project off the bat. The mostly 99 route is fine since it can serve a lot more people than on I-5 and the point is for people to not have to drive hella far to take the train, since that's generally how it works. I do think the portion going through the Hanford area should have stuck with 99, but the price of land along 99 is probably more expensive. |
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It also continues the momentum from the Peninsula electrification project, ideally they could use all the same contractors and get some efficiencies of scale. If this isn't fair to SoCal, then throw in electrification on the Metrolink Ventura County line which will also be overlaid with HSR between Burbank and LA Union Station. All of this has climate benefits too in terms of reducing diesel emissions (although it's fairly minor in the grand scheme of things). |
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But this discussion on alignment really is moot because the voter-approved referendum specifies the general route HSR must take including the diversion to the Antelope Valley and the alignment near Highway 99 through the Central Valley. Any major change in that alignment would probably require voter approval in another referendum. I imagine that the Highway 99 route helped get votes to pass the proposition in places like Fresno and Bakersfield. I also recall that the Antelope Valley route may have been influenced by LA County Supervisor Mike Antonovich who was calling in political favors. The original HSR proposition was deeply flawed. It only provided seed money for the project. Somehow the rest of the money was going to come from private investment and the federal government. Neither of those sources of money have materialized, apart from a few billion from the Obama stimulus program almost 15 years ago. The proposition stipulated that HSR could be built for $30 billion, which was obviously a gross underestimate, and the HSR authority was left with egg on its face when it almost immediately revised its estimates up to at least $70 billion. The original decision to focus construction in the Central Valley made sense. The topography was less demanding and land acquisition costs in agricultural areas would be lower. But the HSR authority never made any progress in identifying funds to build to build the expensive and difficult parts of the route from Bakersfield to LA and from Merced to Gilroy. So what we have left with is a stranded 125-mile high speed line that connects Bakersfield to Merced. It will do what Amtrak's San Joaquins do, just a little faster. I don't fault Newsom's decision to limit the scope of construction work to the already funded portion of the project in the Central Valley. It helped defuse some of the political opposition to the project and probably increased the chances that at least the Central Valley portion of the line would get built. The California GOP uses HSR as a rallying cry for all that is bad about rule by Democrats in California. I see his decision as an exercise in damage control. As for using the temporary $100 billion state surplus to build HSR: that surplus is already gone. Some of it was banked in the state budget reserves for the inevitable rainy day. Some of it was returned to the tax payers. And some of it was used to fund extraordinary needs during the pandemic including homeless support. The state does have other priorities that most voters probably think take higher priority over HSR. I really do hope California does find a way to finish the HSR project. I don't know what the way forward for doing that is. If the project ends without that happy conclusion, though, at least we got an electrified Caltrain out of the bargain. That is definitely a valuable thing. |
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If the tunnel to Bakersfield had been built along the I-5 Grapevine route, there would have to be two 20-30 mile tunnels to establish high speed service to both corridors. |
There was also significant, or at least more, fault concerns with the Grapevine crossing.
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I can't speak directly to the relative earthquake fault risks for the Grapevine route versus the Antelope Valley route. I imagine there are risks with either route. The original 1999 report on California high speed rail had recommended the Grapevine alignment out of Los Angeles. According to a NY Times article from last October, the decision to go with the Palmdale/Lancaster route came when the northern LA County Supervisor, Mike Antonovich. got a member of the rail authority board, Jerry Epstein, to lobby other board members to adopt the longer, more expensive Antelope Valley route. Epstein wanted the LA County Board of Supervisors to renew his Marina del Rey leases for another 40 years, and Antonovich was his chance to make sure that happened. Antonovich denies a quid pro quo (Marina del Rey leases in return for high speed rail for his constituents in Palmdale and Lancaster), but stranger things have happened. According to the NY Times article, the Antelope Valley alignment added 41 miles to the route and increased costs by 16%, not a trivial sum for a project whose cost estimates now approach $130 billion.
To be fair, the NY Times article, which casts California HSR in a pretty negative light, was written by Ralph Vartabedian, who has a long career with the LA Times writing similarly negative articles about the project. https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/09/u...sultPosition=1 On the argument that the Antelope Valley route provided a better LA connection for the Las Vegas Brightline service: maybe, but I would argue that a taxpayer-funded project like California HSR shouldn't take on additional costs and risks to accommodate a privately-owned enterprise like Brightline West, especially since it's only in the last year or so that high speed rail to Las Vegas seemed to have a real chance of happening. |
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In the United States, there is a long history of railroads paying to run their trains on another railroad's tracks. This is going to be a significant source of long-term income for CAHSR that will offset the very high cost of constructing a high-speed entrance into Los Angeles. Brightline gets a better service than they could have ever built themselves and CAHSR earns mailbox money. The phrase is a cliche but this is the definition of a win-win. |
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I understand it that Brightline - or whatever tge service will be called as well as whether or not it will even remain a separate entity from CHSR - will establish the Rancho Cucamonga as the terminal but will also be built to Palmdale when the CHSR mountain tunnel comes online. This would allow a LAUS-LV train and an Rancho Cucamonga-LV which would be more convenient for inland residents.
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CAHSR should have been designed as a SF-LA bullet train, with no other competing objectives. To this point, it's much more of a make-work project for areas like Bakersfield than anything having to do with mobility. The "but the direct, cheaper route doesn't serve downtown Bakersfield therefore people won't ride it" is bizarre. There isn't going to be much Central Valley ridership. And if there were, it wouldn't be harder to access via the direct route. It isn't like most LA residents live walking distance to Union Station, so why would we have such standards in the Central Valley? |
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The Metrolink tracks between LA Union and San Bernardino won't be upgraded until CAHSR Phase 2, which can't happen until Phase 1 is operational, but I'd bet that that terminus will be extended eastward toward San Bernardino or Riverside rather than duplicate LA Union Station. |
Makes sense.
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If there had been a public partnership between Nevada and California, the whole thing could have been coordinated from the beginning, and construction could have been phased so as to keep engineers, consultants, and work crews consistently employed. Part of the problem with a joint agency would have been the fact that most of the route would be in California, with only about 50 miles of track in Nevada. LA>Phoenix is closer to 50/50, but still roughly 3/5 in California, and even more if the San Diego part of the Phase 2 plan is considered. The Interstate Highways blew past this problem since the federal highway trust fund paid for 95% of construction across the barren government-owned lands in the West. |
If I was a betting man I'd wager there is about a 90% chance that both services wind up with a Siemens Velaro varient - especially with the DB operator concession - and if so there is the possibility that maintenance could be shared and CaHSR equipment could be run on the LV line if it came to that.
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Great choice for architecture firm.
Foster + Partners has experience building HSR stations as well as other large scale transportation developments. |
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https://www.metro.net/projects/high-desert-corridor/ |
Very cool to have Foster & Partners working on the Central Valley stations. Will be awesome, iconic architecture. Though I hope the canopies will offer shade, not like that initial rendering. CV sun is intense.
I just wish they'd be working on the stations that matter. These stations are completely irrelevant to CAHSR's success. I still cannot believe that the U.S., the globe's laggard on HSR, has decided to test HSR by running service to Merced, Fresno, Tulare, and Bakersfield, which is some of the most hostile HSR geography in the U.S. It would be like first testing a national Netherlands-level bike mobility project in exurban Phoenix, or first testing a national blizzard warning system in Miami. We have to pray that CA voters ignore the initial near-zero ridership, and push this through to completion, where high ridership is quite likely. The first TGV line in France was Paris to Lyon. Biggest city to second biggest city. Most transit-oriented city to second most transit oriented city. TGV is the global HSR gold standard. |
^^^
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I don't know what you mean by this. Do you mean hostile as in geography/climate or hostile as in unlikely to produce much ridership between CV city pairs? How is the CV IOS hostile geography? It's flat as a pancake. |
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The CV has some of the lowest transit ridership and highest vehicle ownership in the U.S., which is saying something. It's extremely sprawly, with extremely weak urban cores. Very little walkability, bikeability, or transit orientation. Very little downtown-to-downtown modal demand. So all of the necessary ingredients for HSR are missing. It's like planning a subway line in NYC by testing it in Alabama, and then concluding the subway won't generate ridership. It's insanity. CA just needs to push this through, bc there will be an avalanche of right-wing rhetoric once this opens. "See America isn't like Europe, dummies! Tulare has no train demand. We like our trucks. We're nothing like Paris or Frankfurt. Ha!" I bet you the overwhelming source of ridership during the first phase will be train buffs. I'd definitely ride it. It will be busiest on weekends and holidays. But as a functional tool, no way. |
I think the CHSRA knows full well the IOS will function as a demonstration line that will create awe and enthuse the pols to get the rest of the system built. I highly doubt they're planning on touting the robust ridership as evidence that will convince them to get going on the mountain crossings. They aren't myopic. I fully expect the true function of the IOS is public enthusiasm to finish Phase 1.
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I hope you're right. I'll make a point to ride Phase I, but I'm a rail buff.
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Incidentally, that first leg was Tokyo-Nagoya-Osaka. |
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Also, the goal of the project is not just to improve transit, but to revitalize the central valley cities. The idea is that once the system is complete, the areas around the stations in Fresno, Bakersfield, Merced, etc, will see lots of development. |
Plus the CV is like the only place to build it lol and it's only so wide.
Think of the cost of having HSR along the coast.... |
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But yeah, I think some people forget that the coast ranges are a thing lol |
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This is why Phase I is so crazy. They're basically doing it first bc CV is poor and Hispanic, so they can brag about equity, economic justice and the like. Is it a transit project, an economic development project, a reparations project? You see it in the promotional language. If, once CAHSR were running, they wanted to throw the CV a bone and put a station there, fine. It would be a waste of money and time, but it wouldn't threaten HSR in the U.S. But putting it first is extremely risky for U.S. HSR. It's a dream scenario for the anti-transit GQP. |
They have to build it in the CV (40 to 60 miles wide), so might as well hit the population centers and these people do use the trains already there to get to SF, Sac, and LA. They might not be connected to HSR, but they are connected to regular rail.
When the initial project finishes, people from these areas will use it and people outside of these areas will also use it. |
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